German-Polish historian Professor Frank Golczewski (
University of Hamburg) describes the activities of the
Schutzmannschaft Battalion 201 in Belarus as "fighting partisans and killing Jews".
John-Paul Himka, a specialist in Ukrainian history during World War II, and
Ivan Katchanovski of the
University of Ottawa both note that while no one has studied the specific activities of the 201st battalion from this perspective, it is known that Schuma battalions such as the 201 in Belarus were used to fight partisans and murder Jews, that (according to Katchanovsky) there was a strong likelihood that the 201 Battalion was involved in genocide of Jews and Belarusians, and that this topic is worthy of more investigation, although it hasn't been studied in depth.
David R. Marples notes that
Wiktor Poliszczuk claimed that Schutzmannschaft Battalion 201 in Belarus completed brutal pacification of Belarusian villages, and the men had experience with elimination of the Jewish population; however he also describes Poliszczuk's book as a polemic, written from the Soviet perspective, and one-sided. According to OUN's own records, more than 2,000 Soviet partisans were killed by battalion personnel during its 9-month stay in Belarus. Historian
Per Anders Rudling noted, that the so-called "partisans" were nearly synonymous with Jews, as according to
Arthur Nebe, the leader of
Einsatzgruppe B,"The view that “The Jews are without exception identical with the concept of partisan” was a key assumption of the architects of the German counter-insurgency campaigns". ==Disbanding==