There are numerous testimonies from many sources that were part of the “Commission of Inquiry of the Committee for a Fair Trial for Draza Mihailovich” hearings in New York in 1946 while Mihailovich was awaiting trial by the communist court in Belgrade. What I have posted here is just a portion of the conclusions of the commission which included McDowell’s testimony.
Do you realize that every time there is reference to Croatian crimes, you always bring up Mihailovich, the Chetniks, and the Serbs? It’s as if you want to distract and divert attention from one thing by focusing on another.
You are using very selective sources. There are many German and Italian sources that describe in detail how the Croatians behaved during World War Two. Gruesome detail. But you never quote the German and Italian sources when it comes to the Independent State of Croatia 1941-1945.
Dio is funny that way, he derides the communists but has no trouble presenting the communist argument when it suits him. Its all about that spit shine on that glorious Croatian past.
As for bringing up Chetniks, the Serbs here always bring up WW2 on topics that have no relevance to it like this thread. The lead article has nothing to do with WW2. So when the Serbs bring it up and try to suggest that Serbs were somehow non-collaborators, I have to pull out the facts and show otherwise.
Notice how Bokababe avoids answering the question about the Kozara anti-partisan operation in 1942. Serbs don't like to hear the fact that Vojvoda Radic's Chetniks took part in that operation to sweep the Kozara of Tito's Partisans and aided the Germans, Ustashi, and Domobrans in that action that saw those very same Serbian civilians and Partisans sent to Jasenovac.
Why don't the Serbs touch upon who defended Benkovac from the Partisans in the dying days of the war, fighting shoulder to shoulder with them? (It was the Ustashi).