Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Tanasije Dinić

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Prime Minister
  
Milan Nedić

Prime Minister
  
Milan Nedić

Nationality
  
Serbian

Rank
  
Colonel

Preceded by
  
Milan Aćimović

Full Name
  
Tanasije Dinić

Succeeded by
  
Milan Nedić

Preceded by
  
Stojimir Dobrosavljević

Political party
  
Yugoslav National Movement

Died
  
17 July 1946, Belgrade, Serbia

Party
  
Yugoslav National Movement

Tanasije Dinić (1891, Niš, Kingdom of Serbia – 17 July 1946, Belgrade, Yugoslavia) was a Serbian military officer and later Minister of Internal Affairs, in the collaborationist regime established in occupied Serbia by Nazi Germany, the Government of National Salvation. Dinić held the rank of lieutenant-colonel in the Royal Yugoslav Army and was a British sympathizer before and during World War II. He became a member of the fascist Yugoslav National Movement in order to report to the British Foreign Office, SOE and MI6 German plans for the Balkans. Following the invasion of Yugoslavia, he held the post of minister of interior in Milan Nedić's pro-Axis government. Dinić became the minister of social policy and people's health in 1943, and was later captured by Americans near Vienna after war, interrogated, flown back to Belgrade, and handed over to the Communists. After the trial and sentencing, along with General Dragoljub Mihailović executed by firing squad were Tanasije Dinić, Velibor Janić, Boško Pavlović, Dragomir Jovanović, Miloš Glišić, Rade Radić, General Kosta Mušicki, General Djuro Dokić, all on the same day, 17 July 1946.

Postscript

Only after World War II, it was revealed the extent of Colonel Dinić's collaboration with top British spies, the chief of Special Operations Executive (SOE) detail in Belgrade, Tom S. Masterson; his assistant Julius Hanau, a British war veteran who settled in Belgrade after World War I and was then working as a representative of the Vickers Company; former engineer of British-owned Trepča Mines S. W. Bailey, who later became senior British liaison officer at General Mihailović's headquarters; and South African mining engineer, Duane T. (Bill) Hudson, also associated with Trepča Mines. Dinić kept them and their successors informed throughout the war.

References

Tanasije Dinić Wikipedia