Rise: summer 1944 – summer 1946 In the first year of partisan warfare, about 10,000 Lithuanians were killed – about half of the total deaths. Men avoided conscription to the Red Army and hid in the forests, spontaneously joining the Lithuanian partisans. Not all groups were armed or intended to actively fight the Soviets. Partisan groups were relatively large, 100 men and more. There were several larger open engagements between the partisans and
NKVD, like in Kalniškė, Paliepiai,
Seda, Virtukai, Kiauneliškis, Ažagai-Eimuliškis and the village of Panara. Since the Soviets had not established control, the partisans controlled entire villages and towns. In July 1945, after the end of World War II, the Soviets announced an "amnesty" and "legalization" campaign for those hiding in the forests to avoid conscription. According to a Soviet report from 1957, in total 38,838 people came forward under the campaign (8,350 of them were classified as "armed nationalist bandits" and 30,488 as deserters avoiding conscription).
Maturity: summer 1946–1948 In the second stage of partisan warfare, the partisan groups became smaller but better organized. They organized themselves into units and military districts and sought better centralization. The territory of Lithuania was divided into three regions and nine military districts (): • Southern Lithuanian or
Nemunas:
Tauras and
Dainava districts, • North – Eastern Lithuanian or
Kalnų (Mountains):
Algimantas,
Didžioji Kova,
Vytis and
Vytautas districts, • Western Lithuanian or
Jūros (Sea):
Kęstutis,
Prisikėlimas and
Žemaičiai districts. Open engagements with NKVD/MGB were replaced by more clandestine activities. It was important to keep up people's spirits. Therefore, the partisans hid in bunkers and engaged in political and propaganda activities. In particular they protested and disrupted elections to the
Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union in February 1946 and to the
Supreme Soviet of the Lithuanian SSR in February 1947. They published bulletins, leaflets and newspapers. Almost 80 different periodicals were published by the partisans. MGB also changed its tactics and began to recruit agents and organize
destruction battalions. The partisans responded by organizing reprisal actions against collaborators with the Soviets. To combat the guerrillas, in May 1948 the Soviets carried out the largest deportation yet from Lithuania,
Operation Spring, and some forty to fifty thousand people associated with the "forest brothers" were deported to Siberia.
Decline: 1949–1953 map indicating partisan areas of operationIn February 1949, partisan leaders met in the village of
Minaičiai and established a centralized command, the
Union of Lithuanian Freedom Fighters.
Brigadier General Jonas Žemaitis was elected chairman. On February 16, 1949, the 31st anniversary of the
Act of Independence of Lithuania, the Joint Staff of the Union of Lithuanian Freedom Fighters signed a declaration on the future of Lithuania stating that the reinstated Lithuania should be a democratic state that would grant equal rights for every citizen based on freedom and democratic values. It did declare that the
Communist party was a criminal organization. The document of the declaration survived and was preserved by the
KGB. In 1999, the Lithuanian
Seimas (parliament) formally recognized this declaration as a Declaration of Independence.
Juozas Lukša was among those who managed to escape to Western countries; he wrote his memoirs –
Forest Brothers: The Account of an Anti-Soviet Lithuanian Freedom Fighter, 1944–1948 – in Paris, and was killed after returning to occupied Lithuania in 1951. By the early 1950s, the Soviet forces had eradicated most of the Lithuanian nationalist resistance. Intelligence gathered by the Soviet spies in the West and KGB infiltrators within the resistance movement, in combination with large-scale Soviet operations in 1952, managed to end the campaigns against them.
Adolfas Ramanauskas (code name
Vanagas), the last official commander of the Union of Lithuanian Freedom Fighters, was arrested in October 1956 and executed in November 1957. The last Lithuanian anti-Soviet resistance fighters killed in action were
Pranas Končius (code name
Adomas) and Kostas Liuberskis (code name
Žvainys). Končius was killed on July 6, 1965 (some sources say he shot himself on July 13 in order to avoid capture) and awarded the
Cross of Vytis in 2000, which was later revoked in 2015 due to his involvement in the Holocaust. Liuberskis was killed on October 2, 1969; his fate was unknown until the late 2000s. Stasys Guiga (code name
Tarzanas) died in hiding in 1986. ==Structure==