fbpx
Wikipedia

Reichswehr

Reichswehr (lit.'Reich Defence') was the official name of the German armed forces during the Weimar Republic and the first years of the Third Reich. After Germany was defeated in World War I, the Imperial German Army (Deutsches Heer) was dissolved in order to be reshaped into a peacetime army. From it a provisional Reichswehr was formed in March 1919. Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, the rebuilt German Army was subject to severe limitations in size, structure and armament. The official formation of the Reichswehr took place on 1 January 1921 after the limitations had been met. The German armed forces kept the name 'Reichswehr' until Adolf Hitler's 1935 proclamation of the "restoration of military sovereignty", at which point it became part of the new Wehrmacht.

Reichswehr
War ensign of the Reichswehr
Founded6 March 1919; 104 years ago (6 March 1919)
Disbanded16 March 1935; 88 years ago (16 March 1935)
Service branches
HeadquartersZossen, Brandenburg
Leadership
Commander-in-chiefFriedrich Ebert (1919–25)
Paul von Hindenburg (1925–34)
Adolf Hitler (1934–35)
Reichswehr MinisterSee list
Chief of the ministerial officeSee list
Personnel
Military age18–45
ConscriptionNo
Active personnel115,000 (1921)
Related articles
HistoryGerman Revolution
Greater Poland uprising
Silesian Uprisings
Ruhr uprising
RanksMilitary ranks of the Reichswehr

Although ostensibly apolitical, the Reichswehr acted as a state within a state, and its leadership was an important political power factor in the Weimar Republic. The Reichswehr sometimes supported the democratic government, as it did in the Ebert-Groener Pact when it pledged its loyalty to the Republic, and sometimes backed anti-democratic forces through such means as the Black Reichswehr, the illegal paramilitary groups it sponsored in contravention of the Versailles Treaty. The Reichswehr saw itself as a cadre army that would preserve the expertise of the old imperial military and form the basis for German rearmament.

Structure of the Reichswehr edit

Arms limitations under the Treaty of Versailles edit

In Part V of the 1919 Versailles Treaty, Germany had obligated itself to limit the size and armaments of its military forces so that they could be used only as border protection and for the maintenance of order within Germany.

In accordance with the treaty's provisions, personnel strength was limited to a professional army of 100,000[1] men plus a 15,000-man navy. The establishment of a general staff was prohibited. Heavy weapons above defined calibres, armoured vehicles, submarines and large warships were prohibited, as was any type of air force. The regulations were overseen by the Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control until 1927.

Conscription into the German Army had traditionally been for a period of 1 to 3 years. After they had completed their terms of service, the discharged soldiers created a large pool of trained reserves. The Versailles Treaty fixed the term of service for Reichswehr officers at 25 years and for all others at 12 in order to prevent such a buildup of reservists.[2]

Founding edit

On 9 November 1918, at the beginning the German Revolution that led to the collapse of the German Empire and the flight of Emperor Wilhelm II, a republic was proclaimed from Berlin. The next day, German Chancellor Friedrich Ebert and General Wilhelm Groener, acting in the name of the Supreme Army Command, concluded the Ebert-Groener Pact. In it Groener assured Ebert of the loyalty of the armed forces,[3][4] and in return Ebert promised that the government would take prompt action against leftist uprisings, call a national assembly, keep the military command within the professional officer corps and, most importantly, retain the military’s traditional status as ‘state within a state’ – that is, it would continue to be largely independent of the civilian government.

As part of the Armistice of 11 November 1918, the new German government agreed to the speedy evacuation of occupied territories. The withdrawal on the western front began on 12 November and by 17 January 1919 the areas on the west bank of the Rhine were free of German military forces. The task was then to gradually disarm the units of the Imperial Army which still numbered several million soldiers. This was done at previously designated demobilisation sites, usually the respective home garrisons. For the regiments with garrisons on the west bank of the Rhine, demobilisation sites were designated in the interior of the Reich.

The Council of the People's Deputies – the de facto government of Germany from November 1918 until February 1919 – and the Supreme Army Command intended to transfer the remaining units to a peacetime army following demobilisation. On 6 March 1919 the Weimar National Assembly passed a law on the formation of a provisional army to be made up of 43 brigades.[5][better source needed][6] It authorised the Reich President "to dissolve the existing army and to form a provisional Reichswehr which, until the creation of a new armed force to be ordered by Reich law, would protect the borders of the Reich, enforce the orders of the Reich government, and maintain domestic peace and order."

A similarly worded law on the formation of a provisional navy dated 16 April 1919 authorised it to “secure the German coasts, enable safe maritime traffic by clearing mines, acting as maritime police and otherwise assisting merchant shipping, ensure the undisturbed exercise of fishing, enforce the orders of the Reich government in conjunction with the Reichswehr, and maintain peace and order." The strength of the navy was to be 20,000 men.

From 1 October 1919 to 1 April 1920, the forces of the Provisional Reich Army were moved into the 400,000-strong ‘Transitional Army’[7] consisting of 20 brigades.[5] At the same time, the old army’s units and duties were eliminated. After falling to 150,000 men in October 1920, the brigades were replaced by regiments, and the final army strength of 100,000 was reached by 1 January 1921.[5] The Reichswehr was officially formed on that date, with the Defence Law of 23 March 1921 regulating the details. The soldiers’ oath was sworn to the Weimar Constitution.

Structure edit

 
Structure of the Reichswehr, 1920–1934

The Reichswehr was divided into the Reichsheer (army) and the Reichsmarine (navy). The Reichsheer consisted of seven infantry and three cavalry divisions,[7] with all units renumbered. The Reich’s territory was divided into seven military districts. There were two group commands, No. 1 in Berlin and No. 2 in Kassel. The navy was allowed a limited number of certain types of ships and boats, with no submarines.[8] It was divided into Naval Station Baltic Sea and Naval Station North Sea. Under the terms of the Versailles Treaty, the service period for enlisted men and non-commissioned officers in both the army and the navy was 12 years, with 25 years for officers.

The 1921 Defence Law ended the military sovereignty of the states but left Saxony, Württemberg, Baden, and Bavaria with limited independence. Bavaria was special in that Military District VII covered the entire territory of the state with the exception of the Palatinate, and only Bavarians served in the 7th (Bavarian) Division. Until 1924 this unit, known as the Bavarian Reichswehr, enjoyed certain rights of autonomy with respect to the Reich government.

Commanders edit

 
Gustav Noske (right) with Walther von Lüttwitz (1920)

According to the Weimar Constitution, the Reich President had "supreme command over the entire armed forces of the Reich". In general, however, he could act only if there was a countersignature by a member of the government. In terms of authority, this was the Reichswehr Minister.

Two Reich Presidents held office during the Weimar Republic: Friedrich Ebert until 1925, followed by Paul von Hindenburg. The first Reichswehr Minister was Gustav Noske, who was replaced by Otto Geßler after the Kapp Putsch in 1920. Groener took office in 1928, and his deputy Kurt von Schleicher replaced him in 1932. Schleicher continued to hold office on a provisional basis during his two-month chancellorship. Prior to Adolf Hitler's appointment as Reich chancellor, Hindenburg unilaterally – not at the chancellor's recommendation as required by the constitution – appointed Werner von Blomberg as Reichswehr Minister.

The head of army command was initially General Walther Reinhardt. After the Kapp Putsch, General Hans von Seeckt took over the post and had both the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and the Nazi Party banned in 1923. Wilhelm Heye followed him in 1926. Heye was succeeded in 1930 by Kurt Freiherr von Hammerstein-Equord, who tendered his resignation on 27 December 1933. He was succeeded by Werner von Fritsch.

Social composition edit

Given the limited size of the army, careful selection of personnel was possible. Experienced leaders came from the ‘Old Army’ of the Empire. In 1925, 24% of the officers were from the former nobility, down from 30% in 1913. This continued the long-term trend of a reduction in the percentage of noble officers. Large parts of the officer corps held a conservative, monarchist worldview and rejected the Weimar Republic. Especially within the former nobility, however, the stance towards National Socialism was not entirely uncritical.

The Reichswehr leadership and officer corps successfully resisted the democratisation of the troops. Preference was given to recruits from the predominantly conservative rural areas of Germany. The Reichswehr leadership considered them not only physically superior to young men from the cities but also as able to stand up against the "temptations" of social democracy.

In 1926 Reichstag President Paul Löbe proposed to make recruitment dependent on physical fitness only in order to make the composition of the Reichswehr reflect more closely that of society as a whole. The proposal led to fierce opposition from the Reichswehr and conservative circles, both of which believed that opening the Reichswehr to all social groups would lower its effectiveness. Löbe’s proposal did not pass.

The Reichswehr saw itself as a ‘cadre army’ or ‘Leader army’ (‘Führerarmee’), which meant that every soldier was trained in the skills needed to gain higher levels of responsibility. This was to become a basic prerequisite for the rapid growth of the army after the proclamation of military sovereignty by the Nazi regime in 1935.

Officers in the Reichswehr edit

Under the terms of the Versailles Treaty, the Reichswehr was allowed 4,000 officers, while the Reichsmarine could have 1,500 officers and deck officers. The actual Reichswehr officer corps numbered 3,718, down from 227,081 in 1918, of whom 38,118 were career officers. The officers transferred to the Reichswehr were almost all general staff officers. Of the approximately 15,000 men who had been promoted to officers during the war, the Reichswehr took on only a few, as these front-line officers were seen as alien to officer life in the mess hall, barracks, and society. Democratically-minded officers were not accepted into the force. Radical nationalist officers were with few exceptions removed, especially after the Kapp Putsch.

The political attitude of the officer corps was monarchist, although outwardly they posed as loyal to the Republic. Even though the German nobility, which was officially abolished in August 1919, had accounted for only 0.14% of the pre-war German population, an average of 23.8% of the officers in the Reichswehr were from noble backgrounds. The proportion of former noble officers in the individual branches of the armed forces varied greatly. In 1920 they made up 50% of the officers in the cavalry but only 5% in the infantry and 4% in the sappers. Of the approximately 1,000 non-commissioned officers promoted to officers in 1919, by 1928 only 117 remained, or 3.5% of the total officers in the Reichswehr.

Since the Reich government did not bring the officer candidate recruitment process under state control, regimental commanders in the Reichswehr continued to be responsible for selecting officer candidates, as they had in the old Imperial Army. Those admitted came almost exclusively from circles traditionally close to the military. In 1926, 96% of the officer candidates came from the upper social classes and nearly 50% from officer families. The homogeneity of the Reichswehr officer corps was in fact greater than it had been during the Empire. In 1912/13 only 24% of officers had come from families of active or former officers.[9]

Reichswehr in the Weimar Republic edit

By assuring Ebert of its loyalty in the November 1918 Ebert-Groener Pact, the military had ensured the survival of the new government. In the crisis-ridden early 1920s, the Republic used the Reichswehr primarily to fight insurgent left-wing forces, such as during the Spartacist uprising in Berlin in 1919.

Cooperation with the Freikorps edit

Wherever the Treaty of Versailles tied the Reichswehr’s hands or its own manpower was insufficient, it left ‘national defence’ – e.g. border skirmishes against Polish and Lithuanian irregulars, or deployment against the Ruhr Red Army in the demilitarised Rhineland – to the Freikorps, which although officially disbanded in 1920 continued to operate. The Reichswehr cooperated with nationalist Freikorps units when it took action against leftist governments in Thuringia and Saxony in October and November 1923 during the so-called ‘Reich executions’ – interventions against an individual state led by the central government to enforce national law. Reichswehr generals also maintained close contacts with politically right-wing, anti-republican military associations such as the Stahlhelm and Kyffhäuserbund, although the Reichswehr officially described itself as "apolitical".

Passivity during the Kapp Putsch edit

 
General Hans von Seeckt at a Reichswehr exercise, 1925

In March 1920 Germany’s political leadership did not use the Reichswehr against the Kapp Putsch, a failed coup attempt against the Weimar Republic. It occurred after the government tried to demobilise two Freikorps brigades and one of them refused to disband. Seeckt, the chief of the Truppenamt – the disguised general staff of the Reichswehr – had previously spoken out against taking action, reportedly saying that “Reichswehr does not fire on Reichswehr”. Seeckt, however, had no command authority. The Chief of Army Command, and thus the highest military officer, Reinhardt, was in favor of using loyal Reichswehr units to suppress the putsch, but neither Reichswehr Minister Noske nor the Reich government gave the order to deploy. (By contrast, the left-wing Ruhr Uprising, which began during the Kapp Putsch in the Ruhr and Saxony, was ruthlessly put down with the active involvement of the Reichswehr.) As a result of the Kapp putsch, Noske of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), was replaced by Otto Geßler of the German Democratic Party (DDP).

Circumvention of the Treaty of Versailles edit

The Reichswehr leadership began early on to circumvent the arms restrictions in the Versailles Treaty through a series of secret and illegal measures. They included the clandestine establishment of the Black Reichswehr, unauthorised weapons testing in the Soviet Union, the establishment of a Leaders’ Assistant Training School which was intended to compensate for the forbidden General Staff training, and the maintenance of the General Staff in the newly created Truppenamt. Under the code name ‘Statistical Society’, plans for an armaments industry were worked out with the Reich Federation of German Industry. With the help of retired officers, sports schools for training infantrymen were founded, most of them near former military training areas, where exercise instructors for military sports were trained.[10] This took place, especially in northern Germany, with the support of the Stahlhelm, a veterans’ organisation that was part of the Black Reichswehr.[11] Other aids in military training included the use of dummy tanks for exercise purposes.

Secret cooperation with the Soviet Union edit

In February 1923 the new Chief of the Truppenamt, Major General Otto Hasse, travelled to Moscow for secret negotiations. Germany was to support the development of Soviet industry and Red Army commanders were to receive general staff training in Germany. In return, the Reichswehr was able to expand secretly in contravention of the Treaty of Versailles. It was given the opportunity to obtain artillery from the Soviet Union, to train aviation and tank specialists on Soviet soil, and to have chemical warfare agents manufactured and tested. A secret Reichswehr aviation school and testing facility was established at Lipetsk, where some 120 military pilots, 100 aerial observers, and numerous ground personnel were trained as the core of a future German Air Force. At Kazan, tank specialists were trained, but not until 1930 and to a number of only about thirty. At the Tomka gas test site near Saratov, chemical warfare agents were jointly tested and developed.

In December 1926 Social Democrat Philipp Scheidemann disclosed the collaboration with the Soviet Union to the Reichstag, toppling the government under Wilhelm Marx. In 1931 Carl von Ossietzky and Walter Kreiser were convicted of espionage in the Weltbühne Trial for a 1929 report in the weekly Weltbühne on the collaboration, which was by then already known.

Crisis in Bavaria and the Beer Hall Putsch edit

In response to unrest in Bavaria, Ebert transferred executive power to Geßler in November 1923. True power thus rested with von Seeckt, the head of the army command, who prevented a ‘Reich execution’ (see also Cooperation with the Freikorps, above) against the Bavarian government under Gustav Ritter von Kahr. Kahr had been named State Commissioner when the Bavarian Minister President declared martial law. Kahr had designs to overthrow the Weimar Republic[12] and was at first co-operating with Adolf Hitler but then broke with him before Hitler began the Beer Hall Putsch on 8 November. The Reichswehr’s Bavarian military district commander, General Otto von Lossow, supported Kahr and refused to carry out orders from Geßler to suppress the unrest. Ebert and Seeckt then relieved him of his command, although Seeckt sympathised with the government in Munich. In February 1924 Seeckt relinquished the executive powers he had received through Ebert.

Seeckt and the events of 1924–1932 edit

The 1925 Locarno Treaties ruled out any forcible change in Germany’s western borders, and in 1926 Germany joined the League of Nations. While war continued to be seen in the Reichswehr as a means to achieve political goals, government policy under the Locarno Treaties and the Dawes Plan, which for the short term resolved the issue of German reparations payments to the victorious powers, was oriented more toward maintaining peace and international understanding. Seeckt and his officers were opposed to joining the League of Nations and saw their existence threatened by the pacifism of Germany’s left.

After the election of Paul von Hindenburg as Reich President in 1925, his status as victor in the 1914 Battle of Tannenberg made him a figure with whom Reichswehr soldiers identified. Seeckt was forced to resign on 9 October 1926 because he had invited the son of former emperor Wilhelm II to attend army manoeuvres in the uniform of the old Imperial 1st Foot Guards without seeking government approval. It created a storm when the republican press publicised the transgression. Geßler told Hindenburg that Seeckt had to resign or he would himself resign. He was supported by the cabinet, so Hindenburg asked for and received Seeckt's resignation.[13]

Seeckt was succeeded by General Wilhelm Heye, although it was primarily General Kurt von Schleicher who gained additional power. Under his leadership, the Reichswehr intervened in politics more often in order to achieve its goals, with the result that the Republic and the Reichswehr moved closer together.

In February 1927 the Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control, which until then had supervised disarmament, withdrew from Germany.

The decision to build the pocket battleship Deutschland in 1928, which was in compliance with the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles and was a matter of prestige, caused problems for the Social Democrat Reich Chancellor Hermann Müller because his party had campaigned against the ship, but his cabinet members voted for it in order to save the coalition government. For the Reichswehr leadership, the vote was a landmark political decision. The 1929 budget included the first installment for the Deutschland’s sister ship, the Admiral Scheer.

The rapprochement between the Republic and the Reichswehr brought the greatest gains to the Reichswehr. It achieved an increase in the defence budget, and criticism of the increase was seen as an attack on the Reichswehr and thus on the state.

End of the Weimar Republic edit

Because of Hindenburg’s support for the Reichswehr, the presidential cabinets from 1930 onward increased its power. Reich Chancellor Heinrich Brüning was embraced as a former soldier by the Reichswehr, and he spared it from his unpopular austerity measures. Franz von Papen and Schleicher, the two Reich chancellors who followed Brüning, considered using the Reichswehr to abolish democracy. In addition, one of the presidential cabinets’ main objectives was a revision of the Treaty of Versailles in the interest of the Reichswehr.

In 1931 and 1932, a series of actions by the Reichswehr and its leadership showed its increasing power and drift towards the Nazis:

  • When the Harzburg Front, an anti-democratic alliance that included the Nazi Party, was formed in 1931, high-ranking members of the Reichswehr were present.
  • In 1932 Reichswehr Minister Groener, under pressure from several German states, outlawed the Nazi Sturmabteilung (SA) and Schutzstaffel (SS). He did this in his capacity as acting Minister of the Interior, whereas his goal as Reichswehr Minister was to integrate the SA into a non-partisan paramilitary force. Schleicher, Groener’s subordinate at the Ministry of the Reichswehr, told him that by outlawing the SA he had lost the trust of the Reichswehr, and as a result he resigned as Reichswehr Minister.[14]
  • On 13 September 1932, on the initiative of Groener and Schleicher, the Reich Board for Youth Training was founded for the military education of German youth. In July 1933, under Hitler’s chancellorship, it became part of the SA.
  • In the so-called Prussian coup d'état of July 1932, violent unrest in Berlin, particularly a bloody clash between the SA and communists, led Chancellor Papen to use an emergency decree issued by Hindenburg under Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution to temporarily transfer executive power in Berlin and Prussia to the Reichswehr.

According to historian Klaus-Jürgen Müller, the German military strove for Germany to obtain a "position of world power". He identified two tendencies that were united in this long-term goal but that advocated different methods. One "adventurous" direction, represented by Seeckt, espoused a German-Soviet war of revenge against Poland and France. The other, more "modern" direction, represented by Schleicher, which prevailed at the end of the 1920s, relied on a combination of political, military, and economic factors. Firstly, Germany's economic position was to be strengthened and France relegated to the role of a junior partner. The supremacy thus gained in Europe was to form the basis for a position of world power. Müller sees in this one of the "lines of continuity" of German development from the Empire to National Socialism and the cause of an "entente" between groups of the traditional military elites and the Hitler movement in 1933. Hitler was dependent on their support in seizing power, while the latter in turn needed Hitler's supporters as a "mass base".[15]

State within a state edit

In spite of Groener’s assurance in the Ebert-Groener Pact of the military’s loyalty to the government,[3][4] most military leaders refused to accept the democratic Weimar Republic as legitimate. The Reichswehr under the leadership of Seeckt operated largely outside of the control of the politicians.[16] Members of the Reichswehr did not have the right to vote, were subject to internal Reichswehr jurisdiction, and were thus detached from the social and political world. Because of the Ebert-Groener Pact and the Reichswehr's direct subordination to the Reich President, it was able to ensure itself of extensive internal autonomy. It used this to refuse to obey the Reich government, as it did for example during the Kapp Putsch. The autonomy, which included the selection of personnel as well as its code of values and belief that it served the state rather than the form of government, combined with its own jurisdiction under the Reich President to make the Reichswehr a ‘state within a state’ that was difficult to control.

In 1928 the Reichswehr created the Ministeramt, or Office of Ministerial Affairs, under Schleicher, to lobby politicians.[3] German historian Eberhard Kolb wrote that “from the mid-1920s onwards the Army leaders had developed and propagated new social conceptions of a militarist kind, tending towards a fusion of the military and civilian sectors and ultimately a totalitarian military state.”[16]

Reichswehr under Adolf Hitler edit

After becoming chancellor at the end of January 1933, Hitler presented his government program to the generals on 3 February. Among other things, he promised them that the Reichswehr would remain Germany's sole armed force and announced the reintroduction of conscription. The Reichswehr hoped for increased efforts to revise the Treaty of Versailles and the building of a strong military and firm state leadership. But it also feared that the Reichswehr would be supplanted by the 3 million member SA. SA leader Ernst Röhm and his colleagues thought of their force as the future army of Germany, replacing the smaller Reichswehr and its professional officers. The Reichswehr supported Hitler in taking power away from the SA in the summer of 1934. Röhm wanted to become Reichswehr Minister, and in February 1934 demanded that the much smaller Reichswehr be merged into the SA to form a true people's army. This alarmed both political and military leaders, and to forestall the possibility of a coup Hitler sided with conservative leaders and the military. In the Night of the Long Knives (30 June–2 July 1934) Röhm and the leadership of the SA were murdered along with many other political adversaries of the Nazis, including Reichswehr generals Schleicher and Ferdinand von Bredow. The Reichswehr officer corps acknowledged the murders without objection.

 
Reichsheer soldiers swearing the Hitler oath in August 1934, with hands raised in the traditional schwurhand gesture

During 1933 and 1934 the Reichswehr began a secret program of expansion. In December 1933 the army staff decided to increase the active strength to 300,000 men in 21 divisions. On 1 April 1934, between 50,000 and 60,000 new recruits entered the force and were assigned to special training battalions. The original seven infantry divisions of the Reichswehr were expanded to 21, with military district headquarters increased to the size of a corps headquarters on 1 October 1934.[17][18] These divisions used cover names to hide their divisional size, but during October 1935 they were dropped. Also during October 1934, the officers who had been forced to retire in 1919 were recalled. Those who were no longer fit for combat were assigned to administrative positions, thus releasing fit officers for front-line duties.[19]

On 2 August 1934, the day Hindenburg died, Reichswehr Minister Werner von Blomberg, who was originally to have helped ‘tame’ the Nazis, had the Reichswehr swear its oath personally to Hitler. Under the Weimar Republic the oath had been to the constitution.

On 1 March 1935, the Luftwaffe was established and on 16 March universal conscription was reintroduced, both of which violated the Treaty of Versailles. In the same act the Reichswehr was renamed the Wehrmacht. On 1 June 1935 the Reichsheer (the army contingent of the Reichswehr) was renamed ‘Heer’ (‘army’) and the Reichsmarine became the ‘Kriegsmarine’ (‘war navy’).

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Darman, Peter, ed. (2007). "Introduction: Deutschland Erwache". World War II A Day-By-Day History (60th Anniversary ed.). New York: Barnes & Noble. pp. 10 & 575. ISBN 978-0-7607-9475-3.
  2. ^ "Treaty of Versailles Part V, Articles 173–176".
  3. ^ a b c Wheeler-Bennett, John (1967). Hindenburg: The Wooden Titan. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 207–208. ISBN 9780333082690.
  4. ^ a b Shirer, William L. (2011). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. New York: Simon & Schuster. p. 54.
  5. ^ a b c Introduction to the Reichswehr, Axis History Factbook.
  6. ^ "Gesetz über die Bildung einer vorläufigen Reichswehr" [Law on the Formation of a Provisional Army]. documentArchiv.de. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  7. ^ a b Haskew, Michael (2011). The Wehrmacht. London: Amber Books Ltd. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-78274-592-1.
  8. ^ Porter, David (2010). The Kriegsmarine. London: Amber Books Ltd. p. 11. ISBN 9781907446108.
  9. ^ Richhardt, Dirk. "Auswahl und Ausbildung junger Offiziere 1930–1945: Zur sozialen Genese des deutschen Offizierkorps, Inaugural-Dissertation, Fachbereich Geschichte und Kulturwissenschaften, Philipps-Universität Marburg 2002" [Selection and Training of Young Officers 1930-1945: On the Social Genesis of the German Officer Corps] (PDF).
  10. ^ Krüger, Arnd; von Lojewski, Frank (1998). "Ausgewählte Aspekte des Wehrsports in Niedersachsen in der Weimarer Zeit" [Selected aspects of military sports in Lower Saxony during the Weimar period]. In Langenfeld, Hans; Nielsen, Stefan (eds.). Beiträge zur Sportgeschichte Niedersachsens. Teil 2: Weimarer Republik [Contributions to the history of sports in Lower Saxony. Part 2: Weimar Republic] (in German). Hoya: Niedersächsisches Institut für Sportgeschichte NISH. pp. 124–148.
  11. ^ Lippelt, O. (1936). Fünfzehn Jahre Stahlhelm in Niedersachsen [Fifteen years of Stahlhelm in Lower Saxony] (in German). Lüchoe, Druck- u. Verlagsgemeinschaft.
  12. ^ Fest, Joachim (1974). Hitler. San Diego: Harcourt Inc. p. 175. ISBN 0-15-602754-2.
  13. ^ Dorpalen, Andreas (1964). Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 111–112. ISBN 978-1111020736.
  14. ^ Hiller von Gaertringen, Friedrich Freiherr (1966). "Groener, Wilhelm". Neue Deutsche Biographie 7 (in German). Online version. pp. 111–114.
  15. ^ Müller, Klaus-Jürgen (1989). "Deutsche Militär-Elite in der Vorgeschichte des Zweiten Weltkrieges" [German Military Elite Prior to the Second World War]. In Broszat, Martin; Schwabe, Klaus (eds.). Die deutschen Eliten und der Weg in den Zweiten Weltkrieg [German Elites and the Road to the Second World War] (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck Verlag. pp. 226 ff. ISBN 978-3406339936.
  16. ^ a b Kolb, Eberhard (2005). The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge. p. 172.
  17. ^ Kane, Robert B. (2008). Disobedience and Conspiracy in the German Army 1918–1945. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 102. ISBN 978-0786437443.
  18. ^ O'Neill, Robert J. (1968). The German Army and the Nazi Party 1933–39. London: Heineman. pp. 91–92.
  19. ^ Stone, David J. (2009). Fighting for the Fatherland: The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day. Sterling, VA: Potomac Books. p. 450. ISBN 9781597970693.

Bibliography edit

  • Darman, Peter, ed. (2007). "Introduction: Deutschland Erwache". World War II A Day-By-Day History (60th Anniversary ed.). China: The Brown Reference Group plc. ISBN 978-0-7607-9475-3.
  • Deist, Wilhelm; Messerschmidt, Manfred; Volkmann, Hans-Erich; Wette, Wolfram (1990). Volume I The Build-up of German Aggression. Vol. I. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt GmbH. ISBN 0-19-822866-X. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Haskew, Michael (2011). The Wehrmacht. Amber Books Ltd.
  • Kane, Robert B. (2008). Disobedience and Conspiracy in the German Army 1918–1945.
  • Keller, Peter (2014). Die Wehrmacht der Deutschen Republik ist die Reichswehr:Die deutsche Armee 1918–1921 (in German). Paderborn: Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh.
  • Kolb, Eberhard (2005). The Weimar Republic. London: Routledge.
  • O'Neill, Robert J. (1968). The German Army and the Nazi Party 1933–39. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Porter, David (2010). The Kriegsmarine. Amber Books Ltd.
  • Shirer, William L. (2011). The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster.
  • Stone, David J. (2006). Fighting for the Fatherland: The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day.
  • Wheeler-Bennett, John (1967). Hindenburg: The Wooden Titan. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wheeler-Bennett, John (2005). The Nemesis of Power: German Army in Politics, 1918–1945. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • "Introduction to the Reichswehr". Axis History Factbook. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  • Glantz, David; House, Jonathan (2015). When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. Vol. Revised and Expanded Edition. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-70062-121-7.

External links edit

  • Axis History Factbook — Reichswehr
  • Feldgrau's overview of the Reichswehr
  • The Archives of technical Manuals 1900–1945 (includes the Reichswehr-regulations)

reichswehr, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2020, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Reichswehr news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Reichswehr lit Reich Defence was the official name of the German armed forces during the Weimar Republic and the first years of the Third Reich After Germany was defeated in World War I the Imperial German Army Deutsches Heer was dissolved in order to be reshaped into a peacetime army From it a provisional Reichswehr was formed in March 1919 Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles the rebuilt German Army was subject to severe limitations in size structure and armament The official formation of the Reichswehr took place on 1 January 1921 after the limitations had been met The German armed forces kept the name Reichswehr until Adolf Hitler s 1935 proclamation of the restoration of military sovereignty at which point it became part of the new Wehrmacht ReichswehrWar ensign of the ReichswehrFounded6 March 1919 104 years ago 6 March 1919 Disbanded16 March 1935 88 years ago 16 March 1935 Service branchesReichsheer ReichsmarineHeadquartersZossen BrandenburgLeadershipCommander in chiefFriedrich Ebert 1919 25 Paul von Hindenburg 1925 34 Adolf Hitler 1934 35 Reichswehr MinisterSee listChief of the ministerial officeSee listPersonnelMilitary age18 45ConscriptionNoActive personnel115 000 1921 Related articlesHistoryGerman RevolutionGreater Poland uprisingSilesian UprisingsRuhr uprisingRanksMilitary ranks of the ReichswehrAlthough ostensibly apolitical the Reichswehr acted as a state within a state and its leadership was an important political power factor in the Weimar Republic The Reichswehr sometimes supported the democratic government as it did in the Ebert Groener Pact when it pledged its loyalty to the Republic and sometimes backed anti democratic forces through such means as the Black Reichswehr the illegal paramilitary groups it sponsored in contravention of the Versailles Treaty The Reichswehr saw itself as a cadre army that would preserve the expertise of the old imperial military and form the basis for German rearmament Contents 1 Structure of the Reichswehr 1 1 Arms limitations under the Treaty of Versailles 1 2 Founding 1 3 Structure 1 4 Commanders 1 5 Social composition 1 6 Officers in the Reichswehr 2 Reichswehr in the Weimar Republic 2 1 Cooperation with the Freikorps 2 2 Passivity during the Kapp Putsch 2 3 Circumvention of the Treaty of Versailles 2 4 Secret cooperation with the Soviet Union 2 5 Crisis in Bavaria and the Beer Hall Putsch 2 6 Seeckt and the events of 1924 1932 2 7 End of the Weimar Republic 2 8 State within a state 3 Reichswehr under Adolf Hitler 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksStructure of the Reichswehr editArms limitations under the Treaty of Versailles edit In Part V of the 1919 Versailles Treaty Germany had obligated itself to limit the size and armaments of its military forces so that they could be used only as border protection and for the maintenance of order within Germany In accordance with the treaty s provisions personnel strength was limited to a professional army of 100 000 1 men plus a 15 000 man navy The establishment of a general staff was prohibited Heavy weapons above defined calibres armoured vehicles submarines and large warships were prohibited as was any type of air force The regulations were overseen by the Military Inter Allied Commission of Control until 1927 Conscription into the German Army had traditionally been for a period of 1 to 3 years After they had completed their terms of service the discharged soldiers created a large pool of trained reserves The Versailles Treaty fixed the term of service for Reichswehr officers at 25 years and for all others at 12 in order to prevent such a buildup of reservists 2 Founding edit On 9 November 1918 at the beginning the German Revolution that led to the collapse of the German Empire and the flight of Emperor Wilhelm II a republic was proclaimed from Berlin The next day German Chancellor Friedrich Ebert and General Wilhelm Groener acting in the name of the Supreme Army Command concluded the Ebert Groener Pact In it Groener assured Ebert of the loyalty of the armed forces 3 4 and in return Ebert promised that the government would take prompt action against leftist uprisings call a national assembly keep the military command within the professional officer corps and most importantly retain the military s traditional status as state within a state that is it would continue to be largely independent of the civilian government As part of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 the new German government agreed to the speedy evacuation of occupied territories The withdrawal on the western front began on 12 November and by 17 January 1919 the areas on the west bank of the Rhine were free of German military forces The task was then to gradually disarm the units of the Imperial Army which still numbered several million soldiers This was done at previously designated demobilisation sites usually the respective home garrisons For the regiments with garrisons on the west bank of the Rhine demobilisation sites were designated in the interior of the Reich The Council of the People s Deputies the de facto government of Germany from November 1918 until February 1919 and the Supreme Army Command intended to transfer the remaining units to a peacetime army following demobilisation On 6 March 1919 the Weimar National Assembly passed a law on the formation of a provisional army to be made up of 43 brigades 5 better source needed 6 It authorised the Reich President to dissolve the existing army and to form a provisional Reichswehr which until the creation of a new armed force to be ordered by Reich law would protect the borders of the Reich enforce the orders of the Reich government and maintain domestic peace and order A similarly worded law on the formation of a provisional navy dated 16 April 1919 authorised it to secure the German coasts enable safe maritime traffic by clearing mines acting as maritime police and otherwise assisting merchant shipping ensure the undisturbed exercise of fishing enforce the orders of the Reich government in conjunction with the Reichswehr and maintain peace and order The strength of the navy was to be 20 000 men From 1 October 1919 to 1 April 1920 the forces of the Provisional Reich Army were moved into the 400 000 strong Transitional Army 7 consisting of 20 brigades 5 At the same time the old army s units and duties were eliminated After falling to 150 000 men in October 1920 the brigades were replaced by regiments and the final army strength of 100 000 was reached by 1 January 1921 5 The Reichswehr was officially formed on that date with the Defence Law of 23 March 1921 regulating the details The soldiers oath was sworn to the Weimar Constitution Structure edit nbsp Structure of the Reichswehr 1920 1934The Reichswehr was divided into the Reichsheer army and the Reichsmarine navy The Reichsheer consisted of seven infantry and three cavalry divisions 7 with all units renumbered The Reich s territory was divided into seven military districts There were two group commands No 1 in Berlin and No 2 in Kassel The navy was allowed a limited number of certain types of ships and boats with no submarines 8 It was divided into Naval Station Baltic Sea and Naval Station North Sea Under the terms of the Versailles Treaty the service period for enlisted men and non commissioned officers in both the army and the navy was 12 years with 25 years for officers The 1921 Defence Law ended the military sovereignty of the states but left Saxony Wurttemberg Baden and Bavaria with limited independence Bavaria was special in that Military District VII covered the entire territory of the state with the exception of the Palatinate and only Bavarians served in the 7th Bavarian Division Until 1924 this unit known as the Bavarian Reichswehr enjoyed certain rights of autonomy with respect to the Reich government Commanders edit nbsp Gustav Noske right with Walther von Luttwitz 1920 According to the Weimar Constitution the Reich President had supreme command over the entire armed forces of the Reich In general however he could act only if there was a countersignature by a member of the government In terms of authority this was the Reichswehr Minister Two Reich Presidents held office during the Weimar Republic Friedrich Ebert until 1925 followed by Paul von Hindenburg The first Reichswehr Minister was Gustav Noske who was replaced by Otto Gessler after the Kapp Putsch in 1920 Groener took office in 1928 and his deputy Kurt von Schleicher replaced him in 1932 Schleicher continued to hold office on a provisional basis during his two month chancellorship Prior to Adolf Hitler s appointment as Reich chancellor Hindenburg unilaterally not at the chancellor s recommendation as required by the constitution appointed Werner von Blomberg as Reichswehr Minister The head of army command was initially General Walther Reinhardt After the Kapp Putsch General Hans von Seeckt took over the post and had both the Communist Party of Germany KPD and the Nazi Party banned in 1923 Wilhelm Heye followed him in 1926 Heye was succeeded in 1930 by Kurt Freiherr von Hammerstein Equord who tendered his resignation on 27 December 1933 He was succeeded by Werner von Fritsch Social composition edit Given the limited size of the army careful selection of personnel was possible Experienced leaders came from the Old Army of the Empire In 1925 24 of the officers were from the former nobility down from 30 in 1913 This continued the long term trend of a reduction in the percentage of noble officers Large parts of the officer corps held a conservative monarchist worldview and rejected the Weimar Republic Especially within the former nobility however the stance towards National Socialism was not entirely uncritical The Reichswehr leadership and officer corps successfully resisted the democratisation of the troops Preference was given to recruits from the predominantly conservative rural areas of Germany The Reichswehr leadership considered them not only physically superior to young men from the cities but also as able to stand up against the temptations of social democracy In 1926 Reichstag President Paul Lobe proposed to make recruitment dependent on physical fitness only in order to make the composition of the Reichswehr reflect more closely that of society as a whole The proposal led to fierce opposition from the Reichswehr and conservative circles both of which believed that opening the Reichswehr to all social groups would lower its effectiveness Lobe s proposal did not pass The Reichswehr saw itself as a cadre army or Leader army Fuhrerarmee which meant that every soldier was trained in the skills needed to gain higher levels of responsibility This was to become a basic prerequisite for the rapid growth of the army after the proclamation of military sovereignty by the Nazi regime in 1935 Officers in the Reichswehr edit Under the terms of the Versailles Treaty the Reichswehr was allowed 4 000 officers while the Reichsmarine could have 1 500 officers and deck officers The actual Reichswehr officer corps numbered 3 718 down from 227 081 in 1918 of whom 38 118 were career officers The officers transferred to the Reichswehr were almost all general staff officers Of the approximately 15 000 men who had been promoted to officers during the war the Reichswehr took on only a few as these front line officers were seen as alien to officer life in the mess hall barracks and society Democratically minded officers were not accepted into the force Radical nationalist officers were with few exceptions removed especially after the Kapp Putsch The political attitude of the officer corps was monarchist although outwardly they posed as loyal to the Republic Even though the German nobility which was officially abolished in August 1919 had accounted for only 0 14 of the pre war German population an average of 23 8 of the officers in the Reichswehr were from noble backgrounds The proportion of former noble officers in the individual branches of the armed forces varied greatly In 1920 they made up 50 of the officers in the cavalry but only 5 in the infantry and 4 in the sappers Of the approximately 1 000 non commissioned officers promoted to officers in 1919 by 1928 only 117 remained or 3 5 of the total officers in the Reichswehr Since the Reich government did not bring the officer candidate recruitment process under state control regimental commanders in the Reichswehr continued to be responsible for selecting officer candidates as they had in the old Imperial Army Those admitted came almost exclusively from circles traditionally close to the military In 1926 96 of the officer candidates came from the upper social classes and nearly 50 from officer families The homogeneity of the Reichswehr officer corps was in fact greater than it had been during the Empire In 1912 13 only 24 of officers had come from families of active or former officers 9 Reichswehr in the Weimar Republic editBy assuring Ebert of its loyalty in the November 1918 Ebert Groener Pact the military had ensured the survival of the new government In the crisis ridden early 1920s the Republic used the Reichswehr primarily to fight insurgent left wing forces such as during the Spartacist uprising in Berlin in 1919 Cooperation with the Freikorps edit Wherever the Treaty of Versailles tied the Reichswehr s hands or its own manpower was insufficient it left national defence e g border skirmishes against Polish and Lithuanian irregulars or deployment against the Ruhr Red Army in the demilitarised Rhineland to the Freikorps which although officially disbanded in 1920 continued to operate The Reichswehr cooperated with nationalist Freikorps units when it took action against leftist governments in Thuringia and Saxony in October and November 1923 during the so called Reich executions interventions against an individual state led by the central government to enforce national law Reichswehr generals also maintained close contacts with politically right wing anti republican military associations such as the Stahlhelm and Kyffhauserbund although the Reichswehr officially described itself as apolitical Passivity during the Kapp Putsch edit nbsp General Hans von Seeckt at a Reichswehr exercise 1925In March 1920 Germany s political leadership did not use the Reichswehr against the Kapp Putsch a failed coup attempt against the Weimar Republic It occurred after the government tried to demobilise two Freikorps brigades and one of them refused to disband Seeckt the chief of the Truppenamt the disguised general staff of the Reichswehr had previously spoken out against taking action reportedly saying that Reichswehr does not fire on Reichswehr Seeckt however had no command authority The Chief of Army Command and thus the highest military officer Reinhardt was in favor of using loyal Reichswehr units to suppress the putsch but neither Reichswehr Minister Noske nor the Reich government gave the order to deploy By contrast the left wing Ruhr Uprising which began during the Kapp Putsch in the Ruhr and Saxony was ruthlessly put down with the active involvement of the Reichswehr As a result of the Kapp putsch Noske of the Social Democratic Party SPD was replaced by Otto Gessler of the German Democratic Party DDP Circumvention of the Treaty of Versailles edit The Reichswehr leadership began early on to circumvent the arms restrictions in the Versailles Treaty through a series of secret and illegal measures They included the clandestine establishment of the Black Reichswehr unauthorised weapons testing in the Soviet Union the establishment of a Leaders Assistant Training School which was intended to compensate for the forbidden General Staff training and the maintenance of the General Staff in the newly created Truppenamt Under the code name Statistical Society plans for an armaments industry were worked out with the Reich Federation of German Industry With the help of retired officers sports schools for training infantrymen were founded most of them near former military training areas where exercise instructors for military sports were trained 10 This took place especially in northern Germany with the support of the Stahlhelm a veterans organisation that was part of the Black Reichswehr 11 Other aids in military training included the use of dummy tanks for exercise purposes Secret cooperation with the Soviet Union edit In February 1923 the new Chief of the Truppenamt Major General Otto Hasse travelled to Moscow for secret negotiations Germany was to support the development of Soviet industry and Red Army commanders were to receive general staff training in Germany In return the Reichswehr was able to expand secretly in contravention of the Treaty of Versailles It was given the opportunity to obtain artillery from the Soviet Union to train aviation and tank specialists on Soviet soil and to have chemical warfare agents manufactured and tested A secret Reichswehr aviation school and testing facility was established at Lipetsk where some 120 military pilots 100 aerial observers and numerous ground personnel were trained as the core of a future German Air Force At Kazan tank specialists were trained but not until 1930 and to a number of only about thirty At the Tomka gas test site near Saratov chemical warfare agents were jointly tested and developed In December 1926 Social Democrat Philipp Scheidemann disclosed the collaboration with the Soviet Union to the Reichstag toppling the government under Wilhelm Marx In 1931 Carl von Ossietzky and Walter Kreiser were convicted of espionage in the Weltbuhne Trial for a 1929 report in the weekly Weltbuhne on the collaboration which was by then already known Crisis in Bavaria and the Beer Hall Putsch edit In response to unrest in Bavaria Ebert transferred executive power to Gessler in November 1923 True power thus rested with von Seeckt the head of the army command who prevented a Reich execution see also Cooperation with the Freikorps above against the Bavarian government under Gustav Ritter von Kahr Kahr had been named State Commissioner when the Bavarian Minister President declared martial law Kahr had designs to overthrow the Weimar Republic 12 and was at first co operating with Adolf Hitler but then broke with him before Hitler began the Beer Hall Putsch on 8 November The Reichswehr s Bavarian military district commander General Otto von Lossow supported Kahr and refused to carry out orders from Gessler to suppress the unrest Ebert and Seeckt then relieved him of his command although Seeckt sympathised with the government in Munich In February 1924 Seeckt relinquished the executive powers he had received through Ebert Seeckt and the events of 1924 1932 edit The 1925 Locarno Treaties ruled out any forcible change in Germany s western borders and in 1926 Germany joined the League of Nations While war continued to be seen in the Reichswehr as a means to achieve political goals government policy under the Locarno Treaties and the Dawes Plan which for the short term resolved the issue of German reparations payments to the victorious powers was oriented more toward maintaining peace and international understanding Seeckt and his officers were opposed to joining the League of Nations and saw their existence threatened by the pacifism of Germany s left After the election of Paul von Hindenburg as Reich President in 1925 his status as victor in the 1914 Battle of Tannenberg made him a figure with whom Reichswehr soldiers identified Seeckt was forced to resign on 9 October 1926 because he had invited the son of former emperor Wilhelm II to attend army manoeuvres in the uniform of the old Imperial 1st Foot Guards without seeking government approval It created a storm when the republican press publicised the transgression Gessler told Hindenburg that Seeckt had to resign or he would himself resign He was supported by the cabinet so Hindenburg asked for and received Seeckt s resignation 13 Seeckt was succeeded by General Wilhelm Heye although it was primarily General Kurt von Schleicher who gained additional power Under his leadership the Reichswehr intervened in politics more often in order to achieve its goals with the result that the Republic and the Reichswehr moved closer together In February 1927 the Military Inter Allied Commission of Control which until then had supervised disarmament withdrew from Germany The decision to build the pocket battleship Deutschland in 1928 which was in compliance with the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles and was a matter of prestige caused problems for the Social Democrat Reich Chancellor Hermann Muller because his party had campaigned against the ship but his cabinet members voted for it in order to save the coalition government For the Reichswehr leadership the vote was a landmark political decision The 1929 budget included the first installment for the Deutschland s sister ship the Admiral Scheer The rapprochement between the Republic and the Reichswehr brought the greatest gains to the Reichswehr It achieved an increase in the defence budget and criticism of the increase was seen as an attack on the Reichswehr and thus on the state End of the Weimar Republic edit Because of Hindenburg s support for the Reichswehr the presidential cabinets from 1930 onward increased its power Reich Chancellor Heinrich Bruning was embraced as a former soldier by the Reichswehr and he spared it from his unpopular austerity measures Franz von Papen and Schleicher the two Reich chancellors who followed Bruning considered using the Reichswehr to abolish democracy In addition one of the presidential cabinets main objectives was a revision of the Treaty of Versailles in the interest of the Reichswehr In 1931 and 1932 a series of actions by the Reichswehr and its leadership showed its increasing power and drift towards the Nazis When the Harzburg Front an anti democratic alliance that included the Nazi Party was formed in 1931 high ranking members of the Reichswehr were present In 1932 Reichswehr Minister Groener under pressure from several German states outlawed the Nazi Sturmabteilung SA and Schutzstaffel SS He did this in his capacity as acting Minister of the Interior whereas his goal as Reichswehr Minister was to integrate the SA into a non partisan paramilitary force Schleicher Groener s subordinate at the Ministry of the Reichswehr told him that by outlawing the SA he had lost the trust of the Reichswehr and as a result he resigned as Reichswehr Minister 14 On 13 September 1932 on the initiative of Groener and Schleicher the Reich Board for Youth Training was founded for the military education of German youth In July 1933 under Hitler s chancellorship it became part of the SA In the so called Prussian coup d etat of July 1932 violent unrest in Berlin particularly a bloody clash between the SA and communists led Chancellor Papen to use an emergency decree issued by Hindenburg under Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution to temporarily transfer executive power in Berlin and Prussia to the Reichswehr According to historian Klaus Jurgen Muller the German military strove for Germany to obtain a position of world power He identified two tendencies that were united in this long term goal but that advocated different methods One adventurous direction represented by Seeckt espoused a German Soviet war of revenge against Poland and France The other more modern direction represented by Schleicher which prevailed at the end of the 1920s relied on a combination of political military and economic factors Firstly Germany s economic position was to be strengthened and France relegated to the role of a junior partner The supremacy thus gained in Europe was to form the basis for a position of world power Muller sees in this one of the lines of continuity of German development from the Empire to National Socialism and the cause of an entente between groups of the traditional military elites and the Hitler movement in 1933 Hitler was dependent on their support in seizing power while the latter in turn needed Hitler s supporters as a mass base 15 State within a state edit In spite of Groener s assurance in the Ebert Groener Pact of the military s loyalty to the government 3 4 most military leaders refused to accept the democratic Weimar Republic as legitimate The Reichswehr under the leadership of Seeckt operated largely outside of the control of the politicians 16 Members of the Reichswehr did not have the right to vote were subject to internal Reichswehr jurisdiction and were thus detached from the social and political world Because of the Ebert Groener Pact and the Reichswehr s direct subordination to the Reich President it was able to ensure itself of extensive internal autonomy It used this to refuse to obey the Reich government as it did for example during the Kapp Putsch The autonomy which included the selection of personnel as well as its code of values and belief that it served the state rather than the form of government combined with its own jurisdiction under the Reich President to make the Reichswehr a state within a state that was difficult to control In 1928 the Reichswehr created the Ministeramt or Office of Ministerial Affairs under Schleicher to lobby politicians 3 German historian Eberhard Kolb wrote that from the mid 1920s onwards the Army leaders had developed and propagated new social conceptions of a militarist kind tending towards a fusion of the military and civilian sectors and ultimately a totalitarian military state 16 Reichswehr under Adolf Hitler editAfter becoming chancellor at the end of January 1933 Hitler presented his government program to the generals on 3 February Among other things he promised them that the Reichswehr would remain Germany s sole armed force and announced the reintroduction of conscription The Reichswehr hoped for increased efforts to revise the Treaty of Versailles and the building of a strong military and firm state leadership But it also feared that the Reichswehr would be supplanted by the 3 million member SA SA leader Ernst Rohm and his colleagues thought of their force as the future army of Germany replacing the smaller Reichswehr and its professional officers The Reichswehr supported Hitler in taking power away from the SA in the summer of 1934 Rohm wanted to become Reichswehr Minister and in February 1934 demanded that the much smaller Reichswehr be merged into the SA to form a true people s army This alarmed both political and military leaders and to forestall the possibility of a coup Hitler sided with conservative leaders and the military In the Night of the Long Knives 30 June 2 July 1934 Rohm and the leadership of the SA were murdered along with many other political adversaries of the Nazis including Reichswehr generals Schleicher and Ferdinand von Bredow The Reichswehr officer corps acknowledged the murders without objection nbsp Reichsheer soldiers swearing the Hitler oath in August 1934 with hands raised in the traditional schwurhand gestureDuring 1933 and 1934 the Reichswehr began a secret program of expansion In December 1933 the army staff decided to increase the active strength to 300 000 men in 21 divisions On 1 April 1934 between 50 000 and 60 000 new recruits entered the force and were assigned to special training battalions The original seven infantry divisions of the Reichswehr were expanded to 21 with military district headquarters increased to the size of a corps headquarters on 1 October 1934 17 18 These divisions used cover names to hide their divisional size but during October 1935 they were dropped Also during October 1934 the officers who had been forced to retire in 1919 were recalled Those who were no longer fit for combat were assigned to administrative positions thus releasing fit officers for front line duties 19 On 2 August 1934 the day Hindenburg died Reichswehr Minister Werner von Blomberg who was originally to have helped tame the Nazis had the Reichswehr swear its oath personally to Hitler Under the Weimar Republic the oath had been to the constitution On 1 March 1935 the Luftwaffe was established and on 16 March universal conscription was reintroduced both of which violated the Treaty of Versailles In the same act the Reichswehr was renamed the Wehrmacht On 1 June 1935 the Reichsheer the army contingent of the Reichswehr was renamed Heer army and the Reichsmarine became the Kriegsmarine war navy See also edit nbsp Military of Germany portal Ministry of the Reichswehr Weimar paramilitary groupsReferences editCitations edit Darman Peter ed 2007 Introduction Deutschland Erwache World War II A Day By Day History 60th Anniversary ed New York Barnes amp Noble pp 10 amp 575 ISBN 978 0 7607 9475 3 Treaty of Versailles Part V Articles 173 176 a b c Wheeler Bennett John 1967 Hindenburg The Wooden Titan London Palgrave Macmillan pp 207 208 ISBN 9780333082690 a b Shirer William L 2011 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany New York Simon amp Schuster p 54 a b c Introduction to the Reichswehr Axis History Factbook Gesetz uber die Bildung einer vorlaufigen Reichswehr Law on the Formation of a Provisional Army documentArchiv de Retrieved 20 November 2022 a b Haskew Michael 2011 The Wehrmacht London Amber Books Ltd p 13 ISBN 978 1 78274 592 1 Porter David 2010 The Kriegsmarine London Amber Books Ltd p 11 ISBN 9781907446108 Richhardt Dirk Auswahl und Ausbildung junger Offiziere 1930 1945 Zur sozialen Genese des deutschen Offizierkorps Inaugural Dissertation Fachbereich Geschichte und Kulturwissenschaften Philipps Universitat Marburg 2002 Selection and Training of Young Officers 1930 1945 On the Social Genesis of the German Officer Corps PDF Kruger Arnd von Lojewski Frank 1998 Ausgewahlte Aspekte des Wehrsports in Niedersachsen in der Weimarer Zeit Selected aspects of military sports in Lower Saxony during the Weimar period In Langenfeld Hans Nielsen Stefan eds Beitrage zur Sportgeschichte Niedersachsens Teil 2 Weimarer Republik Contributions to the history of sports in Lower Saxony Part 2 Weimar Republic in German Hoya Niedersachsisches Institut fur Sportgeschichte NISH pp 124 148 Lippelt O 1936 Funfzehn Jahre Stahlhelm in Niedersachsen Fifteen years of Stahlhelm in Lower Saxony in German Luchoe Druck u Verlagsgemeinschaft Fest Joachim 1974 Hitler San Diego Harcourt Inc p 175 ISBN 0 15 602754 2 Dorpalen Andreas 1964 Hindenburg and the Weimar Republic Princeton Princeton University Press pp 111 112 ISBN 978 1111020736 Hiller von Gaertringen Friedrich Freiherr 1966 Groener Wilhelm Neue Deutsche Biographie 7 in German Online version pp 111 114 Muller Klaus Jurgen 1989 Deutsche Militar Elite in der Vorgeschichte des Zweiten Weltkrieges German Military Elite Prior to the Second World War In Broszat Martin Schwabe Klaus eds Die deutschen Eliten und der Weg in den Zweiten Weltkrieg German Elites and the Road to the Second World War in German Munich C H Beck Verlag pp 226 ff ISBN 978 3406339936 a b Kolb Eberhard 2005 The Weimar Republic London Routledge p 172 Kane Robert B 2008 Disobedience and Conspiracy in the German Army 1918 1945 Jefferson NC McFarland p 102 ISBN 978 0786437443 O Neill Robert J 1968 The German Army and the Nazi Party 1933 39 London Heineman pp 91 92 Stone David J 2009 Fighting for the Fatherland The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day Sterling VA Potomac Books p 450 ISBN 9781597970693 Bibliography edit Darman Peter ed 2007 Introduction Deutschland Erwache World War II A Day By Day History 60th Anniversary ed China The Brown Reference Group plc ISBN 978 0 7607 9475 3 Deist Wilhelm Messerschmidt Manfred Volkmann Hans Erich Wette Wolfram 1990 Volume I The Build up of German Aggression Vol I Stuttgart Deutsche Verlags Anstalt GmbH ISBN 0 19 822866 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Haskew Michael 2011 The Wehrmacht Amber Books Ltd Kane Robert B 2008 Disobedience and Conspiracy in the German Army 1918 1945 Keller Peter 2014 Die Wehrmacht der Deutschen Republik ist die Reichswehr Die deutsche Armee 1918 1921 in German Paderborn Verlag Ferdinand Schoningh Kolb Eberhard 2005 The Weimar Republic London Routledge O Neill Robert J 1968 The German Army and the Nazi Party 1933 39 London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Porter David 2010 The Kriegsmarine Amber Books Ltd Shirer William L 2011 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany New York NY Simon amp Schuster Stone David J 2006 Fighting for the Fatherland The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day Wheeler Bennett John 1967 Hindenburg The Wooden Titan Palgrave Macmillan Wheeler Bennett John 2005 The Nemesis of Power German Army in Politics 1918 1945 New York Palgrave Macmillan Introduction to the Reichswehr Axis History Factbook Retrieved 1 July 2015 Glantz David House Jonathan 2015 When Titans Clashed How the Red Army Stopped Hitler Vol Revised and Expanded Edition University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 70062 121 7 External links editAxis History Factbook Reichswehr Feldgrau s overview of the Reichswehr The Archives of technical Manuals 1900 1945 includes the Reichswehr regulations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reichswehr amp oldid 1182246976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.