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The End of the Freebooter Tradition: The Forgotten Freikorps Movement of 1944/45

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 December 2008

Perry Biddiscombe
Affiliation:
The University of Victoria

Extract

One of the difficulties in thinking about postwar German history comes in trying to explain the apparent absence of a paramilitary effervescence accompanying the collapse of the Third Reich. Independent military formations—Freikorps—had played a role during the 1806–1813 period, and such units had appeared again during the stormy years from 1918 to 1923, so the seeming absence of such formations in 1944/45 is quite noticeable. Charles Maier called it one of the major surprises of postwar European politics. To some extent, this perception is illusory; in truth, there were a number of Freikorps launched in 1944/45, although they failed to make a military or political impact and were therefore quickly forgotten. Considering the integral connection between previous Freikorps and the development of modern German nationalism, their relative absence in 1944/45 warrants the historian’s attention.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association 1999

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73. Setzer to all Kreisstabsführer des Deutschen Volkssturms, 1 February 1945, Records of the NSDAP. frame 108548, microcopy no. T–81, GMRMC.

74. Krüger, Die Brigade Ehrhardt, 127.

75. Ibid, 127; Waite, Vanguard of Nazism, 266, 277–78; and Koch, Der deutsche Bürgerkrieg, 72.

76. Mobile Field Interrogation Unit no. 1, PW Intelligence Bulletin no. 1/32, 30 January 1945, NA, G–2 Intelligence Division Captured Personnel and Material Branch Enemy POW Interrogation File (MIS–Y), 1943–1945, RG 165.

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85. A National Socialist Leadership Corps report in 1943 noted that after the Machtergreifung “the German officer corps lost its unity as a school of thought and thus its character as an ‘order’ [i.e., comparable to the Jesuits, the Freemasons, the SS, etc.’ It was hitherto the weltanschauliche pillar of the German people, but it then stood pushed to the side, where it still sometimes stands today, devoid of ideas or with, at best, a weak ideological character‥” Dr. Huebner, Abschrift, 4 October 1943, Biographical Records (NSDAP, Reich Ministeries, etc.), reel 78, microform no. T–580, GMRMC.

86. See, for instance, Geyer, Michael, Aufrüstung oder Sicherheit: Die Reichswehr in der Krise der Machtpolitik 1924–1936 (Wiesbaden, 1980).Google Scholar

87. Lt. Priester, Schule VI für Fahnenjunker der Infanterie, 2 February 1945, Biographical Records (NSDAP, Reich Ministries, etc.), reel 78, microform no. T-580 GMRMC.

88. Omer Bartov claims that German small unit cohesion had begun to break down as early as the end of 1941, at least on the Russian Front. Bartov, Omer, Hitler’s Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich (Oxford, 1992), chap. 2.Google Scholar Earlier writers who had emphasized the importance of primary groups claimed that complex German recruitment and training arrangements only collapsed in the last phase of the war, thus eroding the tightness and high morale earlier typical of German formations. Shils, Edward A. and Janowirz, Morris, “Cohesion and Disintigrarion in the Wehrmacht in World War II,” in idem, Military Conflict: Essays in the Institutional Anaylsis of War and Peace (Beverly Hills, 1975), 178–90;Google Scholar and van Creveld, Martin, Fighting Power: German and US. Army Peformance, 1939–1945 (Westport, 1982), 7576.Google Scholar

89. Kissel, Hans, Der deutsche Volkssturm 1944/45; Eine territoriale Miliz im Rahmen der Landesverteidigung (Frankfurt am Main, 1962), 81;Google ScholarSteinert, Marlis, Capitulation 1945: The Story of the Dönitz Regime (London, 1969), 182–83;Google Scholar and Müller to Dönitz, 5 May 1945, frame 5611862, reel 864, Records of OKW, microcopy no. T–77, GMRMC.

90. U.S. 7th Army Interrogation Center, Interrogation of Dr. Robert Ley, 29 May 1945, NA, State Dept. Decimal Files 1945–1949, 740.00119 Control (Germany), RG 59; Hoffmann to Kreisleiter, Kreistabsführer of the German Volkssturm, and Leaders of the Kreiskomissionen, 22 February 1945, frames 107805–6, reel 93; NSDAP Gauleitung Schwaben, Rundschreiben no. 96/45, 18 April 1945. frame 300551, reel 162, both in Records of the NSDAP, microcopy no. T–81, GMRMC; SHAEF Rear G–2, EDS to SHAEF Main for G–2 (Cl), 19 June 1945, PRO. WO 219/1603; and Timm, Freikorps “Sauerland,” 10–11. For the description of a seventy man Freikorps Adolf Hitler unit that withdrew into the Alps in April 1945 and was comprised almost entirely of “Politische Leiter,” see lère Armée française, 2ème Bureau, “Bulletin de renseignements,” 16 May 1945, Annex 4, Service historique de l’armée de terre, 7P 125.

91. Krüger, Die Brigade Ehrhardt, 127.

92. Jünger, Ernst, Tagebücher 3: Strahlun, gen—Zweiter Teil (Stuttgart, 1960), 462, 466–68.Google Scholar

93. Paetel, Karl O., Ernst Jünger (Stuttgart. 1949), 193–94, 196Google Scholar. For “heroic realism,” see Herbert, Ulrich, Best (Bonn, 1996), 88100.Google Scholar

94. Von Salomon, Fragebogen, 495–97.

95. CSDIC (WEA)/BAOR, Report on Nursery, SIR no. 28, 18 April 1945, Appendix H, NA, ETO MIS-Y-Sect. Intelligence and Interrogation Records, 1945–1946, RG 226; 5th Corps Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 1, 11 July 1945, PRO, FO 1007/299; and Koonz, Claudia, Mothers in the Fatherland (New York, 1987), 23–xxiv, 398.Google Scholar

96. Theweleit, Männerphantasien 1: chap. 1.

97. Note, for instance, the bemused reaction of SS Leibstandarte men outside the Führer’s bunker when they were approached (circa 24/25 April) by a female Freikorps volunteer. They immediately identified the woman as a prostitute, and while they appreciated the way she filled out her field tunic and riding breeches, there was no question of their accepting her help. Schenck, Ernst-Günther, Ich sah Berlin sterben (Herford, 1970), 8788.Google Scholar

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99. Reder, Dirk-Alexander, “‘Natur und Sitte verbieten uns die Waffe der Zerstörung zu führen…’: Patriotische Frauen zwischen Frieden und Krieg,” Jahrbuch für Historische Friedensforschung 3 (1944): 174–75;Google Scholar Hagemann, “Heldenmütter,” 196–99; and Mosse, Nationalism and Sexuality, 101.

100. Weser-Kurier, 5 December 1945; 29 December 1945; 3 January 1946; 5 January 1946; 9 January 1946; 16 January 1946; 26 January 1946; 2 March 1946; and Die Neue Zeitung, 28 February 1947. For figures on released POWs from the lost eastern provinces, see Weser-Kurier, 28 May 1947.

101. For allied policy toward Freikorps in the Baltic provinces, see Venner, Baltikum, 119; Volkmann, Hans-Erich, “Der Bericht Generalleutnants Walter von Eberhardt ‘Meine Tätigkeit im Baltikum,’” Zeitschrft für Ostforschung 13 (1964): 728–33;Google ScholarVolkmann, Hans-Erich, “Die jüngste Veröffentlichung zur Baltischen Frage der Jahre 1918–1919,” Zeitschrft für Ostforschung 14 (1965): 329–32;Google ScholarMayer, Arno, Politics and Diplomacy of Peacemaking (New York, 1967), 317–18;Google Scholar Koch, Der deutsche Bürgerkrieg, 135–37; Sullivan, “German Free Corps in the Baltic,” 125; Jones, Hitler’s Heralds, 114–15; Waite, Vanguard of Nazism, 100–3; and Walwort, Arthur, Wilson and His Peacemakers (New York, 1968), 251–52.Google Scholar For Allied tolerance of Freikorps activity in the Ruhr, see Morgan, J. H., Assize of Arms (London, 1945), 146–53;Google ScholarEliasberg, George, Der Ruhrkrieg von 1920 (Bonn-Bad Godesberg, 1974), 212–17;Google Scholar Koch, Der deutsche Bürgerkrieg, 219–22; and Salewski, Michael, Entwaffnung und Militär Kontrolle in Deutschland 1919–1927 (Munich, 1966), 4049.Google Scholar Although the British and Italians were willing to allow German volunteer units to suppress a leftist uprising in the demilitarized areas of the Ruhr, the French continued to fear the German military more than the Red Army. As a reprisal for Freikorps operations in the demilitarized zone, they briefly occupied several towns in Hesse, including Frankfurt.

102. Gajda, Patricia, Postscript to Victory: British Policy and the German-Polish Borderlands, 1919–1925 (Washington, D.C., 1982), 9697, 122–33, 139–40.Google Scholar

103. Lauterbacher, Hartmann, Erlebt und mitgestaltet: Kronzeuge einer Epoche 1923–1945. Zu neuen Ufern nach Kriegsende (Preussisch Oldendorf, 1984), 342–43.Google Scholar For the only serious study contending that the Allies considered using German volunteer formations against the Russians, see Smith, Arthur, Churchill’s German Army: Wartime Strategy and Cold War Politics, 1943–1947 (Beverly Hills, 1977).Google Scholar

104. CCG(BE) Research Branch, HQ/2404 (Res), The Freikorps, 7 June 1945, PRO, FO 37 1/46876.

105. Diehl, The Thanks of the Fatherland, 229–30.

106. Maier, “AHR Forum: The Two Postwar Eras,” 331–32.

107. CCG(BE) Research Branch, HQ/2424 (Res), The Freikorps, 7 June 1945, PRO, 371/46876; NA, Study on the Freikorps, NA, XL 17275, RG 226; and 21st AG, CI News Sheet no. 7, 5 October 1944, Part I, PRO, WO 205/997. See also Diehl, The Thanks of the Fatherland, 56–57. Influential officers like Colonel Dick White in SHAEF Counter-Intelligence—a future head of MI–5—were struck by the Freikorps precedent, and the “problems it created for the occupying forces.” White called this an “interesting and important” issue. White to Sheen and MacLoed, 12 February 1945, PRO, WO 219/1602.

108. USFET G–2 Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 33, 28 February 1946, NA, State Dept. Decimal File 1945–1949, 740.00119 Control (Germany), RG 59.

109. MI–14/15/530/44, The possibility of short and long-term German guerrilla and underground resistance, NA, 1097987, RG 226.

110. SHAEF G–3, Post-Hostilities Handbook, 20, PRO, WO 219/3868.

111. See, for instance, Madsen, Chris, “Victims of Circumstance: The Execution of German Deserters by Surrendered German Troops under Canadian Control in Amsterdam, May 1945,” Canadian Military History 2 (1993): 93113;Google Scholar and Madsen, Chris, The Royal Navy and German Naval Disarmament, 1942–1947 (London, 1998), 8790.Google Scholar

112. Daily Express, 7 June 1945; and Elliot, Maj., Scarlet to Green: A History of Intelligence in the Canadian Army, 1903–1963 (Toronto, 1981), 347.Google Scholar

113. H. G. Sheen, SHAEF G–2 (Cl) to SHAEF G–2 AOCC, 31 January 1945, PRO, WO 219/1578; and Diehl, The Thanks of the Fatherland, 67. Unauthorized movement of German soldiers away from Wehrmacht concentration areas was rare because no one without discharge papers could obtain a ration card. Lt. Col. J. H. B. Lowe, Report on the Visit to the British Zone in Germany and British Sector in Berlin, September 1945, PRO, FO 371/46935.

114. Smith, Arthur, Heimkehr aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg: Die Entlassung der deutschen Kriegsgefangenen (Stuttgart, 1985), 2732,CrossRefGoogle Scholar chaps. 2–4, 7; and Diehl, Thanks of the Fatherland, 57–58.

115. 21st Army Group Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 3, 21 July 1945; no. 4, 28 July 1945, both in PRO, FO 371/46933; and BAOR Forthnightly Intelligence Summary no. 12, 6 October 1945, PRO, FO 371/46935.

116. Diehl, The Thanks of the Fatherland, 55, 58–60, 64–65, 71, 232, 240.

117. Rosenfeld, Gavriel D., “Monuments and the Politics of Memory: Commemorating Kurt Eisner and the Bavarian Revolutions of 1918–1919 in Postwar Munich,” Central European History 30 (1997): 234–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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120. Bauer, et al. , eds., Justiz und NS-Verbrechen, 3: 67, 70, 87–89, 112–15;Google Scholar Tenfelde, “Proletarische Provinz,” 380–81; and Ritchie, J. M., German Literature under National Socialism (London, 1983), 101.Google Scholar

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122. von Salomon, Fragebogen, 416–525.

123. Die Neue Zeitung, 31 May 1946; 12 July 1946; and Zentner, Christian and Bedürftig, Friedmann, eds., The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich (New York, 1991), 1:475.Google Scholar

124. For instances of young Germans caught conducting drill exercises or attempting to hold maneuvres, see The Stars and Stripes, 12 July 1945; USFET G–2 Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 31, 14 February 1946; Eucom Intelligence Summary no. 37, 6 July 1948, both in NA, State Dept. Decimal File 1945–49, 740.00119 Control (Germany), RG 59; and US Constabulary G–2 Weekly Intelligence Report no. 17, 4 October 1946, Annex no. 1, NA, WWII Operations Reports, RG 407.

125. CCG (BE) Research Branch, HQ/4155 (Res), Intermediate Resistance in Germany. 25 April 1945, NA, 129323, RG 226; CCG(BE) Research Branch, HQ/4204 (Res), The Freikorps. 7 Junes 1945, PRO, FO 371/46876; and USFET G–2 Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 33, 28 February 1946, NA, State Dept. Decimal File 1945–49, 740.00119 Control (Germany), RG 59.

126. GSI 8th Army, Joint Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 5, 3 August 1945, PRO, FO 371/46611; CSDIC/WEA BAOR, Report on Nursury, SIR 28, 18 April 1946, Appendix H, NA, ETO MIS-Y-Sect. Intelligence and Interrogation Records 1945–46, RG 332; British Troops Austria, Joint Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 5, 3 August 1945, PRO, FO 1007/300; 5 Corps, Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 1, 11 July 1945, PRO, FO 1007/299; and Ml–14, Mitropa no. 4, 8 September 1945, PRO, FO 371/46967.

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128. ACC Report of the Moscow CFM Meeting, February 1947, section II, Denazification, part 9, French Report, PRO, FO 371/64352; and MI–14, Mitropa no. 12, 29 December 1945, PRO, FO 371/55630.

129. USFET G–2 Weekly Intelligence Summary no. 42, 2 May 1946, NA, State Dept. Decimal File 1945–49, 740.00119 Control (Germany), RG 59; and 250 British Liaison Mission Report no. 7, April 1947, PRO, FO 371/64350.

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132. MI–14, Mitropa no. 12, 29 December 1945, PRO, FO 371/55630.

133. CCG(BE) Research Branch, HQ/4204 (Res), The Freikorps, 7 June 1945, PRO, FO 371/46876; and Robert Kempner, Blueprint for the Nazi underground as Revealed in Confidential Police Reports, 30 October 1943, NA, OMGUS ODI Miscellaneous Reports, RG 260.

134. Die Neue Zeitung, 16 August 1946; 2 September 1946; 17 February 1947; 28 February 1947; 3 March 1947; Weser-Kurier, 4 December 1946; 7 December 1946; Neue Württembergische Zeitung, 28 February 1947; and 4 March 1947.

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136. Diehl, The Thanks of the Fatherland, chaps. 4–7, 233–42. See also Smith, Heimkehr aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, 180–86. A few German training officers and NCOs attempted to create a Freikorps ethos in the Bundeswehr’s new airborne infantry, but the plot was uncovered and the offending officers and noncoms arrested or transferred to other units. Tauber, , The Eagle and the Swastika, 1:312–13.Google Scholar

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144. The term Freikorps remains a source of inspiration for neo-Nazis. In May 1997, Kameradschafl Freikorps und Bund Oberland managed to gather about 400 people in Schliersee in order to celebrate the seventy-sixth anniversary of the Battle of Annaberg. In February of the following year, four teenage members of Freikorps Berlin were suspected of participating in a strsng of home invasions, robberies, and beatings. “Antifaschitische Nachrichten” 6/1997, http://www.infolinks.de.medien/an/1977/06/011.htm, as of 6 April 1998; and Berliner Morgenpost, 26 February 1998.