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词条 Mustafa Golubić
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Legacy

  3. Citations

  4. References

{{Infobox spy
| name = Mustafa Golubić
| image =
| caption =
| allegiance = {{flag|Kingdom of Serbia|Serbia}} (1912–1918)
{{flag|Soviet Union}} (1923–1941)
| service =
| serviceyears = 1912–1918
1923–1941
| operation = Balkan Wars
World War I
World War II
| award =
| codename =
| birth_name = Mustafa Golubić
| birth_date = 24 October 1889/24 January 1891
| birth_place = Stolac, Austro-Hungary (modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina)
| death_date = July 1941
| death_place = Belgrade, German-occupied Yugoslavia
| nationality = Bosnian
| parents = Muhamed and Nura Golubić
| spouse =
| children =
| occupation =
| alma_mater = University of Belgrade
| signature =
}}

Mustafa Golubić ({{lang-sr-Cyrl|Мустафа Голубић}}; 24 October 1889/24 January 1891 – July 1941) was a Bosnian guerrilla fighter, revolutionary and intelligence agent active during World War I, the interwar period and World War II.

Following the outbreak of the Balkan Wars, Golubić joined the Chetniks of Vojislav Tankosić. During World War I, he joined the Royal Serbian Army and later visited Russia to gather recruits for the Balkan Front. After Serbia was overrun in a joint Austro-Hungarian, German and Bulgarian invasion in late 1915, Golubić retreated to the Greek island of Corfu alongside the rest of the Royal Serbian Army, where he began plotting to assassinate Kaiser Wilhelm with the apparent blessing of Dragutin Dimitrijević, the head of Serbian military intelligence. After travelling to France for the purpose of carrying out the plan, Golubić was arrested by the French authorities and deported to Corfu, where he was asked to testify against Dimitrijević, who had since been detained on charges of plotting against the Serbian crown prince, Alexander. Despite torture, Golubić refused to testify and was released. He subsequently relocated to France, where he spent the rest of the war.

In 1920, after allegedly making death threats against Alexander, he relocated to Vienna, where in 1923, he began writing for a Soviet-linked publication under a pseudonym. He was later recruited by the Soviets as an agent and carried out assassinations of Soviet adversaries abroad on behalf of the NKVD. In 1941, Golubić returned to Yugoslavia on a secret assignment. Following the Axis invasion and occupation of the country, he was arrested by the Germans and eventually killed after refusing to disclose any information under torture.

Biography

Mustafa Golubić was born in the town of Stolac, in southwestern Herzegovina.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=127}} His birth date varies by source. By some accounts, he was born on 24 October 1889.{{sfn|Paunović|1999|p=53}} Other sources list his birth date as 24 January 1891. His father, Muhamed, was a craftsman and his mother, Nura, was a homemaker.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=127}} Golubić completed his primary education in Stolac, before relocating to Sarajevo to attend high school. In 1908, he moved to Belgrade for post-secondary studies, studying law at the University of Belgrade.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} Some of Golubić's classmates and contemporaries later recounted that Golubić was recruited by the Russian secret police, the Okhrana, in his youth. The historian Vladimir Dedijer later consulted the records of the Hoover Institution in an attempt to verify this claim, to no avail.{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=435}} Following the outbreak of the Balkan Wars in November 1912, Golubić joined the volunteer Chetnik detachment of Major Vojislav Tankosić.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} As part of their training, Tankosić ordered that Golubić and the other volunteers jump into the Sava from a railway bridge, "just to see whether you are going to fulfill all my orders."{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=289}}

Once the wars had ended, Golubić left Serbia and moved to Toulouse to continue his studies. Following the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on 28 June 1914, Golubić returned to Serbia, where he again joined the ranks of Tankosić's Chetniks. Shortly thereafter, he was reassigned to the Bosnian Battalion of the Užice Army, which was under the command of General Ilija Gojković and whose chief of staff was Dragutin Dimitrijević, the head of Serbian military intelligence. Golubić arrived with a letter of recommendation signed by the academic Jevto Dedijer. In early 1915, Golubić departed for Russia on a mission to bring back volunteers to join the Royal Serbian Army. He returned to Serbia in September 1915, shortly before Austria-Hungary, Germany and Bulgaria's combined invasion of the country, which forced the its military and much of its civilian population to retreat across Albania to the Greek island of Corfu.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} Following the retreat, Golubić approached Dimitrijević with the idea of illegally entering Germany via Switzerland and assassinating Kaiser Wilhelm. Dimitrijević apparently approved of the plan.{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=425}} Golubić subsequently travelled to France, where he was arrested and imprisoned in Toulon.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} In the meantime, Dimitrijević was arrested by the Serbian military police. The arrests effectively put an end to the plot against Wilhelm.{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=425}} Golubić was later deported to Corfu at the request of the Serbian government-in-exile and handed over to the Serbian authorities.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} He was asked to testify against Dimitrijević, who stood accused of plotting against crown prince Alexander. Despite undergoing torture at the hands of the Serbian military police, Golubić refused to speak.{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=397}} Dimitrijević was executed after a show trial in June 1917. Golubić was released and left Corfu, relocating to France via Italy, and settling there for the remainder of the war.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}}

Upon returning to Serbia, which had in the meantime united with the other South Slavic lands in the Western Balkans to form the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, Golubić was immediately arrested and imprisoned inside the Rakovica Monastery. Shortly thereafter, he was exiled to Stolac and placed under constant police surveillance. After being accused of making death threats against Alexander, in late 1920, Golubić left the country and settled in Vienna. He subsequently survived an assassination attempt, and after the Austrian authorities revoked his temporary residence visa, was forced to move to Prague. The following year, he returned to Austria illegally and once again settled in Vienna. Shortly upon his return, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia ({{lang-sh|Komunistička partija Jugoslavije}}; KPJ). Between 1923 and 1927, he wrote for the Vienna-based publication La Fédération balkanique under the pseudonym Nikola Nenadović.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} The publication was directly subordinated to Soviet intelligence. During this time, he collaborated with the high-ranking Soviet agents Labud Kusovac and Pavle Bastajić.{{sfn|Banac|1988|loc=pp. 67–68, note 47}} In one of his articles for La Fédération balkanique, Golubić claimed that Dimitrijević had organized and financed the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand with the knowledge of the senior Russian diplomat Nicholas Hartwig, the Russian military attaché Viktor Alekseevich Artamonov, Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pašić, and crown prince Alexander. Describing the claims as unsubstantiated, Dedijer concludes that Golubić made these allegations "in a spirit of revenge" against Alexander, who had forced him into exile.{{sfn|Dedijer|1966|p=433}}

In 1927, Golubić moved to Moscow, where he began working for the Joint State Political Directorate ({{lang-ru|Объединённое государственное политическое управление}}; OGPU), which was later renamed the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs ({{lang-ru|Народный комиссариат внутренних дел}}; NKVD).{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} Alongside fellow Yugoslavs such as Vlajko Begović and Mirko Marković, Golubić played a key role in the Soviet Union's covert efforts to further the cause of the "world revolution". In this capacity, he took part in countless assassinations of the Soviet Union's political opponents and adversaries abroad.{{sfn|Popov|2000|pp=92–93}} His assignments took him to France, Spain, China, Japan, and North America.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} Golubić eventually attained the rank of colonel.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} The covert nature of Golubić's activities led to him having an almost legendary reputation among the Yugoslav communists. His exploits became the subject of numerous tales and yarns, the authenticity of which is difficult if not impossible to ascertain.{{sfn|Djilas|1973|pp=375–376}} Golubić was one of the few Yugoslavs living in the Soviet Union who survived the Great Purge. Of the approximately 900 Yugoslav communists living in the country in 1936–1937, at least 800 were arrested, and only forty of these survived the Gulags.{{sfn|Banac|1988|p=67}}

During the interwar period, Golubić's nephew Meho was an active communist agitator.{{sfn|Hoare|2006|p=57}} In 1940, the senior Golubić entered Yugoslavia illegally.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} He thus became one of the Soviets' principle agents in the country.{{sfn|Hoare|2007|p=89}} His time in Yugoslavia was marked by frequent clashes with the KPJ. According to the senior Yugoslav communist Milovan Djilas, Golubić was hostile to the KPJ's Central Committee, claiming that it was "composed of Trotskyites". Djilas, together with Aleksandar Ranković, another senior KPJ member, suspected Golubić himself of being a Trotskyite and feared that he was spreading misinformation regarding the Central Committee's activities to Moscow. According to Djilas, he and Ranković were prepared to assassinate Golubić, but were told to desist by Josip Broz Tito, the General Secretary of the Central Committee, who identified Golubić as an agent on "special assignment" and ordered that he be left alone.{{sfn|Djilas|1973|pp=375–376}} On 6 June 1941, Golubić was arrested at the home of the lawyer Tihomir Višnjević in a joint action carried out by the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo). Golubić had been using the pseudonym Luka Samardžić. He was subsequently placed in the custody of the Gestapo, where he was tortured. According to the war correspondent Sima Simić, who was detained alongside Golubić, the latter was so severely beaten that his face had turned blue and his urine was filled with blood.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}} Golubić adamantly refused to disclose any information to the Gestapo.{{sfn|Clissold|1975|p=94}} In July, after several weeks of torture, Golubić was taken to the Royal Garden in downtown Belgrade (modern-day Pioneers Park) and shot. He was survived by his mother, who died in 1953, aged 103.{{sfn|Ćirković|2009|p=128}}

Legacy

Following Golubić's death, the Yugoslav Partisans named a company in his honour; it was composed primarily of Bosnian Muslim fighters.{{sfn|Hoare|2013|p=74}} After the war, a Sarajevo street was named after Golubić.{{sfn|Greble|2011|p=48}} During the Bosnian War, it was renamed by the local authorities on account of Golubić's political affiliations, which were perceived as pro-Serb.{{sfn|Maček|2009|loc=p. 141, p. 229, note 1}}

Citations

References

{{refbegin|40em}}
  • {{cite book|last=Banac|first=Ivo|authorlink=Ivo Banac|year=1988|title=With Stalin against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism|publisher=Cornell University Press|location=Ithaca, New York|isbn=978-1-50172-083-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_C1zDwAAQBAJ|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Clissold|first=Stephen|year=1975|title=Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union, 1939–1973: A Documentary Survey|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|isbn=978-0-19218-315-6|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Ćirković|first=Simo C.|year=2009|title=Ко је ко у Недићевој Србији, 1941–1944|trans-title=Who's Who in Nedić's Serbia, 1941–1944|language=Serbian|publisher=Prosveta|location=Belgrade, Serbia|isbn=978-8-60701-889-5|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Dedijer|first=Vladimir|authorlink=Vladimir Dedijer|year=1966|title=The Road to Sarajevo|publisher=Simon & Schuster|location=New York City|oclc=400010|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Djilas|first=Milovan|authorlink=Milovan Djilas|others=Translated by Drenka Willen|year=1973|title=Memoirs of a Revolutionary|publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich|location=New York City|isbn=978-0-15158-850-3|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Greble|first=Emily|year=2011|title=Sarajevo, 1941–1945: Muslims, Christians and Jews in Hitler's Europe|publisher=Cornell University Press|location=Ithaca, New York|isbn=978-0-8014-6121-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=je_GozR8wRMC|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Hoare|first=Marko Attila|authorlink=Marko Attila Hoare|year=2006|title=Genocide and Resistance in Hitler's Bosnia: The Partisans and the Chetniks, 1941–1943|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|isbn=978-0-19-726380-8|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Hoare|first=Marko Attila|year=2007|title=The History of Bosnia: From the Middle Ages to the Present Day|publisher=Saqi|location=London, England|isbn=978-0-86356-953-1|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Hoare|first=Marko Attila|authorlink=Marko Attila Hoare|year=2013|title=Bosnian Muslims in the Second World War|publisher=Oxford University Press|location=Oxford, England|isbn=978-0-231-70394-9|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Maček|first=Ivana|year=2009|title=Sarajevo Under Siege: Anthropology in Wartime|publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press|location=Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|isbn=978-0-81-22943-8-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yymFDQAAQBAJ|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Paunović|first=Marko|year=1999|title=Srbi: Biografije znamenitih, A-Š|trans-title=Serbs: Biographies of Notables, A–Š|language=Serbian|publisher=Emka|location=Belgrade, Yugoslavia|isbn=|ref=harv}}
  • {{cite book|last=Popov|first=Nebojša|editor1-last=Popov|editor1-first=Nebojša|editor2-last=Gojković|editor2-first=Drinka|year=2000|title=The Road to War in Serbia: Trauma and Catharsis|chapter=Traumatology of the Party State|publisher=Central European University Press|location=Budapest, Hungary|isbn=978-963-9116-56-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GkBmdCwHuDsC|pages=81–108|ref=harv}}
{{refend}}

12 : 1889 births|1891 births|1941 deaths|20th-century Serbian people|Black Hand|Chetniks|Chetniks in the Balkan Wars|People executed by Nazi Germany|People from Stolac|Royal Serbian Army soldiers|Torture victims|Yugoslav people executed by Nazi Germany

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