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A Calculus of Complicity: The Wehrmacht, the Anti-Partisan War, and the Final Solution in White Russia, 1941–42
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 May 2011
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On October 10, 1941, the soldiers of the 3rd Company, 691st Infantry Regiment were uneasy. The task ahead of them was something new. They were to kill the entire Jewish population of Krucha, a town in central Belarus. A few hours later, Private Wilhelm Magel stood with another soldier in front of four Jewish women and an old man with a long, white beard. The company First Sergeant, Emil Zimber, ordered the Jews to turn away from the shooters, but they remained facing the German soldiers. Zimber gave the order to fire but Magel and his colleague, a former divinity student, did not aim at their targets. They requested to be relieved from the execution detail and were assigned to guard the remaining Jews who were waiting in the village square for their turn. This German Army unit without assistance of any other organization murdered a minimum of 150 Jewish men, women, and children in Krucha that day.
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References
1 “Winter, L. Statement,” July 29, 1953, Landesarchiv Nordrhein-Westfalen (Darmstadt) (hereafter LA-NRW)-H: H-13 Darmstadt, Nr. 919 I, Bd. II, 326.
2 The 691st Infantry Regiment was part of the 339th Infantry Division, a regular infantry unit.
3 “Magel, W. Statement,” August 8, 1951, LA-NRW-H: H-13 Darmstadt, Nr. 979 I, Bd. II, 172.
4 This area encompassed most of modern-day Belarus.
5 The term Wehrmacht technically refers to all fighting arms of the German military during World War II. When discussing the general complicity of the military, especially from a historiographical standpoint, in atrocities committed during the war, I will use the term “Wehrmacht” because the discussion of such atrocities generally centers on land forces, specifically the army.
6 Many historians have noted and stressed the connection between the anti-partisan war and the killing of Jews. What is less clear, however, is how this argument was instrumentalized on the ground at the unit level. For an excellent summary of recent historiography in this area, see Shepherd, Ben, “The Clean Wehrmacht, the War of Extermination, and Beyond,” The Historical Journal 52, no. 2 (2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For more on the anti-partisan connection and killings of Jews, see Anderson, Truman, “Incident at Baranivka: German Reprisals and the Soviet Partisan Movement in Ukraine, October-December 1941,” The Journal of Modern History 71, no. 3 (1999)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Shepherd, Ben, War in the Wild East: The German Army and Soviet Partisans (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004)Google Scholar; Pohl, Dieter, Die Herrschaft der Wehrmacht. Deutsche Militärbesatzung und einheimische Bevölkerung in der Sowjetunion 1941–1944 (Munich: Oldenbourg, 2008)Google Scholar; Schulte, Theo J., The German Army and Nazi Policies in Occupied Russia (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989)Google Scholar.
7 For some (but certainly not all) previous citations of this conference, see Browning, Christopher R. and Matthäus, Jürgen, The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939–March 1942 (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2004)Google Scholar; Reemtsma, Jan Phillipp, Jureit, Ulrike, and Mommsen, Hans, Verbrechen der Wehrmacht: Dimensionen des Vernichtungskrieges 1941–1944. Ausstellungskatalog, 1st ed. (Hamburg: Hamburger, 2002)Google Scholar; Förster, Jürgen, “The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination against the Soviet Union,” Yad Vashem Studies 14 (1981)Google Scholar.
8 While Hull perhaps goes too far in attempting to establish causality between the colonial experience and World War II, her argument concerning norms of behavior and institutional memory is a powerful and convincing one. For two viewpoints on this debate, see Hull, Isabel V., Absolute Destruction: Military Culture and the Practices of War in Imperial Germany (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2005)Google Scholar; Gerwarth, Robert and Malinowski, Stephan, “Der Holocaust als ‘kolonialer Genozid’? Europäische Kolonialgewalt und nationalsozialistischer Vernichtungskrieg,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 33, no. 3 (2007)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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14 Ibid.
15 “Decree for the Conduct of Courts-Martial in the District ‘Barbarossa’ and for Special Measures of the Troop,” May 13, 1941, Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. III, 1946: Document 886-PS, 637.
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17 Ibid., 637.
18 Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, vol. Supplement A, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., 1947, 352. Document 884-PS.
19 “Soldaten der Ostfront,” BAMA: RH 26-102-7, Anl. 67.
20 Shepherd, War in the Wild East, 73.
21 “Meeting Notes by Martin Bormann,” July 16, 1941, Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. VII, 1946: Document L-221, 1087, 91.
22 “Okw Order No. 3058/41,” September 8, 1941, Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. IV, 1946: Document 1519-PS, 61.
23 “Okw Order No. 02041/41,” September 12, 1941, Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. III, 1946: Document 878-PS, 636.
24 “Decree for the Conduct of Courts-Martial in the District ‘Barbarossa’ and for Special Measures of the Troop,” May 13, 1941, Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. VI, 1946: Document C-148, 961-62.
25 Browning and Matthäus, The Origins of the Final Solution, 320.
26 Ibid., 312.
27 Ibid., 325.
28 Christian Gerlach, however, argues that these deportations did not necessarily mean a decision to kill German Jews, that this decision was not made until December 1941. See Gerlach, Christian, “The Wannsee Conference, the Fate of German Jews, and Hitler's Decision in Principle to Exterminate All European Jews,” The Journal of Modern History 70, no. 4 (1998)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
29 Browning and Matthäus, The Origins of the Final Solution, 248.
30 “RHGM Befehl. Partisanenabt. Der Sowjets,” July 26, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-224, 177.
31 “RHGM Befehl. Kollektive Gewaltmaßnahmen,” August 12, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-224, Anl. 502.
32 “RHGM Order: Creation of Game Preserve,” June 18, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-12a, Anl. 387.
33 “221 SD Div. Befehl. Versprengte Truppen,” July 8, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-12a, Anl. 309.
34 “403 Ic Tkb, Juli 1941,” BAMA: RH 26-403-4a.
35 “Besondere Anordnungen für den Fall ‘B’ über militärische Hoheitsrechte, Sicherung, und Verwaltung im rückwärtigen Gebiet, Beute, Kriegsgefangene,” June 15, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-28-18.
36 “RHGM Korpsbefehl Nr. 18,” June 24, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-12b, Anl. 193.
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39 Browning and Matthäus, The Origins of the Final Solution, 281. The order was disseminated on August 1.
40 Ibid.
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42 Cüppers, Wegbereiter der Shoah, 201.
43 Zaprudnik, Jan, Historical Dictionary of Belarus (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 1998), 152Google Scholar.
44 “RHGM Stabsbefehl 56,” September 6, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225, 29-30.
45 Grenkevich, Leonid D. and Glantz, David M., The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941–1944: A Critical Historiographical Analysis (Portland, OR: Frank Cass Publishers, 1999), 323Google Scholar. Grenkevich makes much of the fact that almost ten percent of German forces were arrayed against the partisans, even in 1941. Yet the dubious quality of security divisions and police units in fighting a conventional war likely minimizes the overall effects of their absence from the front. By summer 1942–43, however, the partisan units in Belarus had become far more deadly, controlled large amounts of territory, and certainly had a negative effect on the German war effort.
46 Mulligan, Timothy P., “Reckoning the Cost of People's War: The German Experience in the Central USSR,” Russian History 9 (1982): 31CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
47 Grenkevich and Glantz, The Soviet Partisan Movement, 1941–1944, 71.
48 Heer, Hannes, “The Logic of the War of Extermination: The Wehrmacht and the Anti-Partisan War,” in War of Extermination: The German Military in World War II, 1941–1944, ed. Heer, Hannes and Naumann, Klaus (New York: Berghahn Books, 2000), 97Google Scholar.
49 “RHGM Memo. Partisanenabt. Der Sowjets,” July 26, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-224.
50 Mulligan, “Reckoning the Cost of People's War,” 32.
51 “286 SD Personnel Reports,” June 22-December 31, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-286-5. This is out of an average strength of 5,700 men. Compare this, for example, with the 78th Infantry Division which suffered 255 killed in action on July 22 alone in the battle for Mogilev. See “78 Id Casualty Charts,” June–December 1941, BAMA: RH 26-78-27.
52 For a more extreme case, consider the 707th Infantry Division in Western Belarus which reported 10,940 prisoners shot while losing two Germans killed and five wounded in October 1941. Förster, “The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination against the Soviet Union,” 32. In addition, these ratios skyrocket when one adds all reported enemy casualties to all reported German casualties. For a nicely detailed discussion of these issues, see Mulligan, “Reckoning the Cost of People's War.”
53 Epstein, Barbara Leslie, The Minsk Ghetto, 1941–1943: Jewish Resistance and Soviet Internationalism (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2008), 12Google Scholar.
54 Ibid., 18.
55 “RHGM Korpsbefehl 53,” Sept. 16, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225.
56 Twenty-three out of the sixty officers were in command positions.
57 “350 IR Bericht, 19.8.1941,” BAMA: RH 22-221, 295.
58 Nebe was executed for his participation in the July 20 plot. Some have argued that Nebe deliberately inflated the numbers of Jews he reported killed. Yet all evidence indicates that he was quite content to play his role in Nazi genocide and that his displeasure with the regime may have stemmed from the imminent Nazi defeat and not an aversion to killing. Black, Peter, “Arthur Nebe: Nationalsozialist im Zwielicht,” in Die SS: Elite unter dem Totenkopf. 30 Lebensläufe, ed. Smelser, Ronald M. and Syring, Enrico (Paderborn: F. Schöningh, 2000), 371, 372Google Scholar.
59 Lewy, Guenter, The Nazi Persecution of the Gypsies (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), 206Google Scholar.
60 Browning and Matthäus, The Origins of the Final Solution, 289.
61 Blood, Hitler's Bandit Hunters, 57.
62 Angrick, Andrej, “Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski. Himmlers Mann für Alle Fälle,” in Die SS: Elite unter dem Totenkopf, ed. Smelser, and Syring, , 36–7Google Scholar.
63 Blood, Hitler's Bandit Hunters, 57.
64 While Magill's regiment did kill women and children in Pinsk, his reports indicate that he interpreted his orders more narrowly and generally killed only men. Cüppers, Wegbereiter der Shoah, 177.
65 Cüppers, Martin, “Vorreiter der Shoah. Ein Vergleich der Einsätze der beiden SS-Kavallerieregimenter im August 1941,” in Krieg und Verbrechen: Situation und Intention. Fallbeispiele, ed. Richter, Timm C. (Munich: Meidenbauer, 2006), 92Google Scholar.
66 “Teilnehmer-Verzeichnis am Partisanen-Lehrgang vom 24.9.1941,” Sept. 23, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225, 76–7.
67 The agendas for the conference remain in the archives. Unfortunately, minutes (if any were taken) do not appear to have survived the war.
68 “Einleitungsworte zum Partisanenbekämpfungs Lehrgang,” Sept. 24, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225, 81.
69 Ibid., 79–80.
70 “RHGM Tagesordnung für den Kursus ‘Bekämpfung von Partisanen’ vom 24-26.9.41,” Sept. 23, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225, 72.
71 Ibid., 70.
72 Browning, Christopher R., The Path to Genocide: Essays on Launching the Final Solution (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 104Google Scholar.
73 Gerlach, Christian, Kalkulierte Morde. Die deutsche Wirtschafts- und Vernichtungspolitik in Weissrussland 1941 bis 1944 (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition, 1999), 587Google Scholar.
74 “RHGM Tagesordnung für den Kursus ‘Bekämpfung von Partisanen’ vom 24-26.9.41,” Sept. 23, 1941, 70.
75 Ibid.
76 “Vortragsfolge für den Kursus,” BAMA: RH 22–225, 74.
77 Reemtsma, Jureit, and Mommsen, Verbrechen der Wehrmacht, 468.
78 “Pol. Rgt. Mitte Befehl für Partisanenlehrgang,” Sept. 24, 1941, BAMA: RH 22–225, 88.
79 “Kriegstagebuch Nr. 1: Polizei Bataillon 322,” Zentralstelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen zur Aufklärung nationalsozialistischer Verbrechen (hereafter BA-ZS), Ludwigsburg: Dok. Sammlung CSSR 396.
80 “RHGM Tagesordnung für den Kursus ‘Bekämpfung von Partisanen’ vom 24–26.9.41,” Sept. 23, 1941, 73.
81 “SR 2 Befehl für das Unternehmen ‘Kussikowitschi,’” Sept. 26, 1941, BAMA: RH 22–225, 92.
82 Ibid., 93.
83 “RHGM Entwurf. Der Partisan, seine Organisation und seine Bekämpfung,” Oct. 12, 1941, BAMA: RH 22–225, 122.
84 Ibid., 124.
85 Ibid., 125.
86 Ibid., 122.
87 Westermann, Edward B., “Partners in Genocide: The German Police and the Wehrmacht in the Soviet Union,” Journal of Strategic Studies 31, no. 5 (2008): 787CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
88 “Sibille Letter, 2.2.1953,” LA NRW-H: H 13 Darmstadt, Nr. 979 I, Bd. III, 599a.
89 “1/354 IR Report,” October 30, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-286-4, Anl. 130.
90 “Nöll u. a. Urteil,” May 8, 1954, BA-ZS: B162/14058, 543.
91 “Sibille Letter, 2.2.1953,” 599a.
92 Figures 2, 3, and 4 depict summaries of operational data culled from a large number of reports that can be found in the Bundesarchiv-Militärarchiv in Freiburg. These reports are contained in the files of the 286th Security Division (RH 26-286-2, RH 26-286-3, RH 26-286-4), including Kriegestagebuch or war diary entries. The terms with which those killed and captured are reported remain typically euphemistic (killed in action, executed, prisoners, Red Army soldiers, civilians). Jews are not listed as a specific category; however, these graphs are at a minimum clearly indicative of a marked increase in violence over time. In any case, these graphs reflect numbers killed and captured as reported by the units themselves, with as much completeness as surviving documents allowed.
93 “354 IR Meldung,” Oct. 30, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-286-4, Anl. 130.
94 Given that bypassed Red Army soldiers were to have been shot on sight (when encountered west of the Beresina River) since August 8, one wonders if these higher numbers from October on are examples of more civilians (and Jews) being included in the euphemistic reporting of enemy casualties rather than increased numbers of dispersed soldiers being killed. See, for example, “RHGM Propaganda Flyer,” BAMA: RH 22-224, 205; and “RHGM Korpsbefehl 38,” August 11, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-224, 202.
95 See, for example, “350 IR Bericht,” October 16, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-22b, Anl. 483; “350 IR Bericht,” October 18, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-22b, Anl. 486; “350 IR Bericht,” October 22, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-22b, Anl. 499.
96 “221 SD Bericht, V-A IR 350,” Oct. 14, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-221-22b, Anl. 475.
97 Westermann, “Partners in Genocide,” 788-9.
98 “RHGM Korpsbefehl Nr. 50,” September 29, 1941, BAMA: RH 22-225, 95.
99 “RHGM Besprechung mit den Generalstabsoffizieren der Divisionen, 30.9.1941,” BAMA: RH 22-225, 98.
100 “286 SD Ic Tätigskeitbericht,” Sept.–Dec. 1941, BAMA: RH 26-286-5.
101 “Merkblatt über Zuständigkeit, Unterstellung, und Aufgaben,” November 2, 1941, BAMA: RH 26-339-5, Anl. 13.
102 “Kdt. in Weissruthenien, Befehl Nr. 24,” Nov. 24, 1941, Belarussian State Archive-Minsk (hereafter BStA): 378-1-698.
103 Browning, Christopher R., Nazi Policy, Jewish Workers, German Killers (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 120–1CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
104 Browning and Matthäus, The Origins of the Final Solution, 312.
105 Ibid., 506, 239 ff.
106 “Befehl Nr. 1 für Unternehmen ‘Dreieck,’” September 11, 1942, BAMA: RH 23-25, 63.
107 “Gefechtsbericht über Unternehmen ‘Dreieck’ und ‘Viereck’ vom 17.9.-2.10.1942,” October 19, 1942, BAMA: RH 23-25, 25.
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109 “Veit, A. Statement,” July 7, 1953, LA NRW-H: H 13 Darmstadt, Nr. 979 I, Bd. II, 271.
110 “Wallenstein, H. Statement,” August 26, 1953, LA NRW-H: H-13 Darmstadt, Nr. 919 I, Bd. II, 341.
111 Some examples from letters are instructive of some soldiers’ beliefs, including anti-Semitism. See, for example, Manoschek, Walter, Es gibt nur eines für das Judentum: Vernichtung. Das Judenbild in deutschen Soldatenbriefen 1939–1944 (Hamburg: Hamburger, 1995)Google Scholar; Golovchansky, Anatoly, “Ich Will Raus Aus Diesem Wahnsinn”: Deutsche Briefe Von Der Ostfront 1941–1945. Aus Sowjetischen Archiven (Wuppertal: P. Hammer, 1991)Google Scholar; Fuchs, Karl, Richardson, Horst Fuchs, and Showalter, Dennis E., Sieg Heil!: War Letters of Tank Gunner Karl Fuchs, 1937-1941 (Hamden, CT: Archon Books, 1987)Google Scholar; Buchbender, Ortwin and Sterz, Reinhold, Das Andere Gesicht des Krieges. Deutsche Feldpostbriefe, 1939–1945 (Munich: Beck, 1983)Google Scholar; Bähr, Walter and Bähr, Hans Walter, Kriegsbriefe gefallener Studenten, 1939–1945 (Tübingen: R. Wunderlich, 1952)Google Scholar.
112 One of the limitations of postwar testimony as a source is that soldiers are most reluctant to discuss anti-Semitism, either their own or that of their comrades. Due to legal definitions of the time, these men were often very careful to avoid any implication of racism or acknowledgment of Nazi genocidal ideals. Even so, there is sufficient evidence from these sources (as well as from survivors) to indicate that these types of leaders and men were present.
113 “Breuer, J. Statement,” June 29, 1953, LA NRW-H: H 13 Darmstadt, Nr. 979 I, Bd. II, 310.
114 “RHGM Entwurf. Der Partisan, seine Organisation und seine Bekämpfung,” Oct. 12, 1941, 124-6.
115 “Magel, W. Statement,” August 8, 1951, 173.
116 “Menzel, B. Statement,” September 8, 1961, BA-ZS: B162/3876, 49.
117 Given a choice between a 1:50 and 1:100 ratio of hostages per German soldier, army commanders routinely chose the 1:100 number.
118 Browning, Christopher R., “The Wehrmacht in Serbia Revisited,” in Crimes of War: Guilt and Denial in the Twentieth Century, ed. Bartov, Omer, Grossmann, Atina, and Nolan, Mary (New York: New Press, 2002), 36Google Scholar.
119 Ibid., 37.
120 Ibid., 40.
121 “Judgment in the Hostage Case (United States of America vs. Wilhelm List et al.),” Nazi conspiracy and aggression, Washington, D.C.: U.S. G.P.O., Vol. XI, 1950, 1240.
122 For more on the Wehrmacht in Serbia, see Manoschek, Walter, “Serbien ist Judenfrei.” Militärische Besatzungspolitik und Judenvernichtung in Serbien 1941/42 (Munich: R. Oldenbourg, 1993)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Browning, Christopher R., “Wehrmacht Reprisal Policy and the Murder of the Male Jews in Serbia,” in Christopher Browning, Fateful Months: Essays on the Emergence of the Final Solution (New York: Holmes & Meier, 1991)Google Scholar; Meyer, H. F., Von Wien nach Kalavryta. Die blutige Spur der 117. Jäger-Division durch Serbien und Griechenland (Mannheim: Bibliopolis, 2002)Google Scholar.
123 Blood, Hitler's Bandit Hunters, 276. Blood correctly distinguishes between Partisanenbekämpfung (anti-partisan war) and Bandenbekämpfung (bandit fighting, the term that quickly replaced Partisanenbekämpfung). While the former could be considered a traditional counterinsurgency between armed combatants, the latter encompassed mass killing of civilians, including Jews.
124 “Judgment in the Hostage Case (United States of America vs. Wilhelm List et al.),” 529.
125 Kahl, Wolfgang, “Vom Mythos der ‘Bandenbekämpfung.’ Polizeiverbände im zweiten Weltkrieg,” Die Polizei. Fachzeitschrift für das Polizeiwesen 89, no. 2 (1998): 53Google Scholar.
126 Bourke notes that many men were veterans of real combat and that, for them, the role of the actual guerilla war in Vietnam was very significant in their behavior. Dave Grossman describes some characteristics that German units had in common with the U.S. unit at My Lai. He adds, however, that the very important ingredients relating to actual casualties and frustration caused by the insurgency were vital in this atrocity. See Bourke, Joanna, An Intimate History of Killing: Face-to-Face Killing in Twentieth-Century Warfare (New York: Basic Books, 1999), 171–214Google Scholar; Grossman, Dave, On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society (New York: Back Bay Books, 2009), 190–1Google Scholar.
127 Gerlach, Kalkulierte Morde, 601-2.
128 Westermann, “Partners in Genocide,” 774.
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