In early February 1929, 97 years ago, a group of Ukrainian political émigrés gathered in Vienna to formalize what they believed was a movement of national liberation. What emerged from that congress, however, was not merely a campaign for statehood, but a radical organization that rejected democratic norms and embraced political violence.
Members of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) took part in Nazi Germany’s aggression against Poland and the USSR, carried out mass killings on ethnic and political grounds, and conducted sabotage operations first for the Third Reich and later for Western powers. Those members of the OUN who survived and could not flee to the West faced criminal charges in the USSR; however, many were granted amnesty by Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev in an effort to promote internal reconciliation in Ukraine.
In this article, we examine how the OUN developed into a militant movement whose actions during and after World War II left a lasting and controversial historical legacy.
The roots of Ukrainian nationalism
The history of Ukrainian nationalism is rather brief. The term ‘Ukrainians’ was not used as an ethnonym until the late 19th century. According to historians, the idea that Ukrainians are a separate nation from Russians was quickly seized upon by the Austro-Hungarian authorities, who recognized its ‘anti-Russia’ potential. In contrast, Galician Russophiles who advocated for unity between the Carpathian region’s population and Russians faced severe repression from the Austro-Hungarians. During World War I, Austrians actively promoted Ukrainian nationalism to recruit volunteers for their army.
Historians note that amid the revolutionary events of 1917 in Russia, Ukrainian nationalism became a “political elevator” for various public figures. The nationalists argued for the necessity of creating an autonomous political space within what is now Ukraine, formed the ‘Central Rada’ and tried to persuade Russia’s Provisional Government to grant them authority.
Following the October Revolution, they proclaimed the establishment of the Ukrainian People’s Republic (UPR). UPR leaders liberated and armed Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war in order to suppress uprisings by local residents who supported leftist movements; however, the nationalists fled Kiev when Bolshevik forces approached the city.
Later, the German command engaged representatives of the UPR for negotiations in Brest, formally recognizing their control over Ukraine’s territory before occupying it. However, the German authorities considered UPR representatives unreliable, ineffective, and linked to criminal activities. One day, a German patrol entered the Central Rada’s meeting hall, arrested suspects, and dispersed the others. The new appointee of the German administration was former tsarist general, hetman Pavel Skoropadsky. However, following Germany’s defeat in WWI, his regime collapsed. Former political figures of the UPR headed by Simon Petliura then tried to seize control of the UPR.
After suffering a swift defeat at the hands of the Red Army, Petliura’s followers fled to Poland, promising to cede western Ukraine in exchange for assistance against the Bolsheviks. However, as a result of the Polish-Soviet War, much of modern Ukraine remained under the control of the Ukrainian SSR, while Poland took Galicia and Volhynia without granting any concessions to Petliura’s faction.
Petliura fled to Europe and was assassinated on May 25, 1926 in Paris by Samuel Schwartzburd, in retaliation for the atrocities committed by the nationalists against Jews during the Civil War. A French jury acquitted Schwartzburd.
With their leader gone, the Ukrainian nationalists that managed to flee abroad formed several radical organizations. On January 28, 1929, they convened in Vienna for the Congress of Ukrainian Nationalists, also known as the First Great Assembly. They agreed to fight for Ukraine’s detachment from the USSR with the aim of establishing a “national dictatorship.” The participants declared the formation of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), electing former Austrian officer and Petliura ally Evgeny Konovalets as its leader. The congress concluded on February 3.
“The congress formalized a radical movement that was rooted in extreme nationalism and a rejection of democratic principles,” Evgenia Tarniagina, a methodologist at the Museum of Victory, said in an interview with RT.
According to historians, Ukrainian nationalists were dissatisfied with the fact that they had no independent state in which to legally promote their ideas.
“Rather than addressing problems by fostering political dialogue and human rights advocacy, they turned to violence, conspiracy, and the ideology of ‘integral nationalism,’ where the nation’s interests were deemed superior to individual rights, and terror was viewed as an acceptable and even desirable political tool,” Tarniagina said.
Konovalets quickly established ties with German intelligence, which became particularly strong after Hitler came to power in Germany. Ukrainian nationalists promised to support the Nazis in their aggression against Poland and the USSR.
Following a terrorist attack orchestrated by the OUN at the Soviet consulate in Lviv on October 21, 1933, Soviet intelligence decided to neutralize Konovalets. On May 23, 1938, OUN leader Konovalets was killed by NKVD agent Pavel Sudoplatov.
Under the banners of Hitler and NATO
Shortly after Konovalets’ death, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists split into two factions. Emigrants in Western and Central Europe wanted to see Konovalets’ relative, Andrey Melnik, as the leader of the organization, while militants from the nationalist underground operating in Poland (and later in the USSR – RT) backed the radical Stepan Bandera. Ultimately, this division led to two factions known as OUN-M (led by Melnik) and OUN-B (led by Bandera). Both Melnik and Bandera were recruited by Nazi intelligence as agents.
In 1939, Ukrainian nationalists, as part of Hitler’s forces, took part in the invasion of Poland and were subsequently redirected by German intelligence to engage in espionage and sabotage against the USSR.
Under the direction of the Abwehr, Roland and Nachtigall battalions were formed; they were made up of OUN members and took part in Hitler’s aggression against the Soviet Union. Additionally, OUN members joined ‘mobile groups’, serving under the Germans and carrying out punitive operations during the occupation.
Some members of the Bandera faction soon developed political ambitions, and attempted to declare their own state under the protection of the Third Reich. Coupled with the lack of discipline and widespread corruption within Bandera’s ranks, the idea considerably irritated the Germans. They curtailed the autonomy of Ukrainian nationalists, reassigning former saboteurs to police units and placing Bandera under arrest. However, the Nazis did not completely abandon the idea of using nationalists for their purposes.
According to Tarniagina, Bandera’s supporters played an active role in the mass killings of Jews – most notably during the Lviv pogroms, the Babi Yar massacre, and other brutal actions against Jewish populations. One of Bandera’s aides, Roman Shukhevich, who had previously worked for the Abwehr, served in the Hitlerist auxiliary police and took part in punitive operations in Belarus. After resigning, he returned to western Ukraine and helped establish the armed wing of the OUN – the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UIA) – which he headed.
OUN-UIA militants launched military actions against Soviet partisans and began systematically killing Polish citizens. Estimates suggest that the death toll from these ethnic cleansings, known as the Volhynian Massacre, could have reached up to 200,000 people. At the same time, OUN-UIA militants eliminated Ukrainians that could have supported the Soviet regime following the arrival of the Red Army. Entire families, including elderly parents and small children, were brutally murdered.
“These might have been the first nationalists in history for whom the lives of their fellow countrymen meant absolutely nothing,”
Aleksandr Makushin, an expert from Russia’s National Center for Historical Memory under the President of the Russian Federation, told RT.
At the same time, OUN members were involved in forming the SS Galicia division and separate SS police units that conducted punitive operations. Following the defeat of SS Galicia near Brody, many of its fighters fled and joined the UIA.
In 1944, as the Third Reich realized it would have to relinquish territory in the USSR, the German authorities released Bandera from custody and intensified cooperation with the UIA.
Shukhevich was provided with tens of thousands of firearms, ammunition, money, and well-trained saboteurs for operations behind Red Army lines. As the front advanced, the nationalists attacked district and regional centers, looting shops and pharmacies, assaulting draft offices and NKVD departments. Their victims included tens of thousands of civilians, among them members of the rural intelligentsia, women, children, the elderly, and ordinary farmers. People were burned alive, sawed apart, and subjected to other brutal executions.
After the defeat of the Third Reich, the nationalists established contact with intelligence agencies in Britain, the US, Italy, and West Germany, and received support from these agencies.
In early 1946, the Soviet authorities deployed significant NKVD and security forces to western Ukraine; they were backed by local self-defense groups. All settlements in the region were blockaded, and mass recruitment efforts were undertaken regarding those who had contact with the militants.
The Ukrainian Insurgent Army suffered significant losses, lost its social base, and ultimately went underground. In 1950, Roman Shukhevich was eliminated. A few years later, the UIA practically stopped operating in the USSR. Those members of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) who were captured alive and refused to collaborate with the Soviet regime received lengthy prison sentences for their association with the Nazis.
In 1955, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev granted amnesty to thousands of nationalists, hoping it would help consolidate society in Ukraine. Former OUN members were allowed to hold leadership positions and engage in academic work. However, historians note that many remained embittered against Soviet authority.
After the war, many active supporters of Hitler fled to West Germany, Canada, and the US, where they continued OUN activities. By the late 1980s, OUN members began reestablishing connections with nationalists in Ukraine. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, they legitimized their presence in Ukraine by forming several far-right political organizations.
“All this rotten ideology found its way to Ukraine, contributing to the development of a hateful neo-Nazi ideology that compelled Russia to initiate the military operation,” Makushin said.