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Norwegian resistance movement
*** Shopping-Tip: Norwegian resistance movement
:''For the
game modification mini-mod, see
Forgotten Hope#Norwegian Resistance Norwegian Resistance''
'''Norwegian resistance''' to the
Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany from
1940 to
1945 took several forms:
* '''Asserting the legitimacy of the exiled Norwegian government''', and by implication the lack of legitimacy of the Quisling regime and Terboven administration
* The '''initial defense''' in Southern Norway, which was largely disorganized, but succeeded in allowing the government to escape capture
* The more '''organized military defense and counter-attacks''' in parts of Western Norway and in Northern Norway, aimed at securing strategic positions and the evacuation of the government
* '''Armed resistance''', in the form of sabotage, commando raids and other special operations during the occupation
* '''Civil disobedience''' and unarmed resistance
See also
Weserübung and
Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany
Asserting legitimacy of exiled Norwegian government
The Norwegian government of Prime Minister
Johan Nygaardsvold, with the exception of foreign minister
Halvdan Koht and minister of defense
Birger Ljungberg, was largely caught by surprise when it became apparent in the early hours of
April 9,
1940 that
Nazi Germany had launched an invasion of Norway. Although some of the country's gold reserve had already been removed from Oslo, there were few contingency plans for such an invasion.
Unprepared though it may have been, the Norwegian government was unwilling to capitulate to the ultimatum timed to coincide with the arrival of German troops and delivered by
Curt Bräuer, the German minister in Oslo. The German demand that Norway accept the "protection of the Reich" was rebuffed by Koht and the Norwegian government before dawn had even broken on the morning of invasion.
"''Vi gir oss ikke frivillig, kampen er allerede i gang''," replied Koht. "We will not submit voluntarily; the struggle is already under way."
Anticipating German efforts to capture the government, the entire
Storting Norwegian parliament, the
Haakon VII royal family, and cabinet hastily evacuated Oslo by train and car to
Hamar and then on to
Elverum, where an extraordinary session of parliament was called. In large part because of the presence of mind of the parliament's president
Carl Johan Hambro, the Storting managed to pass an emergency measure (known as the
Elverum Authorization) that gave full authority to the king and his cabinet until the Storting could convene again.
This gave the king and cabinet constitutional authority to reject the German emissary
Curt Bräuer's ultimatums to accept the German invasion. Although there were several German attempts to capture or kill King Haakon and the Norwegian government, they managed to evade these attempts and traveled through Norway's remote interior until leaving the country for
London in early June.
Reserving the constitutional legitimacy of the Norwegian government also undermined
Vidkun Quisling's attempts at claiming the Norwegian government for himself. After Quisling had proclaimed his assumption of the government of Norway, several individuals on the Supreme Court took the initiative to establish an Administrative Council (''Administrasjonsrådet'') in an effort to stop him. This became a controversial initiative, in that both the legitimate Norwegian government refused to give the council any legal backing, and the German authorities ended up disbanding it.
Initial defense
After a longstanding policy of disarmament after
World War I, the Norwegian military was largely underfunded and undertrained by the late 1930's, though some politicians across the political spectrum had advocated strengthening the country's defense capabilities. As a result, forces in Southern Norway were largely unprepared for the
Operation Weserübung invasion, and the German invading army met little initial resistance landing in Norway.
One notable exception was the sinking of the
German cruiser Blücher by the
Oscarsborg festning Oscarsborg fortress at the sound at
Drøbak, which delayed the capture of
Oslo long enough for the government to escape the capital.
There was also spirited defense at other locations, including
Midtskogen, but these were largely the result of improvised missions by isolated military units and irregular volunteers. The battles slowed down the German advance by several days, allowing the Norwegian government to evade capture and conduct critical constitutional business.
Counter-attacks
Several Norwegian military units that had mobilized as a precautionary measure in
Northern Norway during the
Winter War, in cooperation with Polish and British forces launched several counterattacks with moderate success. Allied forces had several successes in Northern Norway, but were redirected for the ultimately futile defense of
France. While Northern Norway ultimately fell, efforts there allowed the Norwegian government, including the royal family, to escape and maintain the legitimate government in exile, as part of the Allies.
While stationed in
London, the government contributed Norwegian forces to the Allied effort and ordered the Norwegian Merchant Fleet to assist in transportation, to facilitate this the ships were operated under the
Nortraship organisation; at that time the worlds largest shipping company. It also created apprehension in the Nazi leadership that Allied forces might try to recapture Norway to deny German naval units access to the
North Atlantic, tying up several hundred thousand forces that otherwise would have been deployed to other fronts.
Armed resistance
Although Norway did not see major battles beyond those in Narvik, a number of military operations served to subvert the Nazi authorities and contribute to the larger war effort.
Milorg started out as a small sabotage unit and ended up building a full military force in time for the liberation.
Company Linge was a special operations unit that specialized in coastal insertions and combat.
There were repeated raids in
Lofoten,
Måløy, and other coastal areas.
Norwegian spotters aided in the destruction of numerous German
warships, such as the
German_battleship_Bismarck Bismarck and the
Tirpitz. The Norwegian resistance also smuggled people in and out of Norway during the war, through Sweden or by fishing boats to
Shetland (referred to as the "
Shetland bus"). A number of saboteurs (most notably
Max Manus and
Gunnar Sønsteby) destroyed ships and supplies. Perhaps its most famous achievements were a series of operations to destroy
Norsk Hydro's
heavy water plant and stockpile of heavy water at
Vemork, crippling the German nuclear program (see: ''
Norwegian heavy water sabotage''). The Germans attempted to stifle Resistance activities and executed several innocent Norwegian men, women and children in retaliation after any Resistance act. Probably the worst act of reprisal was the assault on the fishing village of
Telavåg in the spring of 1942.
In the mid 1980s it was revealed that Sweden aided the Norwegian resistance movement with training and equipment in a series of camps along the Norwegian border. To avoid suspicion they were camoflaged as police training camps.
Intelligence gathering within occupied Norway was very much needed for the allied forces, and several organisations were established for this, the largest and most efficient was called
XU. Established by
Arvid Storsveen, its basis were students from the University of Oslo. One interesting fact was that two of its four leaders were young women, among them
Anne-Sofie Østvedt.
Civil disobedience
Of lesser military importance was the distribution of illegal newspapers (often with news items culled from Allied news broadcasts; possession of radios was illegal). The purpose of this was twofold: it counteracted German propaganda, and it maintained nationalistic, anti-German feelings in the population at large. It has been suggested that combating the illegal press expended German resources out of proportion to the illegal media's actual effects.
Finally, there was the attempt at maintaining an "Ice Front" against the German soldiers. This involved, among other things, never speaking to a German if it could be avoided (many pretended to speak no German, though German skills were then almost as prevalent as English now) and refusing to sit beside a German on public transportation. The latter was so annoying to the occupying German authorities that it became illegal to stand on a bus if seats were available.
Towards the end of the war, the resistance become more open, with rudimentary military organizations set up in the forests around the larger cities. A number of Nazi collaborators and officials were killed, and those collaborating with the German or Quisling authorities were
ostracize ostracized, both during and after the war.
A symbol of the Norwegian resistance was wearing a
paper clip on a lapel; an innocuous item, the paper clip was assumed to be a Norwegian invention, and represented uniting against the occupation.
The Norwegian Resistance museum, at
Akershus fortress,
Oslo, gives a good impression of the activities of the Norwegian resistance movement.
See also
*
Weserübung
*
British campaign in Norway
*
Vidkun Quisling
*
Norwegian heavy water sabotage
*
Operation Archery
Category:World War II resistance movements
Category:Military history of Norway during World War II
Category:National liberation movements
Category:Norway at war Resistance movement, Norwegian
it:Resistenza norvegese
no:Norsk motstandsbevegelse under andre verdenskrig
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