Wachlarz
Wachlarz (
Polish for
folding fan) was a
Polish World War II resistance organization formed by the
Armia Krajowa for sabotage duties behind the German
Eastern Front, outside of the Polish borders. Its commanders were Lt.Col.
Jan Włodarkiewicz (until 1942) and Lt.Col.
Remigiusz GrocholskiOriginally formed in
1941, shortly after the outbreak of the Nazi-Soviet war, the organization was subordinate to the
Związek Walki Zbrojnej and bore the cryptnonym of
18, later changed to
27. The final name, Wachlarz, was a result of the subdivision of the organization onto several branches, each trying to spread its influence from certain portions of the Polish border deep into the Soviet territory. There were five different sectors of Wachlarz, each acting independently and formed along several main supply lines of the German war machine:#
Lwów-
Tarnopol-
Zhmerynka-
Dnepropetrovsk#
Równe-
Zhytomir-
Kiev#
Brześć nad Bugiem-
Pińsk-
Homel#
Lida-
Minsk-
Borisov-
Orsha#
Wilno-
Daugavpils-
PolotskThe main aim of the organization was to prepare reconnaissance, intelligence, sabotage and diversion between the Eastern Front and the pre-war Polish borders, from the
Baltic Sea to southern
Ukraine. By cutting the supply lines and disruptung troop movement, the organization was to be prepared to cut the German lines during the planned all-national uprising. The aim was to separate the German army from its supply depots and allow for the Polish underground forces to liberate Poland while the Germans in the USSR are crushed both from the east and the west.
Initially the unit was formed of officers of the
Tajna Armia Polska organization, incorporated into the ZWZ in 1941. After its formation, the
Armia Krajowa took the command over the Wachlarz. Although at its height the organization had roughly 1000 highly-trained members, most of which were trained in
commando warfare as the
Cichociemni and since 1942 it carried over more than 100 major acts of sabotage, its efficiency was seriously limited by both the
Gestapo and the
Soviet partisans. The most notable success was cutting all railway lines leading to and from
Minsk in May of 1942 and a similar action in
Brześć in August of the same year. Between December of 1942 and February of the following year a large part of the 4th sector was arrested by the Gestapo. They were liberated from the
Pińsk prison by a successful action of
Jan Piwnik.
Until March of
1943 all units of Wachlarz were incorporated into the
KeDyw organization.