209 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2025
    1. that “Hitler's war” had been waged first and foremost against communism and consequently, as some will have it, that the Third Reich had served as the main bulwark against “Bolshevism” and ought to be given its due for having “saved” Western civilization from Asiatic barbarism

      facinating if stupid

    2. even the Western powers will not be able to prevent the fulfilment of that which Christ had said of his resurrection,” namely, the rebirth of the German Reich

      christ ordaned reich

    3. a quarter of the letters contained complaints regarding the general situation, the men's direct superiors and the higher leadership, as well as on lesser issues such as provisions, friction within the units, and postal delays

      some complants but not about the fuoror

    4. The need of soldiers under constant danger of death for some kind of spiritual support, provided in the Wehrmacht first and foremost by a quasi-religious belief in Hitler, was thus powerfully demonstrated in this period of profound military and psychological crisis.

      hitler filled the roll of god

    5. ailed Putsch attempt served as a particularly powerful indication of the reserves of “belief” in the Führer still remaining among the troops of the Wehrmacht only months before the Third Reich finally collapsed. Indeed, Hitler's “salvation” even further enhanced his divine aura and appeared conclusively to prove God's approval of the Führer and his actions, as he himself so often asserted.

      loyal untill the end

    6. ronically, even men who claimed that the “time of fanaticism and intolerance of other views is over,” and that “if we want to win the war, we must become more rational” concluded that all this was necessary “so that we will not be delivered to the revenge of the Jews.

      be open to more views by klling

    7. Increasingly during the last two years of the war, the troops at the front came to see themselves as the missionaries of the entire German nation, indeed of Western civilization as a whole

      missionarys of civilization

    8. Not a few historians, perhaps because most of them have also not experienced battle at close quarters, believe that combat soldiers are the first to see through the glorification of war commonly associated with “soldiers of the pen”; there is good reason to doubt whether this is the case in any army, especially regarding national conscript forces

      effect of non military military historians

    9. Thus belief became both a personal, psychological need among the troops, and a weapon which would strengthen the Führer and enable him to wring from history the now increasingly mythical Endsieg.

      hitler works on tinkerbell majic

    10. As the fortunes of the Ostheer rapidly deteriorated, the troops' “belief” in Hitler did not falter, but rather increased in direct proportion to the hopelessness of the situation.

      more faith in hitler/god

    11. Well, of course, what they [the Nazis, rather than “us,” the Wehrmacht] did to the Jews was revolting. But we were told over and over again that it was a necessary evil. … No, I must admit, at the time I had ho idea we had fallen into the hands of criminals. I didn't realize that until much later, after it was all over.

      i didn't realize it was wrong till it was over

    12. /Thus there was a much less distorted, dehumanized image of the Greek inhabitants. More important, perhaps, is the fact that we depend here on testimonies given in the course of a police inquiry thirty years after the event.

      bias in sorses and greeks less de huminized

    13. Indeed, the most important aspect of this incident is that the men acted precisely as they had been ordered and massacred over half the population of the village, in spite of the fact that many of them were allegedly aware of the criminal nature of the operation/Moreover, as this reprisal action was carried out in 1943 by a unit which had previously served on the Eastern Front, where such massacres were quite common, it is unlikely that it was the troops' first experience with Wehrmacht atrocities.

      dont question it and you will be fine

    14. Wehrmacht among the soldiers than the official documents and, for that matter, private correspondence betray. As far as the troops' letters are concerned, this is not surprising, for negative comments about the regime and the implementation of its policies could and did lead to prosecution and heavy punishment

      bias in letters

    15. Retrospectively, at a distance of thirty years, and particularly when questioned by police officials, soldiers sometimes described events differently than in their letters from the front.

      changed view of what they thought over time propaganda wheres off in memory

    16. This reaction to reality as a confirmation of propaganda was evident concerning other aspects of the Soviet Union as well. Thus early on in the campaign Private W. Lämmert wrote that “if in the past I thought that our propaganda had in this respect [conditions in Russia] somewhat exaggerated, today I can say that it had rather embellished conditions, for reality here is still far worse.”1

      beliving nazi propaganda was toned down

    17. Thus while it is true that initially it was easier to create hatred and fear of an abstract enemy, once this image had been internalized soldiers applied it to real living human beings, apparently believing that they actually resembled the caricatures of “the Jew” in Nazi newspapers.

      propaganda makes people caricatures

    18. Private Reinhold Mahnke furnished a detailed description of Bolshevik-Jewish atrocities against the Lithuanians. Not only did they eject them from their houses and then burn them down, they also “cut off their feet and hands, tore out their tongues. … They even nailed men and children to walls. Had these criminals come to our country,” Mahnke now realized, “they would have torn us to pieces and mangled us, that's clear. But the Lithuanians have taken revenge,” he concluded, referring to the anti-Jewish pogroms

      result of propaganda

    19. “One may not allow oneself to feel any compassion for these people, because they are all very cowardly and perfidious.”1

      one may not allow one self to feel compassion"

    20. soldiers who have been roving about in the forests dressed as civilians and who have committed acts of terrors

      "soldiers disgussed as civilians"

    21. his also made the troops feel that they were actually liberating the Russian people from “Bolshevism, the world's enemy, which had made the Russians into its mercenaries.” The Russians' suffering was therefore blamed not on the Wehrmacht, but on the “Bolsheviks,” who “do not care whether the Russian people is bled to death,” and “have no sense of responsibility.”156Close

      liberating russia

    22. Quite apart from their deep-seated racism and anxiety, the soldiers' letters also betray a need to justify the criminal actions of the army in the East, o

      race anxity and justification

    23. Now I know what war really means. But I also know that we had been forced into the war against the Soviet Union. For God have mercy on us, had we waited, or had these beasts come to us. For them even the most horrible death is still too good. I am glad that I can be here to put an end to this genocidal system.145

      im putting an. end to genocide belife

    24. ndicative of this inversion was la letter by a captain who must have known of the wide-scale maltreatment of Soviet POWs, and yet maintained that “[t]he Russians had been completely stultified and persuaded that the Germans would massacre all prisoners,”142Close implying that they had been lied to and that nothing of the sort was actually taking place.

      dont belive own eyes

    25. Yesterday, for instance, we saw our first women soldiers. … And these pigs fired on our decent German soldiers from ambush positions.

      women solders

    26. of events to the ideological incitement of the Red Army by Jewish Bolsheviks as well as to the generally savage nature of the Russian race

      enimys too strong and too weak

    27. he Reich's alleged biological and political enemies came to resemble the stereotype of the Untermensch promulgated by the regime.

      like irland durring the famin

    28. Yet it never occurred to this officer that these Jews were being starved to death by his fellow-countrymen

      blaming getto conditions on jews

    29. while the atrocities committed by the Wehrmacht and the SS were attributed to the enemy's malicious character rather than the murderous policies of the Nazi regime.

      blame victems for the atrocities commited agenst them

    30. incorporated these arguments in their private correspondence, given the fact that censorship was concerned with incidents of criticism, not with the absence of Nazi phraseology.

      distorted letters

    31. Fuchs, like many of his generation, saw his love to his wife and his love to Hitler as a single entity symbolizing the spirit which united the whole German Volk.

      he wants to kiss hitler anf all of germany

    32. He has fulfilled the most beautiful duty of a soldier and has become an example for us all, which we have to follow.

      poor missgided sods

    33. There was certainly something wrong in the state of France!”119Close Karl Fuchs wrote his new bride on 15 July:

      quick victory > richus

    34. A particularly interesting letter repeated almost word for word what could be read in most propaganda sheets of the period,

      propoganda in letters

    35. een from this perspective, it was inevitable that after years of premilitary and army indoctrination the Wehrmacht's troops would be able to assess and describe reality only by constant reference to the Nazi Weltanschauung, which in their case literally constituted their view of the world. Considering its consequences, the creation of this consensus among the troops was probably the single most significant achievement of the Nazi regime's educational efforts.

      making silders of one mind

    36. The most striking aspect of the soldiers' letters is the remarkable similarity between their terminology, modes of expression, and arguments and those which characterize the Wehrmacht's propaganda. In complete contradiction to Mommsen's above quoted assertion, the fact that these men, who were indeed closer than any of the propagandists to the reality of the war, saw and described it through the distorting lenses of the regime's ideology, is the true measure of the extent to which they had been made into Hitler's soldiers in the most profound sense of the term

      nazi language in letters and minds

    37. Naturally, it would be false to describe the troops' “mystical belief in the Führer” as a firm commitment to an articulate and coherent ideology; Nazism never made such claims to begin with.

      nazism lacked firm idiology

    38. Indeed, as von Herwarth explains, the very decision to assassinate Hitler rather than arrest and try him as had previously been suggested was based on the general conviction that German troops would never be willing to accept a different command as long as Hitler lived, but that news of his death would instantly bring about the collapse of the myth that surrounded his name. Hence there was no way of gaining the support of large numbers of German troops without eliminating Hitle

      hitler was the mainstay of german army confidence and nazism

    39. hould not to be taken at face value, it is well worth considering that even those who did find the courage to plot against Hitler were evidently much disheartened to discover that virtually no military units existed which could knowingly be deployed in a Putsch attempt

      hard to coup without military suport

    40. ur soldiers at the [Eastern] front are now completely convinced of the necessity of this war,”101Close and added a few days later: “Morale of our men at the front [is] very good. The soldiers now realize that this campaign was necessary.”

      belife in nessesity of campain

    41. Studies of morale in the Third Reich have stressed that until late in the war combat troops remained in higher spirits than the population in the rear, their firsthand knowledge of military setbacks notwithstanding.

      confidence of idealism

    42. Studies of morale in the Third Reich have stressed that until late in the war combat troops remained in higher spirits than the population in the rear, their firsthand knowledge of military setbacks notwithstanding.

      confidence of idealsim

    43. ndividual German soldier was a committed National Socialist; rather, it is to say that the vast majority of the troops internalized the distorted Nazi presentation of reality, and consequently felt that they had no other alternative but to fight to the death.

      no alternative but to fight to the death

    44. The only redeeming feature of this presentation, and it is an important one in this context, is that it supplies us with powerful proof of the lingering effects Nazi views have had not only on veterans, but also on scholars

      historogrophy defeated

    45. The ultimate defeat of the Wehrmacht inevitably spelled the defeat of Europe, whose heart was torn but and whose body was left at the mercy of the superpowers in the periphery. Put differently, both in the “elementary sense” of fighting for their own and the civilian population's survival in the face of a barbaric invasion, and in the politico-strategic sense of defending Europe from the domination of non-European powers, the troops of the Ostheer were, as Nazi propaganda had claimed all along, fighting for a just cause.

      dumb historiogrphy

    46. this was not merely a battle for survival, but also a fight to retain Germany's greatness. In these last months of the war, he writes,

      historiogrophy of fight to retain german greatness

    47. German army was engaged in a fight for two noble goals, precisely those, incidentally, ascribed it by Nazi propaganda. First, writes Hillgrube

      german army two noble goels in hill grubbers view

    48. and that although the Soviet Union established ruthless dictatorships in the East, it did not have the same genocidal intentions partly carried out by the Third Reich.

      sovits way less bad

    49. Finally, in 1986 a respectable German scholar could claim that the Ostheer's battles of 1944–45 had been a heroic effort to stem that same “flood” and should consequently be seen as a glorious chapter in German history, even if this chapter had been written during the Nazi regime's most frenzied period.

      historiogrophy justifying war in east as anti comunist

    50. key arguments and terms employed by the regime during the war have recently resurfaced in the Federal Republic under the guise of an attempt to give the Germans back their history and allow them to regain their national identity by recognizing the positive aspects of even the murkiest periods in their past. Most disturbingly, ideological, geopolitical, and nationalist justifications for the role played by the Third Reich,

      neo nazis stpping comunism justification for past

    51. But the Nazi Weltanschauung had a considerable effect on some of the regime's domestic opponents as well, reflecting as it did in a more radical form some of the aspirations and hopes of German nationalism as it had been molded at least since Bismarck

      nazi ideals and oponents

    52. Rudel describes the fate and role of Hitler's regime in Europe using precisely the same propagandistic terms so prevalent during the war. The Third Reich is not the terrible destroyer of human beings and moral values, but their defender; the German soldier is not Hitler's instrument of genocide, but a sort of Germanic St. George spearing the communist dragon. Postwar knowledge of the real essence of the Nazi dictatorship seems to have had little impact on such men, who in any case must have known a great deal about the regime's murderous nature long before it was finally destroyed.

      condone murder

    53. the Red hordes are devastating our country … we must fight on. We shall only lay down our arms when our leaders give the order. This is our plain duty according to our military oath, it is our plain duty in view of the terrible fate which threatens us if we surrender unconditionally as the enemy insists

      "terrible fate"of surender

    54. Western scholars and soldiers to go on considering such men as mere professionals certainly is. The influential British military historian Liddell Hart was among those who set the tone for this approach, when he wrote soon after the fighting ended how much he had been taken by the supposed “gentlemanliness” in war of the German generals he had spoken with.82Close

      historiogrophy of denazified genrals

    55. If we understand that what many of these officers believed to be “patriotic theories” were actually National Socialist notions of geographical expansion and “racial” destruction, we can view the above passage as a candid statement of the extent to which the regime had succeeded to implant its world-view into the minds of its soldiers.

      world view for soldiers

    56. the opposition within the Army was continually weakened, since the new age groups that were now called to the colors had already served in the Hitler Youth,

      new trupes already swarn to hitler

    57. Whereas regarding the army's involvement in the implementation of criminal policies he takes a familiar apologetic line and simply falsifies the evidence,

      historical lies

    58. Similarly, examples of the manner in which Nazi arguments were still being used to justify the Wehrmacht's actions long after the war was over are not difficult to come by.

      nazi justifications post war

    59. azi indoctrination in fact had a major and insufficiently acknowledged impact on the perception of reality of all ranks in the German army during the war, and its effects can be seen to have lingered on for many years after the “capitulation.”

      nazi idiology at all ranks and levils

    60. Wehrmacht's propaganda which had presented it as the bulwark of civilization against Bolshevism now appeared admirably suitable for the needs of the Western Allianc

      cold war likes some nazi shit

    61. it also created the basis for the resurrection of German military institutions, which in turn made it politically necessary to repress the notion of Nazi penetration into the army of the Third Reich

      politicly nessisary to not think the nazi millitary was too nazi

    62. Western experience and memory was different, and was thus differently reflected in the writings of Western historians. Not unrelated was also the fact that the liberal tradition of rigidly separating between politics and the military hampered a clearer understanding of the radically different tradition in Germany or, for that matter, also in Russia. I

      western europe idiologicly diffrent so the memory is diffrent

    63. young man's civilian background was just as crucial to his conduct as a soldier as the experience of six years in war was crucial to molding his civilian identity upon release from military service.

      people are soldiers and it changes them

    64. Thus while historians dealing with civilian society pay little attention to the army, military historians are mainly concerned with military matters, touching on the contact between soldiers and civilians only at the higher levels of either hierarchy, in matters concerning strategy, politics, and economy. Consequently the junior ranks of the army are treated as a gray, faceless mass, devoid of both a civilian past and an individual identity, will, and consciousness. This makes it possible to ascribe to this mass conscript army whatever characteristics one chooses without, however, providing much evidence to sustain one's opinion.

      problims with historiogrophy

    65. “Front-credo” (Frontbekenntnis), which compressed the essence of the National Socialist Weltanschauung into a pseudo-religious statement of belief:

      front credo

    66. , but also makes demands upon the power of resistance of each individual soldier. This mental power of resistance has to be repeatedly strengthened, particularly during rest periods

      "stregthening soldiers resistance"

    67. an interest in instruction in political and other current issues, which comes to show that he is more preoccupied with them than one usually thinks.67

      how can this be combined with the regection of thought in favor of action

    68. Neither the officers nor the rank and file seem to have been particularly disturbed by the inherent contradictions of their propaganda.

      not disterbed by cobtrodictions

    69. The gist of the argument was in all cases that the attack against the Soviet Union had merely been a preventive measure, intended to thwart the approaching invasion of “Asiatic barbarism,” led by “Judeo-Bolshevism,” which had aimed at devastating Europe and destroying its “culture.”

      invasion was premtive strike in their minds

    70. n the East the soldier is not only a fighter according to the rules of warfare, but also a carrier of an inexorable racial conception [völkischen Idee] and the avenger of all the bestialities which have been committed against the Germans and related races.

      tasks beyond soldering

    71. Once the fighting began, rather than attempt to temper their troops' brutality, many commanders seemed to think that the soldiers were still showing too much compassion for the enemy, and strove to instill into them a greater understanding for, and a firmer will to participate in, the brutalities deemed essential for the victorious outcome of this “war of ideologies.”

      "nessisary brutality"

    72. told his divisional commanders: “A deep ideological and racial abyss separates us from Russia,” which was, after all, “an Asiatic state.” Therefore, he stressed, “the aim must be to destroy European Russia.”

      asiativ vs european

    73. e saw what one expected to see, and one smashed it so as not to have to see it any longer. This process was greatly accelerated due to the fact that such propagandistic portrayals of the enemy were not disseminated merely by the party's organs and the army's high command in the rear, but also by combat commanders at the front, many of whom, moreover, did not view ideology cynically as one more means to motivate their troops, but seem to have believed it with precisely that sort of fervor demanded from the Führer's disciples. I

      belive and spred ideas they can see are wrong

    74. n the Eastern Front, however, the troops found no contradiction between the “Judeo-Bolshevik Asiatic hordes” which sprang from the propagandists' imagination and the enemy soldiers they were actually fighting.

      see with propaganda nazi glasses

    75. ideological and racial qualities, of his fanaticism and will for revenge, was doubtlessly the Soviet commissar. The Mitteilungen für die Truppe painted a particularly nightmarish picture of this monstrous angel of death accepted, as we shall see, by many of the soldiers as an accurate reflection of reality:

      paint enimy in bad light

    76. eat, especially powerful because for some at least it was perhaps tinged with a sense of guilt, with a feeling that such revenge would be well deserved.

      revenge feeding on a fews guilt

    77. Any weakling can put up with victories. Only the strong can stand firm in battles of destiny. But heaven gives the ultimate and highest prize only to those who are capable of withstanding battles of destiny.”

      battlee of destiny

    78. oldier could well imagine what these demonic hordes might wreak on his land, for his own army's actions in Russia had provided him with an appropriate example. Indeed, it was fear of vengeance

      fear of vengence

    79. Only an unquestioning belief in the Führer and the final victory would save the world from subjugation by the devil's hordes

      only blind faith to save them

    80. e are filled with the responsibility to God to defend the land which had been given us, to save His property and to multiply it, and therefore we mobilize not only our weapons … but also the weapons of the soul. …

      god givin land and wepons of the soul

    81. the tone of the army's propaganda changed from ecstatic to frantic, often verging on the hysterical; technology and skill were now to be increasingly replaced by devotion and fanaticism, rational thought by “blind” belief.

      ideological fuver in face of deafeat

    82. and with all the passion of which we are capable, sacrifice [hingeben] ourselves to this Führer and strive to be worthy of the historical epoch molded by a heaven-storming will.47

      worthy of the age

    83. His genius, in which the whole strength of Germandom is embodied with ancient powers [mit Urgewalt verkörpert], has animated the souls of 80,000,000

      majic hitler

    84. powerful need for belief among soldiers living in conditions of constant danger, and catered to it with an endless stream of leaflets, brochures, speeches, radio talks, newspaper articles, and all other forms of propaganda directed at the troops throughout the war

      propoganda for army

    85. et the purpose of the Nazi sacralization of ideology was not merely to achieve abstract belief, but rather to harness faith as a motivating engine for concrete action

      use faith

    86. “Belief” in Hitler, in an increasingly religious, metaphysical sense of the term, was a central element in Nazi ideology.

      "belife" in hitler

    87. Second, it provided the soldiers with an image of the enemy which so profoundly distorted their perception that once confronted with reality they invariably experienced it as a confirmation of what they had come to expect

      creat horrible enimy + trust in hitler

    88. . The indoctrination of the soldiers was of crucial importance in two related ways. First, it taught the troops totally to trust Hitler's political and military wisdom, and never to doubt either the morality of his orders or the outcome of his prophecies.

      why indoctrinate troups part one

    89. the Wehrmacht chose a radically new path by its decision to devote a considerable effort to the political, that is, National Socialist education of the troops, and its particular insistence on instilling into them a mystical belief in Hitler.

      new indoctrination of troops

    90. His greatest hope was “to show German youths German values and German greatness and to educate them into real Germans, in whom spirit and mind, will and soul are equally well learned.”

      want to indoctrinate more

    91. war will go on for many years, if not for centuries! Oh well, one will not be put to sleep and will not rust, will not find boredom, will not be satisfied with phrases and flattering lies; perhaps precisely this time will lead toward truth and knowledge.28

      better war then peace for these people

    92. ndeed an outstanding example of the type manufactured by that powerful combination of the Nazi regime's ideology, the Wehrmacht's system of values, and the reality of the war, enhanced by the youthfulness of the soldiers, the manifest weakness of family and school in the face of totalitarian rule, and the tremendous impact of a highly appealing youth movement, which deliberately mobilized the rebellious spirits of the young against their parents and teachers, providing them instead with military trappings, power over their elders, and an opportunity to sacrifice themselves for a “good cause.”21Close Such idealistic junior officers in turn had a substantial influence on the rank and file, while simultaneously generating a feeling of pride in the Wehrmacht's achievements among the population in the rear.

      summary

    93. Describing himself in his memoirs as a “150 percent idealistic-believing officer,” he kept fighting even after the capitulation was formally announced. Significantly, although he totally internalized the regime's value system and conformed to the new ideal type of the Wehrmacht's combat officer, Döbler did not consider himself a party member; indeed, just like the younger Heck, he saw himself as being of a higher quality than the staid and corrupt “Alte Kämpfer.” His energetic and self-sacrificial devotion to the regime was expressed in a will to conform to its models of heroism and action.

      not party member but party ideal

    94. But while this woman simply went on leading a normal life, hardly noticing the changes taking place around her as long as they did not touch her personally, others were far from indifferent, especially the young men who ended up in fieldgray uniforms.

      whent on so long as it didnt affect us

    95. t was not uncommon for young people in Germany to reject their families' convictions and follow the Nazis, and many fathers and mothers, themselves strongly opposed to the Hitler regime, were denounced by their own children as enemies of the state or even turned over to the Gestap

      denounce own parents

    96. “For me a whole world came apart,” he maintained, especially because “I was then … quite earnest,” and “[a]lthough they naturally tried to explain to us … that these were Untermenschen, Russian POWs, Jews, I don't know who they rounded up there.”

      reacton to camps

    97. ome were soon old enough to exercise these powers against the Reich's real or alleged exterior enemies; the younger generation was confined to the family circle and the school, where it functioned as the regime's corps of agents and informers. Th

      child informers

    98. Heck's is a Bildungsroman concerned with the making of an innocent child into a zealous Hitler Youth leader whose greatest desire is to sacrifice himself for the Führer.

      disire sacrifice

    99. The HJ gained much of its appeal by openly opposing the traditional foci of authority, the family and the school, and by presenting itself both as a rebel youth movement

      rebel agenst athority with new athority

    100. This was of particular importance because the regime was first and foremost concerned with indoctrinating Germany's young generation, both in the official educational system and especially within the ranks of the Hitlerjugend and the Arbeitsdienst

      indoctronation

    101. Most of the men who served as the Wehrmacht's combat troops during the Second World War were either children or teenagers when Hitler came to power in 1933

      only children when nazis came to power

    102. , for this was no ordinary war between two opposing armies, but a campaign of murder and destruction which dispensed with all previously accepted norms of conduct, and intentionally mobilized the unavoidable sense of guilt for killing innocent civilians and unarmed soldiers as an engine even further to enhance its barbarity, punishing its victims for having made their persecutors into monsters

      not war but murder

    103. . To be sure, soldiers often cope with the destruction of enemy lives and property by shifting the responsibility for their actions to their opponents. Dehumanizing the enemy is an inherent element of war

      dehuminization native to war

    104. Hence, only by physically annihilating the victims and erasing their memory could one salvage one's own humanity

      memory and justification

    105. self-fulfilling prophecy, whereby acting in a manner perceived as necessary for the situation one expected actually created that situation, confirming one's expectations and justifying one's actions.

      self fufilling profocies confuzing cause and effect

    106. few essential and unchangeable beliefs and dogmas which no amount of empirical evidence could disprove, particularly as they were not based on rational examination or logical construction, but on faith

      fath in founding principals

    107. This striking inversion of reality, which ascribed the unprecedented brutality of the Wehrmacht and the SS to their victims, was the most characteristic feature of the German soldier's “coming to terms” with his actions in the Soviet Union. Indeed, it can be said that this was probably the most effective means of overcoming the moral scruples many of the Wehrmacht's troops and officers may still have retained in spite of their long years of ideological training.

      inversion as a copping mecanism showing power of indoctrination

    108. The German people owes a great debt to our Führer, for had these beasts, who are our enemies here, come to Germany, such murders would have taken place that the world has never seen before.

      beliving lies

    1. r actions was distorted by the conditions and circumstances of their existence. Yet it must be emphasized that it was the years of premilitary and army indoctrination which molded the soldiers' state of mind, prepared them for the horrors of war, and instilled into them such determination and ruthlessness.

      indoctrination

    2. ndeed, one can say that the typical Landser was a very frightened man, scared of his commanders, terrified of the enemy; this is probably why he seems to have enjoyed so much watching others suffer. The photographs of smiling Wehrmacht troops, each with his little camera, busily taking pictures of hanged “partisans,” or of piles of butchered Jews, this horrific “Exekutions-Tourismus,”

      very important. fear makes people like violence, exocution turism

    3. Mutiny and disintegration tend to have a contagious effect on armies and to spread with remarkable speed; the Wehrmacht protected itself from most breakouts by harsh discipline, but completely inoculated its troops from a panic epidemic by huge counter-injections of terror from the enemy.

      make enimy worse then officers

    4. while discipline was aimed at instilling into the troops fear of their superiors, indoctrination increasingly terrorized the soldiers by horror tales about what they could expect from the “Judeo-Bolshevik” and “Asiatic flood” threatening the cradle of culture.

      make them. fear the enimy worse

    5. so too this ideological cohesion of the troops assumed a major role in preventing the organizational disintegration of the army when the disciplinary system crumbled.

      idiological cohisioned remained

    6. From all this it is clear that at critical moments, when terror from the enemy became even greater than fear of one's superiors, incidents of breakdown among combat units did occur, and no amount of disciplinary brutality could prevent them

      disipline of fear is brittle

    7. fighting with a great deal of devotion and determination. Only when everything was lost did the soldiers finally give up, and even then their officers still tried to keep them in their positions.

      only give up when all hope truly lost

    8. uite apart from the sense common to so many soldiers and officers of having to stick together precisely because they shared a common guilt.

      stick to gether because of comen guilt

    9. Harsh discipline thus played a far more important role in preserving unit cohesion than “primary groups.” It was particularly effective within the context of a brutal war in which soldiers were not only ordered to commit crimes against the enemy, but also allowed to get away with breaches of discipline toward prisoners and civilians.

      diffrent system of cohesion

    10. Having legalized the murder of civilians, it was really only a matter of time and circumstances before the army would sanction the murder of its own troops.

      murdr own troops

    11. expect every officer, NCO and man, who has retained his soldierly honor, to do everything in order to control such outbreaks of pan

      arms agenst comradees"

    12. ndeed, from this stage on, the Wehrmacht experienced a growing incidence of cases whereby discipline was enforced not merely by court martials and heavy punishments, but also by the application of force without any prior legal proceedings. For this reason it is also impossible accurately to estimate the actual number of soldiers executed for real or perceived offenses during the war

      no cort marshal for some just punnishment

    13. But although it was obvious that these were manifestation of exhaustion due to heavy combat and lack of manpower, the corps insisted:

      exastion

    14. It thus became standard policy to terrorize the troops from evading a likely death at the front by promising them certain execution if they were caught in the act.

      proobobole or certin death?

    15. As the chaos at the front made for a rise in breaches of combat discipline, lesser offenses were also punished with great harshness.

      small offences of soldering get harsh punnishment but. you can murdeer with impunity

    16. As the war dragged on, the number of trials per month rose by a factor of 3.5, from 12,853 in December 1939 to 44,955 in October 1944, but the number of death sentences rose by a factor of no less than eight, from 519 in 1939–40 to 4118 in 1943–44.

      harsh disipline in the face of a lost war

    17. The astonishing number of executions in the Wehrmacht was mainly due to the politicization of martial law, whereby such offenses as desertion and self-inflicted wounds came under the heading of treason and subversion (Wehrkraftzerseztung), and were consequently punishable with death.

      politization of dicipline

    18. hereas during the Great War the Kaiserheer executed only forty-eight of its soldiers, in the Second World War between 13,000 and 15,000 men were put to death by their own army

      death penaty ww1 vs 2

    19. Discipline in the German army Was always harsh; but in the Wehrmacht, and especially in the Ostheer of 1941–45, it became positively murderous

      murderus disipline

    20. but it may well have prepared the background for their brutal behavior and indifference to the fate of helpless women and children when the occasion arose during “anti-partisan” operations.

      why k with killing children

    21. hildren were supplied with unlikely “stories,” such as that they were looking for their parents, while their real object was to spy for the enemy

      kill children justification

    22. agent” was found to be very handy indeed. In October 1941, for instance, the 12th Infantry warned its troops that “information is usually carried by youngsters aged 11 to 14,” and recommended “flogging [as] the most advisable measure for interrogation.”

      interigation getting them to kill childreen

    23. Now while the generals had little scruples about issuing orders to shoot men and uproot whole populations, they feared that executing women and children might cause disciplinary problems among the troops, and normally preferred the SS and SD to carry out such unsavory tasks

      hard to kill woman and kids unless yu call them spys

    24. evertheless, when the term “partisan” seemed insufficient to legitimize brutality, especially where obviously helpless civilians were concerned, the army sometimes resorted to the euphemism “spy” or “agent,”, a uniquely useful term precisely because it was based on the assumption that innocence was the best indication of guilt.

      espianage is a great exscuse for killing people

    25. . And, as what constituted guerrilla activity included a wide-range of actions or lack of actions, and as the term “partisan” denoted not merely active or passive resisters, but also people belonging to “undesirable” political and “racial” categories

      partisan had a super wide definition

    26. The fact that the division found only a few obsolete firearms among the population, and that it sustained almost no casualties, indicated that this operation was merely one more feast of destruction against defenseless civilians.

      they know they are not partisans

    27. “Zigeunerbaron,” a “cleansing” action in the forest regions south of Briansk. Troops were ordered to arrest all male civilians between the ages of fifteen and sixty-five, and to drive out the remaining population, whose property was to be confiscated and villages burned down.

      "clensing" the area

    28. it is obvious that this frenzied extermination policy had very little to do with actual guerrilla activity

      not acctully killing partisans

    29. By then the 12th Infantry decreed that anyone “tolerating” partisans would be hanged, and a few days later it was announced that civilians caught without the recently issued passes would be shot on the spo

      shoot just aboout anyone you don't like

    30. “Partisans,” or “bandits,” was a term used to describe all civilians deemed unworthy of life by the army, whether due to guerrilla activity or to political and “racial” affiliation.

      partisans ether race or activity

    31. Especially in winter, combat divisions also ordered their troops to confiscate from the prisoners all items of clothes deemed useful for their own protection from the cold, condemning POWs to death by exposure

      hording cloths and medicine

    32. or was the indiscriminate shooting of prisoners limited to soldiers who had grown used to operating according to the dictates of the “commissar order.” The GD Division, which came to the front after the order was rescinded, behaved in precisely the same manner, demonstrating that this was more a question of ideological preparation and unwillingness on the part of commanders to enforce their will as regards Russian lives.

      even new troups after the order was recended act in the same brutal way becase its about idiolgoy

    33. At this stage one could no longer expect them to alter their conduct toward an enemy still described as a devilish Untermensch

      one someone is untermensch they are a perminant target

    34. Whereas the recognition by the generals that the killing and maltreatment of POWs merely stiffened the enemy's resistance, coupled with the need for forced labor in the Reich, finally caused the abolition of the Kommissarbefehl and brought about some improvement in conditions for prisoners by 1942, commanders failed entirely in their efforts to put a stop to the indiscriminate shootings by their troops.

      eventully some practical sence takes root but not in stopping troups from murdering people

    35. This meant that both the political officers in uniform, and anyone described as a partisan by the army, a category which included “racially undesirable elements” such as Jews, were to be done away with

      imidiate murder of racially undersirable eliments

    36. his own thinking had been molded by that combination of ideology and ruthless, indeed cynical practicality typical of National Socialism: “We want to free the civilian population from the yoke of Bolshevism and We need their labor force.” The Russians were to be freed from Bolshevism so that the Germans could enslave them for their own purposes

      only people oposed are opposed foor practical rather then moral reasons

    37. particularly as they were normally accompanied by orders to kill a great many other Russians belonging to a growing list of political, “racial,” and military categories. Indeed, as the army's propaganda represented all Russians as Untermenschen not deserving of life in any case, the soldiers saw no reason to distinguish between them and those slated to be shot outright.

      retoric of untermenschen

    38. and even more so the officers on the ground, tended to choose the most radical interpretation of the “criminal orders.” For

      racilized view of criminal orders

    39. To this killing of POWs was added the “destruction” of so-called political and biological enemies, mostly simply described as “bandits” or “partisans,” without much effort to distinguish between real guerrillas, political “suspects,” and Jews.

      not distinguashing between true partisans and political suspects/jews

    40. ommanders at the front repeatedly warned their men of the “treacherous behavior especially of prisoners of war of Asian descent,” ordered them to “act ruthlessly and energetically against the slightest sign of insubordination” and “totally to eliminate any active or passive resistance” by making “immediate use of weapons,” and reminded them to “take into account the animosity and inhuman brutality of the Russians.”

      confrunt inhuman brutality of russians with inhuman brutality

    41. his unprecedented death rate was related to the execution of commissars by the troops upon capture; to the delivery to the Einsatzgruppen for “special treatment” of so called “politically intolerable” (

      exicution of POWs

    42. Of arguably even deadlier consequences was the manner in which the Wehrmacht's orders regarding Soviet soldiers and politically or “racially” dangerous elements not only officially sanctioned a campaign of organized murder, but also opened the way for a massive wave of indiscriminate shooting by soldiers who refused to distinguish between the various categories of enemies dictated from above

      threat to one group quicly leads to violence to all

    43. and ordering the women and children “to wander off to the area north-west of the desert-zone” in temperatures reaching 40° Celsius below freezing point

      fucking cowardly bastards

    44. eeling under the weight of the first Soviet counter-offensive, the 18th Panzer burned all the villages it was forced to evacuate, destroyed or consumed their entire livestock, arrested and sent to the rear their adult male population, and drove the women and children out into the snow

      brutality in the face of their own defeat

    45. he 12th Infantry employed other “young childless girls and women” in various domestic chores within the camps, and there is evidence to suggest that they were used for sexual purposes as well,

      rape and exploitation

    46. In the course of this recruitment the division also took the opportunity to point out Jews and other “suspects” found in the villages to the SD for further “treatme

      suspect parts of population

    47. It is quite astonishing that even at this late stage of the war the corps commander failed to grasp that the “wild” behavior of his troops was merely a product of the organized exploitation of the land; indeed, that what had made the individual German soldier into “a thief and a robber” was the fact that his commanders at the highest echelons of the military hierarchy had sent him into the Soviet Union on a campaign of robbery, destruction, and murder.

      making their own soldiers into theifs and robbers

    48. But the poverty of the population merely induced these formations officially to sanction “wild” requisitions by instructing their men to resort to “selfhelp.

      when orginized violence is no longer profitable they tern to wild violence

    49. or reasons of control and discipline, the officers tried to draw a clear distinction between what they called “organized” and “wild” requisitions, but with singular lack of success

      Inability to diffrentiate orginized and spontanius violence

    50. convincing even more inhabitants that they had no choice but to join the partisans, a major cause for the growth of resistance to the Germans also in Western Europe.

      brutality leads to more resistance

    51. Yet the ideological basis of the occupation prevented any far-reaching practical changes in economic policy even then

      idiology over practical conserns

    52. the Wehrmacht's policy left Russia's civilians with little choice but to resist with ever greater tenacity an invader who promised them only suffering and death. This had the effect of a self-fulfilling prophesy, for the war in the East soon became precisely the kind of savage struggle for survival Hitler had said it would be.

      starving civis have to fight harder --> the war gets more brutal

    53. it became possible to enforce such brutal combat discipline on them without stirring any visible spirit of rebellion, let alone actual mutiny. On one level, it was easier to bear the officers' brutality by being allowed to act brutally toward others; on another, brutal enforcement of will came to be seen as the norm;

      cycle of brutality and a changing world view

    54. Conversely, as compared with previous campaigns, soldiers on the Eastern Front became the target of an ever harsher policy of punishment for breaches of discipline related to actual combat activity, as the dramatic rise in long prison terms and executions demonstrates.

      more punnishment for battle offencise

    55. In the Soviet Union, however, we no longer hear of soldiers being tried, let alone executed, for acts of violence and plunder against Soviet citizens. Indeed, according to the “Barbarossa” decree, such prosecution was legally possible only if it was shown that by committing these offenses a soldier had simultaneously breached military discipline

      no longer a crime to do horrible stuff to civis

    56. camouflaging brutalities behind a series of euphemisms and pseudolegal terms. Ultimately, the army reverted to the crudest moral code of war, according to which everything which ensured one's survival was permitted (and thus considered moral), and everything even remotely suspect of threatening it must be destroyed (and was by definition immoral).

      brutality working its way into the system itself

    57. By legalizing murder, robbery, torture, and destruction, these instructions put the moral basis of martial law, and thereby of military discipline, on its' head. The army did not simply pretend not to notice the criminal actions of the regime, it positively ordered its own troops to carry them out, and was distressed when breaches of discipline prevented their more efficient execution.

      ordering what would ordinarily be crimes

    58. large soldiers who committed offenses against members of the civilian population were brought to justice and severely punished, on the other.29Close There were only two, though highly significant exceptions: those perceived as the Reich's political enemies, be they former German citizens, foreign political opponents, or resistance fighters, and those labelled as the German Volk's biological enemies, and especially Jews, were treated not only by the SS, but also by the Wehrmacht, in an entirely different manner and could not expect any legal protection. Here military discipline showed its capacity not only to prevent crimes, but also to legalize them.

      no legal protection for "enimys"