<http://www.juliagorin.com/wordpress/?p=2062> A Decade of American Infamy: 
March 24, 1999 Continues to Play Out on March 24, 2009


Posted by Julia Gorin
 

I haven’t prepared anything for March 24th on this 10th anniversary of America 
’s greatest shame. But as regular readers know, around here every day is March 
24, 1999. So I’m going to just post most of an article that appeared last week 
in a northern San Diego paper — from which I learned that March 24, 1999 had 
been foreshadowed by March 24, 1946. 

For those who have already found and read the article on their own, I’ve 
injected two of my own comments, midway and at the end, which might be of 
interest.

******

Recounted with rare and appropriate indignation by Lyle E. Davis, the story of  
<http://astore.amazon.com/julgor-20/detail/0451224957> The Forgotten 500 made 
it onto the  <http://www.thecommunitypaper.com/index.php> cover of a local San 
Diego paper called The Paper. There are a lot of powerful people living in San 
Diego , so let’s see if this story finally — after half a century — gets some 
legs:

I’m about to tell you a story that, after you’ve read it, if your blood isn’t 
boiling…well, you maybe ought to book an appointment with your favorite 
mortician.

Armchair Generals in the Pentagon during WWII and their civilian counterparts 
and bosses in the US State Department should have been taken out and given, at 
a minimum, a sound caning or horse-whipping…and at the worst, faced a firing 
squad.

Their absolute ineptitude and politicking almost cost the lives of 513 Allied 
airmen and, ultimately, ruined the reputation and resulted in the firing squad 
execution of a national hero and patriot who cared for our troops as though 
they were his own sons.

Sadly, these idiots who ran the Pentagon are all gone now. We cannot give them 
the thrashing they so richly earned and deserved. Bumbling incompetents who 
were more suited to fighting a war on the Washington cocktail circuit than out 
in the boonies with the troops, they were pledged to supply, defend, and look 
after their interests. Instead, they survived the war in comfort while others, 
many others, suffered.

Here’s what happened:

This was the time when our aircrews were flying incredibly dangerous bombing 
missions over the Ploesti Oilfields in Romania . The Nazis surrounded these 
critically important oilfields with major defensive barriers . . . massive 
amounts of ack-ack (anti-aircraft artillery) that filled the air with flak, 
trying to bring down our bombers. And, too often, they were successful. If the 
bombers were not shot out of the sky they would limp along as far as they could 
before the air crew had to bail out. Often, this was over the hills of 
Yugoslavia .

Upon landing, Serbian villagers would soon find them and rush to embrace the 
downed airman. Area Serb farmers and their heavy set wives, with their 
babushkas, and rough peasant clothing, would take them into their small 
villages and hide them from the patrolling Germans. They would feed the airmen 
stale bread and goats milk . . . sharing with the airmen the meager food 
supplies they had. 

This is a magnificent story of heroism, sacrifice, planning, execution, and 
accomplishment that remained a secret for over 50 years. It was kept a secret 
until 1997 because those same Armchair Generals and lily-livered bureaucrats at 
the State Department wanted it kept secret. Details of what happened might 
embarrass somebody…an ally, a former enemy, a present enemy, or, heaven forbid, 
themselves.

Only recently has the story been totally declassified and that, in itself, is 
an absolute injustice and borders on being criminal.

Bureaucrats showed what cowards they were, what treacherous administrators they 
were that had no regard for 500+ airmen who had been hiding under Nazi noses 
for months. Instead, they chose to play politics…and politics, when it involves 
our military and their lives, is despicable.

Sometimes I think if we could just get rid of the bureaucrats we’d get 
something done and win some wars. 

A reader of The Paper, and a nieghbor, brought me a copy of “The Forgotten 
500,” by Gregory A. Freeman. It tells the story of Operation Halyard in August 
1944. (suppressed for almost 53 years). Five American agents from the OSS , the 
precursor of the CIA, worked with a Serbian guerilla, General Draja 
Mihailovich, to carry out the huge, ultra-secret rescue mission from the hills 
of Yugoslavia . 

Americans would send in a fleet of C-47 cargo planes to land in the hills of 
Yugoslavia, behind enemy lines, to pluck out hundreds of airmen. In this 
remarkable mission, more than 500 Allied airmen, mostly Americans, were rescued 
from the hills of Yugoslavia . 

At the time, the area was controlled by the Nazis who were hunting for the 
American airmen daily. The story also involves a national hero who died 
needlessly, because our government did not support him…even though he took our 
downed airmen under his wing, protected them, saw to it they got fed, saw to 
it, eventually, that they were successfully evacuated from Yugoslavia and 
returned to their families.

These brave Serbian villagers hid the Americans, even though they faced death 
if they were caught. It wasn’t a simple task. Not by a long shot. The number of 
downed airmen was enormous. First, a hundred, then 150, then 200, ultimately, 
there were over 500 airmen who were being hidden in the Yugoslavian hills by 
these poor Serbian villagers.

Some sad stories came about as the Serbs sought to comfort our airmen. On more 
than one occasion our airmen would be given stale bread and goats milk to 
eat…and they would wolf it down…only to then learn that the food they just ate 
had been meant for the airmen and the entire family. The family went without 
eating that night.

On another occasion, a newly arrived airman awoke in the morning and complained 
about how hard his bed was Another airman who had been in the village for 
awhile took him by the collar and went outside and pointed at the villagers who 
had given up their bed for the comfort of the airman. They had slept outside, 
on the ground. The airman felt about an inch tall, but he also learned just how 
much these Serbian villagers were sacrificing to aid in the comfort of these 
airmen.

That’s the nuts and bolts of what happened. But the Devil, as they say, — is in 
the details. There is much, much more to the story that complicates it all.

>From author Gregory Freeman:

“I was drawn to the idea that not only was this an amazing tale of intrigue and 
bravery, but it had been purposely hidden from the American people for decades. 
A dramatic story is one thing; a dramatic story that has been kept secret is 
even more intriguing. The story of “Operation Halyard” is one of the last great 
stories of World War II and it is high time that the American people learn 
about the heroic sacrifice of Draza Mihailovich and the Serbian people.” 

>From a review by  <http://jewishworldreview.com/julia/gorin061507.php3> 
>Aleksandra Rebic - “that these heroic acts that he had discovered had not only 
>been virtually ignored, but were actually deliberately suppressed as if they 
>never happened, (demanded that the book be written.) “His research led him to 
>painful discoveries that he could not help but include in this story of 
>heroism, and the light that he sheds on the dark side of ‘Operation Halyard’ 
>makes “The Forgotten 500” not only a valuable book, but an essential one. Just 
>as he reminds us of the great things that men in the worst situations are 
>capable of, he also exposes the lengths taken to cover up acts that should 
>have been widely heralded as triumphant examples of the human spirit but 
>instead were sacrificed to the manipulations of political expediency. We owe 
>both the dead and the living to move, once and for all, ‘Operation Halyard’, 
>possibly the greatest rescue of American lives from behind enemy lines in the 
>history of warfare, from being a mere footnote in history to being a shining 
>example of what men of integrity are capable of. Mr. Freeman, with “The 
>Forgotten 500,” is paying the long overdue debt.” 

Gen. Draja Mihailovich is one of the primary focal points of this story. He was 
the leader of the Chetniks, the Yugoslav guerilla fighters that challenged the 
Nazis. When the Allied airmen landed in the hills and forests of Serbia, they 
were now among freedom fighters, loyal above all else, to the democratic 
Allies, though the airmen did not know it as they fell from the sky onto 
Yugoslavian soil. Among the hundreds who fell, most were Americans. 

The other military and heavily political element in Yugoslavia was headed by 
Josef Broz Tito. He organized the anti-fascist resistance movement known as the 
People’s Liberation Movement led by Yugoslav Partisans. Ostensibly, both 
organizations, Mihailovich’s Chetniks and Tito’s Partisans were fighting the 
same war, to defeat the Germans. But, in fact there was a war within a war 
going on. Tito was heavily supplied by Russia, was an avowed and avid Communist 
and was determined to turn Yugoslavia into a Communist state once the war was 
over. He worked closedly with British “moles” (spies who worked for Britain ’s 
MI5 but who were secretly working for the Russians and the Communist Cause.). 
Mihailovich, on the other hand, sought a democratic Yugoslavia .

In the end, Tito prevailed and achieved his goal of converting Yugoslavia to 
the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia from 1945 until his death in 1980. 

General Mihailovich fell seventeen months after the so-called “liberation” of 
Yugoslavia . Reports from Belgrade on March 24th, 1946, announced his capture 
under puzzling circumstances on March 13th, 1946. His trial before a Communist 
military court began on June 10th, 1946. He was “sentenced” to death on July 
15th, 1946, and murdered on July 17th, 1946. 

So word of the Allies’ betrayal of Mihailovich — and with him, all of 
Yugoslavia — was first publicized on March 24th. The events that the 
announcement referred to may have happened before March 24th, but we know that 
a date becomes famous even if it is merely the day on which the public finds 
out about an event. (American independence was actually declared over the two 
days preceding July 4, 1776, but the public found out on the 4th and so that’s 
the day we celebrate. Likewise, Bill Clinton’s NATO attack on Yugoslavia 
actually launched on March 23, but he only let us know about it on March 24th.) 
Back to the article:

General Mihailovich is no more. He has departed this world convinced that he 
was abandoned by the Allies. The voices that were raised abroad in his defense 
were not allowed to reach him and he died without the satisfaction of knowing 
that in the opinion of many he died an innocent man and a great soldier. The 
legends of his heroic deeds, however, are becoming more and more well known, 
certainly in Yugoslavia, and, finally, now in the western world. It is safe to 
say that he, Mihailovich, lives in the hearts of the Serbs of Yugoslavia .

Ultimately, General Mihailovich and his forces would prove just how profound 
‘doing the right thing no matter what’ is. Mihailovich, together with the 
Serbian people, had rescued, fed, clothed, protected and risked their lives on 
behalf of the Americans. These shot down airmen were “funneled” to the Halyard 
Mission which set up airfields for airlifting the fliers back to Italy .

Those 513 rescued airmen have been pleading, shouting, and using any means at 
their disposal to right a terrible wrong. Mihailovich was labeled a traitor and 
collaborator and they have been, collectivly, trying for over 60 years to clear 
his name. Now, with the publication of The Forgotten 500, perhaps Mihailovich 
will receive his rightful, though posthumous, recognition for the good that he 
did, for his nation, and for our Allied airmen.

The frustrating issue in this story is that in the name of political 
expediency, enforced by both the Yugoslav postwar regime and the British, the 
Americans stayed silent about this chapter of the great heroism of their own 
sons and the selfless sacrifices of their rescuers. Not only did they stay 
silent, they kept it silent. Classified. 

This story has never been appropriately publicized in the western world because 
it has not been “politically correct” to do so. It has remained a taboo theme 
in many political and publishing circles which has dismayed and frustrated so 
many rescued airmen, and their rescuers, for decades. Many of the veterans of 
‘Operation Halyard,’ both the rescued and their rescuers, spent the duration of 
their postwar years striving to right this wrong. Many have since passed away 
without ever experiencing the contentment of seeing justice done and a debt 
repaid. 

Freeman’s talent for telling a great true story as it deserves to be told and 
for his attention to detail makes this story come alive on the pages:

“Not until 1997 would the world understand that the switch of allegiance was 
orchestrated largely by a Soviet operative who convinced the British that 
Mihailovich could not be trusted… Communist moles had infiltrated both the OSS 
(Office of Strategic Services) and the SOE (Special Operations Executive), 
(both were the “spook” or intelligence agencies) working to besmirch the name 
of Mihailovich to promote the postwar Communization of Yugoslavia under 
Tito…Klugmann, who was closely associated with the infamous British traitors 
known as the Cambridge Five…was principally responsible for sabotaging the 
Mihailovich supply operation and for keeping from London information about how 
much Mihailovich forces were fighting the Germans and how much success they 
were having.” 

James Klugmann, a devout communist and ultimately a traitor to his country of 
Great Britain, is among the many collateral players in the Mihailovich story 
and Freeman doesn’t shy away from exposing his role in influencing the 
misguided British policy that would have tragic consequences for General 
Mihailovich and ultimately the fate of Serbia itself. Freeman writes: “The 
recently declassified files reveal that, for instance, Klugmann had great 
influence over Colonel Sir William Deakin, the senior intelligence officer in 
Yugoslavia …” 

It was Deakin who was mainly responsible for convincing Churchill to switch 
sides from Mihailovich to Tito. Freeman competently weaves politics and the 
story on the ground together in such a way as to give the reader the big 
picture. Freeman, unlike many historians, is able to see the forest, not just 
the trees. 

He understood, too, the significance of Mihailovich’s integrity in rising above 
and beyond the betrayal perpetrated upon him and his people. In the summer of 
1944, because of destructive but successful British political manipulations, it 
was no longer ‘politically correct’ for the Allies, including the Americans who 
deferred to the British in policy relating to the Balkan sphere, to deal with 
Mihailovich in any way. This means no supplies, food, ammuntion, or medical 
supplies. Yet, there were now hundreds of downed Allied fliers, most of them 
Americans, who were being protected by Mihailovich and his men and had to be 
evacuated. This presented quite a political dilemma. Thanks to the efforts of 
American officers such as George Vujnovich and George Musulin, an ACRU 
organization (Air Crew Rescue Unit) was created and it was decided to send 
Musulin to the hills of Serbia, accompanied by Mike Rajachich and OSS radio 
operator Arthur Jubilian, to run the evacuation operation that would come to be 
known as the ‘Halyard Mission’. 

It was going to be a rescue attempt unlike any ever attempted by the OSS or 
anyone else, and indeed that’s exactly what it turned out to be. Over the 
course of several months in 1944, hundreds of Allied airmen would be evacuated 
and not one would be sacrificed. All, without exception, would make it back to 
their homes and their families alive. 

Not one American would be turned over to the Nazis, even though the Germans 
were offering substantial rewards to the local natives to give them up. Though 
the Allies had turned their back on General Mihailovich, he refused to turn his 
back on them. 

The drama of ‘Operation Halyard’ would end in December of 1944, and due to the 
perseverance of men with the names of Vujnovich, Musulin, Petrovich, Rajachich, 
Lalich, Jibilian and others, it would end as a virtually perfect success story 
in the face of almost insurmountable odds.

Every downed airman survived. 

General Mihailovich, however, would not share their fate. The airmen whom he 
had saved were left to their tears, devastated by the news, and many would 
dedicate the rest of their years to vindicating Mihailovich, his Serbian 
people, and to seeking justice for the man to whom they felt they owed their 
very lives. Many in the Allied world who were following the capture, trial, and 
execution of Mihailovich, were left to wonder “how it could have been allowed 
to happen.” […]



Even conservatives and patriots haven’t shown the decency to bring this story 
to light, much less demonstrated the volition to delve into the history of a 
place so that we might quit repeating that history over and over with our 
policies there. This, despite the fact that it was their favorite president, 
Ronald Reagan, who  
<http://draza-mihailovich.blogspot.com/2006/07/photo-of-ronald-reagan-commentary-on.html>
 pointed out that Mihailovich had to do what no one else had to — fight Nazism 
and Communism at the same time:

The ultimate tragedy of Draza Mihailovich cannot erase the memory of his heroic 
and often lonely struggle against the twin tyrannies that afflicted his people, 
Nazism and Communism. He knew that totalitarianism, whatever name it might 
take, is the death of freedom.

The West’s abandonment of Mihailovich and the real Yugoslavia ensured 
communism’s foothold there. We would later point to that communism as an excuse 
to violently dismantle Yugoslavia . 

It is the Serbian fate to be punished by the West for the West’s own mistakes. 
Today, even after several of the architects of NATO’s 1999 war on Belgrade have 
privately admitted here and there that the action was a mistake, we continue in 
the same direction in order to hide and bury that mistake, now deliberately 
buttressing Islamic elements in the region after having originally done so 
unintentionally in the 90s. 

 

 



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