During early February 1943, as the Partisans began to prevail over the Chetniks as part of
Case White, Đujić and
Petar Baćović attempted to mount a counteroffensive around
Bosansko Grahovo in western Bosnia preliminary to re-capturing
Drvar. This was opposed by the Germans and made no headway. By early August, the Dinara Division was "poorly formed, badly armed and disciplined", lacked accurate rolls of its members, and consisted of no more than 3,000 effectives.
Lieutenant Colonel Mladen Žujović, one of Mihailović's few remaining delegates in the area, concluded that the division was "a pure figment of the imagination." Đujić's and Baćović's forces were active in the Dalmatian Hinterland in January 1943. 33 people were executed in the Imotski district, and 103 in the area of Vrlika and its surroundings. Between 60 and 80 Croats were killed in the village of
Maovice on 26 January 1943; victims were mostly slaughtered with knives or thrown alive into burning buildings. On 25 March 1943, Chetnik units of the Dinara Division were ordered to begin "cleansing [the area] of Croats and Muslims" and to create "one national corridor along the Dinara mountain for the connection of Herzegovina with Northern Dalmatia and Lika." Between 26-30 March 1944, Dinara Chetniks, alongside the
7th SS Division "Prinz Eugen" and the Ustaše
369th Infantry Division (under German command), massacred at least 1,525 Croat civilians during anti-Partisan reprisals across several villages in the Dalmatian Hinterland. In April 1943, Đujić's Chetniks set up a prison and execution site in the village of Kosovo (today
Biskupija), near Knin. Thousands of local civilians, (both Croats and even Serb Anti-Fascists) including women and children, as well as captured Partisans, were held and mistreated at this prison, while hundreds of prisoners (as many as over 1,000) were tortured and killed at an execution site near a ravine close to the camp. On 30 April 1944, Chetniks, in collaboration with the
SS Police Regiment Bozen and local
Italian Fascists, massacred 269 Croat civilians in village of
Lipa, near
Rijeka, of whom 121 were children between seven months and 15 years old. The Dinara Division was in December 1944 retreating to Slovenia through the
Croatian Littoral. On their way, they looted villages, killed 33 civilians, and burnt the village of
Bribir to the ground. On 21 December 1944, after Đujić requested a written guarantee from Ante Pavelić to afford him and his forces refuge in
German-occupied Slovenia, Pavelić ordered the military forces of the Independent State of Croatia to give Đujić's division free passage. However, Đujić went through an alternate route towards the
Istrian peninsula, as the routes offered by Pavelić were not secure from Partisan attacks, and killed the Croatian population along the way. When Đujić reached Slovenia, his forces joined
Dobroslav Jevđević's Chetniks,
Dimitrije Ljotić's
Serbian Volunteer Corps, and the remnants of
Milan Nedić's
Serbian Shock Corps in forming a single unit that was under the command of
Odilo Globocnik of the
Higher SS and Police Leader in the
Adriatic Littoral. ==Aftermath==