Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118


Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 was a Schutzmannschaft auxiliary police battalion. The core of the Schutzmannschaft battalion 118 consisted of Ukrainian nationalists from Bukovina in Western Ukraine. It was linked to the ultra-nationalist Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, to its smaller Melnyk wing. 900 members of The OUN in Bukovina marched towards eastern Ukraine as members of paramilitary Bukovinian Battalion. After reinforcement by volunteers from Galicia and other parts of Ukraine, the Bukovinian Battalion had a total number of 1,500–1,700 soldiers. When the Bukovinian Battalion was dissolved, many of its members and officers were reorganized as Schutzmannschaft Battalions 115 and 118. Among the people incorporated into the Schutzmannschaft Battalions 115 and 118 were Ukrainian participants in the Babyn Yar massacre.
The Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 was formed by the Nazis in the spring of 1942 in Kiev in the Reichskommissariat Ukraine. It was based upon the Battalion 115, splitting away from the latter, but also included Soviet prisoners of war. 100 members of the third company of the Battalion 115 formed the first company of the Battalion 118; it was the most active part of the battalion, considered as its elite and consisted mostly of nationalists from Western Ukraine. Additional two new companies were composed of Soviet POWs, mostly Ukrainians, and local volunteers from Kiev region. The German commander of the battalion was Sturmbannführer Erich Körner, who had his own staff of Germans, commanded by Emil Zass.
In 1944, the battalion, led by the former Red Army officer Hryhoriy Vasiura, was merged back to the Battalion 115 and transferred from East Prussia to France, where it joined the 30th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS.

Operations

In November 1942 the newly-formed Battalion 118 was transferred to Minsk and from there for approximately one year to a new base on the outskirts of the former Second Polish Republic. It was active in the area until July 1944. During this time the battalion participated in the German pacification actions, part of the "dead zone" policy of annihilating hundreds of Belarusian villages in order to remove the support base for the alleged partisans. The 60 major and 80 smaller actions affecting 627 villages across occupied Belarus included Operation Hornung, Draufgänger, Cottbus, Hermann and Wandsbeck. Entire Jewish communities were exterminated on the general orders of Curt von Gottberg with the necessary backup provided by the Battalions 115 and 102, the Russian ROA, Baltic collaborators, Belarusian Auxiliary Police, and the SS-Sturmbrigade Dirlewanger. They also fought the Polish underground. Close to 50 men deserted from the 115th battalion in the winter 1942-43, while dozens of the members of 118th battalion joined the UPA in Volhynia.
In the spring of 1944 due to the Soviet counteroffensive Battalion 118 and Battalion 115 were merged around East Prussia into a single battalion with up to 600 men. In August 1944, all of them were transported by train to Besançon in France to form the 30th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS along with other Ukrainian formations. While in the village of Valderharn, some members made contact with the French partisans from FFI and one night the majority deserted to join them. They named themselves the 2nd Ukrainian "Taras Shevchenko" battalion of the French Forces of the Interior. However, the French after the war wanted to send them back to Russia in accordance with their international agreements, therefore many of the former volunteers continued service in the French Foreign Legion to avoid repatriation.

Accusation in atrocities and war crimes

Due to participation in a series of punitive actions, some members of Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 have been later accused of committing most brutal atrocities and war crimes during World War II. The Khatyn massacre occurred in Khatyn, a village in Belarus, in the Lahojsk district, Minsk Voblast. On March 22, 1943, the population of the village was massacred by Battalion 118.
In Khatyn, the members of the Battalion 118 filled a farmer's barn with civilians, set it on fire, and used a machine gun to kill the civilians who tried to escape the flames: "One witness stated that Volodymyr Katriuk was a particularly active participant in the atrocity: he reportedly lay behind the stationary machine gun, firing rounds on anyone attempting to escape the flames". A Soviet Union war-crimes trial in 1973 heard that three members of the Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 killed a group of Belarusian loggers earlier that day, suspecting they were part of a popular uprising. "I saw how Ivankiv was firing with a machine-gun upon the people who were running for cover in the forest, and how Katriuk and Meleshko were shooting the people lying on the road," the witness said. The Schutzmannschaft Battalion 118 was chiefly responsible for the creation of German "dead zones". The dead zone policy involved exterminating communities suspected, or capable of aiding the Soviet partisans who had launched ambushes against Nazi forces in Belarus.

Personnel

The battalion consisted of 3 companies totaling 500 men, which in turn were divided into 3 platoons each:
;Commanders:
;Company leaders:
;Platoon leaders:
;Chiefs-of-Staff:
;Known privates:
Names of individuals on record include: I. Kozynchenko, G. Spivak, S. Sakhnо, O. Knap, T. Topchiy, I. Petrichuk, Lakustа, Lukovich, Scherban, Varlamov, Khrenov, Yegorov, Subbotin, Iskanderov, Khachaturyan, and Vladimir Katriuk, implicated by witness along with Ivankiv, and Meleshko. Tried in the Soviet Union and sentenced to minor prison terms were Fedorenko, Golchenko, Vertelnikov, Gontarev, Funk, Medvedev, Yakovlev, Lappo, Osmakov, Sulzhenko, Trofimov, Sparrow, Kolbasin, and Muravev.