in Warsaw (pre-war appearance), the place of arrest of the unit's soldiers , codenamed
Marynarz On Saturday, 5 June 1943, the Gestapo unexpectedly surrounded
St. Alexander's Church at
Three Crosses Square in Warsaw, where the wedding of Lieutenant
Mieczysław Uniejewski, codenamed
Marynarz, commander of one of the patrols of the Warsaw team Osa–Kosa 30, and Teofila Suchanek, sister of a soldier from this unit, was taking place. The Germans arrested almost everyone in the church, including nearly 25 soldiers of the unit, who, against all principles of conspiracy, attended the ceremony in such a large group. Among those arrested were, among others, Lieutenant Jan Papieski, codenamed
Jerzy (the first deputy commander), Aleksandra Sokal, codenamed
Władka (staff liaison), Andrzej Jankowski, codenamed
Jędrek, and Tadeusz Battek, codenamed
Góral (soldiers of the Kraków team, participants in the assassination attempt on
SS-Obergruppenführer Krüger). A preserved German report indicates that the action was not accidental, as the Gestapo had already obtained information that a wedding involving important figures of the Polish underground would take place that day at St. Alexander's Church. The report also indicates that the Germans' goal was not so much to eliminate Osa–Kosa 30, but to capture those responsible for the attacks on Krüger and the Berlin train station. 89 arrested people were taken to
Pawiak, where, after a quick selection, 33 people (mainly elderly and mothers with small children) were released. The mentioned German report states that he was associated with the detainees and was secretly brought to Pawiak, where during the confrontation he identified three people: Mieczysław Uniejewski, Aleksandra Sokal, and Krystyna Milli. During further investigations, including based on interrogations and entries from Krystyna Milli's notebook, other soldiers of Osa–Kosa 30 were identified. Most of them were soon executed. The rest were deported to
concentration camps or disappeared. The "bust" at St. Alexander's Church meant the disbandment of the Warsaw team Osa–Kosa 30. Lieutenant
Mieczysław Kudelski, codenamed
Wiktor, however, attempted to reconstruct it based on soldiers who managed to avoid arrest. Shortly afterward,
Wiktor died there under torture. In the face of exposure and disbandment of the unit, the Home Army command decided to dissolve it, which occurred at the end of July 1943. Ten surviving soldiers were incorporated into the Motor 30 unit, into Lieutenant
Pola's combat team. They participated in
Operation Góral, and later some were transferred to partisan units. Most of the tasks of the disbanded unit were taken over by the newly formed
Agat unit. Based, among other things, on the experiences of Osa–Kosa 30, the Home Army command decided that it would be organized based on scouting youth who had previously served in the
Warsaw Assault Groups.
Case of Stanisław Jaster After the war, the disbandment of the unit became the subject of historical research and investigations by the veterans' community. In his memoirs published in 1968, Aleksander Kunicki blamed
Stanisław Jaster, codenamed
Hel, an
Auschwitz-Birkenau escapee and a soldier of the unit, for the exposure of Osa–Kosa 30. Kunicki claimed, citing alleged findings from an investigation by the Home Army counterintelligence, that Jaster's escape from the camp was staged by the Germans to infiltrate the underground.
Hel supposedly later betrayed the participants of the wedding at St. Alexander's Church, identified detainees at Pawiak, and finally set a trap for Lieutenant
Wiktor. After the latter's arrest, the Gestapo allegedly faked Jaster's escape from a police car; he was supposedly later exposed by the counterintelligence and executed by order of the Polish Underground. A similar account appeared in the 1969 memoirs of Lieutenant Colonel
Emil Kumor, codenamed
Krzyś, head of the special department of the Home Army General Staff. Kunicki and Kumor's accusations sparked a long-standing and emotional debate, as many historians and veterans believed Jaster was innocent and that his death was a tragic mistake. Based on the current state of research (2016), especially available archival sources, it can be assumed with a high degree of probability that the accusations against Stanisław Jaster are unfounded. Therefore, the identity of the informant who enabled the Germans to break up the unit remains unresolved.
Tomasz Strzembosz, in his monograph
Storm Units of Conspiratorial Warsaw, indicated that
the leadership of Kosa can be largely blamed for the tragedy of its soldiers, as it did not prevent the massive participation of unit members in the wedding ceremony, and the counterintelligence cell for not detecting the informant. == Notes ==