German Advance Into Yugoslavia
Germany had privately counselled Italy against making moves in the Balkans, aware that its position with regards to the Entente and the post-Armistice negotiations meant it could not be entangled in a new military conflict. But with the declaration of Croatian independence and calls for protection from the Volksdeutsche minorities in Drava and Danube Banates, Germany saw that it had to move to protect its interests at least in the northern border regions of Yugoslavia before the whole of Yugoslavia descended into anarchy. Urgent messages were relayed from Berlin to London in an attempt to secure British support for a German advance to secure the borderlands of Drava Banate to protect the Slovene and German residents from the depredations of Italian and Hungarian troops and Croat militias with the withdrawal of the Yugoslav military.
Britain and Greece were so far not involved in the conflict, but the situation at the Greco-Yugoslav border was becoming concerning with refugees streaming south into Greece. The thought of approving German troops goosestepping into Yugoslavia was galling to the British government, but the obvious schism between Italian and German interests was worth exploiting under the humanitarian rationale of supporting the former Slovenian Province from Italian aggression. On the evening of the 1st May the British government relayed an approval to the German Imperial government to safeguard and protect the territory and citizens of the Yugoslavian banate of Drava for the duration of the crisis in Yugoslavia.
German troops pre-positioned along the Yugoslav border received their orders, and at dawn on the 2nd May crossed the frontier into Yugoslavia. Their engagement orders were very specific; Italian and Hungarian troops were a friendly force but were to be halted and prevented from any further advances into territory allocated to Germany, while Croat militia and Yugoslav troops were to be repulsed.
Germany applied the lessons learned in the West, and as the ground troops advanced the sky was filled with a continuous top-cover of Messerschmitt’s wearing bright yellow recognition bands. Resistance was minimal as Yugoslav forces had pulled back to the south and Croat militias were engaged in their own territory. The civilian populations in general welcomed and greeted the Germans as they arrived, seeing them as protectors from the oppression of Serbs, Croats or now Italians, and in many areas ethnic Germans militias had already seized control expediting the German advance.
The principal advance was south from Leibnitz, into Maribor and towards Celje. A secondary thrust was towards Murska Sobota down the Mur River valley. Facing no military opposition, by the the evening of the 2nd May Germany had achieved its goals and halted to consolidate.
When advised of the German advance into north-eastern Yugoslavia Mussolini was furious. The conquest of Yugoslavia was to be a demonstration of Italian military might and Italian leadership of a multinational alliance. The post-war handling of the German ethnic minorities had been a major consideration, and Mussolini had planned to award the Germanic areas of the Drava Banate as a gift to Germany from the magnanimous all-conquering Caesar. Germany had now pre-empted Mussolini and even more embarrassingly, blocked Italian troops and prevented their advance. In a fit of pique Mussolini decided that the fate of the Danube Swabians would not be in their own post-Yugoslav ethnic state. Mussolini wanted nothing to do with the potential problems of future Germanic agitation, and with Hungary’s territorial claims to the area Mussolini allocated the Banat to Hungary and washed his hands of Yugoslavian ethnic Germans.