Accused en masse of pro-German sympathies and collaboration, the entire Soviet population of Karachay, Balkars, Ingush, Chechen, Kalmyks, and Crimean Tatars were deported to Siberia and Central Asia between 1943 and 1944 in an unprecedented act of collective punishment. The deportations were ordered by an increasingly paranoid Josef Stalin who feared the historical grievances of non-Russian ethnic minorities might lead to further collaboration with foreign powers and disloyalty to the Soviet government.
According to the Soviet government, 10% of the 183,000 Crimean Tatars served in German battalions, while Crimean Tatar activists today say that there were just 800 willing collaborators. As punishment, on 18 May 1944, 80 years ago today, the entire Crimean Tatar ethnic group in the Soviet Union was deported to Uzbekistan. Officially, one fifth of those deported died within the next year and a half, although activists claim that in reality almost half of them perished in the deportations, which were implemented in extremely harsh and brutal conditions and led to immense suffering, cultural dislocation and the dispossession of the Crimean Tatars’ traditional lands.