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| Osvald Group | |
|---|---|
| Participant in World War II | |
| Active | 1940-1944 |
| Leaders | Asbjørn Sunde |
| Area of operations |
Norway |
| Strength | Around 150 saboteurs and helpers (1944) |
| Allies | Communist Party of Norway, Milorg, XU, SOE |
| Opponents | Nazi Germany, Nasjonal Samling |
| Battles/wars | Sabotage, assassinations |
The Osvald Group was a Norwegian sabotage organisation during the Second World War, and led by Asbjørn Sunde, who used Osvald as one of his cover names. The organisation was originally a branch of the Wollweber League, a subsidiary to the Soviet secret police organization NKVD which dissolved when Ernst Wollweber was arrested in 1940. The Osvald Group was the most active sabotage organization in Norway from 1941 to 1944.12
Activities
After the arrest of Ernst Wollweber and the revelation of the Wollweber League, Asbjørn Sunde still had an intact organisation in Oslo, but had lost contact with Moscow, and had no funding. Sunde kept his organization alive and prepared caches of explosives around the country. They initiated their sabotage activities shortly after Operation Barbarossa, the German attack on the Soviet Union 22 June 1941, and continued until the Osvald Group was demobilised in 1944, by orders from Moscow. Their first railway sabotage mission was undertaken 20 July 1941, the blast of a Wehrmacht train at Nyland Station in Oslo. This was the start of a series of actions. The Osvald group's active resistance policy was in opposition to the Communist Party of Norway (NKP), Milorg and other organizations that preferred a more passive resistance. The group cooperated with the group 2A and 2A's police group, as well as with Milorg, SOE and XU.
From the winter of 1942 NKP formed military groups, and Sunde had meetings with their leader Peder Furubotn. Sunde established a sabotage training center in Rukkedalen and recruited a network of saboteurs in the area Torpo-Gol and Nesbyen, down the Hallingdal and further to Oslo and Bergen. In September 1942 Sunde agreed to supply guards at the communist party's central camp in Hemsedal, in exchange for practical and financial support. Sunde became NKP's military leader, and the organisation became more quick-witted. In 1944 there was a break between the group and NKP's leader Peder Furubotn, when Furubotn demanded that the group should subordinate itself to his leadership.
The Osvald Group was closed down in 1944, following orders from Moscow. During its operative period from July 1941 to July 1944 the group was responsible for more than 100 known actions, dominating sabotage activity in Norway during this period.
Post-war
Due to the political climate at the time and the group's close relations to the NKVD and Moscow, the Osvald Group received no recognition from the Norwegian Government after the war, and their members were never decorated.
A memorial was set up in Oslo 30 May 1995, in memory of saboteurs from the Osvald Group that perished during the Second World War.
References
- ^ Borgersrud, Lars (1995). "Osvald-gruppen". Norsk krigsleksikon 1940-45. Ed. Hans Fredrik Dahl. Oslo: Cappelen. 468pp. ISBN 8202141389. Retrieved on 2008-09-15. (Norwegian)
- ^ Borgersrud, Lars (1995). "Sunde, Asbjørn". Norsk krigsleksikon 1940-45. Ed. Hans Fredrik Dahl. Oslo: Cappelen. 468pp. ISBN 8202141389. Retrieved on 2008-09-15. (Norwegian)
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 19 September 2008, at 09:47.
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