04237nam 22005053 450 991015880090332120230807220256.097817862506501786250659(CKB)3810000000099062(MiAaPQ)EBC4807940(Au-PeEL)EBL4807940(CaPaEBR)ebr11354498(OCoLC)975223371(Perlego)3018300(EXLCZ)99381000000009906220210901d2015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierForest Brothers, 19451st ed.San Francisco :Verdun Press,2015.©2015.1 online resource (38 pages)Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY -- Introduction -- The First Soviet Occupation -- German Occupation and Operation Bagration -- The Third "Liberation" -- The "Forest Brothers" -- Hope and Motivation -- Soviet Measures against the Resistance -- Culmination -- Conclusions -- APPENDIX A - 1941 NKVD deportation priorities: Groups considered a threat to the occupation -- APPENDIX B. - Partisan military districts -- APPENDIX C - Theoretical Appendix: A Case Study in Flexibility and Security -- People and Ideology -- Flexibility -- Security -- Conclusions -- APPENDIX D. - Chekist data: Number of Nationalist underground command centers dismantled -- regional and district staff members captured or killed by the Soviet campaign -- APPENDIX E. - Chekist data: Number of partisan operations conducted -- partisans killed, captured, arrested and given amnesty -- APPENDIX F. - Chekist data: Number of captured weapon systems by Soviets -- BIBLIOGRAPHY.Although the resistance effort maintained its strength ideologically, the Lithuanian partisan movement never recovered from the culminating point in 1945 because of a shortfall in resources, a lack of external support, and the inability of resistance leadership to adapt rapidly enough against a comprehensive Soviet assimilation campaign.While many authors argue that the high point in the Lithuanian partisan war occurred between 1946 and 1947, the totality of evidence points towards a culmination in 1945 from which the effort never recovered. This culminating point may be attributed to a miscalculation of partisan resources on the part of their leadership as well as a lack of external support. The main reason for achieving culmination, however, rested in the inability of partisans to fight a conventional war against a massive, combined arms Soviet force. Mass deportations between three separate occupations and a wave of 60, 000 escapees created a vacuum of political, military and moral leadership. Compounded with the realization that there would be no external support from the democratic West, the will of the Lithuanians was bent by the Soviet campaign. Ultimately, the numbers of partisans killed, captured or given amnesty by Soviet forces reflect an apex in military capability in 1945 that drastically diminished thereafter.The pinnacle of partisan effort in 1945 clearly represents a culminating point that forced the Lithuanian resistance movement to shift their operations drastically. Ultimately, based on the totality of evidence, the 1945 culminating point splits the resistance into two stages: 1) 1944-1945-conventional war operations, a period of traditional offensive warfare by an organized partisan movement; and 2) 1946-1953-irregular warfare operations, a period of unremitting decline by a significantly diminished resistance, relegated to a more defensive posture and small scale offensive operations. Forest Brothers, 1945Underground movements, WarGuerrillasInsurgencyUnderground movements, War.Guerrillas.Insurgency.947.93083999999999Leskys Major Vylius M1374066MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910158800903321Forest Brothers, 19453406874UNINA