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Brandenburgers

The Brandenburgers (German: Brandenburger) were members of the Brandenburg Nazi German special forces unit during World War II.[1]

Battalion – December 1939
Division – February 1943 – March 1944
Panzergrenadier-Division – 1944–1945.
Division "Brandenburg" Vehicle Insignia
Active1939–1945
Country Nazi Germany
BranchArmy
TypeSpecial forces
RoleAirborne forces
Amphibious warfare
Covert operations
Direct action
Special Operations
Special Reconnaissance
Unconventional warfare
SizeCompany (initial)
Division (at peak)
Part ofAbwehr
Garrison/HQStendal
Friedenthal
Nickname(s)'Brandenburg'
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Theodor von Hippel
Adrian von Fölkersam

Originally, the unit was formed by and operated as an extension of the military's intelligence organ, the Abwehr. Members of this unit took part in seizing operationally important targets by way of sabotage and infiltration. Being foreign German nationals who were convinced Nazi volunteers, constituent members had lived abroad and were proficient in foreign languages as well as being familiar with the way of life in the area of operations where they were deployed.

The Brandenburg Division was generally subordinated to the army groups in individual commands and operated throughout Eastern Europe, in northern Africa, Afghanistan, the Middle East and in the Caucasus. In the later course of the war, parts of the special unit were used in Bandenbekämpfung operations against partisans in Yugoslavia before the division was reclassified and merged into one of the Panzergrenadier divisions in the last months of the war. They committed various atrocities in the course of their operations.

Background and membership

The unit was the brainchild of Hauptmann (captain) Theodor von Hippel, who, after having his idea rejected by the Reichswehr, approached Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, commander of the German Intelligence Service, the Abwehr. Hippel proposed that small units, trained in sabotage and fluent in foreign languages, could operate behind enemy lines and wreak havoc with the enemy's command, communication and logistical tails.[2] Canaris was at first against the proposal as he viewed such measures similar to what the Bolsheviks had done and was suspicious of Hippel's motives. Still determined to form the unit, Hippel looked to his section chief, Helmuth Groscurth, who supported the unit's formation and the two men conferred on the matter on 27 September 1939.[3] Just a few days after their meeting, the Army General Staff put forth a directive authorizing the creation of "a company of saboteurs for the West."[4] As part of the Abwehr's 2nd Department, Hippel was tasked with creating the unit.[5] Originally, the unit Hippel assembled was named the Deutsche Kompagnie, then later on 25 October it became the Baulehr-kompagnie 800 and then again on 10 January 1940, the unit was called the Bau-Lehr-Bataillon z.b.V. 800 (800th Special Duties Construction Training Battalion); but its later more widely known epithet, "the Brandenburgers", stemmed from the name of the unit's first permanent quarters.[4]

Training for the men in the Brandenburg Division ranged from five to seven months and included course instruction on reconnaissance, swimming, hand-to-hand combat, demolitions, marksmanship in both German and Allied weapons, conventional infantry tactics, and other specialized training.[6] Brandenburg units were deployed as small commando outfits to penetrate into enemy territory and conduct both sabotage and anti-sabotage operations. Despite their demonstrated successes while incurring minimum casualties, many traditionally-minded German officers still found their use abhorrent.[7] Most of the personnel were fluent in other languages, which allowed them, for example, to penetrate the Netherlands in 1940 disguised as Dutch barge crews just before the start of the invasion. In 1941, they preceded the invasion of Yugoslavia undercover as Serbian workers. During the night before Operation Barbarossa began, Brandenburger units crossed the Soviet border disguised as Soviet workers and Red Army soldiers. Others even adorned themselves in Arab garments to conduct surveillance on Allied warships traversing between the Straits of Gibraltar and North Africa ahead of the Wehrmacht deployment there.[8] Correspondingly, Department II of the Abwehr, under which the Brandenburgers were subsumed, had a distinct sub-component for army, navy, and air force operations.[9]

Many of the Brandenburgers were misfits who could hardly be characterized as conventional soldiers, due in large part to the nature of their operations. They would mingle with enemy soldiers, secretly countermand orders, redirect military convoys, and disrupt communications—all the while collecting intelligence along the way.[8] Ahead of the primary invasion forces in the USSR, operatives from the Brandenburg Division seized bridges and strategically important installations in clandestine missions lasting for weeks before they linked up with advancing forces.[8]

The predecessor formation to the Brandenburg Division was the Freikorps Ebbinghaus, which originated before the invasion of Poland in 1939. Colonel Erwin von Lahousen (and the defense groups of military districts VIII and XVII) from within Department II of the Abwehr, put together small K-Trupps (fighting squads), which consisted of Polish-speaking Silesians and ethnic Germans, whose job it was to occupy key positions and hold them until the arrival of regular Wehrmacht units.[citation needed][a] The first members of the "K-Trupps" were German nationals. Generally, these men were civilians who had never served in the army but were briefly trained by the "Abwehr" and were led by army officers. After the Polish campaign, this changed as these commandos became members of the Wehrmacht. Despite their seeming lack of prior experience, the demands placed on these newly formed commandos were high.[10] It was mandatory that they be volunteers for this duty. They were also expected to be agile, capable of improvising, endowed with initiative and team spirit, highly competent in foreign languages and in their dealings with foreign nationals, and capable of the most demanding physical performance.[11] Eventually, the early guiding principle that required members of the Division Brandenburg to be volunteers ended with their increasing use and integration with the regular army.[12]

Operations

 
Otto Skorzeny (left) and the former Brandenburger Adrian von Fölkersam (middle) now with Skorzeny's SS-Jagdverbände in Budapest after Operation Panzerfaust, 16 October 1944
 
Cuff title of the Division „Brandenburg“, worn on the lower right sleeve from 1944 onwards

The night before the Invasion of Poland (Plan White) in September 1939, small groups of German special forces dressed in civilian clothes crossed the Polish border to seize key strategic points before dawn on the day of the invasion.[13] This made them the first special operations unit to see action in the Second World War.[14][b] Freikorps Ebbinghaus engaged in atrocities against Poland's population and its captured PoWs.[16] On 4 September, members of the Freikorps Ebbinghaus executed 17 people at Pszczyna, among them Boy Scouts from the town's secondary schools. They also tortured 29 citizens of Orzesze before executing them.[c] On 8 September 1939, in the upper Silesian city, Siemanowice, they executed 6 Poles and then on 1 October 1939, shot 18 people in Nowy Bytom.[17] Larger massacres were carried out in Katowice, where hundreds of people were executed.[16] Within two weeks of the invasion of Poland, Ebbinghaus had "left a trail of murder in more than thirteen Polish towns and villages".[18]

On 15 December 1939 the company was expanded and re-designated as the Brandenburg Battalion.[19] After its formation, the soldiers of the new special unit were initially employed to protect the Romanian oil fields and later chrome ore supplies from Turkey.[20] The battalion consisted of four companies, organised along linguistic lines:

In addition, the Battalion contained volunteers who had lived in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine.[22][d]

A platoon of Brandenburgers took part in Operation Weserübung, the invasion of Scandinavia in April 1940, during which they secured strategic properties in Denmark and Norway.[23]

During the spring 1940 invasions of Belgium and the Netherlands, the Brandenburg units proved essential in seizing "vital points ahead of Guderian's panzers."[24] Chronicling Brandenburger No. 3 Company's penetration into Belgium, Lahousen was gratified to report that, "forty-two out of sixty-one objectives were secured and handed over to the units following behind."[25] For their exploits in Belgium and the Netherlands, the Brandenburgers were among the most decorated units marching with the invading German armies, which earned them the admiration of the Abwehr Chief, Wilhelm Canaris.[26] On 27 May 1940, chief-of-staff of the High Command of the German armed forces, Wilhelm Keitel, wrote to Canaris that the Brandenburgers had "fought outstandingly well" which was further validated when Hitler presented Iron Cross commendations to 75% of the 600 men who participated.[27] By October 1940, the Brandenburgers constituted an entire regiment-sized unit.[28] The rest of the Brandenburgers were assigned to Panzer Corps Grossdeutschland along with its old training partner from 1940 to 1941, the Grossdeutschland Division.

The unit was again deployed in Operation Marita, the invasion of the Balkans.[29] On 6 April 1941, during Operation Marita, the Brandenburgers managed to take the strategically important bridge over the Vardar and they also secured the gorge on the River Danube which forms part of the boundary between Serbia and Romania known otherwise as the Iron Gates. Shortly after this, they captured the island of Euboea.[30] Additional operations were demanded of the Brandenburgers during the opening phase for the June 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union, as they were the first to sweep across the border, destroying power facilities, cutting communication lines, spreading disinformation, and activating "sleeper" agents.[31] Their most notable mission was taking the bridges over the Daugava in Daugavpils on 28 June 1941, during which members of the 8th Company of the Brandenburg Kommandos crossed the bridge in a commandeered Soviet truck, overpowered the guards and held the position for two hours against significant Soviet counterattacks.[32] From June 1942 through February 1943, the Brandenburgers carried out commando operations against Allied supply lines in North Africa by way of clandestine missions in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia.[33]

In early August 1942, a Brandenburg unit of 62 Baltic and Sudeten Germans led by Adrian von Fölkersam penetrated farther into enemy territory than any other German unit. They had been ordered to seize and secure the vital Maikop oilfields. Disguised as NKVD men, and driving Soviet trucks, Fölkersam's unit passed through the Soviet front lines and moved deep into hostile territory. The Brandenburgers ran into a large group of Red Army soldiers fleeing from the front. Fölkersam saw an opportunity to use them to the unit's advantage. By persuading them to return to the Soviet cause, he was able to join with them and move almost at will through the Soviet lines.[34]

On 26 December 1942, the men of Parachute Company of the Brandenburg Regiment were transported by gliders in an operation to destroy bridges and supply routes used by the British in North Africa. It was a disaster. Some of the gliders were shot down while flying over enemy lines and others were destroyed approaching their targets. Most of the paratroopers were killed in the operation.[35]

Units of the division were sent to the Balkans to engage in anti-partisan operations.[e]

In mid 1943, many Brandenburger units were moved from the Balkans, and took part in actions to disarm Italian soldiers. One vital area was the island of Kos, in the Dodecanese island chain off the coast of Turkey. Kos had been secured by British troops in September 1943, and a large garrison of allied Italian troops was also present. Along with Luftwaffe paratroop forces, Brandenburgers took part in the recapture of the island.[37] On 25 May 1944, members of the division, attached to SS-Fallschirmjäger-Bataillon 500, took part in the unsuccessful Operation Rösselsprung, an airborne operation to capture Yugoslav Partisan leader Josip Broz Tito.[38]

In September 1944 it was decided that special operations units were no longer necessary. The Brandenburg Division became the Infantry Division Brandenburg and transferred to the Eastern front.[39] Approximately 1,800 men (including von Fölkersam) were transferred to SS-Standartenführer Otto Skorzeny's SS-Jäger-Bataillon 502 operating within SS-Jagdverband Mitte, but mostly to the SS-Jagdverband Ost until the end of the war.[40] Only the Kurfürst Regiment retained its original role as a commando unit.[41]

In late 1944, the division was equipped with a Panzer Regiment and redesignated Panzergrenadier-Division Brandenburg and returned to the Eastern front. The Brandenburgers were involved in heavy fighting near Memel, until their withdrawal, along with the Großdeutschland, via ferry to Pillau. The division was all but annihilated during the heavy fighting near Pillau and only 800 men escaped to the thin strip of land at Frische Nehrung.[42] While some survivors surrendered to the British in Schleswig-Holstein in May, others enlisted in the French Foreign Legion and fought in the First Indochina War where their skills proved an asset.[40][f]

Sub-battalions

Bergmann Battalion

The Bergmann battalion (meaning "miner") was a military unit of the German Abwehr during World War II, composed of five German-officered companies of volunteers from the Caucasus region of the Soviet Union. The battalion was formed of the émigrés and Soviet POWs from the Caucasian republics at Neuhammer in October 1941. Subordinated to the German commando battalion Brandenburgers and placed under the command of Oberleutnant Theodor Oberländer, the unit received training at Neuhammer and Mittenwald (Bavaria) with the Gebirgsjäger. Later a special 130-men-strong Georgian contingent of Abwehr codenamed "Tamara-II" was incorporated into Bergmann. By March 1942, there were five companies of some 300 Germans and 900 Caucasians.[44]

In August 1942, Bergmann went to the Eastern Front, where it saw its first action in the North Caucasus campaign in August 1942. The unit engaged in anti-partisan actions in the Mozdok-Nalchik-Mineralnye Vody area and conducted reconnaissance and subversion in the Grozny area. At the end of 1942, Bergmann conducted a successful sortie through the Soviet lines, bringing with them some 300 Red Army defectors, and covered the German retreat from the Caucasus. Bergmann went through a series of engagements with the Soviet partisans and regular forces in the Crimea in February 1943 and was dissolved—like other Ostlegionen units—at the end of 1943. The significantly shrunken ex-Bergmann companies were dispatched to conduct police functions in Greece and Poland.[45]

Nachtigall and Roland Battalions

The Nachtigall Battalion, officially known as Special Group Nachtigall,[46] and the Roland Battalion, officially known as Special Group Roland, were the subunits under command of the Abwehr special operation unit Brandenburgers (1st Brandenberg Battalion).[47] They were the two military units formed 25 February 1941 by head of the Abwehr Wilhelm Franz Canaris, which sanctioned the creation of the "Ukrainian Legion" under German command. They were manned primarily by occupied Polish citizens of Ukrainian ethnicity directed to unit by Bandera's OUN orders.[48]

In May 1941, the German command decided to split a 700-strong Ukrainian Legion into two battalions: Nachtigall ("Nightingale") and Roland Battalion. Training for Nachtigall took place in Neuhammer near Schlessig. On the Ukrainian side, the commander was Roman Shukhevych and on the German, Theodor Oberländer. (Oberländer was later to become Federal Minister for Displaced Persons, Refugees and War Victims in the Federal Republic of Germany.) Ex-Brandenburger Oberleutnant Dr. Hans-Albrecht Herzner was placed in military command of the Battalion. The Nachtigall unit was outfitted in the standard Wehrmacht uniforms. Before entering Lviv, they placed blue and yellow ribbons on their shoulders.[49] In comparison to Nachtigall – which used ordinary Wehrmacht uniform – the Roland Battalion was outfitted in the Czechoslovakian uniform with yellow armband with text "Im Dienst der Deutschen Wehrmacht" (In the service of the German Wehrmacht). They were given Austrian helmets from World War I.[50]

The Battalion was set up by the Abwehr and organized by Richard Yary of the OUN(b) in March 1941, prior the German invasion to Soviet Union. Approximately 350 Bandera's OUN followers were trained at the Abwehr training centre at the Seibersdorf under command of the former Poland Army major Yevhen Pobiguschiy. In Germany, in November 1941 the Ukrainian personnel of the Legion were reorganized into the 201st Schutzmannschaft Battalion. It numbered 650 persons which served for one year at Belarus before disbanding.[51] Many of its members, especially the commanding officers, went on to the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and 14 of its members joined 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician) SS-Freiwilligen-Schützen-Division Galizien in spring 1943.[g][better source needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A large number of the recruits were small-time criminals who fled from Poland.See: Wrzesień 1939 na Śląsku (September 1939 in Silesia) – p. 37 Paweł Dubiel – 1963.
  2. ^ By no means was the Brandenburg Division the only German special operations unit of the Second World War, as they also had Otto Skorzeny's Friedenthaler Jagdverbände (which rescued Mussolini) and the Airborne Kampfgeschwader 200.[15]
  3. ^ See: The fate of Polish children during the last war by Roman Hrabar, Zofia Tokarz, Jacek Edward Wilczur, Rada Ochrony Pomników Walki i Męczeństwa (Poland) Interpress, 1981; Rocznik przemyski – Volume 21 – p. 130, Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Nauk w Przemyślu, p. 130 (1982); A więc wojna":ludność cywilna we wrześniu 1939 r. Anna Piekarska, Instytut Pamieci Narodowej (2009) Reviews Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, p. 21.
  4. ^ The battalion also included motorcycle and paratroop platoons.
  5. ^ It is an undisputed fact that units of the Brandenburg were used in guerrilla warfare. Covering long distances and violating the martial terms of Hague Convention, the Brandenburg Division was conceived to be a special forces unit veritably designed for the sake of partisan warfare. Brandenburgers participated in partisan war in the East, in some cases as a cover for the murder of minorities. Partisan warfare was nevertheless a deadly reality to the German authorities and was actually considered a military necessity. This fact does not detract in any way or excuse the commission of war crimes by members of the Brandenburg Commandos at the local level by individual units or commands.[36]
  6. ^ Due to the nature of their operations and the inherent hazards they faced, very few of them survived the war.[43]
  7. ^ See: Боляновський А.В. Дивізія «Галичина»: історія — Львів: , 2000. (Bolyanovsky AV Division "Halychyna": History — Lviv, 2000)

References

Citations

  1. ^ Lew 1997, The Brandenburg Commandos.
  2. ^ Höhne 1979, p. 376.
  3. ^ Höhne 1979, pp. 376–377.
  4. ^ a b Höhne 1979, p. 377.
  5. ^ Higgins 2014, p. 9.
  6. ^ Schuster 1999, p. 658.
  7. ^ Lucas 2014, p. 10.
  8. ^ a b c Lucas 2014, p. 5.
  9. ^ Lucas 2014, pp. 17–18.
  10. ^ Witzel 1990, pp. 119–120.
  11. ^ Witzel 1990, p. 120.
  12. ^ Witzel 1990, p. 128.
  13. ^ Bassett 2011, p. 177.
  14. ^ Schuster 1999, p. 657.
  15. ^ Davies 2008, p. 247.
  16. ^ a b Warzecha 2003, pp. 55–60.
  17. ^ Jankowski & Religa 1981, p. 100.
  18. ^ Gilbert 1989, p. 8.
  19. ^ Adams 2009, p. 50.
  20. ^ Witzel 1990, p. 121.
  21. ^ Axworthy 1995, p. 19.
  22. ^ Higgins 2014, p. 10.
  23. ^ Spaeter 1982, pp. 47–54.
  24. ^ Bassett 2011, p. 191.
  25. ^ Höhne 1979, p. 414.
  26. ^ Höhne 1979, pp. 414–415.
  27. ^ Höhne 1979, p. 415.
  28. ^ Stone 2011, p. 367n.
  29. ^ Higgins 2014, p. 11.
  30. ^ Brockdorff 1967, p. 427.
  31. ^ Bellamy 2007, p. 183.
  32. ^ Spaeter 1982, pp. 144–150.
  33. ^ Spaeter 1982, pp. 250–273.
  34. ^ Higgins 2014, pp. 50–52.
  35. ^ Ailsby 2000, p. 91.
  36. ^ Bundesarchiv, Die Brandenburger.
  37. ^ Smith & Walker 1974, pp. 116–127.
  38. ^ Eyre 2006, pp. 362–370.
  39. ^ Adams 2009, p. 51.
  40. ^ a b Higgins 2014, p. 76.
  41. ^ Dear & Foot 1995, p. 122.
  42. ^ Bartov 2001, p. 10.
  43. ^ Schuster 1999, pp. 657–658.
  44. ^ Hoffmann 1991, p. 109.
  45. ^ Hoffmann 1991, pp. 46–47, 56, 195, 267.
  46. ^ Abbott 2004, p. 47.
  47. ^ Seidler 1999, pp. 57–58.
  48. ^ Patrylyak 2004, pp. 271–278.
  49. ^ Patrylyak 2004, pp. 272–277.
  50. ^ Patrylyak 2004, p. 287.
  51. ^ Patrylyak 2004, pp. 371–382.

Bibliography

  • Abbott, P. E. (2004). Ukrainian Armies, 1914–55. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84176-668-3.
  • Adams, Jefferson (2009). Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-81085-543-4.
  • Ailsby, Christopher (2000). Hitler's Sky Warriors: German Paratroopers in Action, 1939–45. Staplehurst, UK: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-109-8.
  • Axworthy, Mark (1995). Third Axis Fourth Ally. London: Arms and Armour. ISBN 1-85409-267-7.
  • Bartov, Omer (2001). The Eastern Front, 1941–45: German Troops and the Barbarisation of Warfare. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-33394-944-3.
  • Bassett, Richard (2011). Hitler's Spy Chief: The Wilhelm Canaris Betrayal. New York: Pegasus Books. ISBN 978-1-60598-450-6.
  • Bellamy, Chris (2007). Absolute War: Soviet Russia in the Second World War. Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-375-72471-8.
  • Brockdorff, Werner (1967). Geheimkommandos des Zweiten Weltkrieges (in German). Wels: Verlag Welsermühl. ISBN 3-88102-059-4.
  • Bundesarchiv. . Bundesarchiv. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
  • Davies, Norman (2008). No Simple Victory: World War II in Europe, 1939-1945. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-67001-832-1.
  • Dear, Ian; Foot, M.R.D., eds. (1995). The Oxford Guide to World War II. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534096-9.
  • Eyre, Wayne Lt.Col. (Canadian Army) (2006). "Operation Rösselsprung and the Elimination of Tito, May 25, 1944: A Failure in Planning and Intelligence Support". The Journal of Slavic Military Studies. Routledge. 19 (1): 343–376. doi:10.1080/13518040600697969. S2CID 144383512.
  • Gilbert, Martin (1989). The Second World War: A Complete History. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-8050-0534-X.
  • Higgins, David (2014). Behind Soviet Lines: Hitler's Brandenburgers Capture the Maikop Oilfields 1942. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 9781782005995.
  • Hoffmann, Joachim (1991). Kaukasien 1942/43: Das deutsche Heer und Orientvölker der Sowjetunion [Caucasus 1942–43: The German Army and Oriental Peoples of the USSR] (in German). Freiburg: Rombach Druck und Verlagshaus. ISBN 978-3-79300-194-2.
  • Höhne, Heinz (1979). Canaris: Hitler's Master Spy. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-08777-2.
  • Jankowski, Joseph; Religa, Jan (1981). Zbrodnie hitlerowske na wsi polskiej, 1939–1945 [Nazi Crimes in the Polish Countryside, 1939–1945] (in Polish). Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza.
  • Lefevre, Eric (1999). Brandenburg Division: Commandos of the Reich. Histoire & Collections. ISBN 978-2-908182-73-6.
  • Lew, Christopher (1997). "The Brandenburg Commandos". HistoryNet. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  • Lucas, James (2014). Kommando: German Special Forces of World War Two. Barnsley: Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-84832-737-5.
  • Patrylyak, I.K. (2004). Військова діяльність ОУН(Б) у 1940–1942 [Military activities of the OUN (B) in the years 1940–1942] (in Ukrainian). Kiev: Shevchenko University Press.
  • Schuster, Carl (1999). "Brandenburg Division". In David T. Zabecki (ed.). World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. London and New York: Garland Publishing Inc. ISBN 0-8240-7029-1.
  • Seidler, Franz Wilhelm (1999). Die Kollaboration 1939–1945: Zeitgeschichtliche Dokumentation in Biographien (in German). München: Herbig Verlag. ISBN 978-3-77662-139-6.
  • Smith, Peter; Walker, Edwin (1974). War in the Aegean. London: William Kimber Publishing. ISBN 978-0-71830-422-5.
  • Spaeter, Helmuth (1982). Die Brandenburger: Eine deutsche Kommandotruppe (in German). München: Angerer. ISBN 978-3-92212-800-7.
  • Stone, David (2011). Shattered Genius: The Decline and Fall of the German General Staff in World War II. Philadelphia: Casemate. ISBN 978-1-61200-098-5.
  • Warzecha, Bartłomiej (2003). "Niemieckie zbrodnie na powstańcach śląskich w 1939 roku" [German crimes against the insurgents in Silesia in 1939]. Bulletin of the Institute of National Remembrance (in Polish). 3 (12–1): 55–60.
  • Witzel, Dietrich F. (1990). "Kommandoverbände der Abwehr II im Zweiten Weltkrieg". In Militärgeschichtliches Forschungsamt (ed.). Militärgeschichtliche Beiträge. Bonn: Mittler Verlag. ISBN 978-3-81320-361-5.

Further reading

  • Cavaleri, Leo (2017). Das 2. Regiment der "Division Brandenburg" eine Dokumentation zum Einsatz der Brandenburger-Gebirgsjäger im Osten bzw. Südosten Europas. Aachen: Helios. ISBN 978-3-86933-186-7.
  • Hamilton, A. Stephan (2016). Panzergrenadiers to the Front!: The Combat History of Panzergrenadier-Division Brandenburg on the Eastern Front, 1944-45. Solihull, UK: Helion & Co. ISBN 978-1-910777-13-8.
  • Paterson, Lawrence (2018). Hitler's Brandenburgers: The Third Reich's Elite Special Forces. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-68247-372-6.

brandenburgers, this, article, about, german, special, forces, unit, world, horse, breed, brandenburger, residents, german, city, brandenburg, other, uses, brandenburg, disambiguation, german, brandenburger, were, members, brandenburg, nazi, german, special, f. This article is about the German special forces unit of World War II For the horse breed see Brandenburger For the residents of the German city see Brandenburg For other uses see Brandenburg disambiguation The Brandenburgers German Brandenburger were members of the Brandenburg Nazi German special forces unit during World War II 1 Battalion December 1939Division February 1943 March 1944Panzergrenadier Division 1944 1945 Division Brandenburg Vehicle InsigniaActive1939 1945Country Nazi GermanyBranchArmyTypeSpecial forcesRoleAirborne forcesAmphibious warfareCovert operationsDirect actionSpecial OperationsSpecial ReconnaissanceUnconventional warfareSizeCompany initial Division at peak Part ofAbwehrGarrison HQStendalFriedenthalNickname s Brandenburg EngagementsWorld War IICommandersNotablecommandersTheodor von HippelAdrian von Folkersam Originally the unit was formed by and operated as an extension of the military s intelligence organ the Abwehr Members of this unit took part in seizing operationally important targets by way of sabotage and infiltration Being foreign German nationals who were convinced Nazi volunteers constituent members had lived abroad and were proficient in foreign languages as well as being familiar with the way of life in the area of operations where they were deployed The Brandenburg Division was generally subordinated to the army groups in individual commands and operated throughout Eastern Europe in northern Africa Afghanistan the Middle East and in the Caucasus In the later course of the war parts of the special unit were used in Bandenbekampfung operations against partisans in Yugoslavia before the division was reclassified and merged into one of the Panzergrenadier divisions in the last months of the war They committed various atrocities in the course of their operations Contents 1 Background and membership 2 Operations 3 Sub battalions 3 1 Bergmann Battalion 3 2 Nachtigall and Roland Battalions 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Bibliography 7 Further readingBackground and membership EditThe unit was the brainchild of Hauptmann captain Theodor von Hippel who after having his idea rejected by the Reichswehr approached Admiral Wilhelm Canaris commander of the German Intelligence Service the Abwehr Hippel proposed that small units trained in sabotage and fluent in foreign languages could operate behind enemy lines and wreak havoc with the enemy s command communication and logistical tails 2 Canaris was at first against the proposal as he viewed such measures similar to what the Bolsheviks had done and was suspicious of Hippel s motives Still determined to form the unit Hippel looked to his section chief Helmuth Groscurth who supported the unit s formation and the two men conferred on the matter on 27 September 1939 3 Just a few days after their meeting the Army General Staff put forth a directive authorizing the creation of a company of saboteurs for the West 4 As part of the Abwehr s 2nd Department Hippel was tasked with creating the unit 5 Originally the unit Hippel assembled was named the Deutsche Kompagnie then later on 25 October it became the Baulehr kompagnie 800 and then again on 10 January 1940 the unit was called the Bau Lehr Bataillon z b V 800 800th Special Duties Construction Training Battalion but its later more widely known epithet the Brandenburgers stemmed from the name of the unit s first permanent quarters 4 Training for the men in the Brandenburg Division ranged from five to seven months and included course instruction on reconnaissance swimming hand to hand combat demolitions marksmanship in both German and Allied weapons conventional infantry tactics and other specialized training 6 Brandenburg units were deployed as small commando outfits to penetrate into enemy territory and conduct both sabotage and anti sabotage operations Despite their demonstrated successes while incurring minimum casualties many traditionally minded German officers still found their use abhorrent 7 Most of the personnel were fluent in other languages which allowed them for example to penetrate the Netherlands in 1940 disguised as Dutch barge crews just before the start of the invasion In 1941 they preceded the invasion of Yugoslavia undercover as Serbian workers During the night before Operation Barbarossa began Brandenburger units crossed the Soviet border disguised as Soviet workers and Red Army soldiers Others even adorned themselves in Arab garments to conduct surveillance on Allied warships traversing between the Straits of Gibraltar and North Africa ahead of the Wehrmacht deployment there 8 Correspondingly Department II of the Abwehr under which the Brandenburgers were subsumed had a distinct sub component for army navy and air force operations 9 Many of the Brandenburgers were misfits who could hardly be characterized as conventional soldiers due in large part to the nature of their operations They would mingle with enemy soldiers secretly countermand orders redirect military convoys and disrupt communications all the while collecting intelligence along the way 8 Ahead of the primary invasion forces in the USSR operatives from the Brandenburg Division seized bridges and strategically important installations in clandestine missions lasting for weeks before they linked up with advancing forces 8 The predecessor formation to the Brandenburg Division was the Freikorps Ebbinghaus which originated before the invasion of Poland in 1939 Colonel Erwin von Lahousen and the defense groups of military districts VIII and XVII from within Department II of the Abwehr put together small K Trupps fighting squads which consisted of Polish speaking Silesians and ethnic Germans whose job it was to occupy key positions and hold them until the arrival of regular Wehrmacht units citation needed a The first members of the K Trupps were German nationals Generally these men were civilians who had never served in the army but were briefly trained by the Abwehr and were led by army officers After the Polish campaign this changed as these commandos became members of the Wehrmacht Despite their seeming lack of prior experience the demands placed on these newly formed commandos were high 10 It was mandatory that they be volunteers for this duty They were also expected to be agile capable of improvising endowed with initiative and team spirit highly competent in foreign languages and in their dealings with foreign nationals and capable of the most demanding physical performance 11 Eventually the early guiding principle that required members of the Division Brandenburg to be volunteers ended with their increasing use and integration with the regular army 12 Operations Edit Otto Skorzeny left and the former Brandenburger Adrian von Folkersam middle now with Skorzeny s SS Jagdverbande in Budapest after Operation Panzerfaust 16 October 1944 Cuff title of the Division Brandenburg worn on the lower right sleeve from 1944 onwards The night before the Invasion of Poland Plan White in September 1939 small groups of German special forces dressed in civilian clothes crossed the Polish border to seize key strategic points before dawn on the day of the invasion 13 This made them the first special operations unit to see action in the Second World War 14 b Freikorps Ebbinghaus engaged in atrocities against Poland s population and its captured PoWs 16 On 4 September members of the Freikorps Ebbinghaus executed 17 people at Pszczyna among them Boy Scouts from the town s secondary schools They also tortured 29 citizens of Orzesze before executing them c On 8 September 1939 in the upper Silesian city Siemanowice they executed 6 Poles and then on 1 October 1939 shot 18 people in Nowy Bytom 17 Larger massacres were carried out in Katowice where hundreds of people were executed 16 Within two weeks of the invasion of Poland Ebbinghaus had left a trail of murder in more than thirteen Polish towns and villages 18 On 15 December 1939 the company was expanded and re designated as the Brandenburg Battalion 19 After its formation the soldiers of the new special unit were initially employed to protect the Romanian oil fields and later chrome ore supplies from Turkey 20 The battalion consisted of four companies organised along linguistic lines 1st company men from Baltic Russian territories 2nd company Volksdeutsche from Romania 21 3rd company Sudeten Germans who spoke Czech Slovak and Ruthenian 4th company Volksdeutsche from YugoslaviaIn addition the Battalion contained volunteers who had lived in Belarus Russia and Ukraine 22 d A platoon of Brandenburgers took part in Operation Weserubung the invasion of Scandinavia in April 1940 during which they secured strategic properties in Denmark and Norway 23 During the spring 1940 invasions of Belgium and the Netherlands the Brandenburg units proved essential in seizing vital points ahead of Guderian s panzers 24 Chronicling Brandenburger No 3 Company s penetration into Belgium Lahousen was gratified to report that forty two out of sixty one objectives were secured and handed over to the units following behind 25 For their exploits in Belgium and the Netherlands the Brandenburgers were among the most decorated units marching with the invading German armies which earned them the admiration of the Abwehr Chief Wilhelm Canaris 26 On 27 May 1940 chief of staff of the High Command of the German armed forces Wilhelm Keitel wrote to Canaris that the Brandenburgers had fought outstandingly well which was further validated when Hitler presented Iron Cross commendations to 75 of the 600 men who participated 27 By October 1940 the Brandenburgers constituted an entire regiment sized unit 28 The rest of the Brandenburgers were assigned to Panzer Corps Grossdeutschland along with its old training partner from 1940 to 1941 the Grossdeutschland Division The unit was again deployed in Operation Marita the invasion of the Balkans 29 On 6 April 1941 during Operation Marita the Brandenburgers managed to take the strategically important bridge over the Vardar and they also secured the gorge on the River Danube which forms part of the boundary between Serbia and Romania known otherwise as the Iron Gates Shortly after this they captured the island of Euboea 30 Additional operations were demanded of the Brandenburgers during the opening phase for the June 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union as they were the first to sweep across the border destroying power facilities cutting communication lines spreading disinformation and activating sleeper agents 31 Their most notable mission was taking the bridges over the Daugava in Daugavpils on 28 June 1941 during which members of the 8th Company of the Brandenburg Kommandos crossed the bridge in a commandeered Soviet truck overpowered the guards and held the position for two hours against significant Soviet counterattacks 32 From June 1942 through February 1943 the Brandenburgers carried out commando operations against Allied supply lines in North Africa by way of clandestine missions in Egypt Libya and Tunisia 33 In early August 1942 a Brandenburg unit of 62 Baltic and Sudeten Germans led by Adrian von Folkersam penetrated farther into enemy territory than any other German unit They had been ordered to seize and secure the vital Maikop oilfields Disguised as NKVD men and driving Soviet trucks Folkersam s unit passed through the Soviet front lines and moved deep into hostile territory The Brandenburgers ran into a large group of Red Army soldiers fleeing from the front Folkersam saw an opportunity to use them to the unit s advantage By persuading them to return to the Soviet cause he was able to join with them and move almost at will through the Soviet lines 34 On 26 December 1942 the men of Parachute Company of the Brandenburg Regiment were transported by gliders in an operation to destroy bridges and supply routes used by the British in North Africa It was a disaster Some of the gliders were shot down while flying over enemy lines and others were destroyed approaching their targets Most of the paratroopers were killed in the operation 35 Units of the division were sent to the Balkans to engage in anti partisan operations e In mid 1943 many Brandenburger units were moved from the Balkans and took part in actions to disarm Italian soldiers One vital area was the island of Kos in the Dodecanese island chain off the coast of Turkey Kos had been secured by British troops in September 1943 and a large garrison of allied Italian troops was also present Along with Luftwaffe paratroop forces Brandenburgers took part in the recapture of the island 37 On 25 May 1944 members of the division attached to SS Fallschirmjager Bataillon 500 took part in the unsuccessful Operation Rosselsprung an airborne operation to capture Yugoslav Partisan leader Josip Broz Tito 38 In September 1944 it was decided that special operations units were no longer necessary The Brandenburg Division became the Infantry Division Brandenburg and transferred to the Eastern front 39 Approximately 1 800 men including von Folkersam were transferred to SS Standartenfuhrer Otto Skorzeny s SS Jager Bataillon 502 operating within SS Jagdverband Mitte but mostly to the SS Jagdverband Ost until the end of the war 40 Only the Kurfurst Regiment retained its original role as a commando unit 41 In late 1944 the division was equipped with a Panzer Regiment and redesignated Panzergrenadier Division Brandenburg and returned to the Eastern front The Brandenburgers were involved in heavy fighting near Memel until their withdrawal along with the Grossdeutschland via ferry to Pillau The division was all but annihilated during the heavy fighting near Pillau and only 800 men escaped to the thin strip of land at Frische Nehrung 42 While some survivors surrendered to the British in Schleswig Holstein in May others enlisted in the French Foreign Legion and fought in the First Indochina War where their skills proved an asset 40 f Sub battalions EditBergmann Battalion Edit Main article Bergmann Battalion The Bergmann battalion meaning miner was a military unit of the German Abwehr during World War II composed of five German officered companies of volunteers from the Caucasus region of the Soviet Union The battalion was formed of the emigres and Soviet POWs from the Caucasian republics at Neuhammer in October 1941 Subordinated to the German commando battalion Brandenburgers and placed under the command of Oberleutnant Theodor Oberlander the unit received training at Neuhammer and Mittenwald Bavaria with the Gebirgsjager Later a special 130 men strong Georgian contingent of Abwehr codenamed Tamara II was incorporated into Bergmann By March 1942 there were five companies of some 300 Germans and 900 Caucasians 44 In August 1942 Bergmann went to the Eastern Front where it saw its first action in the North Caucasus campaign in August 1942 The unit engaged in anti partisan actions in the Mozdok Nalchik Mineralnye Vody area and conducted reconnaissance and subversion in the Grozny area At the end of 1942 Bergmann conducted a successful sortie through the Soviet lines bringing with them some 300 Red Army defectors and covered the German retreat from the Caucasus Bergmann went through a series of engagements with the Soviet partisans and regular forces in the Crimea in February 1943 and was dissolved like other Ostlegionen units at the end of 1943 The significantly shrunken ex Bergmann companies were dispatched to conduct police functions in Greece and Poland 45 Nachtigall and Roland Battalions Edit The Nachtigall Battalion officially known as Special Group Nachtigall 46 and the Roland Battalion officially known as Special Group Roland were the subunits under command of the Abwehr special operation unit Brandenburgers 1st Brandenberg Battalion 47 They were the two military units formed 25 February 1941 by head of the Abwehr Wilhelm Franz Canaris which sanctioned the creation of the Ukrainian Legion under German command They were manned primarily by occupied Polish citizens of Ukrainian ethnicity directed to unit by Bandera s OUN orders 48 In May 1941 the German command decided to split a 700 strong Ukrainian Legion into two battalions Nachtigall Nightingale and Roland Battalion Training for Nachtigall took place in Neuhammer near Schlessig On the Ukrainian side the commander was Roman Shukhevych and on the German Theodor Oberlander Oberlander was later to become Federal Minister for Displaced Persons Refugees and War Victims in the Federal Republic of Germany Ex Brandenburger Oberleutnant Dr Hans Albrecht Herzner was placed in military command of the Battalion The Nachtigall unit was outfitted in the standard Wehrmacht uniforms Before entering Lviv they placed blue and yellow ribbons on their shoulders 49 In comparison to Nachtigall which used ordinary Wehrmacht uniform the Roland Battalion was outfitted in the Czechoslovakian uniform with yellow armband with text Im Dienst der Deutschen Wehrmacht In the service of the German Wehrmacht They were given Austrian helmets from World War I 50 The Battalion was set up by the Abwehr and organized by Richard Yary of the OUN b in March 1941 prior the German invasion to Soviet Union Approximately 350 Bandera s OUN followers were trained at the Abwehr training centre at the Seibersdorf under command of the former Poland Army major Yevhen Pobiguschiy In Germany in November 1941 the Ukrainian personnel of the Legion were reorganized into the 201st Schutzmannschaft Battalion It numbered 650 persons which served for one year at Belarus before disbanding 51 Many of its members especially the commanding officers went on to the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and 14 of its members joined 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS 1st Galician SS Freiwilligen Schutzen Division Galizien in spring 1943 g better source needed See also EditBattle of Velikiye Luki Special Staff F Operation Mammoth Robey Leibbrandt Kampfgeschwader 200Notes Edit A large number of the recruits were small time criminals who fled from Poland See Wrzesien 1939 na Slasku September 1939 in Silesia p 37 Pawel Dubiel 1963 By no means was the Brandenburg Division the only German special operations unit of the Second World War as they also had Otto Skorzeny s Friedenthaler Jagdverbande which rescued Mussolini and the Airborne Kampfgeschwader 200 15 See The fate of Polish children during the last war by Roman Hrabar Zofia Tokarz Jacek Edward Wilczur Rada Ochrony Pomnikow Walki i Meczenstwa Poland Interpress 1981 Rocznik przemyski Volume 21 p 130 Towarzystwo Przyjaciol Nauk w Przemyslu p 130 1982 A wiec wojna ludnosc cywilna we wrzesniu 1939 r Anna Piekarska Instytut Pamieci Narodowej 2009 Reviews Instytut Pamieci Narodowej p 21 The battalion also included motorcycle and paratroop platoons It is an undisputed fact that units of the Brandenburg were used in guerrilla warfare Covering long distances and violating the martial terms of Hague Convention the Brandenburg Division was conceived to be a special forces unit veritably designed for the sake of partisan warfare Brandenburgers participated in partisan war in the East in some cases as a cover for the murder of minorities Partisan warfare was nevertheless a deadly reality to the German authorities and was actually considered a military necessity This fact does not detract in any way or excuse the commission of war crimes by members of the Brandenburg Commandos at the local level by individual units or commands 36 Due to the nature of their operations and the inherent hazards they faced very few of them survived the war 43 See Bolyanovskij A V Diviziya Galichina istoriya Lviv 2000 Bolyanovsky AV Division Halychyna History Lviv 2000 References EditCitations Edit Lew 1997 The Brandenburg Commandos Hohne 1979 p 376 Hohne 1979 pp 376 377 a b Hohne 1979 p 377 Higgins 2014 p 9 Schuster 1999 p 658 Lucas 2014 p 10 a b c Lucas 2014 p 5 Lucas 2014 pp 17 18 Witzel 1990 pp 119 120 Witzel 1990 p 120 Witzel 1990 p 128 Bassett 2011 p 177 Schuster 1999 p 657 Davies 2008 p 247 a b Warzecha 2003 pp 55 60 Jankowski amp Religa 1981 p 100 Gilbert 1989 p 8 Adams 2009 p 50 Witzel 1990 p 121 Axworthy 1995 p 19 Higgins 2014 p 10 Spaeter 1982 pp 47 54 Bassett 2011 p 191 Hohne 1979 p 414 Hohne 1979 pp 414 415 Hohne 1979 p 415 Stone 2011 p 367n Higgins 2014 p 11 Brockdorff 1967 p 427 Bellamy 2007 p 183 Spaeter 1982 pp 144 150 Spaeter 1982 pp 250 273 Higgins 2014 pp 50 52 Ailsby 2000 p 91 Bundesarchiv Die Brandenburger Smith amp Walker 1974 pp 116 127 Eyre 2006 pp 362 370 Adams 2009 p 51 a b Higgins 2014 p 76 Dear amp Foot 1995 p 122 Bartov 2001 p 10 Schuster 1999 pp 657 658 Hoffmann 1991 p 109 Hoffmann 1991 pp 46 47 56 195 267 Abbott 2004 p 47 Seidler 1999 pp 57 58 Patrylyak 2004 pp 271 278 Patrylyak 2004 pp 272 277 Patrylyak 2004 p 287 Patrylyak 2004 pp 371 382 Bibliography Edit Abbott P E 2004 Ukrainian Armies 1914 55 Oxford Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 668 3 Adams Jefferson 2009 Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence Lanham MD Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 81085 543 4 Ailsby Christopher 2000 Hitler s Sky Warriors German Paratroopers in Action 1939 45 Staplehurst UK Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 109 8 Axworthy Mark 1995 Third Axis Fourth Ally London Arms and Armour ISBN 1 85409 267 7 Bartov Omer 2001 The Eastern Front 1941 45 German Troops and the Barbarisation of Warfare New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 33394 944 3 Bassett Richard 2011 Hitler s Spy Chief The Wilhelm Canaris Betrayal New York Pegasus Books ISBN 978 1 60598 450 6 Bellamy Chris 2007 Absolute War Soviet Russia in the Second World War Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 375 72471 8 Brockdorff Werner 1967 Geheimkommandos des Zweiten Weltkrieges in German Wels Verlag Welsermuhl ISBN 3 88102 059 4 Bundesarchiv Die Brandenburger Kommandotruppe und Frontverband Bundesarchiv Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Davies Norman 2008 No Simple Victory World War II in Europe 1939 1945 New York Viking ISBN 978 0 67001 832 1 Dear Ian Foot M R D eds 1995 The Oxford Guide to World War II Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 534096 9 Eyre Wayne Lt Col Canadian Army 2006 Operation Rosselsprung and the Elimination of Tito May 25 1944 A Failure in Planning and Intelligence Support The Journal of Slavic Military Studies Routledge 19 1 343 376 doi 10 1080 13518040600697969 S2CID 144383512 Gilbert Martin 1989 The Second World War A Complete History New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 0534 X Higgins David 2014 Behind Soviet Lines Hitler s Brandenburgers Capture the Maikop Oilfields 1942 Oxford Osprey ISBN 9781782005995 Hoffmann Joachim 1991 Kaukasien 1942 43 Das deutsche Heer und Orientvolker der Sowjetunion Caucasus 1942 43 The German Army and Oriental Peoples of the USSR in German Freiburg Rombach Druck und Verlagshaus ISBN 978 3 79300 194 2 Hohne Heinz 1979 Canaris Hitler s Master Spy New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 08777 2 Jankowski Joseph Religa Jan 1981 Zbrodnie hitlerowske na wsi polskiej 1939 1945 Nazi Crimes in the Polish Countryside 1939 1945 in Polish Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza Lefevre Eric 1999 Brandenburg Division Commandos of the Reich Histoire amp Collections ISBN 978 2 908182 73 6 Lew Christopher 1997 The Brandenburg Commandos HistoryNet Retrieved 6 August 2012 Lucas James 2014 Kommando German Special Forces of World War Two Barnsley Frontline Books ISBN 978 1 84832 737 5 Patrylyak I K 2004 Vijskova diyalnist OUN B u 1940 1942 Military activities of the OUN B in the years 1940 1942 in Ukrainian Kiev Shevchenko University Press Schuster Carl 1999 Brandenburg Division In David T Zabecki ed World War II in Europe An Encyclopedia Vol 1 London and New York Garland Publishing Inc ISBN 0 8240 7029 1 Seidler Franz Wilhelm 1999 Die Kollaboration 1939 1945 Zeitgeschichtliche Dokumentation in Biographien in German Munchen Herbig Verlag ISBN 978 3 77662 139 6 Smith Peter Walker Edwin 1974 War in the Aegean London William Kimber Publishing ISBN 978 0 71830 422 5 Spaeter Helmuth 1982 Die Brandenburger Eine deutsche Kommandotruppe in German Munchen Angerer ISBN 978 3 92212 800 7 Stone David 2011 Shattered Genius The Decline and Fall of the German General Staff in World War II Philadelphia Casemate ISBN 978 1 61200 098 5 Warzecha Bartlomiej 2003 Niemieckie zbrodnie na powstancach slaskich w 1939 roku German crimes against the insurgents in Silesia in 1939 Bulletin of the Institute of National Remembrance in Polish 3 12 1 55 60 Witzel Dietrich F 1990 Kommandoverbande der Abwehr II im Zweiten Weltkrieg In Militargeschichtliches Forschungsamt ed Militargeschichtliche Beitrage Bonn Mittler Verlag ISBN 978 3 81320 361 5 Further reading EditCavaleri Leo 2017 Das 2 Regiment der Division Brandenburg eine Dokumentation zum Einsatz der Brandenburger Gebirgsjager im Osten bzw Sudosten Europas Aachen Helios ISBN 978 3 86933 186 7 Hamilton A Stephan 2016 Panzergrenadiers to the Front The Combat History of Panzergrenadier Division Brandenburg on the Eastern Front 1944 45 Solihull UK Helion amp Co ISBN 978 1 910777 13 8 Paterson Lawrence 2018 Hitler s Brandenburgers The Third Reich s Elite Special Forces Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 68247 372 6 Portals Military of Germany World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brandenburgers amp oldid 1133050044, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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