A picture of Waffen-SS and Wehrmacht co-operation in Yugoslavia.
On the right is
SS-Obergruppenführer und General der Waffen-SS Artur Phleps, who commanded the 7th Waffen-SS Gebirgsjager (Mountain troops) Division, considered by Tito and his partisans the most dangerous of their enemies. He served Austria-Hungary in World War one, being a Transylvanian German. When the empire ended with the war, he went home and spent the 20's and 30's in the Romanian army. After basically calling the Romanian government and royal court incompetent, corrupt retards, he was put in reserve and retired. Unsatisfied, he received permission to join the Wehrmacht in 1940 but instead joined the Waffen-SS. He was moved to Yugoslavia in 1941 to create a regiment of Waffen-SS mountain troops from the local German Balkans, which he commanded until his death under mysterious circumstances in 1944.
Second to the left, the taller gentleman, is Kurt Waldheim, serving as a Wehrmacht interpreter for Phleps to his Italian allies, who Phleps hated. During one heated conversation with an Italian commander, he told Waldheim "Listen Waldheim, I know some Italian and you are not translating what I am telling this so-and-so". Allegedly, being in intelligence, he had a hand in some war crimes in the area. Waldheim would survive the war, and not only came out ok, he was eventually elected president of Austria. And how did he get enough prestige to get elected president?
He was the UN Secretary-General for 9 years before he got elected.
Oops.