Davidson travelled between
Cairo,
Jerusalem and
Istanbul as the fortunes of the war in Africa were changing. In July 1942, he de-briefed
Stanislav Rapotec, who recently arrived to Istanbul from a covert mission to Yugoslavia. In October, he was promoted to
Major and appointed the Acting Head of SOE Yugoslav Desk in Cairo assisted by Lieutenant
James Klugmann and Major William Deakin. They ultimately reported to Brigadier C M Keble, who was in charge of all operational sections of SOE Cairo. The remnants of the
Royal Yugoslav Army (RYA) rebranded as the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland (
Chetniks) and led by Colonel
Draža Mihailović, although frequently accused of complicity with the enemy and reluctance to fight, continued to receive British assistance and military missions. At the same time, SOE officers travelled to Canada to recruit mission volunteers among Yugoslav emigrants. The rumours about an active Partisan resistance movement continued as well as an inexplicable presence of numerous German divisions, desperately needed on the Eastern Front, stuck in parts of the country not known for any recognised opposition. It became clear that there was much fighting on the ground. By January 1943, intercepted and decoded German
Military Security Service (SD) radio signals detailed continuous fighting between the Partisans and the Germans. Keble asked Davidson to work closely with Deakin and plot all SD reported Partisan positions on a map. Using the German confidential sources it shortly became obvious that "The Partisans were active in most regions of Yugoslavia. They were strong, effective and aggressive. They were a formidable fighting force in constant use". On 28 January Deakin and Keble met
Winston Churchill in Cairo and showed him their map of Partisan activity. Churchill asked for a memo which Keble duly provided - named "Operations in Yugoslavia". The memo stated that aid to Mihailović should continue in areas where his troops are known to be active. It stated that 'Other resisting elements' in Slovenia and Croatia were holding down thirty divisions in areas which are vital to both Italian and German communications - without having received any external aid at all. Their leadership was politically 'extreme left' but the rank and file were 'not necessarily politically minded'. It claimed that it was inaccurate to adopt the German branding of the whole movement as 'communist'. Finally, it asked for a few long-range
Liberator aircraft so that the aid could be delivered to both sides. They received four smaller
Halifax bombers instead. It was thanks to Davidson's map that the first two missions of
Yugoslav Canadians were successfully parachuted blind into the occupied territory, hoping to stumble across local Partisans on 20 April. Both
Operation Hoathley 1 and
Operation Fungus reached the targeted groups and reported back to Cairo HQ. The team prepared the first British Liaison mission, and on 26 May six soldiers led by Deakin successfully dropped to the Partisan GHQ at
Black Lake in
Montenegro. Codenamed
Operation Typical, they landed in the middle of a large German offensive -
Operation Schwarz - which aimed to surround and destroy the Partisan forces. They followed the GHQ out of the encirclement and less than three months later Davidson joined them. == Arrival ==