AllSerbia
AllSerbia (Serbian: СвеСрбија, SveSrbija) was an idea put forth by fascist Serbian leader Milan Nedić in concurrence with his Government of National Salvation to form a new Serbian state as part of the [...] Germany's Neue Ordnung.
The creator of the name and idea for AllSerbia was Nedić himself, who resisted the name used by others Greater Serbia.
This project was envisioned as uniting Serbia and Montenegro (within their World War II borders) along with parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina which were then part of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH). The areas to be annexed from the NDH corresponded somewhat to the areas not included in the Banovina of Croatia as part of the Cvetković-Maček Agreement from 1939.
Nedić discussed his idea with German fuhrer Adolf [...] in Berlin in September of 1943. The maps Nedić presented to [...] were drafted by his brother Milutin Nedić and Serbian ambassador Milutin Spalajković. [...] showed little interest in the territorial expansion of Serbia, and during the course of the meeting had already turned it down.
Herman Nojbaher, [...]'s representative in Serbia, was a proponent of the project of creating a new Serbian state, especially after the Italian capitulation in 1943. The biggest opponent of the idea was [...]'s representative in the NDH, Siegfried Kasche.
Apparently, NDH leader Ante Pavelić and the state's command were uncomfortable with the meeting of [...] with Nedić. The NDH's government acquired a copy of Nedić's map and published it late in 1943. Later, the original documents were destroyed after the war in Belgrade. The only surviving copies were those printed by the NDH.