List of Pro-Axis Leaders and Governments or Direct Control in Occupied Territories

This is a list of Native Pro-Axis Leaders and Governments or Direct Control in Occupied Territories, including:

  1. territories with some indigenous pro-Axis leaders
  2. collaborating local administrations
  3. direct administration by occupying pro-Axis forces
  • Albania (until 1945)
  • Bohemia and Moravia (until 1945)
  • Carpatho-Ruthenia (until 1944)
  • Belgium (until 1944)
  • Banat (until 1944)
  • Backa (until 1944)
  • Bosnia (until 1944-45)
  • Herzegovina (until 1944-45)
  • Dalmatia (until 1945)
  • Slovenia (Carniola) (until 1945)
  • Littoral (Küstenland) (until 1945)
  • Sanjak of Novi Pazar (until 1944)
  • Transylvania (Siebenburgen) (until 1944)
  • Kosovo (until 1944)
  • Macedonia (until 1944)
  • Montenegro (until 1944)
  • Serbia (until 1944)
  • Croatia (until 1945)
  • Slavonia (until 1944)
  • Galicia (until 1944)
  • Dobruja (until 1944)
  • Bukovina (until 1944)
  • Bessarabia (until 1944)
  • Transnistria (until 1944)
  • Moldavia (until 1944)
  • Netherlands (until 1944)
  • Luxembourg (until 1944)
  • France (German held area of France) (until 1944)
  • Channel Islands (German held area of British Isles) (until 1945)
  • Greece (until 1944)
  • Denmark (until 1945)
  • Dodecanese (until 1943)
  • Norway (until 1945)
  • Estonia (until 1944)
  • Latvia (until 1944)
  • Lithuania (until 1944)
  • Ukraine (until 1944)
  • Belarus (until 1944)
  • Russia (Occupied areas) (until 1944)
  • Caucasia (north areas) (until 1943)
  • General Government (German administration over occupied Polish areas)
  • Syria (until 1941)
  • Lebanon (until 1941)
  • Morocco (until 1943)
  • Algeria (until 1943)
  • Tunisia (until 1943)
  • Libya (until 1943)
  • Ethiopia (until 1941)
  • Somalia (until 1941)
  • Djibouti (until 1942)
  • Madagascar (until 1942)
  • Hong Kong (Kowloon) (Japanese held British Land) (until 1945)
  • Macau (Japanese Held Portuguese Land) (until 1945)
  • Philippines (until 1945)
  • Burma (until 1945)
  • Malaya (Malacca) (until 1945)
  • Singapore (Syonan) (until 1945)
  • Brunei (until 1945)
  • Dutch East Indies (Indonesia)(until 1945)
  • Christmas Island (Japanese Held British Land) (until 1945)
  • East Timor (Japanese Held Portuguese Land) (until 1945)
  • New Guinea (Japanese Held Australian Land) (until 1945)
  • Andaman & Nicobar Islands (Japanese Held British Land) (until 1945)
  • Attu (Japanese Held American Land) (until 1942)
  • Kiska (Japanese Held American Land) (until 1942)
  • Solomon Islands (until 1943)
  • Gilbert Islands (until 1944)
  • Guam (until 1944)
  • Wake Island (until 1945)
  • Nauru (until 1945)

Famous quotes containing the words list of, list, leaders, governments, direct, control, occupied and/or territories:

    Thirty—the promise of a decade of loneliness, a thinning list of single men to know, a thinning brief-case of enthusiasm, thinning hair.
    F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940)

    Religious literature has eminent examples, and if we run over our private list of poets, critics, philanthropists and philosophers, we shall find them infected with this dropsy and elephantiasis, which we ought to have tapped.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    It is our experience that political leaders do not always mean the opposite of what they say.
    Abba Eban (b. 1915)

    It has become necessary to call the attention of European governments to a fact which is apparently so insignificant that the governments seem not to notice it. The fact is this: an entire people is being annihilated. Where? In Europe. Are there witnesses? One witness, the entire world. Do the governments see it? No.
    Victor Hugo (1802–1885)

    Parliament must not be told a direct untruth, but it’s quite possible to allow them to mislead themselves.
    Norman Tebbit (b. 1931)

    Only one thing is certain: if pot is legalized, it won’t be for our benefit but for the authorities’. To have it legalized will also be to lose control of it.
    Germaine Greer (b. 1939)

    Just across the Green from the post office is the county jail, seldom occupied except by some backwoodsman who has been intemperate; the courthouse is under the same roof. The dog warden usually basks in the sunlight near the harness store or the post office, his golden badge polished bright.
    —Administration for the State of Con, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    Curiosity doesn’t matter any more. These days people don’t want to be transported to emotional territories where they don’t know how to react.
    Hector Babenko (b. 1946)