
Green Amry
Green Army
"For the Land, for the People, Against the Reich."
The Green Army is a communist-socialist militia active in the territories of the former Soviet Union, particularly within the brutal German occupation zone known as Reichskommissariat Moskowien. Formed during the chaos of the Slavic Uprising of 1944, the movement draws its roots from rural peasant resistance, ex-Red Army fighters, and revolutionary agrarian ideology.
Origins and Ideology
- Emerging in 1944 as a response to both Nazi oppression and Stalinist collapse, the Green Army advocates for a peasant-based socialism, rooted in self-governance, land collectivization, and militant resistance.
- It rejects both the German Reich and the authoritarian legacy of Stalin, positioning itself as an independent leftist alternative.
- The Green Army is decentralized and non-hierarchical, led by local revolutionary councils made up of former soldiers, community leaders, and peasants.
- They operate in mobile guerrilla cells, specializing in sabotage, night raids, and ambushes throughout the forests and rural zones of western Russia.
Their banner features a green sickle crossed with a rifle over a dark red background.
Activity in Moskowien
- Responsible for the destruction of German supply convoys, the burning of forced labor camps, and the assassination of collaborators and SS officers in rural territories.
- In areas like Tula, Smolensk, and the Volga forests, the Green Army controls stretches of countryside at night and conducts daytime raids.
- Their strength lies in local support, with peasants often providing food and shelter, despite the risk of brutal German reprisals.
Relations with Other Forces
- The SS-Hauptamt Ost has declared the Green Army a "subversive insurgency" and orders total extermination upon discovery.
- The Russian Liberation Army (ROA) engages them wherever possible, but suffers from poor morale and lack of local trust.
- The Supreme Union of Siberian Socialists regards them with cautious respect, although ideological differences remain significant.

