SUBTERRANEAN BUNKERS OF THE UKRAINIAN UNDERGROUND MOVEMENT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 7, 2001
Sequence Number: 
6
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 24, 1950
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4.pdf464.86 KB
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("O; S NTRY "fA ,TIN REPORT 25X1A Approved For Release 200i1L031/11 ? CIA-RDP82-00457ROO4600 a .a _ h PT G NC AGENCY REPORT NO. UJ5F (Ukraine) SUBJECT Subterranean bunkers of the Ukrainian Underground vvement PLACE ACQUIRED DATE OF INFO. 25X1X l ,> 25X1A DATE fl!S `''. 24 iF: NO.. OF PAGES NO. OF ENCLS. fUSTED BELOW) SUPPLEMENT TO REPORT NO. 42-oooy sneral Although the bunkers of the U: rainian underground move;, -int considered below are all subterranean, it is nc.t uncommon for bunkers to e built above ground in buildings The majority of bunkers of all types consist of one sub- terranean room used only during, the cold moi.ths of the year., In direct contrast to operating proced;a.r:s up to the end of .orid .,ar II, no offensive act.lons are ever carried out from bankers, since they are built only for defensive purposes,, All branihes of the resistance movement use bunkers, both active partisans and sae-ialists.. In other words those members of UFA, OUN, the UHVtt, the 5B, the tied Cross, and the finance and propaganda sections who are living as i legal residents of the Soviet Union or Poland live in bunkers some time du,ing each year, Supplies of food and water must be sufficient in the fall to permit the inhabitants to remain enti-- ~a" within the bunker as long a. snow is on the ground, In reaction to in- creasingly refined and cle,'-r Soviet methods of bunker detection, the resistance movement has per force cony, .nually improved camouflage devices and other measures to prevent detectfan,, 2:, The site chosen for an underground bunker depends largely on local conditions, terrain, density of fopulat.ihn, etc,, Bunkers are often built into the sides of hills because it is east.- to dig horizontally than vertically. In general, the farther a bunker is si`.;.atec: from a settlement, a road, or any sort of thoroughfare, the better, the common location presently used is in an ordinary field covered witf brush one or two feet high. Prior to 194.6, the partisans found that bunks ,s near brooks were very ss tisfactory because, when apf roaching the bunker, cr,, could wade along the brook, thereby eliminating tell-tale footprints. Af.'icr the discovery of such a bunker in 1946,: the aaFiLt3 - began searching iU brooks for bunkers; and since that time the UPA units have been instructs;: to stop building bunkers beside brooks" UPK Headquarters issues no sl ( cific instructions concerning the location of ;bunkers, The choice of sues is left to the discretion of the local commanders, who are more familiar witt on-the-spot conditions. 'onsL action and Camouflage 3. Spades, picks, and shoNil_s are the main implements used in building bunkers. flsual.ly a large bunker '.v acconodate seven to nine ,men can be built in thre3 This document is hereby regraded to CONFIDENTIAL in accordance with the letter of 16 October 1978 from the Director of Central intelligence to the Archivist of the United States. 25X1 C CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2001/03/17.:('rir G1~4-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4 !, ')r-V1 A C 1JR0L 11%Thi..LIGLi0CF osGi NCY weeks if the men working on it spend ten hours a day or night on the job,:, Only the men who are to live in it participate ir, the building of the bunker, Formerly, ordinary workmen were blindfolded and led to the site but this became an insecure method when Soviet anti-partisan pressure on the civilian population increased. '.,;ben building in an oten field, the partisans attempt 'to dispose of the dirt in a nearby field under cultivation. At (right they mix tha dirt with plowed soil so that it looks natural. Directly over the ounker on the ground, branches and limbs of trees are laid in a Directly criss-cross fashion to increase the amount of weight which the ground over the bunker can su.ppport. leaves are then strewn over these branches and :Limbs of trees. After a firm foundation has been made, a type of asphalt or cement is ;ro rod among the branches and leaves. Above this "asphalt", dirt and grass or shru:s are planted so that the location blends with its natural surroundings. The ground above a bunker should slope so that water will drain off. 25X1X the following description of a bunker which he occupied for three and a half months during the winter of 1946-47. This typical bunker cons'.jted of one room five ,peters long and four meters wide. The height of the sloped ceiling varied `':om three and a half meters on one side of the room to two meters an the other side. The four corners of the bunker were fortified by posts made from tree trunks and the inner walls were lined with strung branches criss-crossed in much the same manner as above the ounker and strengthened with the same cemuen:t-like substance. This bunker had two openings flush with the ground, one-half meter square, which served as windows These windows were made of camouflaged removable boards., The only means of entry and exit to the bunker was a square tunnel two meters long and one meter wide, extending between the ceiling of the bunker and the surface of the ground above. At the upper entrance to the tunnel, a wooden box resting on two ledges was fitted flush with the ground, This box, filled with dirt, was camouflaged with grass To enter the ounkerA one had to lift the box by pulling a wire well hidden in the sur- rounding brush. To leave the bunker, one pushed the box up from below. aiithin this bunker there was one t-.bie with an oil lamp, two chairs, several barrels containing food, a chest containing weapons and ammunition, a Stove, and a wooden structure partitioned into twelve bunks. Under the bunks were stored boxes of food and arm, The stove in the bunker was used not only for cooking but for warmth. Cooking was done only on moonless nights; the stovepipe emerged in a clum., of bushes above the bunker. The heat created during the cooking hours had to last to warm the bunker until the stove could be used again the following slight . 7. In order to ventilate most bunkers, a small hole is drilled up the middle of a nearby tree,. This method is general.I-y used for forest bunkers. Other- there appears to be no specific provision for ventilation except for the ordinary amount that would come 'nto a bunker through the opening; and closing of the tunnel or "windows" or through cracks. In some bunkers there is a small tunnel built off the main room which is used for toilet facilities. :>easonal U ee 8,, bunkers arm usually built in the mate fail or just before the gro-ind freezes., The partisans move into the bunkers in December or January and stay there underground until about April. During this time, they do not leave the bun- ker unless there is no snow on the ground., 9., Bunkers are built either as the winter quarters for small groups of ordinary Partisans or for specialist underground workers such as printers. Fartisans normally leave their bunkers in the spring and live above ground until the p ol.lowingr, winter. Specialists, however, often continue liv ,g in their bunker as long as it is safe to do so during all seasons of the year, 12. The men who live in bunkers usually sleep between 5:00 am and 3:00 pm. Normally, breakfast is e q/ / ,(~9 la-R E52-6d4gr Wt'YO U 0~-4a Approved For Release 8 / A Approved For Release 2001/03/1.7tlA-RDP82-00457R004GM15R006-4 NTft:l, IN i' ;La..M hCt, AGu CY lecture and study period which lasts five or six hours. Ali.tary history of the Ukniine, compass and map reading, political indoctrination, and partisan warfare are only a few of the topics that are taught during these sessions. Naturally, the caliber teaching depends on the ability of the group leader and the special talents of the other inhabitants. At ;aid nig?,ht the occupants have their main meal, and an hour before daybreak they have their supper and go to bed. 11, During the summer, the UNA has a five-week course in first aid, which trains about fifty men each year. 0ihenever possible, the occupants of a bunker will include one of these trained men dur.ng the winter. If, however, a bunker has no one trained in first aid, all occupants 6o what they can to aid a -.Lek or wounded companions. Regardless of the circumstances, a sick man remains ).!.side the bunker until spring. The security danger is considered too great during the winter period to allow the man to go to a villa;-e or town for medical treatment. Sc:curitvLeasures 12~ ~:'henever practical, i.e., not during the snow season, the men in a bunker perform guard duty, This duty consists solely of guarding the bunker. The guard rests in concealment usually not gore than a meter from the entrance to the bunker itself, so that no unnecessary footprints are left on the ground. This guard is necessary to keep the occupants from being caught unaware by an intruder. 1.3. There are four standard ways of dealing with intruders who discover the location of a bunker while it is in use: a, If the men in the bunker know the man who discovers their hiding place they warn him of the danger to all concerned if the Soviets should "' od the location of the bunker. Following a lengthy lecture, the man is set free, Should the man riot be well-known to the occupants of the bunker, he is kept in the bunker until a check.can be made of him. If tine occupants are unable to obtain any information, derogatory or otherwise, they often keep the man with them in the bunker throughout the winter. P. If the man who discovers the ounker is a kncan agent, or subsequent in- formation should prove him to be one, he is liquidated? d, Then a bunker has been discovered and it appears likely that other per soars of unknown reliability know of its location, the bunker is evacuated. Evacuation is also normal if a person who has discovered the location manages to escape? Some bunkers are built with an escape tunnel or hatch, usually very crudely fashioned and barely wide and high enough for one ;;:an at a time to squeeze through",. This exit is never used except for emergency escape:, when the decision to evacuate has been made the occupants take all ;capers and printed material, weapons, ammuni,ion, and, if tit.:e permits, their food. A one-room bunker with about ten men can usually be evacuated completely in half an hoFurj ,fter le_;vinc; the bunker, the men bury everything that they have taken with them in order to be able to travel to the next safest place without being burdened with extra equipment, Soviet , ods for Discovering iunkers Generally speaking, Soviet bunker-detecting methods have gone through the following three phases since 1943: Approved For Release 2001/03/17 : CIA-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4 Approved For Release 2001 /03/1 a; A-RDP82-00457R00460005g%~-4 C :iNTRAt, fl TELLM:NCE t>,G ,NCY a.: The Red Army on the way to or from. the r,estern front in 1943 through 1945 combed specified areas looking for bunkers and partisans. They concentrated r.o:,tly on wooded areas? Larger troop units were sent through the woods searching. The soldiers were easily spotted by the UPA men and few partisans were discovered during these years, b. By 1945 and 19469 Soviet Army troops were no long.r used because they were considered unreliable. Instead, LIVI) and special troops in groups of 200 were sent into areas known to contain partisans. One source told of a wooded area, forty-five kilometers long and seven kilometers wide, where about 700 UPA partisans lived. The doviet^ sent 8,000 ir,VD troops into this area to ferret out the partisans during the summer of 1946: At that ti.?:e of the year, UPt; partisans were living above ground. There rictle three former forest rangers with the parti- sans that summer who had formerly worked in this same forest complex.: Consequently, by followii.g the directions of these rangers, the par- tisan units spent the entire summer leading; the Soviets a merry chase through the woods. The groups of 200 men that the Soviet sent out from time to time were not familiar with the woods and were easy marks for the small bands of UPA men, who could spot them coming and chose the convenient time and place for an ambush or encounter. because they were losing too many men on these forays into partisan country, the Soviets gave up Phase 2 at the end of 1946. G., harly 1947 marked the beginning of the latest and most successful Soviet method of detecting the location of bunkers and partisan units. After the mass troop action of Phases 1 and 2 _I roved unsuccessful, the Soviets decided on the one-man penetraticn method,, They would put one man into a suspected partisan area and order him to report all information that he could obtain regarding the possible location of partisan groups. According to recent reports, these agents are more interested in the general area where partisan bunkers are located than in the specific location of any one bunker. These men also live in an area for a bng time and attempt to gain the confidence of the local population before starting; on their task of ferreting out bunkers of the underground rnoveirent. Prior Lo July 1948, it was known that MVD troops staticn>1 in the obl.ast capital, Drogobych, were given a course in the detection of bunkers. H captured is~slD man who had. attended the course in Drogo- bych told the UPA that the aIVU troops were given instruction on seventy-six different types of ounkers used by the partisans, MVD Headquarters in Kiev reportedly has a central office entirely de.-oted to the study and comparison of bunko s and means of detecting them. 16 the Soviets are very thorough in their attempts to 25X1X locate centers of artisan activity,. He claims that, if, for example, the A'VD locates a bunker in a well or near abrook,a check of every brook and well in that particular area for further evidence of bunkers can be expected. He also mentioned the fact that in the winter of 1947-1948 the Soviets sus- pected that there were strong and well-organized UPA partisans in a certain territory in the western Ukraine. In this region of about fifteen villages and 7,,00{) inhabitants,, there was a wooded area where the Soviets had cap- tured a Polish youth who at.parently had no great love for the Ukrainians. After plying the Pole for a week with. food and wine, they instructed him to -rend some time in the forest area and to attempt to obtain all the informa- tion that he could concerning possible partisan activity? This method proved unsuccessful because the ,yo ,ng Pole vies not familia- with the woods. 17. Still undaunted. the Soviet: tried another approach. One even, - - they robbed several homes in one of the villages and the next day, professing great concern over the robbery, the Sovie6ta_ went into the village and searched, for the "robber". The wor i as quietly passed around by the MVD that quite possibly the Pole who had spent some time in the village might Approved For Release 2001/03/17 : CIA-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4 Approved For Release 2001/03/17,;,G4-RDP82-00457R004600050006-4 25X1A Cei. I TLaj CONFIDENTWM have ccrisritted the rob;.eries.,,eanwhile, the Polish boy had taken to the woods to hide out from the villagers and supposedly from the Soviets Not long after h~vinV., [,one to the woods,, he net t-.itlo UP,i teen one evening.. He yearned theta th`lt the Soviets were in the village. They thanked him and went oriA but the young rote quietly followed them. He soon noticed that their footsteps suddenly sto,..ed ahead ark's he heard nothing f or a while In this manner he was able to surmise the ap,.roximate location of the bun- ker,. The nest-evening; the juiVAU troops surrounded the area, and a-fight ensued the followint it rning . During this encounter, four Urea men and six Soviet's A.e killed The young dole who liad been the infors: 3 was later captured by the UPa and verified the above incident in detail, SF C~ T Approved For Release 2001/03/17: IA-RDP82- flO06-4