The
Waffen-SS (German
for "Armed SS", literally "Weapons SS") was the combat arm of the Schutzstaffel
("Protective Squadron") or SS, an organ of the
Nazi Party. The Waffen-SS saw
action throughout
World War II and grew
from three regiments to over 38 divisions, and served alongside the
Wehrmacht Heer regular army, but was never
formally part of it. It was
Adolf
Hitler's will that the Waffen-SS never be integrated into the
army: it was to remain the armed wing of the Party and to become an
elite police force once the war was over.
Operational control of
units on the front line was given to the Army's High
Command, but in all other respects it remained under the
control of Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler's SS organization, through
the SS
Führungshauptamt
, literally The SS Guidance Principal
Office.
At first membership was open to "Aryans" only in accordance with
the
racial policies of the
Nazi state, but in 1940 Hitler authorized the formation of
units composed largely or solely of
foreign volunteers
and conscripts, and by the end of the war ethnic non-Germans
made up approximately 60% of the Waffen-SS.
After the
war at the Nuremberg
Trials
, the Waffen-SS was condemned as a criminal organisation due to its
essential connection to the Nazi Party and its involvement in war
crimes. Waffen-SS veterans were denied many of the rights
afforded to
veterans who had served in the
Heer (army),
Luftwaffe (air
force) or
Kriegsmarine (navy). The
exception made was for Waffen-SS conscripts sworn in after 1943,
who were exempted due to their
involuntary servitude.
In the 1950s and 1960s
Waffen-SS veteran groups successfully fought numerous legal battles
in West
Germany
to overturn the Nuremberg
ruling and win pension rights for their
members.
Origins (1929–1939)
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 119-01-03, Berlin, Parade zum dritten
Jahrestag LSSHA crop.jpg|thumb|275px|left|Parade for the third
anniversary of the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler on the
barracks' grounds.
Sepp Dietrich is at
the lectern. May 1935]]
The origins of the Waffen-SS can be traced
back to the selection of a group of 120 SS men in March 1933 by
Josef "Sepp" Dietrich to form the
Sonderkommando Berlin
.
By
November 1933 the formation was 800 men strong, and at a
remembrance ceremony in Munich for the tenth anniversary of the
failed Munich
Putsch
the regiment swore allegiance to Hitler. The oath given:
Pledging
loyalty to him alone and
Obedience unto death. The
formation was given the title
Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler
(LAH). After 13 April 1934, by order of Himmler, the regiment was
known as the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler (LSSAH).
The
Leibstandarte demonstrated their loyalty in June 1934
during the Night of the Long
Knives, the purge of the Sturmabteilung
(SA). The SA had over two million members at
the end of 1933. Led by one of Hitler's old comrades,
Ernst Röhm, the SA represented a threat to
Hitler's relationship with the German Army and threatened to sour
his relations with the conservatives of the country; people whose
support Hitler needed to solidify his position in the German
government. Hitler decided to act against the SA. The SS was put in
charge of eliminating Röhm and the other high-ranking officers of
the SA.
The
Night of the Long
Knives on 30 June 1934 saw the killing of approximately 82 SA
men, including almost its entire leadership, effectively ending the
power of the SA. This action was largely carried out by the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler. In September 1934, Adolf
Hitler authorized the formation of the military wing of the
Nazi Party and approved the formation of
the
SS-Verfügungstruppe or
SS-VT, special service troop under Hitler's command. The SS-VT had
to depend on the
German Army for its supply of
weapons and military training and they had control of the
recruiting system, through local draft boards responsible for
assigning conscripts to the different branches of the
Wehrmacht, to meet quotas set by the
German High Command (Oberkommando
der Wehrmacht or OKW in German). The SS was given the lowest
priority for recruits.Even with the difficulties of the quota
system
Heinrich Himmler formed two
new SS regiments, the
SS Germania and
SS
Deutschland, which together with the
Leibstandarte
and a communications unit made up the SS-VT.
At the same time
Himmler established the SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz and
SS-Junkerschule
Braunschweig
for training
the officers required to lead the new regiments. Both
schools used the regular army training methods and used former Army
officers to train their potential officers to be combat effective.
The officer candidates had to meet stringent requirements before
being allowed entry to the schools: all SS officers had to be a
minimum height of 5 foot 10 inches – 5 foot 11 inches for
the
Leibstandarte and they also had to have served some
time in the ranks.
In 1936 Himmler selected former Lieutenant General
Paul Hausser to be Inspector of the SS-VT with
the rank of
Brigadefuhrer, and he set
about transforming the SS-VT into a credible military force that
was a match for the regular army.
On 17 August 1938 Hitler declared that the SS-VT would have a role
in domestic as well as foreign affairs, which transformed this
growing armed force into the rival that the army had feared.
He decreed
that service in the SS-VT would qualify to fulfill military
obligations, although service in the SS-Totenkopfverbände
or SS-TV would not. Some units of the SS-TV
would, in the case of war, be used a reserves for the SS-VT, which
did not have its own reserves. For all its training, the SS-VT had
been unable to test itself in a combat situation.
This changed in 1938,
when two opportunities arose with the Anschluss of Austria
in March and the occupation of the Sudentenland in October. A battalion of
the
Leibstandarte was chosen to accompany the Army troops
in occupying Austria, and during the occupation of the Sudetenland
the three regiments of the SS-VT participated. In both actions no
resistance was met.
World War II
1939
Invasion of Poland
In August 1939 Hitler placed the SS-VT under the operational
command of the
OKW.
At the outbreak of
hostilities there were four SS armed regiments:
Leibstandarte, Deutschland, Germania and
the new regiment from Austria
Der Führer, the last not yet
combat-ready.
Events during the
Invasion of
Poland raised doubts over the combat effectiveness of the
SS-VT. Their willingness to fight was never in any doubt; at times
they were almost too eager. The OKW reported that the SS-VT had
unnecessarily exposed themselves to risks and acted recklessly,
incurring heavier losses than Army troops. They also stated that
the SS-VT was poorly trained and its officers unsuitable for
command.
As an example, OKW cited that the
Leibstandarte had to be rescued by an Army regiment after
becoming surrounded at Pabianice
by the Poles. In its defence the SS-VT
insisted that it had been hampered by its fighting piecemeal
instead of as one formation, and was improperly equipped to carry
out its required objectives. Himmler insisted that that the SS-VT
should be allowed to fight in its own formations under its own
commanders, while the OKW tried to have the SS-VT disbanded
altogether. Hitler was unwilling to upset the Army, and Himmler
chose a different path. He ordered that the SS-VT form its own
divisions but that the divisions would be under Army command.
First Divisions
In October 1939,
Deutschland,
Germania and
Der Führer were reorganized into the
SS-Verfügungs Division, with the
Leibstandarte remaining independent and increased in
strength to a reinforced motorized regiment.
Hitler authorized the
creation of two new divisions: the SS
Totenkopf Division formed from militarized
Standarten of the SS-VT and the Polizei
Division formed from members of the national police force
. Almost overnight the force that the OKW had
tried to disband had increased from 18,000 to over 100,000 strong.
Hitler next authorized the creation in March 1940 of four Motorized
Artillery battalions, one for each division and the
Leibstandarte. The OKW was supposed to supply these new
battalions with the weapons it required, but was reluctant to hand
over guns from its own arsenal. The weapons arrived only slowly,
and by the time of the
Battle of
France only the
Leibstandarte battalion was up to
strength.
1940
France and the Netherlands
The three SS divisions and the
Leibstandarte spent the
winter of 1939 and the spring of 1940 training and preparing for
the coming war in the west. In May they moved to the front, and the
Leibstandarte became part of the Army's
227th Infantry Division.
The
Der Führer Regiment was detached from the SS-VT Division
and moved near the Dutch border, with the remainder of the division
behind the line in Munster, awaiting the
order to invade the Netherlands
. The SS
Totenkopf and Polizei
Divisions were held in reserve.
On 10 May
the Leibstandarte overcame Dutch border guards and
spearheaded the German advance into The Netherlands
, and the Der Führer advanced towards
Utrecht
. The following day the rest of the SS-VT
Division crossed into The Netherlands and headed towards Rotterdam
, which they reached on 12 May. After the surrender
of Rotterdam, the Leibstandarte set out to reach the
Hague
, which they did on 15 May, capturing 3,500 Dutch
prisoners of war.
In France the SS
Totenkopf was involved in the only Allied
tank attack in the
Battle of
France, when on 21 May units of the
1st Army Tank
Brigade, supported by the
50th Infantry
Division, took part in the
Battle of Arras. The SS
Totenkopf was overrun, finding their standard
anti tank gun, the
3.7 cm
PaK 36, was no match for the British
Matilda tank.
After the
Dutch surrender, the Leibstandarte moved south to France
on 24
May. Becoming part of the XIX Panzer Corps under the
command of General Heinz Guderian,
they took up a position 15 miles south west of Dunkirk
along the line of the Aa
canal, with a bridgehead at Saint Venant
. That night the OKW issued order that the
advance was to halt, with the
British Expeditionary
Force trapped. The
Leibstandarte paused for the night,
but the following day, in defiance of Hitler's orders, continued
the advance.
Dietrich ordered his III Battalion to cross
the canal and take the height beyond, where British
artillery observers were putting the regiment at
risk. They assaulted the heights and drove the observers
off. Instead of being censured for his act of defiance, Dietrich
was awarded the
Knight's Cross of the Iron
Cross.
The same day the British attacked St Venant, forcing the SS-VT
Division to retreat, the first time any SS unit had been forced to
withdraw and give up ground it had captured.
On 27 May the
Deutschland reached the defensive line on the Leie River
at Merville
. They forced a bridgehead across the river
and waited for the SS
Totenkopf Division to arrive and
provide support and cover their flank. What arrived first was a
unit of British tanks, which penetrated their positions. The SS-VT
managed to hold on against the British tank force, which got to
within 15 feet of them, and the arrival of the
Totenkopf
Panzerjager platoon saved the
Deutschland from being destroyed.
At the same time
another unit from the Totenkopf, the 14 Company, was
involved in the Le Paradis massacre
, where 99 men of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Norfolk Regiment were
machinegunned, and any survivors finished off with bayonets.
By 28 May
the Leibstandarte had taken Wormhout
, only ten miles from Dunkirk. They were responsible
for the Wormhoudt
massacre
, when the II Battalion killed 80 British prisoners
of war.
By 30 May the British were cornered at Dunkirk, and the SS
divisions continued the advance into France.
The
Leibstandarte reached Saint-Étienne
, 250 miles south of Paris, and had advanced further
into France then any other unit. The next day the French
surrendered.
Hitler expressed his pleasure with the performance of the
Leibstandartes in The Netherlands and France, telling them
that;
Henceforth it will be an honour for you, who bear
my name, to lead every German attack.
1940 expansion
Himmler
had gained approval for the Waffen-SS to form its own high command,
the Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS within the SS
Fuhrungshauptamt
, which was created in August 1940. It
received command of the SS-VT (the
Leibstandarte and the
Verfugungs-Division, renamed
Reich) and the armed
SS-TV regiments (the Totenkopf Division plus nine
Totenkopf-Standarten which were organized into the
1st and
2nd SS Infantry Brigades, the
SS Cavalry Brigade, and
Kampfgruppe Nord). The
KdW-SS also had administrative authority over the Polizei Division,
which would however not formally be merged into the Waffen-SS until
1942.
In August 1940,
Gottlob Berger
approached Himmler with a plan to recruit volunteers in the
conquered territories from the ethnic German and Germanic
populations. Hitler at first had his doubts about recruiting
foreigners but was persuaded by Himmler and Berger. He gave
approval for a new division to be formed from foreign nationals
with German officers, and by June 1941
Danish and
Norwegian volunteers had formed the SS
Regiment
Nordland, with
Dutch
and
Flemish volunteers forming the SS
Regiment
Westland, the two regiments in the
SS Division 'Wiking.
Volunteers came forward
in such numbers that the SS was forced to open a new training camp
just for foreign volunteers at Sennheim
in Alsace-Lorraine
.
1941
By the spring of 1941 the Waffen-SS consisted of the equivalent of
six or seven divisions: the
Reich,
Totenkopf,
Polizei and
Wiking Divisions and
Kampfgruppe Nord, and the
Leibstandarte,
1 SS Infantry,
2 SS Infantry and
SS Cavalry Brigades.
Balkans
In March
1941, a major Italian counterattack against Greek
forces
failed, and Germany was forced to come to the aid of its
ally. Operation
Marita began on 6 April 1941, with German troops invading
Greece through Bulgaria
in an effort to secure its southern
flank.
Reich was ordered to leave France and head for
Romania
, and the Leibstandarte was ordered to
Bulgaria
. The Leibstandarte, attached to the
XL Panzer Corps, advanced west then
south from Bulgaria into the mountains, and by 9 April had reached
Prilep
, 30 miles
from the Greek border. Further north the SS Reich, with
the XLI Panzer Corps, crossed the
Romanian border and advanced on Belgrade
, the Yugoslav
capital, arriving on 12 April to accept the city's
surrender. The Yugoslavian Army surrendered a few days
later.
The
Leibstandarte had now crossed into Greece, and on 10
April engaged the
6th Australian
Division in the
Battle of
the Klidi Pass. For 48 hours they fought for control of the
heights, often engaging in hand-to-hand combat, eventually gaining
control with the capture of Height 997, which opened the pass,
allowing the German Army to advance into the Greek interior. This
victory finally gained praise from the OKW: in the order of the day
they were commended for their "Unshakable offensive spirit" and
told that "The present victory signifies for the
Leibstandarte a new and imperishable page of honour in its
history."
The
Leibstandarte continued the advance on 13 May. When
the Reconnaissance Battalion under the command of
Kurt Meyer came under heavy fire
from the Greek Army defending the
Klisura
pass, they routed the defenders and captured 1,000 prisoners of war
at the cost of six dead and nine wounded.
The next day, Meyer
captured Kastoria
another 11,000 prisoners of war, and by 20 May the
Leibstandarte had cut off the retreating Greek Army at
Metsovon
and accepted the surrender of the Greek
Epirus-Macedonian Army.
Soviet Union
Operation Barbarossa, the German
invasion of the Soviet
Union
, started on 22 June 1941, and all the Waffen-SS
formations participated (including the SS Reich which was
formally renamed 2 SS Das Reich by the Fall of
1941).
SS
Division Nord in northern Finland
took part in Operation Arctic Fox with the Finnish
Army and at the battle at Salla
, where
against strong Soviet forces they suffered 300 killed and 400
wounded in the first two days of the invasion. The battle at
Salla was a disaster: the thick forests and heavy smoke from forest
fires disoriented the troops and the division's units completely
fell apart. By the end of 1941,
Nord had suffered severe
casualties. Over the winter of 1941–42 it received replacements
from the general pool of Waffen-SS recruits, who were supposedly
younger and better trained than the SS-men of the original
formation.
The rest of the Waffen-SS divisions and brigades fared better.
The SS
Totenkopf and SS Polizei divisions were attached to
Army Group North, with the mission
to advance through the Baltic states
and onto Leningrad
. The SS Division Das Reich was with
Army Group Centre and headed
towards Moscow
.
The SS
Division Wiking and the Leibstandarte were with
Army Group South, heading for the
Ukraine
and the city of Kiev
.
The war in the Soviet Union proceeded well at first, but the cost
to the Waffen-SS was extreme: the
Leibstandarte by late
October was at half strength due to enemy action and
dysentery that swept through the ranks.
Das
Reich had lost 60% of its strength and was still to take part
in the Battle of
Moscow
, and was decimated in the following Soviet
offensive. The
Der Führer Regiment was reduced to
35 men out of the 2,000 that had started the campaign in June.
Altogether, the Waffen-SS had suffered 43,000 casualties..
While the
Leibstandarte and the SS divisions were fighting
in the front line, behind the lines it was a different story. The 1
SS Infantry and 2 SS Infantry Brigades, which had been formed from
surplus
concentration camp guards
of the SS-TV, and the SS Cavalry Brigade moved into the Soviet
Union behind the advancing armies.
At first they fought Soviet partisans and cut off units of the
Red Army in the rear of Army Group South, capturing 7,000 prisoners of war,, but from mid-August 1941
until late 1942 they were assigned to the Reich Main Security Office
, headed by Reinhard
Heydrich. The brigades were now used in for rear area
security and policing, and, most importantly, they were not under
Army or Waffen-SS command. In the autumn of 1941, they left the
anti-partisan role to other units and actively took part in the
Holocaust.
While assisting the Einsatzgruppen
, they participated in the liquidation of the
Jewish population of the Soviet Union,
forming firing parties when required. The three brigades
were responsible for the murder of tens of thousands by the end of
1941.
Because it was more mobile and better able to carry out large-scale
operations, the SS Cavalry Brigade played a pivotal role in the
transition from "selective mass murder" to the wholesale
extermination of the
Jewish population. On 27
July the Brigade was ordered into action, and by 1 August the SS
Cavalry Regiment was responsible for the death of 800 people; five
days later, on 6 August, this total had reached 3,000 "Jews and
Partisans". On 1 August, after a meeting between
Heinrich Himmler,
Erich von Bach-Zelewski and
Hinrich Lohse, the brigades received the
following order:
Explicit order by RFSS: All Jews
must be shot.
Drive the female Jews into the swamps.
Gustav Lombard, on receiving the
order, advised his Battalion that "In future not one male Jew is to
remain alive, not one family in the villages." Throughout the next
weeks, soldiers of SS Cavalry Regiment 1 under Lombard's command
murdered an estimated 11,000 Jews and more than 400 dispersed
soldiers of the Red Army.
1942
1942 expansion
In 1942 the Waffen-SS was further expanded and a new division was
entered on the rolls in March. By the second half of 1942 an
increasing number of foreigners, many of whom were not volunteers,
began entering the ranks.
The 7th SS Volunteer
Mountain Division Prinz Eugen was recruited from
Volksdeutsche (ethnic Germans) drafted
under threat of punishment by the local German leadership from
Croatia
, Serbia
, Hungary
and Romania
and used on anti partisan operations in the
Balkans. Himmler approved the introduction of formal
compulsory service for the Volksdeutsche in German occupied Serbia.
Another new division was formed at the same time, when the SS
Cavalry Brigade was used as the
cadre in the
formation of the
8th SS Cavalry Division
Florian Geyer.

Offensive of the Red Army south of
Lake Ilmen, 7 January – 21 February 1942
Panzergrenadier divisions
The front line divisions of the Waffen-SS that had suffered through
the Russian winter of 1941-1942 and the Soviet counter-offensive
were withdrawn to France to recover and be reformed as
panzergrenadier divisions. Thanks to the
efforts of Himmler and
Obergruppenführer Paul Hausser, the new commander of the
SS Panzer Corps, the three SS
Panzergrenadier divisions
Leibstandarte,
Das
Reich and
Totenkopf were to be formed with a full
regiment of tanks rather than only a battalion. This meant that the
SS Panzergrenadier divisions were full-strength Panzer divisions in
all but name. They each received nine
Tiger
tank, which were formed into the
heavy panzer companies.
Demyansk Pocket
The Soviet offensive of January 1942 had trapped a number of German
divisions in the
Demyansk Pocket
between February and April 1942; the 3 SS
Totenkopf was
one of the divisions encircled by the Red Army.
The Red Army
liberated Demyansk
on 1 March 1943 with the retreat of the German
troops. "For his excellence in command and the particularly
fierce fighting of the
Totenkopf",
Obergruppenführer Theodor Eicke was awarded the Oak Leaves to
the
Knight's Cross
on 20 May 1942.
1943
1943 expansion
The Waffen-SS expanded further in 1943: in February the
9th SS Panzer Division Hohenstaufen and its
sister division, the
10th SS Panzer Division
Frundsberg, were formed in France. They were followed
in July by the
11th SS Volunteer Panzergrenadier
Division Nordland created from Norwegian and Danish
volunteers. September saw the
12th SS Panzer
Division Hitlerjugend start forming using volunteers
from the
Hitler Youth. Himmler and
Berger were successful in their appeal to Hitler to form a
Bosnian Muslim division, and
the
13th Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Handschar , the first
non-Germanic division, was formed, to fight
Titos Yugoslav
Partisans.
This was followed by the
14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS Galicia formed from
volunteers from Galicia in
the western Ukraine
. The
15th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS was created in 1943, using
compulsory military service in the
Ostland. The final new 1943
division was the
16th SS Panzergrenadier Division
Reichsführer-SS, which was created using the
Sturmbrigade Reichsführer
SS as a cadre. By the end of the year, the Waffen-SS had
increased in size from eight divisions and some brigades to 16
divisions.
Kharkov
On the
Eastern Front, the Germans suffered a devastating defeat when the
6th Army was defeated during the
Battle of
Stalingrad
. Hitler ordered the SS Panzer Corps back to
the Eastern Front for the counter-attack, with the object the city
of Kharkov
. The SS Panzer Corps was in full retreat,
having been attacked by the
Soviet 6th Army, when on 19 February
they received the order to attack. In an example of an SS Commander
disobeying Hitler's order to "stand fast and fight to the death",
Hausser had withdrawn in front of the Red Army, but he now turned
and attacked. Without support from the
Luftwaffe or neighbouring German formations they
broke through the Soviet line and advanced onto Kharkov.
Despite
orders to encircle Kharkov from the north, the SS Panzer Corps
directly attacked Kharkov in the Third Battle of Kharkov
on 11 March. This led to four days of
house-to-house fighting before Kharkov was recaptured by the 1 SS
Leibstandarte on 15 March.
Two days later the Germans recaptured
Belgorod
, creating the salient that in July 1943
led to the Battle of
Kursk
. The German offensive cost the Red Army an
estimated 70,000
casualties but
the house-to-house fighting in Kharkov was particularly bloody for
the SS Panzer Corps, which had lost approximately 44% of its
strength by the time operations ended in late March.
Warsaw Ghetto uprising
The
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was
the Jewish insurgency that arose within the Warsaw Ghetto from 19 April to 16 May, an
effort to prevent the transportation of the remaining population of
the ghetto to the Treblinka extermination camp
. The only units involved from the Waffen-SS
were 821 Waffen-SS
Panzergrenadiers
from five
reserve and
training battalions and one
cavalry
reserve and training battalion.
Kursk
The next
test for the Waffen-SS was the Battle of Prokhorovka
, which was part of the Battle of Kursk. The
SS Panzer Corps had been renamed the
II SS Panzer Corps and was part of the
4 Panzer-Army, which was
chosen to spearheaded the attack through the Soviet defenses. The
attack penetrated to a depth of and was then stopped by the
Soviet 1st Tank
Army.
During
the fighting over the next few days, the II SS Panzer Corps thought
they were close to driving a wedge between the 1st Tank Army and
Soviet 69th Army, and had even
broken through the third line of Soviet defenses at Prokhorovka
. Wrongly believing they had made a
breakthrough, they were prepared to exploit the opportunity the
next day. The Soviet reserves had been sent south, to defend
against a German attack by the
III
Panzer Corps and with the loss of their reserves, any hope that
may have had of dealing a major defeat to the SS Panzer Corps
ended. But the German advances now failed – despite appalling
losses, the Soviet tank armies held the line and prevented the II
SS Panzer Corps from making the expected breakthrough.
Italy
After the
Allied invasion of Italy in
September 1943, Hitler ordered the II SS Panzer Corps to move to
Italy
, but in the end only the Leibstandarte was
pulled out of Russia and sent to Italy, where the only other
Waffen-SS unit was the 16 SS Panzergrenadier
Division Reichsführer-SS.
After the
Italian
surrender and the Italian collapse of 8 September 1943, the
Leibstandarte was ordered to begin disarming nearby
Italian units. It also had the task of guarding vital road and rail
junctions in the north of Italy and was involved in several
skirmishes with
partisan.
This went
smoothly, with the exception of a brief skirmish with Italian
troops stationed in Parma
on 9
September. By 19 September all Italian forces in the
Po River plain had been disarmed, but the
OKW was concerned by reports that elements of the
Italian Fourth Army were regrouping in
Piedmont, near the French border.
Sturmbannführer Joachim Peiper's mechanised III Battalion, SS
Panzergrenadier Regiment 2, was sent to disarm these units.
On
arriving in the province of Cuneo
, Peiper
was met by an Italian officer who warned that his forces would
attack unless Peiper's unit vacated the province
immediately. Peiper refused, which goaded the Italians into
attacking. The veterans of Peiper's battalion defeated the Italians
in a fierce battle, and then disarmed the remaining Italian forces
in the area.
While the
Leibstandarte was operating in the north, the 16
SS
Reichsführer-SS sent a
Kampfgruppe to contain the
Anzio landings in January 1944. In March,
the bulk of the 1st Italienische Freiwilligen Sturmbrigade (or la
Brigata d'Assaulto, Miliza Armata in Italian) was sent to the Anzio
beachhead where they fought alongside their German allies,
receiving favourable reports and taking heavy losses. In
recognition of their performance, Himmler declared the unit to be
fully integrated into the Waffen-SS.
1944
1944 expansion
The Waffen-SS expanded again during 1944. January saw the formation
of the
19th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS , formed from the two SS
Infantry Brigades as
cadre with
Latvian conscripts.
The
20th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS was formed via general
conscription in February 1944, around a cadre from the
3 Estonian SS Volunteer
Brigade.
The
21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Skanderbeg was formed
in March 1944 from Albanian and Kosovan volunteers, for
anti-partisan duties in Albania
and Kosovo
. A
second Waffen-SS cavalry division followed in April 1944, the
22nd SS Volunteer Cavalry Division Maria
Theresia: the bulk of the soldiers were
Hungarian Army volksdeutsche conscripts, transferred to the
Waffen-SS following an agreement between Germany and Hungary. The
23rd SS Volunteer Panzer Grenadier Division
Nederland followed, formed from the 4th SS Volunteer
Panzergrenadier Brigade Nederland, but it was never more than a
large brigade.
The 24th Waffen Gebirgs Division
der SS was another division that was never more than brigade
size, consisting mainly of ethnic
German volunteers from Italy
and
volunteers from Slovenia
, Croatia
, Serbia
and
Ukraine
. They were primarily involved in fighting
partisans in the Kras region of the Alps on the frontiers of Slovenia
, Italy
, and
Austria
, the mountainous terrain requiring specialized
mountain troops and equipment. Two
Hungarian divisions followed: the
25th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS Hunyadi and the
26th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS . These were formed under
the authority of the Hungarian defense minister, at the request of
Himmler. One regiment from the Hungarian Army was ordered to join,
but they mostly consisted of Hungarian and Rumanian volunteers. The
27th SS Volunteer Division Langemarck
was formed next in October 1944, from
Flemish volunteers added to the 6th SS Volunteer
Sturmbrigade Langemarck, but again it was nothing more than a large
brigade. The 5th SS Volunteer Sturmbrigade Wallonien was also
upgraded to the
28th SS Volunteer Grenadier
Division Wallonien and like the 27th SS was never more
than a large brigade. Plans to convert the Kaminnski Brigade into
the
29th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS RONA were dropped after the
execution of their commander
Bronislav Kaminski; instead the Waffen
Grenadier Brigade of SS (Italian no. 1) became the
29th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS . The
30th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS was formed from the
Schutzmannschaft-Brigade Siegling.
The final new division of 1944, was the
31st SS Volunteer
Grenadier Division which was formed from conscripted Volksdeutsche, mainly from the Batschka
region of Hungary.
Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket
The
Korsun-Cherkassy Pocket was
formed in January 1944, when units of the 8th Army withdrew to the Panther-Wotan Line, a defensive position
along the Dnieper River in the
Ukraine
. Two Army Corps were left holding a
salient into the Soviet
lines extending some . The Red Army deployed the 1st and 2nd
Ukrainian Fronts to form two armoured rings around the pocket: an
inner ring and an external ring to prevent relief formations from
reaching the trapped units.
Trapped in the pocket were a total of six
German divisions, including the 5 SS Wiking, with the
attached 5th SS
Volunteer Sturmbrigade Wallonien, and the Estonian
SS Battalion Narwa. The Germans
broke out in coordination with a relief attempt by other German
forces from the outside, including the 1 SS
Leibstandarte.
Roughly two out of three encircled men succeeded in escaping the
pocket.
Raid on Drvar
The
Raid on Drvar, codenamed
Operation Rösselsprung, was an attack by the Waffen-SS and
Luftwaffe on the command structure of the
Yugoslav partisans. Their objective was the elimination of the
Bolshevik-controlled Supreme Headquarters and the capture of
Marshal
Josip Broz Tito. The
offensive took place in April and May, 1944. The Waffen-SS units
involved were the
500th SS
Parachute Battalion and the 7 SS
Prinz Eugen.
The assault started when a small group parachuted into
Dvar to secure landing grounds for the following
glider force. The 500th SS Parachute
Battalion fought their way to Tito's cave headquarters and
exchanged heavy gunfire resulting in numerous casualties on both
sides. By the time German forces had penetrated into the cave, Tito
had already escaped. At the end of the battle only 200 men of the
500th SS Parachute Battalion remained unwounded.
Baltic states
In the
Baltic states the Battle of Narva
started in February, and can be divided into
two phases: the Battle for Narva Bridgehead
from February to July and the Battle of
Tannenberg Line
from July to September. A number of volunteer
Waffen-SS units from Norway
, Denmark
, The
Netherlands
, Belgium
fought in Narva, in what has been called by several
authors the Battle of the European SS. The units
were all part of the
III
SS Panzer Corps in
Army Group
North, which consisted of the
11th SS
Panzergrenadier Division Nordland, the
4th SS Volunteer Panzergrenadier Brigade
Nederland, the
5th SS Volunteer
Sturmbrigade Wallonien, the
6th SS
Volunteer Sturmbrigade Langemarck and the conscript
20th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS , under the command of
Obergruppenführer Felix Steiner. Also in Army Group North was
the
VI SS Corps, which consisted of the
15th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS an the
19th
Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS .
Normandy
Operation Overlord, the Allied
"D-Day"
landings in
Normandy, took place on 6 June 1944.
In preparation for
the expected landings the I SS Panzer
Corps Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler was moved to
Septeuill to the west of Paris
in April
1944. The Corps had the 1 SS
Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler, 12 SS
Hitlerjugend, the 17 SS
Götz von
Berlichingen and the Army's
Panzer Lehr divisions assigned
to it. The corps was to form a part of General
Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg's
Panzer Group West, the Western
theatre's armoured reserve. The Corps was restructured on 4 July
1944 and only the 1 SS
Leibstandarte and the 12 SS
Hitlerjugend remained at strength.
After the
landings, the first Waffen-SS unit in action was the 12 SS
Hitlerjugend, which arrived at the invasion front on 7
June, in the Caen
area. The same day they were involved in the
Ardenne
Abbey massacre
.
The next unit to arrive was the 17 SS
Götz von
Berlichingen on 11 June, which came into contact with the
101st Airborne
Division. The 1 SS
Leibstandarte together with the
SS Heavy Panzer Battalion
101 arrived at the end of the month.
The first action they
were involved in was the defence of Carpiquet
village and aerodrome in what was known as Operation Windsor.
The only
other Waffen-SS unit in France at this time was the 2 SS Das
Reich, in Montauban
, north of Toulouse
. They were ordered north to the landing
beaches and on 9 June were involved in the
Tulle murders, where 99 men were murdered.
The next
day they reached Oradour-sur-Glane
and massacred 642 French civilians.
The
II SS Panzer Corps consisting
of the 9 SS
Hohenstaufen and 10 SS
Frundsberg
divisions and the
SS Heavy
Panzer Battalion 102 started to arrive from the Eastern Front
from 26 June, just in time to counter
Operation Epsom.

German counterattacks against
Canadian-Polish positions on 20 August 1944.
Without any further reinforcements in men or material the Waffen-SS
divisions were hard put to stop the Allied advance. 1 SS
Leibstandarte and 2 SS
Das Reich took part in the
failed
Operation Lüttich in
early August.
The end came in mid August when the German
Army was encircled and trapped in the Falaise pocket
, including the 1 SS Leibstandarte, 10 SS
Frundsberg and 12 SS Hitlerjugend and the 17 SS
Götz von Berlichingen, while the 2 SS Das Reich
and the 9 SS Hohenstaufen were ordered to attack Hill 262
from the outside in order to keep the gap
open. By 22 August the Falaise pocket had been closed, and
all German forces west of the Allied lines were dead or in
captivity. In the fighting around Hill 262 alone, casualties
totalled 2,000 killed and 5,000 taken prisoner. The 12 SS
Hitlerjugend had lost 94% of its armour, nearly all of its
artillery, and 70% of its vehicles. The division had close to
20,000 men and 150 tanks before the campaign started, and was now
reduced to 300 men and 10 tanks.
With the German Army in full retreat, two further Waffen-SS
formations entered the battle in France, the
SS Panzergrenadier Brigade 49
and the
SS Panzergrenadier
Brigade 51. Both had been formed in June 1944, from staff and
students at the
SS-Junkerschules.
They had
been stationed in Denmark
to allow the garrison there to move into France,
but were themselves brought forward at the beginning of August, to
the area south and east of Paris. Both Brigades were
tasked to hold crossings over the Seine River
allowing the Army to retreat. Eventually
they were forced back and then withdrew, the surviving troops being
incorporated into the 17 SS
Götz von Berlichingen
Greece
While the
bulk of the Waffen-SS was now on the Eastern Front or in Normandy,
the 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division was
stationed in Greece
on internal security duties and anti-partisan
operations. On 10 June they became involved in the
Distomo
massacre
, when over a period of two hours they went door to
door and massacred Greek civilians, reportedly in revenge for a
partisan attack. In total,
218 men, women and children were killed. According to survivors,
the SS forces "
bayoneted babies in their
cribs, stabbed pregnant women, and
beheaded the village priest."
Italy
On the
Italian Front the 16 SS Reichsführer-SS, was conducting
anti-partisan operations and is remembered more for the atrocities
it committed than its fighting ability: it was involved in the
Sant'Anna
di Stazzema massacre
in August 1944, and the Marzabotto
massacre
between September and October 1944,
Finland
In Finland, the 6 SS
Nord had held its lines during the
Soviet summer offensive until it was ordered to withdraw from
Finland upon the conclusion of an armistice between the Finns and
the Soviets in September 1944.
They then formed the rear guard for the
three German corps withdrawing from Finland in Operation Birch, and from September to
November 1944 marched 1,600 kilometres to Mo i Rana
, Norway, where it entrained for the southern end of
the country, crossing the Skagerrak
to Denmark
.
Arnhem and Market-Garden
In early
September 1944, the II SS Panzer Corps (9 SS Hohenstaufen
and 10 SS Frundberg) were pulled out of the line and sent
to the Arnhem
area in
the Netherlands
. Upon arrival they began the task of
refitting, and the majority of the remaining armoured vehicles were
loaded onto trains in preparation for transport to repair depots in
Germany.
On Sunday 17 September 1944 the Allies
launched Operation
Market-Garden, and the British 1st Airborne Division was dropped in
Oosterbeek
, to the west of Arnhem. Realizing the
threat,
Wilhelm Bittrich, the new
commander of II SS Panzer Corps, ordered
Hohenstaufen and
Frundsberg to ready themselves for combat. Also in the
area was the
Training and Reserve Battalion, 16th
SS Division Reichsführer-SS. The Allied airborne
operation was a failure, and the city of
Arnhem was not liberated until 14 April
1945.
Warsaw Uprising
At the other end of
Europe, the Waffen-SS was
dealing with the
Warsaw Uprising.
Between
August and October 1944, the Dirlewanger Brigade (recruited from
criminals and the mentally ill) and the Waffen-Sturm-Brigade RONA as well
as a number of smaller units were sent to Warsaw
to put
down the uprising. During the battle, the
Dirlewanger behaved atrociously, raping, looting and
killing citizens of Warsaw regardless of whether they belonged to
the Polish resistance or not;
Oskar
Dirlewanger himself encouraged their excesses. The unit's
behaviour was reportedly so bestial and indiscriminate that Himmler
was forced to detail an attached battalion of SS military police
for the sole purpose of ensuring the Dirlewanger convicts did not
turn their aggressions against their own leaders or nearby German
units. At the same time they were encouraged by Himmler to
terrorize freely, take no prisoners, and generally indulge their
perverse tendencies. Favoured tactics of the Dirlewanger men during
the siege reportedly included the ubiquitous gang rape of female
Poles, both women and children, playing "bayonet catch" with live
babies, and torturing captives to death by hacking off their arms,
dousing them with
gasoline, and setting
them alight to run armless and flaming down the street. The
Dirlewanger brigade committed almost non-stop atrocities during
this period, in particular the four-day
Wola massacre.
The other unit
Waffen-Sturm-Brigade RONA volunteers were
first given the task of clearing the sector of
Ochota district defended by only 300 poorly-armed
Poles. Their attack was planned for the morning of 5 August, but
when the time came, the Kaminski's men could not be found; after
some searching, they were found looting abandoned houses in the
rear. At the same time, thousands of Polish civilians were killed
by the RONA SS men during the events known as
Ochota massacre; many victims were also
raped. In the middle of the month, they were moved south to the
Wola sector, but it fared no better in combat
here than in Ochota; in one incident a sub-unit had stopped their
advance to loot a captured building on the
front line and was consequently cut off and
wiped-out by the Poles.
The brigade's commander Bronislav Kaminski was then called to
Łódź
to attend a leadership conference. He never
reached it; officially, Polish partisans were blamed for an alleged
ambush in which Kaminski was killed.
According to various
sources he was either tried first by an SS court or simply executed
by the Gestapo
out of hand. The behaviour of the RONA
during the battle was an embarrassment even to the SS, and the
alleged rape and murder of two German
Strength Through Joy (Kdf) girls may
have played a part in his execution.
Vistula River line
In late
August 1944, 5 SS Wiking was ordered back to Modlin
on the Vistula River
line near Warsaw
, where it
was to join the newly formed Army
Group Vistula. Fighting alongside the
Luftwaffe's Fallschirm-Panzer
Division 1 Hermann Göring, they proceeded to
annihilated the
Soviet 3rd Tank
Corps. The advent of the
Warsaw
Uprising brought the Soviet offensive to a halt, and relative
peace fell on the front line. The division remained in the Modlin
area for the rest of the year, grouped with the 3 SS
Totenkopf in the
IV SS
Panzer Corps. Heavy defensive battles around Modlin followed
for the rest of the year. Together they helped force the Red Army
out of Warsaw and back across the Vistula River where the Front
stabilized until January 1945.
Ardennes Offensive
The
Ardennes Offensive or "Battle of
the Bulge" between 16 December 1944 and 25 January 1945 was a major
German offensive through the forested Ardennes Mountains region
of Belgium
. The Waffen-SS units included the
Sixth SS Panzer Army, under
Sepp Dietrich. Created on 26 October 1944, it
incorporated the
I SS Panzer Corps
(1 SS
Leibstandarte the 12 SS
Hitlerjugend and
the
SS Heavy Panzer
Battalion 101). It also had the
II SS Panzer Corps (2 SS
Das
Reich and the 9 SS
Hohenstaufen). Another unit
involved was
Otto Skorzeny's
SS Panzer Brigade 150.
The
purpose of the attack was to split the British and American line in
half, capture Antwerp
, Belgium
, and encircle and
destroy four Allied armies, forcing the Western Allies to negotiate a peace treaty on terms favorable to the Axis Powers.
The attack was ultimately a failure.
It is infamous for
the Malmedy
massacre
in which approximately 90 unarmed American
prisoners of war were murdered
on 17 December 1944 by the Kampfgruppe
Peiper, part of the 1 SS
Leibstandarte.
Siege of Budapest
In late
December 1944, the Axis forces, including IX Waffen Alpine
Corps of the SS , defending Budapest
, were encircled in the Siege of Budapest. The IV SS Panzer
Corps (3 SS
Totenkopf and 5 SS
Wiking) was
ordered south to join
Hermann Balck's
6 Armee (Army Group
Balck),
which was mustering for a relief effort, codenamed
Operation Konrad.
As a part
of Operation Konrad I, the IV.SS Corps was committed to action on 1
January 1945, near Tata
, the
advance columns of Wiking slamming into the Soviet
4th Guards
Army. A heavy battle ensued, with the 5 SS
Wiking and 3 SS
Totenkopf destroying many of the
Soviet tanks. In three days their panzer spearheads had driven 45
kilometres, over half the distance from the start point to
Budapest.
The Soviets manoeuvred forces to block the
advance, and they barely managed to halt them at Bicske
, only from Budapest. Two further
attacks, Operations Konrad II and III, also failed.
The
Hungarian Third Army had
been besieged in Budapest along with the IX Waffen Alpine Corps of
the SS (Croatian) (8 SS
Florian Geyer and 22 SS
Maria
Theresa). The siege lasted from 29 December 1944 until the
city surrendered unconditionally on 13 February 1945. Some idea of
the intensity of the fighting can be had by the fact that only 170
men of the 22 SS
Maria Theresa made it back to the German
lines.
1945
1945 expansion
The Waffen-SS continued to expand in 1945. January saw the
32nd SS Volunteer Grenadier Division 30
January formed from the remnants of other units and staff
from the
SS-Junkerschules. In
February the Waffen Grenadier Brigade or SS Charlemagne (1st
French) was reformed as the
33rd Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS Charlemagne , and the
SS Volunteer Grenadier-Brigade Landstorm Nederland was upgraded to
the
34th SS Volunteer Grenadier Division
Landstorm Nederland. The second SS Police division
followed when the
35th SS and Police
Grenadier Division was formed from SS Police units that had
been transferred to the Waffen-SS. The Dirlewanger Brigade was
reformed as the
36th Waffen Grenadier
Division of the SS, however there was now a real shortage of
Waffen-SS volunteers and conscripts, so units from the Army were
attached to bring it up to strength. The third SS Cavalry division
37th SS Volunteer Cavalry Division
Lützow was formed from the remnants of the 8 SS
Florian Geyer and 22 SS Maria
Theresia, which had
both been virtually destroyed. The last Waffen-SS division was the
38th SS Division Nibelungen which was
also formed from students and staff from the SS-Junkerschule, but
consisted of only around 6,000 men, the strength of a normal
brigade.
The
XV SS Cossack Cavalry
Corps, which contained the
1 SS
Cossack Division, was transferred to the Waffen-SS on 1
February 1945. Despite the refusal of its commander, General von
Pannwitz, to enter the SS, the corps was placed under SS
administration and all Cossacks became formally part of the
Waffen-SS.
Operation Nordwind
Operation Nordwind was the last
major German offensive on the Western Front.
It began on 1 January
1945 in Alsace
and Lorraine in
north-eastern France, and it ended on 25 January. The
initial attack was conducted by three Corps of the 1st Army.
By 15
January at least 17 German divisions (including units in the
Colmar
Pocket
) were engaged, including the XIII SS Army Corps (17 SS Götz von
Berlichingen and 38 SS Nibelungen) and the 6 SS
Nord and 10 SS Frundsberg.
Operation Solstice
Operation Solstice, or the
'Stargard tank battle', in February 1945 was one of the last
armoured offensive operations on
the Eastern Front. It was a limited counter-attack by the three
corps of the
Eleventh SS Panzer
Army, which was being assembled in
Pomerania, against the spearheads of the 1st
Belorussian Front. Originally planned as a major offensive, it was
executed as a more limited attack.
It was repulsed by the Red Army, but
helped to convince the Soviet High Command to
postpone the planned attack on Berlin
.
Initially
the attack achieved a total surprise, reaching the banks of the
Ina River and, on 17 January, Arnswalde
. Strong Soviet counter attacks halted the
advance, and the operation was called off.
The III (Germanic) SS
Panzer Corps, was pulled back to the Stargard
and Stettin
on the northern Oder
River.
East Pomeranian Offensive
The
East Pomeranian
Offensive lasted from 24 February to 4 April, in
Pomerania and
West
Prussia. The Waffen-SS units involved were the 11 SS
Nordland, 20 SS
Estonian, 23 SS
Nederland, 27 SS
Langemark, 28 SS
Wallonien, all in the
III SS Panzer Corps, and the
X SS Corps, which did not command any SS
units.
In March
1945, the X SS Corps was encircled by the 1st Guards Tank Army, 3rd Shock Army, and the
Polish 1st Army in the area of
Dramburg
. This pocket was destroyed by the Red Army
on 7 March 1945. On 8 March 1945, the Soviets announced the capture
of General Krappe and 8,000 men of the X SS Corps.
Operation Spring Awakening
After the Ardennes offensive failed, the SS Divisions involved were
pulled out and refitted in Germany in preparation for
Operation Spring Awakening, with
top priority for men and equipment. The replacements were a mixed
group of raw recruits and drafted
Luftwaffe and
Kriegsmarine personnel no longer needed by
their own branch of service, as they had no aircraft or ships to
serve in. The 6th SS Panzer Army would again take the lead, with
the I SS Panzer Corps (1 SS
Leibstandarte and 12 SS
Hitlerjugend) and the II SS Panzer Corps (2 SS
Das
Reich and the 10 SS
Frundsberg). Also present but not
part of the 6th SS Panzer Army was the IV SS Panzer Corps (3 SS
Totenkopf and 5 SS
Wiking). This was the first
time that six SS Panzer Divisions took part in the same
offensive.
As planned, the offensive got under way on 6 March 1945,
spearheaded by the 6th SS Panzer Army. The attack managed to take
the Soviets by surprise and impressive gains were made for an
offensive launched at such a late date in the war.
However once the
Soviets realized that elite SS units were involved, they took the
German offensive seriously, utilizing 16 rifle divisions, two tank
corps and two mechanized corps, with some 150 tanks, in direct
support just behind the front line south west of Lake Balaton
. The Soviets had been building up their
forces for their own offensive along the
Danube valley, which meant the 6th SS Panzer Army's
attack was confronted by an overwhelming Soviet force of more than
1000 tanks, which ground the German advance to a halt.
By 14 March the attack was in serious trouble. The advance of the
6th SS Panzer Army, while impressive, was well short of its
targets. All the Waffen-SS divisions suffered grievously during
Spring Awakening, and by the end most were below 50% strength
without much prospect of reinforcements to replace losses.
Armband Order
This failure is famous for the notorious "armband order" that
followed. The order was issued to Sepp Dietrich by Adolf Hitler,
who claimed that the troops, and, more importantly, the 1 SS
Leibstandarte, "did not fight as the situation demanded."
As a mark of disgrace, the
Leibstandarte units involved in
the battle were ordered to remove their treasured "Adolf Hitler"
cuff titles. Dietrich was disgusted by
Hitler's order and did not relay it to his troops.
Vienna Offensive
After
Operation Spring Awakening, the 6th SS Panzer Army withdrew towards
Vienna
and was involved in the Vienna Offensive. The only major
force to face the attacking Red Army was the II SS Panzer Corps (2
SS
Das Reich and 3 SS
Totenkopf), under the
commanded of
Wilhelm Bittrich,
along with
ad hoc forces made up of garrison and
anti-aircraft units. Vienna fell on 13 April. Bittrich's II SS
Panzer Corps had pulled out to the west that evening to avoid
encirclement.
Berlin
The
Army Group Vistula was formed
in 1945 to protect Berlin from the advancing Red Army.
It fought in the
Battle of the Seelow
Heights (16-19 April) and the Battle of Halbe
(21 April-1 May), both part of the Battle of Berlin. The Waffen-SS was
represented by the III (Germanic) SS Panzer Corps.
On 16 April, the remnants of the 11 SS
Nordland, 33 SS
Charlemagne and the Spanish Volunteer Company of SS 101,
were all ordered to move to the front line east of Berlin. From 17
April to 20 April they were in constant combat all along the front
and pushed back into the city.
On 23
April, Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke
was appointed by Hitler the Battle Commander for the centre
government quarter/district (Zitadelle sector) that included the
Reich
Chancellery
and Führerbunker
. Mohnke's command post was under the Reich
Chancellery in the bunkers therein. He formed the
Kampfgruppe
Mohnke (Battle Group Mohnke) and it was divided into two weak
regiments. It was made up of the LSSAH Flak Company, replacements
from LSSAH Training and Reserve Battalion from Spreenhagan (under
Standartenfuhrer Anhalt), 600 men from the Reichsführer SS Begleit
Battalion, the Führer-Begleit-Company and the core group being the
800 men of the LSSAH Guard Battalion (that was assigned to guard
the Führer).
On 25 April, Brigadeführer
Gustav
Krukenberg was appointed the commander of (Berlin) Defence
Sector C which included the
Nordland Division, whose
previous commander
Joachim Ziegler
was relieved of his command the same day. On 27 April, after a
spirited but futile defence, the remnants of
Nordland were
pushed back into the centre government district (Zitadelle sector)
in Defence sector Z. There Krukenberg's
Nordland
headquarters was a carriage in the Stadtmitte U-Bahn station. The
men of
Nordland were now under Mohnke's overall command.
Since Mohnke's fighting force was located at the nerve centre of
the German Third Reich it fell under the heaviest artillery
bombardment of the war which began as a birthday present to Hitler
on 20 April 1945 and lasted to the end of hostilities on 8 May
1945.
Under pressure from the most intense
shelling, the SS troops put up stiff resistance as the Red Army
raced to take the Reichstag
and Reich Chancellery. This condemned the SS
troops to bitter and bloody street fighting. By 26 April, the
Nordland defenders in the centre government quarter were
pushed back into the Reichstag and Reich Chancellery. There over
the next few days, the survivors (mainly French SS troops from the
former 33 SS
Charlemagne) held out against overwhelming
odds.
On 30 April, after receiving news of Hitler's suicide, orders were
issued that those who could do so were to break out. Prior to the
breakout Mohnke briefed all commanders that could be reached within
the Zitadelle sector about the events as to Hitler's death and the
planned breakout.The break out started at 2300 hours on 1 May.
There were ten main groups that attempted to head northwest towards
Mecklenburg.
Fierce fighting continued all around
especially in the Weidendammer Bridge
area. What was left of the 11 SS
Nordland under Brigadeführer
Gustav Krukenberg fought hard in that area
but Soviet artillery and anti-tank guns dispatched the groups.
Several very small groups managed to reach the Americans at the
Elbe's west bank, but most, including Mohnke's
group, could not make it through the Soviet rings.
On 2 May hostilities officially ended by order of
Helmuth Weidling, Kommandant of the Defense
Area Berlin. News of the surrender lead some of the encircled
Waffen-SS men to change their minds as to suicide. Author Thomas
Fischer related the following example of the mindset of some of the
men:
Commanders
- Josef "Sepp" Dietrich was a former
Army sergeant with a peasant background, who
commanded the forerunner of the Waffen-SS, the Sonderkommando
Berlin. He would command the Leibstandarte SS
Adolf Hitler from its inception to Regiment, Brigade and
Division. He was then given
command of the I SS Panzer Corps
Leibstandarte and by the end of the war was the
commander of the 6th SS Panzer
Army.
- Paul Hausser, a former General in
the regular army, was chosen by Himmler to transform the SS-VT into a
credible military organisation. He was the first divisional
commander of the Waffen-SS when the SS-VT was formed into a
Division for the Battle of France.
He went onto command the II SS Panzer
Corps and the 7th Army.
- Theodor Eicke, a former army pay
master and police informant. He was the first commander of the Dachau
concentration camp
. He formed the SS
Totenkopf Division from members of the SS-Totenkopfverbände
and was killed in action on 26 February 1943, on
the Eastern
Front.
- Felix Steiner, another former army
officer and veteran of World War I. He
was given command of the SS Regiment Deutschland. He has
been given credit for the creation of small mobile Battle Group and armed his men with
Submachine guns and Grenades instead of Rifles and issued Camouflage clothing. He would go on to command
the SS Division Wiking and the
III SS Panzer
Corps.
- Kurt Meyer started the
war in command of the Leibstandarte anti-tank company, was
promoted and given command of the Reconnaissance Battalion which he
lead in the Balkans and Russia. He was chosen to lead the SS
Panzergrenadier Regiment 25, in the newly formed 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, and at
the age of 33 became a Divisional commander in the German forces
when he took over command of the division in Normandy in 1944.
Casualties
Total casualties amongst the Waffen-SS will probably never be
known, but one estimate indicates that they suffered 180,000 dead,
400,000 wounded and 40,000 missing.
World
War II casualties indicates that the Waffen-SS suffered 314,000
killed and missing, or 34.9%. By comparison the United States Army
suffered 318,274 killed and missing, or 2.8%
War crimes
Generally the Waffen-SS was not directly
involved in the Holocaust, as the
separately organised Allgemeine SS
was responsible for the death camps, although many members of it
and the SS-Totenkopfverbände subsequently became members of the
Waffen-SS, forming the initial core of the Totenkopf
Division. Many Waffen-SS members and units were
responsible for war crimes. For members who did not take part in
them, they had to face the fact there was a "guilt by association"
that attached.
After the war the Schutzstaffel
organisation as a whole was held to be a criminal
organization by the post-war German government, due to the
undeniable evidence that it was responsible for serious war
crimes. Formations such as the
Dirlewanger and
Kaminski
Brigade were singled out, and many others were involved in
large-scale massacres or smaller-scale atrocities such as the
Houtman affair. In the West the most infamous incidents included
the following:
- Wormhoudt massacre
by SS Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler, 1940, Belgium
- Le Paradis massacre
by SS Totenkopf, 1940, France
- Oradour-sur-Glane massacre
by SS Das Reich, 1944, France
- Tulle
massacre
by SS Das Reich, 1944, France
- Marzabotto massacre
by SS Reichsführer-SS, 1944, Italy
- Malmedy massacre
by Kampfgruppe Peiper part of 1st SS Panzer
Division, 1944, Belgium
- Ardeatine massacre
by two SS Officers, 1944, Italy
- Distomo massacre
by 4th SS Polizei Panzergrenadier Division,
1944, Greece
- Sant'Anna di Stazzema
massacre
by SS Reichsführer-SS, 1944, Italy
- Ardenne Abbey massacre
12th SS Panzer Division, 1944,
France
The
linking of the SS-VT with the SS-Totenkopfverbände
(SS-TV) in 1938 posed important questions about
Waffen-SS criminality, since the latter were already responsible
for imprisonment, torture and murder of Jews
(and other political opponents) through providing the personnel for
manning of the Concentration Camps. Their leader,
Theodor Eicke, who was the commandant
of the Dachau concentration camp
, inspector of the camps and murderer of Ernst Röhm, later became the commander of
the 3 SS Totenkopf Division. With the invasion of
Poland, the Totenkopfverbände troops were called on to carry out
"police and security measures" in rear areas. What these measures
involved is demonstrated by the record of
SS Totenkopf
Standarte Brandenburg.
It arrived in Włocławek
on 22 September 1939 and embarked on a four day
"Jewish action" that included the burning of synagogues and the execution en masse of the
leaders of the Jewish community. On 29 September the
Standarte travelled to Bydgoszcz
to conduct an "intelligentsia action".
Approximately 800 Polish civilians and what
the Sicherheitsdienst
(SD) termed "potential resistance leaders" were
killed. The Totenkopfverbände was to become one of the elite
SS divisions, but from the start they were among the first
executors of a policy of systematic extermination.
Several formations within the Waffen-SS were found guilty of a
war crime, especially in the opening and
closing phases of the war. In addition to documented atrocities,
Waffen-SS units assisted in rounding up Eastern European Jews for
deportation and utilised
Scorched-earth tactics during anti-partisan
operations. Some Waffen-SS personnel convalesced at concentration
camps, from which they were drawn, by serving guard duties. Other
members of the Waffen-SS were more directly involved in
genocide.
The end
of the war saw a number of war crime trials, including the Malmedy
massacre trial
. The counts of indictment related to the
massacre of more than 300 American prisoners "in the vicinity of
Malmedy
, Honsfeld, Büllingen, Ligneuville, Stoumont, La
Gleize, Cheneux, Petit Thier, Trois Ponts, Stavelot
, Wanne and Lutrebois", between 16 December 1944 and
13 January 1945, and the massacre of 100 Belgian civilians mainly
in the vicinity of Stavelot.
During
the International Military Tribunal (better known as the Nuremberg
Trials
), the Waffen-SS was declared a criminal
organisation, except conscripts, who were exempted from that
judgement as they had been forced to join.
HIAG
The
HIAG (
Hi'lfsgemeinschaft
auf
Gegenseitigkeit der
Angehörigen der ehemaligen Waffen-SS
, literally "Mutual
Help Association of Former Waffen-SS Members"
) was an
organization founded in 1951 by former members of the Waffen-SS to
provide assistance to veterans, and campaign for the rehabilitation
of their legal status with respect to veterans' pensions.
Unlike soldiers of the regular Wehrmacht, pensions had been denied to members of
the Waffen-SS as a result of it having been declared a criminal
organization at the Nuremberg trials.
See also
References
- Reitlinger, p. 84.
- Flaherty, p. 144.
- Cook, Stan & Bender, R. James. Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler, R. James Bender Publishing, 1994, pp. 17, 19.
- Flaherty, p. 145.
- The SS: Hitler's Instrument of Terror (Gordon Williamson)
- Flaherty, p. 146.
- Windrow, pp. 7-8.
- Flaherty, p. 148.
- Flaherty, p. 149.
- Flaherty, p. 150.
- Flaherty, p. 151.
- Flaherty, p. 152.
- Flaherty, p. 152.
- Flaherty, p. 154.
- Harmon, p. 100.
- Flaherty, p. 143.
- Flaherty, p. 154.
- Flaherty, p. 155.
- Jackson, pp. 285-288.
- Flaherty, p. 156.
- Flaherty, p. 161.
- Flaherty, p. 160.
- Blau (1953),
- Flaherty, p. 163.
- Flaherty, p. 165.
- Windrow, p. 9.
- Flaherty, p. 166.
- Flaherty, p. 168.
- Hennes, War of Extermination, p. 136.
- Browning, p. 279.
- Browning, p. 280.
- Browning, p. 281.
- Cuppers, p. 279.
- George H. Stien, The Waffen SS, 3rd Ed., Cornell
University Press, 1984, p171
- Mitcham, p. 148.
- Reynolds, p. 9.
- Fellgiebel (2000), p. 59.
- Flaherty, p. 173.
- Flaherty, pp. 173-174.
- Margry (2001), p. 20.
- Reynolds, p. 10.
- Dunn 1997, p. 153.
- Glantz 1995, pp. 166-167.
- Bergstrom, p. 81.
- Clarke (1966), pp. 337–38.
- Reynolds, p. 15.
- Reynolds, p. 15.
- The 29th Waffen Divisionen der SS (Italianishe Nr.
1)
- Ailsby, p. 169.
- Williamson, Gordon and Stephan Andrew. p. 4.
- Williamson & Andrew, pp. 5-6.
- Zetterling & Frankson, p. 335.
- Nash, Hell’s Gate, p. 366.
- Eyre, pp. 343-376.
- Mitchum The Panzer Legions, pp. 261-262.
- Reynolds, p. 131.
- Reynolds, p. 145.
- Latimer, World War II
- Reynolds, p. 148.
- Clark Operation Epsom, p. 27.
- Fey, p. 145.
- Jarymowycz, p. 196.
- Hastings, p. 306.
- McGilvray, p. 54.
- Bercuson, p. 233.
- Richard Landwehr, p. 129.
- Richrd Landwehr, p. 22.
- Harclerode, p. 460.
- Ellis, pp. 313-315.
- Bell, J. Bowyer. "Besieged: Seven Cities Under Siege".
Philadelphia: Chilton, (1966), p. 89-91.
- Conot, Robert E. "Justice at Nuremberg". New York: Carrol &
Graf, (1984), p. 278-281.
- Bell, J. Bowyer. "Besieged: Seven Cities Under Siege".
Philadelphia: Chilton, 1966. 89-91.
- Kirchmayer, p. 367.
- Massacre At Malmédy During the Battle of the Bulge, by Michael
Reynolds – World War II Magazine, Février 2003 – [1]
- Rolf Michaelis (2006), Die Waffen-SS. Mythos und
Wirklichkeit. Berlin: Michaelis-Verlag, p. 36.
- Beevor, p. 91.
- Erhard Raus, Panzer Operations. The Eastern Front Memoir of
General Raus, 1941-1945, pp. 324-332.
- Tessin, p. 164.
- Ustinow, p. 179.
- Schramm, p. 1156.
- p. 198., The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial
Japan, Hans Dollinger, Library of Congress Catalogue Card
Number 67-27047
- Dollinger, p. 199.
- Descriptions of Soviet actions are from Ustinov, pp.
238-239.
- Gosztony, p. 262.
- Fischer, Thomas. Soldiers of the Leibstandarte, J.J.
Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. 2008, pp 42-43.
- Lumsden, Robin. A Collector's Guide To: The Allgemeine -
SS, Ian Allan Publishing, Inc. 2001, p 149.
- Beevor (2002) p. 301.
- Beevor (2002) p. 323.
- Fischer, Thomas. Soldiers of the Leibstandarte, J.J.
Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. 2008, p 49.
- Flaherty, p. 147.
- Windrow, p. 10.
- Rűdiger Overmans. Deutsche militärische Verluste im Zweiten
Weltkrieg. Oldenbourg 2000. ISBN 3-486-56531-1
Notes
- Explanatory notes
- Citations
- Reitlinger, p. 84.
- Flaherty, p. 144.
- Cook, Stan & Bender, R. James. Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler, R. James Bender Publishing, 1994, pp. 17, 19.
- Flaherty, p. 145.
- The SS: Hitler's Instrument of Terror (Gordon Williamson)
- Flaherty, p. 146.
- Windrow, pp. 7-8.
- Flaherty, p. 148.
- Flaherty, p. 149.
- Flaherty, p. 150.
- Flaherty, p. 151.
- Flaherty, p. 152.
- Flaherty, p. 152.
- Flaherty, p. 154.
- Harmon, p. 100.
- Flaherty, p. 143.
- Flaherty, p. 154.
- Flaherty, p. 155.
- Jackson, pp. 285-288.
- Flaherty, p. 156.
- Flaherty, p. 161.
- Flaherty, p. 160.
- Blau (1953),
- Flaherty, p. 163.
- Flaherty, p. 165.
- Windrow, p. 9.
- Flaherty, p. 166.
- Flaherty, p. 168.
- Hennes, War of Extermination, p. 136.
- Browning, p. 279.
- Browning, p. 280.
- Browning, p. 281.
- Cuppers, p. 279.
- George H. Stien, The Waffen SS, 3rd Ed., Cornell
University Press, 1984, p171
- Mitcham, p. 148.
- Reynolds, p. 9.
- Fellgiebel (2000), p. 59.
- Flaherty, p. 173.
- Flaherty, pp. 173-174.
- Margry (2001), p. 20.
- Reynolds, p. 10.
- Dunn 1997, p. 153.
- Glantz 1995, pp. 166-167.
- Bergstrom, p. 81.
- Clarke (1966), pp. 337–38.
- Reynolds, p. 15.
- Reynolds, p. 15.
- The 29th Waffen Divisionen der SS (Italianishe Nr.
1)
- Ailsby, p. 169.
- Williamson, Gordon and Stephan Andrew. p. 4.
- Williamson & Andrew, pp. 5-6.
- Zetterling & Frankson, p. 335.
- Nash, Hell’s Gate, p. 366.
- Eyre, pp. 343-376.
- Mitchum The Panzer Legions, pp. 261-262.
- Reynolds, p. 131.
- Reynolds, p. 145.
- Latimer, World War II
- Reynolds, p. 148.
- Clark Operation Epsom, p. 27.
- Fey, p. 145.
- Jarymowycz, p. 196.
- Hastings, p. 306.
- McGilvray, p. 54.
- Bercuson, p. 233.
- Richard Landwehr, p. 129.
- Richrd Landwehr, p. 22.
- Harclerode, p. 460.
- Ellis, pp. 313-315.
- Bell, J. Bowyer. "Besieged: Seven Cities Under Siege".
Philadelphia: Chilton, (1966), p. 89-91.
- Conot, Robert E. "Justice at Nuremberg". New York: Carrol &
Graf, (1984), p. 278-281.
- Bell, J. Bowyer. "Besieged: Seven Cities Under Siege".
Philadelphia: Chilton, 1966. 89-91.
- Kirchmayer, p. 367.
- Massacre At Malmédy During the Battle of the Bulge, by Michael
Reynolds – World War II Magazine, Février 2003 – [1]
- Rolf Michaelis (2006), Die Waffen-SS. Mythos und
Wirklichkeit. Berlin: Michaelis-Verlag, p. 36.
- Beevor, p. 91.
- Erhard Raus, Panzer Operations. The Eastern Front Memoir of
General Raus, 1941-1945, pp. 324-332.
- Tessin, p. 164.
- Ustinow, p. 179.
- Schramm, p. 1156.
- p. 198., The Decline and Fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial
Japan, Hans Dollinger, Library of Congress Catalogue Card
Number 67-27047
- Dollinger, p. 199.
- Descriptions of Soviet actions are from Ustinov, pp.
238-239.
- Gosztony, p. 262.
- Fischer, Thomas. Soldiers of the Leibstandarte, J.J.
Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. 2008, pp 42-43.
- Lumsden, Robin. A Collector's Guide To: The Allgemeine -
SS, Ian Allan Publishing, Inc. 2001, p 149.
- Beevor (2002) p. 301.
- Beevor (2002) p. 323.
- Fischer, Thomas. Soldiers of the Leibstandarte, J.J.
Fedorowicz Publishing, Inc. 2008, p 49.
- Flaherty, p. 147.
- Windrow, p. 10.
- Rűdiger Overmans. Deutsche militärische Verluste im Zweiten
Weltkrieg. Oldenbourg 2000. ISBN 3-486-56531-1
Bibliography
- Cook, Stan; Bender, Roger James. (1994). Leibstandarte SS
Adolf Hitler: Uniforms, Organization, & History. San Jose,
CA: R. James Bender Publishing. ISBN 978-0-912138-55-8
- Lumsden, Robin (2001). A Collector's Guide To: The
Allgemeine - SS, Ian Allan Publishing, Inc. ISBN
0-7110-2905-9
External links