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Commissar Order

The Commissar Order (German: Kommissarbefehl) was an order issued by the German High Command (OKW) on 6 June 1941 before Operation Barbarossa. Its official name was Guidelines for the Treatment of Political Commissars (Richtlinien für die Behandlung politischer Kommissare). It instructed the Wehrmacht that any Soviet political commissar identified among captured troops be summarily executed as a purported enforcer of the so-called Judeo-Bolshevism ideology in military forces. It is one of a series of criminal orders issued by the leadership.

First page of the Commissar Order, dated 6 June 1941

According to the order, all those prisoners who could be identified as "thoroughly bolshevized or as active representatives of the Bolshevist ideology" should also be killed.[1]

History Edit

Planning for Operation Barbarossa began in June 1940. In December 1940, Hitler began vague allusions to the operation[2] to senior generals on how the war was to be conducted, giving him the opportunity to gauge their reaction to such matters as collaboration with the SS in the "rendering harmless" of Bolsheviks, which eventually culminated in Führer Directive 21 on 18 December 1940. The Wehrmacht was already politicised to some extent, having participated in the extra-legal killings of Ernst Röhm and his associates in 1934, communists in the Sudetenland in 1938, and Czech and German political exiles in France in 1940.[3] On 3 March 1941, Hitler explained to his closest military advisers how the war of annihilation was to be waged. On that same day, instructions incorporating Hitler's demands went to Section L of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW) (under Deputy Chief Walter Warlimont); these provided the basis for the "Guidelines in Special Areas to Instructions No. 21 (Case Barbarossa)" discussing, among other matters, the interaction of the army and SS in the theatre of operations, deriving from the "need to neutralise at once leading bolsheviks and commissars."[4]

Discussions proceeded on 17 March during a situation conference, where Chief of the OKH General Staff Franz Halder, Quartermaster-General Eduard Wagner and Chief of Operational Department of the OKH Adolf Heusinger were present. Hitler declared: "The intelligentsia established by Stalin must be exterminated. The most brutal violence is to be used in the Great Russian Empire" (quoted from Halder's War Diary entry of 17 March ).[5]

On 30 March, Hitler addressed over 200 senior officers in the Reich Chancellery. Among those present was Halder, who recorded the key points of the speech. He argued that the war against the Soviet Union "cannot be conducted in a knightly fashion" because it was a war of "ideologies and racial differences." He further declared that the Commissars had to be "liquidated" without mercy because they were the "bearers of ideologies directly opposed to National Socialism."[6] Hitler stipulated the "annihilation of the Bolshevik commissars and the Communist intelligentsia" (thus laying the foundation for the Commissar Order), dismissed the idea of court martials for felonies committed by the German troops, and emphasised the different nature of the war in the East from the war in the West.[7]

Hitler was well aware that this order was illegal, but personally absolved in advance any soldiers who violated international law in enforcing this order. He said that the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 did not apply since the Soviets had not signed them.[6] The Soviet Union, as a distinct entity from the Russian Empire, did not, in fact, sign the Geneva Convention of 1929. However, Germany did, and was bound by article 82, stating "In case, in time of war, one of the belligerents is not a party to the Convention, its provisions shall nevertheless remain in force as between the belligerents who are parties thereto."

The Commissar Order read as follows:

Guidelines for the Treatment of Political Commissars

In the battle against Bolshevism, the adherence of the enemy to the principles of humanity or international law is not to be counted upon. In particular it can be expected that those of us who are taken prisoner will be treated with hatred, cruelty and inhumanity by political commissars of every kind.

The troops must be aware that:

1. In this battle mercy or considerations of international law is false. They are a danger to our own safety and to the rapid pacification of the conquered territories.

2. The originators of barbaric, Asiatic methods of warfare are the political commissars. So immediate and unhesitatingly severe measures must be undertaken against them. They are therefore, when captured in battle, as a matter of routine to be dispatched by firearms.

The following provisions also apply:

3. ... Political commissars as agents of the enemy troops are recognizable from their special badge—a red star with a golden woven hammer and sickle on the sleeves.... They are to be separated from the prisoners of war immediately, i.e. already on the battlefield. This is necessary, in order to remove from them any possibility of influencing the captured soldiers. These commissars are not to be recognized as soldiers; the protection due to prisoners of war under international law does not apply to them. When they have been separated, they are to be finished off.

4. Political commissars who have not made themselves guilty of any enemy action nor are suspected of such should be left unmolested for the time being. It will only be possible after further penetration of the country to decide whether remaining functionaries may be left in place or are to be handed over to the Sonderkommando. The aim should be for the latter to carry out the assessment.

In judging the question "guilty or not guilty", the personal impression of the attitude and bearing of the commissar should as a matter of principle count for more than the facts of the case which it may not be possible to prove.

Response Edit

The first draft of the Commissar Order was issued by General Eugen Müller on 6 May 1941 and called for the shooting of all commissars in order to avoid letting any captured commissar reach a POW camp in Germany.[8] The German historian Hans-Adolf Jacobsen wrote:

There was never any doubt in the minds of German Army commanders that the order deliberately flouted international law; that is borne out by the unusually small number of written copies of the Kommissarbefehl which were distributed.[9]

The paragraph in which General Müller called for army commanders to prevent "excesses" was removed on the request of the OKW.[10] Brauchitsch amended the order on 24 May 1941 by attaching Müller's paragraph and calling on the army to maintain discipline in the enforcement of the order.[11] The final draft of the order was issued by OKW on 6 June 1941 and was restricted only to the most senior commanders, who were instructed to inform their subordinates verbally.[11]

Nazi propaganda presented Barbarossa as an ideological-racial war between German National Socialism and "Judeo-Bolshevism," dehumanising the Soviet enemy as a force of Slavic Untermensch (sub-humans) and "Asiatic" savages engaging in "barbaric Asiatic fighting methods" commanded by evil Jewish commissars to whom German troops were to grant no mercy.[12] The vast majority of the Wehrmacht officers and soldiers tended to regard the war in Nazi terms, seeing their Soviet opponents as sub-human.[13]

The enforcement of the Commissar Order led to thousands of executions.[14] The German historian Jürgen Förster wrote in 1989 that it was simply not true that the Commissar Order was not enforced, as most German Army commanders claimed in their memoirs and some German historians like Ernst Nolte were still claiming.[14] The majority of German units carried out the Commissar Order.[15] Erich von Manstein passed on the Commissar Order to his subordinates, who executed all the captured commissars, something that he was convicted of by a British court in 1949.[16] After the war, Manstein lied about disobeying the Commissar Order, saying he had been opposed to the order, and never enforced it.[16] On 23 September 1941, after several Wehrmacht commanders had asked for the order to be softened as a way of encouraging the Red Army to surrender, Hitler declined "any modification of the existing orders regarding the treatment of political commissars."[17]

When the Commissar Order became known among the Red Army it provoked stronger resistance to German forces.[18] This unwanted effect was cited in German appeals to Hitler (e.g. by Claus von Stauffenberg), who finally cancelled the Commissar Order after one year, on 6 May 1942.[19] The order was used as evidence at the Nuremberg Trials and as part of the broader issue of whether the German generals were obligated to follow orders from Hitler even when they knew those orders were illegal.

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Soviet Prisoners of War: Forgotten Nazi Victims of World War II March 30, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Führer Directives and Führer Orders". WW2DB. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  3. ^ Burleigh 1997, p. 65
  4. ^ Manfred Messerschmidt, Forward Defence (as included in War of Extermination: The German Military in World War II 1941–1945, edited by Hannes Heer and Klaus Naumann (2000); page 388
  5. ^ Messerschmidt; page 389
  6. ^ a b Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (Touchstone Edition) (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1990)
  7. ^ Kay 2011, p. 72.
  8. ^ Jacobsen 1968, pp. 516–517.
  9. ^ Jacobsen 1968, p. 517.
  10. ^ Jacobsen 1968, pp. 518–519.
  11. ^ a b Jacobsen 1968, p. 519.
  12. ^ Förster 2005, p. 126.
  13. ^ Förster 2005, p. 127.
  14. ^ a b Förster, Jürgen "The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination Against the Soviet Union". The Nazi Holocaust p. 502
  15. ^ "The War of Annihilation in the Soviet Union". The German Military and the Holocaust. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  16. ^ a b Smesler, Ronald & Davies, Edward The Myth of the Eastern Front, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007 p. 97
  17. ^ Jacobsen 1968, p. 522.
  18. ^ Holocaust Encyclopedia: Commisar Order
  19. ^ Hartmann 2013, p. 91.

Sources Edit

  • Burleigh, Michael. Ethics and Extermination. 1st ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. Cambridge Books Online. Web. 5 May 2016. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511806162
  • Jürgen Förster: "The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination Against the Soviet Union" pages 494-520 from The Nazi Holocaust Part 3 The "Final Solution": The Implementation of Mass Murder Volume 2 edited by Michael Marrus, Westpoint: Meckler Press, 1989 ISBN 0-88736-255-9.
  • Jürgen Förster: "Das Unternehmen 'Barbarossa' als Eroberungs- und Vernichtungskrieg." In: Germany and the Second World War. Clarendon Press. 1983. pp. 435–440. ISBN 3-421-06098-3.
  • Förster, Jürgen (2005). "The German Military's Image of Russia". In Erickson, Ljubica; Erickson, Mark (eds.). Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Hartmann, Christian (2013). Operation Barbarossa: Germany's War in the East, 1941–1945. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966078-0.
  • Jacobsen, Hans-Adolf (1968). "The Kommissarbefehl and Mass Executions of Soviet Russian Prisoners of War". In Krausnick, Helmut; Buchheim, Hans; Broszat, Martin; Jacobsen, Hans-Adolf (eds.). Anatomy of the SS State. New York: Walker and Company. ISBN 978-0-00-211026-6.
  • Kay, Alex J. (2011) [2006]. Exploitation, Resettlement, Mass Murder: Political And Economic Planning for German Occupation Policy in the Soviet Union, 1940–1941. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-186-8.
  • Helmut Krausnick: "Kommissarbefehl und 'Gerichtsbarkeitserlass Barbarossa' in neuer Sicht," In: Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte. 25, 1977, pp. 682–738.
  • Reinhard Otto: "Wehrmacht, Gestapo und sowjetische Kriegsgefangene im deutschen Reichsgebiet 1941/42." Munich 1998, ISBN 3-486-64577-3.
  • Felix Römer: "Der Kommissarbefehl. Wehrmacht und NS-Verbrechen an der Ostfront 1941/42." Schöningh, Paderborn 2008, ISBN 978-3-506-76595-6.
  • Römer, Felix (2012). "The Wehrmacht in the War of Ideologies: The Army and Hitler's Criminal Orders on the Eastern Front". In Alex J. Kay; Jeff Rutherford; David Stahel (eds.). Nazi Policy on the Eastern Front, 1941: Total War, Genocide, and Radicalization. University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-407-9.
  • Christian Streit: "Keine Kameraden. Die Wehrmacht und die sowjetischen Kriegsgefangenen 1941–1945." Dietz, Bonn 1991 [1979], ISBN 3-8012-5016-4.

External links Edit

  • 6 June 1941 Hitler
  • Commissar order: English translation
  • "Fuhrer-Erlasse" 1939–1945 (über die Ausübung der Kriegsgerichtsbarkeit im Gebiet "Barbarossa") 13 May 1941 Keitel

commissar, order, german, kommissarbefehl, order, issued, german, high, command, june, 1941, before, operation, barbarossa, official, name, guidelines, treatment, political, commissars, richtlinien, für, behandlung, politischer, kommissare, instructed, wehrmac. The Commissar Order German Kommissarbefehl was an order issued by the German High Command OKW on 6 June 1941 before Operation Barbarossa Its official name was Guidelines for the Treatment of Political Commissars Richtlinien fur die Behandlung politischer Kommissare It instructed the Wehrmacht that any Soviet political commissar identified among captured troops be summarily executed as a purported enforcer of the so called Judeo Bolshevism ideology in military forces It is one of a series of criminal orders issued by the leadership First page of the Commissar Order dated 6 June 1941According to the order all those prisoners who could be identified as thoroughly bolshevized or as active representatives of the Bolshevist ideology should also be killed 1 Contents 1 History 2 Response 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Sources 5 External linksHistory EditPlanning for Operation Barbarossa began in June 1940 In December 1940 Hitler began vague allusions to the operation 2 to senior generals on how the war was to be conducted giving him the opportunity to gauge their reaction to such matters as collaboration with the SS in the rendering harmless of Bolsheviks which eventually culminated in Fuhrer Directive 21 on 18 December 1940 The Wehrmacht was already politicised to some extent having participated in the extra legal killings of Ernst Rohm and his associates in 1934 communists in the Sudetenland in 1938 and Czech and German political exiles in France in 1940 3 On 3 March 1941 Hitler explained to his closest military advisers how the war of annihilation was to be waged On that same day instructions incorporating Hitler s demands went to Section L of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht OKW under Deputy Chief Walter Warlimont these provided the basis for the Guidelines in Special Areas to Instructions No 21 Case Barbarossa discussing among other matters the interaction of the army and SS in the theatre of operations deriving from the need to neutralise at once leading bolsheviks and commissars 4 Discussions proceeded on 17 March during a situation conference where Chief of the OKH General Staff Franz Halder Quartermaster General Eduard Wagner and Chief of Operational Department of the OKH Adolf Heusinger were present Hitler declared The intelligentsia established by Stalin must be exterminated The most brutal violence is to be used in the Great Russian Empire quoted from Halder s War Diary entry of 17 March 5 On 30 March Hitler addressed over 200 senior officers in the Reich Chancellery Among those present was Halder who recorded the key points of the speech He argued that the war against the Soviet Union cannot be conducted in a knightly fashion because it was a war of ideologies and racial differences He further declared that the Commissars had to be liquidated without mercy because they were the bearers of ideologies directly opposed to National Socialism 6 Hitler stipulated the annihilation of the Bolshevik commissars and the Communist intelligentsia thus laying the foundation for the Commissar Order dismissed the idea of court martials for felonies committed by the German troops and emphasised the different nature of the war in the East from the war in the West 7 Hitler was well aware that this order was illegal but personally absolved in advance any soldiers who violated international law in enforcing this order He said that the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 did not apply since the Soviets had not signed them 6 The Soviet Union as a distinct entity from the Russian Empire did not in fact sign the Geneva Convention of 1929 However Germany did and was bound by article 82 stating In case in time of war one of the belligerents is not a party to the Convention its provisions shall nevertheless remain in force as between the belligerents who are parties thereto The Commissar Order read as follows Guidelines for the Treatment of Political CommissarsIn the battle against Bolshevism the adherence of the enemy to the principles of humanity or international law is not to be counted upon In particular it can be expected that those of us who are taken prisoner will be treated with hatred cruelty and inhumanity by political commissars of every kind The troops must be aware that 1 In this battle mercy or considerations of international law is false They are a danger to our own safety and to the rapid pacification of the conquered territories 2 The originators of barbaric Asiatic methods of warfare are the political commissars So immediate and unhesitatingly severe measures must be undertaken against them They are therefore when captured in battle as a matter of routine to be dispatched by firearms The following provisions also apply 3 Political commissars as agents of the enemy troops are recognizable from their special badge a red star with a golden woven hammer and sickle on the sleeves They are to be separated from the prisoners of war immediately i e already on the battlefield This is necessary in order to remove from them any possibility of influencing the captured soldiers These commissars are not to be recognized as soldiers the protection due to prisoners of war under international law does not apply to them When they have been separated they are to be finished off 4 Political commissars who have not made themselves guilty of any enemy action nor are suspected of such should be left unmolested for the time being It will only be possible after further penetration of the country to decide whether remaining functionaries may be left in place or are to be handed over to the Sonderkommando The aim should be for the latter to carry out the assessment In judging the question guilty or not guilty the personal impression of the attitude and bearing of the commissar should as a matter of principle count for more than the facts of the case which it may not be possible to prove Response EditThe first draft of the Commissar Order was issued by General Eugen Muller on 6 May 1941 and called for the shooting of all commissars in order to avoid letting any captured commissar reach a POW camp in Germany 8 The German historian Hans Adolf Jacobsen wrote There was never any doubt in the minds of German Army commanders that the order deliberately flouted international law that is borne out by the unusually small number of written copies of the Kommissarbefehl which were distributed 9 The paragraph in which General Muller called for army commanders to prevent excesses was removed on the request of the OKW 10 Brauchitsch amended the order on 24 May 1941 by attaching Muller s paragraph and calling on the army to maintain discipline in the enforcement of the order 11 The final draft of the order was issued by OKW on 6 June 1941 and was restricted only to the most senior commanders who were instructed to inform their subordinates verbally 11 Nazi propaganda presented Barbarossa as an ideological racial war between German National Socialism and Judeo Bolshevism dehumanising the Soviet enemy as a force of Slavic Untermensch sub humans and Asiatic savages engaging in barbaric Asiatic fighting methods commanded by evil Jewish commissars to whom German troops were to grant no mercy 12 The vast majority of the Wehrmacht officers and soldiers tended to regard the war in Nazi terms seeing their Soviet opponents as sub human 13 The enforcement of the Commissar Order led to thousands of executions 14 The German historian Jurgen Forster wrote in 1989 that it was simply not true that the Commissar Order was not enforced as most German Army commanders claimed in their memoirs and some German historians like Ernst Nolte were still claiming 14 The majority of German units carried out the Commissar Order 15 Erich von Manstein passed on the Commissar Order to his subordinates who executed all the captured commissars something that he was convicted of by a British court in 1949 16 After the war Manstein lied about disobeying the Commissar Order saying he had been opposed to the order and never enforced it 16 On 23 September 1941 after several Wehrmacht commanders had asked for the order to be softened as a way of encouraging the Red Army to surrender Hitler declined any modification of the existing orders regarding the treatment of political commissars 17 When the Commissar Order became known among the Red Army it provoked stronger resistance to German forces 18 This unwanted effect was cited in German appeals to Hitler e g by Claus von Stauffenberg who finally cancelled the Commissar Order after one year on 6 May 1942 19 The order was used as evidence at the Nuremberg Trials and as part of the broader issue of whether the German generals were obligated to follow orders from Hitler even when they knew those orders were illegal See also EditPolitical Directorate of the Soviet Army and Soviet Navy Commando Order Severity Order German mistreatment of Soviet prisoners of war German High Command orders for Treatment of Soviet Prisoners of WarReferences EditCitations Edit Soviet Prisoners of War Forgotten Nazi Victims of World War II Archived March 30 2008 at the Wayback Machine Fuhrer Directives and Fuhrer Orders WW2DB Retrieved 19 July 2021 Burleigh 1997 p 65 Manfred Messerschmidt Forward Defence as included in War of Extermination The German Military in World War II 1941 1945 edited by Hannes Heer and Klaus Naumann 2000 page 388 Messerschmidt page 389 a b Shirer The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Touchstone Edition New York Simon amp Schuster 1990 Kay 2011 p 72 Jacobsen 1968 pp 516 517 Jacobsen 1968 p 517 Jacobsen 1968 pp 518 519 a b Jacobsen 1968 p 519 Forster 2005 p 126 Forster 2005 p 127 a b Forster Jurgen The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination Against the Soviet Union The Nazi Holocaust p 502 The War of Annihilation in the Soviet Union The German Military and the Holocaust Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b Smesler Ronald amp Davies Edward The Myth of the Eastern Front Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2007 p 97 Jacobsen 1968 p 522 Holocaust Encyclopedia Commisar Order Hartmann 2013 p 91 Sources Edit Burleigh Michael Ethics and Extermination 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1997 Cambridge Books Online Web 5 May 2016 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511806162 Jurgen Forster The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination Against the Soviet Union pages 494 520 from The Nazi Holocaust Part 3 The Final Solution The Implementation of Mass Murder Volume 2 edited by Michael Marrus Westpoint Meckler Press 1989 ISBN 0 88736 255 9 Jurgen Forster Das Unternehmen Barbarossa als Eroberungs und Vernichtungskrieg In Germany and the Second World War Clarendon Press 1983 pp 435 440 ISBN 3 421 06098 3 Forster Jurgen 2005 The German Military s Image of Russia In Erickson Ljubica Erickson Mark eds Russia War Peace and Diplomacy London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Hartmann Christian 2013 Operation Barbarossa Germany s War in the East 1941 1945 Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966078 0 Jacobsen Hans Adolf 1968 The Kommissarbefehl and Mass Executions of Soviet Russian Prisoners of War In Krausnick Helmut Buchheim Hans Broszat Martin Jacobsen Hans Adolf eds Anatomy of the SS State New York Walker and Company ISBN 978 0 00 211026 6 Kay Alex J 2011 2006 Exploitation Resettlement Mass Murder Political And Economic Planning for German Occupation Policy in the Soviet Union 1940 1941 New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 186 8 Helmut Krausnick Kommissarbefehl und Gerichtsbarkeitserlass Barbarossa in neuer Sicht In Vierteljahrshefte fur Zeitgeschichte 25 1977 pp 682 738 Reinhard Otto Wehrmacht Gestapo und sowjetische Kriegsgefangene im deutschen Reichsgebiet 1941 42 Munich 1998 ISBN 3 486 64577 3 Felix Romer Der Kommissarbefehl Wehrmacht und NS Verbrechen an der Ostfront 1941 42 Schoningh Paderborn 2008 ISBN 978 3 506 76595 6 Romer Felix 2012 The Wehrmacht in the War of Ideologies The Army and Hitler s Criminal Orders on the Eastern Front In Alex J Kay Jeff Rutherford David Stahel eds Nazi Policy on the Eastern Front 1941 Total War Genocide and Radicalization University of Rochester Press ISBN 978 1 58046 407 9 Christian Streit Keine Kameraden Die Wehrmacht und die sowjetischen Kriegsgefangenen 1941 1945 Dietz Bonn 1991 1979 ISBN 3 8012 5016 4 External links EditDer Kommissarbefehl 6 June 1941 Hitler Commissar order English translation Fuhrer Erlasse 1939 1945 uber die Ausubung der Kriegsgerichtsbarkeit im Gebiet Barbarossa 13 May 1941 Keitel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commissar Order amp oldid 1168519918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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