were allies in the anti-Bolshevik cause. Following the defeat of the Whites and the consolidation of
Soviet control from Moscow, the nationalists looked for other allies. By the late 1930s there were
links with German military intelligence (the Abwehr). Outside help was needed both to end
communist rule and re-assert independence.
In the second half of 1941, during the invasion of the Soviet union, the Abwehr organized Ukrainian
nationalists into units under German command and used them in front of the regular troops and the
SS extermination battalions. The aim of this tactic was to open the path for the Wehrmacht with
units that would be welcomed as liberators, particularly in Lvov, previously known as Lemberg in
the Austro-Hungarian empire, in the Western part of the Ukraine. These Ukrainian forces seized the
opportunity to declare a “Free state of Ukraine“, but this lasted less than a week before being
supressed by the Germans. It nevertheless would be used later as a model for all Ukrainian demands
for nationhood.
At the end of 1943, in the forest of Jytomir (Galizia, in the western part of the Ukraine), these same
Ukrainian nationalists held the first clandestine congress of the Antibolshevik Blok of Nations
(ABN), creating at the same time the Ukrainian National Army (UPA). The UPA then took part in
attacks on the retreating Wehrmacht, while at the same time harassing the Red Army, the communist
partisans, and the Jews (due to their suspected communist sympathies). The UPA, consisting of
around 70,000 guerrillas, were joined by fragments of the SS Ukrainian, Byelorussian, Russian, and
Cossack batallions, as well as Hungarian, Rumanian, Soviet, Baltic and Georgian deserters. Many
of these dispersed former elements of the German army ended up in Western displaced persons
camps.
The Americans, British, and French began to take an interest in the UPA, especially when it became
apparent that some of its units continued their struggle against the Red Army after 1945. This anti-
communist guerrilla warfare went on for several years. In the context of the many anti-Soviet forces
that were active in the mid-1940s, the Ukrainians were undoubtedly the best organized and the most
dangerous threat to Soviet dominance. Stalin mobilized considerable forces against the UPA (with
Nikita Khrushchev playing a leading role) and forced the repatriation of millions on the borders of
Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and the Soviet Union in an efforot to defeat them. The UPA was
finally subdued in 1954, but its influence would continue via the various actors who later
Christopher Simpson, Blowback, America’s Recruitment of Nazis and Its Effects on the Cold War, Weidenfeld &
Nicolson, London 1988; John Loftus, America’s Nazi Secret, Trine Day, 2010 (second printing of The Belarus
Secret, Alfred Knopf, 1982); Wolodimir Kosyk, L’Allemagne National-Socialiste et l’Ukraine, L’Est Européen,
1990, the most interesting pro-ukrainian book in regard of its propaganda contents.