Miloš Glišić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милош Глишић; 27 February 1910 – 17 July 1946) was Yugoslav military officer.
After Axis invasion of Yugoslavia he joined Chetniks of Draža Mihailović and participated in the uprising against German occupying forces.
[3] In August 1942 Glišić was arrested, imprisoned and tortured by Gestapo because he sabotaged German attempts to disarm his unit and intensified his communication with Mihailović.
In July 1947 nine of them, including Glišić, were found guilty for collaboration with Axis and war crimes and executed on unknown location in Belgrade.
[5] After appropriate education in 1940 he worked in operational department of the General Staff of Royal Yugoslav Army with the rank of Captain.
[7] At the beginning of the World War II Glišić became a member of the staff of Požega Chetnik Detachment and soon promoted to the rank of Major.
[9] Glišić represented Chetniks at the negotiations with communists held in the first half of August 1941 in village Godovik, Užička Požega.
[14] During April, Glišić started to cooperate with Chetnik leader Pavle Đurišić and worked constantly on improving relations with the Italians.
[15] Glišić was moderate in Chetnik movement, as he wanted to have an agreement with Muslim leaders in the region, something Đurišić considered unsustainable.
[20] After expulsion of partisans out of Bijelo Polje County in May, Glišić gave orders to local population to report hidden partisans under threat of death and that attacking Chetniks and destroying of roads, bridges and telephone lines is punishable by death, after which he ordered return of normal functioning of all administrative organs and schools.
[23] On 26 June Glišić's main advisor and ally Vučko Ignjatović was killed by pro-Ljotić members of his Detachment.
[25] Presence of large number of legalised Chetniks in Nova Varoš was seen as unsustainable by Italians, especially those of Glišić's Požega Detachment.
Glišić was dismissed from the post,[26] but he stayed near Nova Varoš despite Nedić's orders to leave the area with several members of Sandžak Detachment.
[29] After being released from the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp Glišić stayed in Austria until January 1946 when he tried to illegally enter Yugoslavia near Maribor.