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{{Infobox national military
The '''Wehrmacht''' was the military of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945. It was made up of the [[Heer]] (army), the [[Luftwaffe]] (air force), and the [[Kriegsmarine]] (navy). The [[Waffen SS]] also be considered part of the Wehrmacht as it was under the command of the army even though the SS was separate from the Wehrmacht. It was one of the major militaries during World War II and enjoyed initial success although it was eventually defeated by the combined might of the allies.
 
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| name = ''Wehrmacht''
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| image = War ensign of Germany (1938–1945).svg
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| alt = Red flag with black Nordic cross, black swastika in the center and black iron cross in the upper left corner
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| caption = ''[[Reichskriegsflagge]]'', the war flag and [[naval ensign]] of the ''Wehrmacht'' (1938–45 version)
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| image2 = Balkenkreuz.svg
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| alt2 = Black cross with white and black outline
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| caption2 = Emblem of the ''Wehrmacht'', the ''[[Balkenkreuz]]'', a stylized version of the [[Iron Cross]] seen in varying proportions
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| motto = ''[[Gott mit uns]]''{{sfn|Armbrüster|2005|p=64}}
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| founded = 16 March 1935
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| current_form =
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| disbanded = 20 September 1945{{sfn|Müller|2016|p= 1}}{{efn|The official dissolution of the Wehrmacht began with the [[German Instrument of Surrender]] of 8 May 1945. Reasserted in Proclamation No. 2 of the [[Allied Control Council]] on 20 September 1945, the dissolution was officially declared by ACC Law No. 34 of 20 August 1946.{{sfn|Allied Control Authority|1946a|p=81}}{{sfn|Allied Control Authority|1946b|p=63}}}}
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| branches = {{plainlist|
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* ''[[German Army (1935–1945)|Heer]]'' (army)
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* ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' (navy)
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* ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' (air force)}}
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| headquarters = [[Maybach I and II|Maybach II]], [[Wünsdorf]]
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<!-- Leadership -->
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| commander-in-chief = {{plainlist|
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*[[Adolf Hitler]] (first)
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*[[Karl Dönitz]] (last)}}
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| commander-in-chief_title = [[#Command structure|Supreme<br>Commander]]
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| chief minister = {{plainlist|
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*[[Werner von Blomberg]] (first)
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*[[Adolf Hitler]] (last)}}
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| chief minister_title = [[#Command structure|Commander-in-chief]]
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| minister = Werner von Blomberg
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| minister_title = [[Ministry of the Reichswehr|Minister of War]]
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| commander = [[Wilhelm Keitel]]
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| commander_title = [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht#Chief of the Armed Forces High Command|Chief of the ''Wehrmacht'' High Command]]
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<!-- Manpower -->
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| age = 18–45
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| conscription = 1–2 years
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| manpower_data =
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| manpower_age = 18
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| available =
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| available_f =
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| fit =
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| fit_f =
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| reaching = 700,000 (1935){{sfn|Müller|2016|p=12}}
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| reaching_f =
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| active = 18,000,000 {{small|(total served)}}{{sfn|Overmans|2004|p=215}}
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| ranked =
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| reserve =
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| deployed =
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<!-- Financial -->
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| amount = {{plainlist|
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*19&nbsp;billion ℛℳ (1939) {{small|(€{{Inflation|DE|19|1939}} billion in {{Inflation-year|DE}})}}
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*89&nbsp;billion ℛℳ (1944) {{small|(€{{Inflation|DE|89|1944}} billion in {{Inflation-year|DE}})}}{{efn|Total GDP: 75 billion (1939) & 118 billion (1944){{sfn|Harrison|2000|p=10}}}}}}
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| percent_GDP = {{plainlist|
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*25% (1939){{sfn|Tooze|2006|p=181}}
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*75% (1944){{sfn|Evans|2008|p=333}}}}
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<!-- Industrial -->
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| domestic_suppliers = {{plainlist|
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*[[Alkett]]
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*[[Auto Union]]
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*[[Blohm+Voss]]
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*BMW
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*Daimler-Benz
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*[[Focke-Wulf]]
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*[[Heinkel]]
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*[[Henschel & Son]]
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*[[Junkers]]
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*[[Krupp]]
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*MAN SE
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*[[Messerschmitt]]
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*[[Opel]]
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*Porsche}}
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| foreign_suppliers = {{plainlist|
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*[[Kingdom of Hungary (1920–1946)|Kingdom of Hungary]]
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*[[Second Spanish Republic]]
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*[[Switzerland]]{{sfn|Department of State|2016}}}}
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| imports =
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| exports = <!--Nazi Germany and Neutral Europe During the Second World War-->
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<!-- Related articles -->
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| history = [[History of Germany during World War II]]
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| ranks = {{plainlist|
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* [[Ranks and insignia of the German Army (1935–1945)|''Heer'' ranks]]
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* [[Uniforms and insignia of the Kriegsmarine|''Kriegsmarine'' ranks]]
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* [[Ranks and insignia of the Luftwaffe (1935–1945)|''Luftwaffe'' ranks]]
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}}
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}}
   
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The '''''Wehrmacht''''' ({{IPA-de|ˈveːɐ̯maxt|-|De-Wehrmacht-pronunciation.ogg}}, {{literal translation|defence force}}) was the unified [[armed forces]] of [[Nazi Germany]] from 1935 to 1945. It consisted of the [[German Army (1935–1945)|''Heer'']] (army), the ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' (navy) and the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' (air force). The designation "''Wehrmacht''" replaced the previously-used term ''[[Reichswehr]]'', and was the manifestation of the Nazi regime's efforts to [[German re-armament|rearm Germany]] to a greater extent than the [[Treaty of Versailles]] permitted.{{sfn|Taylor|1995|pp=90–119}}
==History==
 
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[[Category:Military of Germany]]
 
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After the [[Adolf Hitler's rise to power|Nazi rise to power]] in 1933, one of [[Adolf Hitler]]'s most overt and audacious moves was to establish the ''Wehrmacht'', a modern offensively-capable armed force, fulfilling the Nazi régime's long-term goals of regaining lost territory as well as gaining new territory and dominating its neighbours. This required the reinstatement of conscription, and massive investment and [[defense spending]] on the [[arms industry]].{{sfn|Kitchen|1994|pp=39–65}}
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The ''Wehrmacht'' formed the heart of Germany's politico-military power. In the early part of the [[World War II|Second World War]], the ''Wehrmacht'' employed [[combined arms]] tactics (close-cover air-support, tanks, and infantry) to devastating effect in what became known as ''[[Blitzkrieg]]'' (lightning war). Its campaigns in [[Battle of France|France (1940)]], the [[Operation Barbarossa|Soviet Union (1941)]], and [[North African Campaign|North Africa (1941/42)]] are regarded by historians as acts of boldness.{{sfn|Van Creveld|1982|p=3}} At the same time, the far-flung advances strained the ''Wehrmacht's'' capacity to the breaking point, culminating in its first major defeat in the [[Battle of Moscow]] (1941); by late 1942, Germany was losing the initiative in all theatres. The German [[Operational art of war|operational art]] proved no match to the war-making abilities of the Allied coalition, making the ''Wehrmacht's'' weaknesses in strategy, doctrine, and logistics readily apparent.{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=58–59}}
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Closely cooperating with the [[Schutzstaffel|''SS'']] and the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'', the German armed forces committed numerous [[Wehrmacht war crimes|war crimes]] (despite later denials and promotion of the [[myth of the clean Wehrmacht|myth of the clean ''Wehrmacht'']]).{{sfn|Hartmann|2013|pp= 85–108}} The majority of the war crimes took place in the Soviet Union, Poland, Yugoslavia, Greece and Italy, as part of the [[war of annihilation]] against the Soviet Union, [[the Holocaust]] and [[Nazi security warfare]].
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During World War II about 18&nbsp;million men served in the ''Wehrmacht''.{{Sfnm|1a1=Overmans|1y=2004|1p=215|2a1=Müller|2y=2016|2p=16|3a1=Wette|3y=2006|3p= 77}} By the time the war ended in Europe in May 1945, German forces (consisting of the [[German Army (1935–1945)|''Heer'']], the ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'', the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'', the ''[[Waffen-SS]]'', the ''[[Volkssturm]]'', and [[Wehrmacht foreign volunteers and conscripts|foreign collaborateur units]]) had lost approximately 11,300,000 men,{{sfn|Fritz|2011| p= 470}} about half of whom were missing or killed during the war. Only a few of the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s upper leadership went on trial for war crimes, despite evidence suggesting that more were involved in illegal actions.{{sfn|Wette|2006|pp= 195–250}}{{sfn|USHMM|n.d.}} According to [[Ian Kershaw]], most of the three million ''Wehrmacht'' soldiers who invaded the USSR participated in committing war crimes.{{Sfn|Kershaw|1997|p= 150}}
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==Origin==
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===Etymology===
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The German term ''"Wehrmacht''" stems from the compound word of {{lang-de|wehren}}, "to defend" and {{lang|de|Macht}}, "power, force".{{efn|See the Wiktionary article for more information.}} It has been used to describe any nation's armed forces; for example, ''Britische Wehrmacht'' meaning "British Armed Forces". The [[Frankfurt Constitution]] of 1849 designated all German military forces as the "German ''Wehrmacht''", consisting of the ''Seemacht'' (sea force) and the ''Landmacht'' (land force).{{sfn|Huber|2000}} In 1919, the term ''Wehrmacht'' also appears in Article 47 of the [[Weimar Constitution]], establishing that: "The Reich's President holds supreme command of all armed forces [i.e. the ''Wehrmacht''] of the Reich". From 1919, Germany's national defense force was known as the ''[[Reichswehr]]'', a name that was dropped in favor of ''Wehrmacht'' on 21 May 1935.{{sfn|Strohn|2010|p=10}}
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===Background===
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[[File:Bundesarchiv_Bild_102-16108,_Vereidigung_von_Reichswehr-Soldaten_auf_Hitler.jpg|alt=|thumb|253x253px|''Reichswehr'' soldiers swearing the [[Hitler oath]] in August 1934]]
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In January 1919, after [[World War I]] ended with the signing of the [[Armistice with Germany (Compiègne)|armistice of 11 November 1918]], the armed forces were dubbed ''Friedensheer'' (peace army).{{sfn|Wheeler-Bennett|1967|p=60}} In March 1919, the national assembly passed a law founding a 420,000-strong preliminary army, the ''Vorläufige Reichswehr''. The terms of the [[Treaty of Versailles]] were announced in May, and in June, Germany signed the treaty that, among other terms, imposed severe constraints on the size of Germany's armed forces. The army was limited to one hundred thousand men with an additional fifteen thousand in the navy. The fleet was to consist of at most six [[battleship]]s, six [[cruiser]]s, and twelve [[destroyer]]s. [[Submarine]]s, [[tank]]s and heavy [[artillery]] were forbidden and the air-force was dissolved. A new post-war military, the ''[[Reichswehr]]'', was established on 23 March 1921. [[Conscription|General conscription]] was abolished under another mandate of the Versailles treaty.{{sfn|Craig|1980|pp=424–432}}
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The ''Reichswehr'' was limited to 115,000 men, and thus the armed forces, under the leadership of [[Hans von Seeckt]], retained only the most capable officers. The American historians Alan Millet and [[Williamson Murray]] wrote "In reducing the officers corps, Seeckt chose the new leadership from the best men of the general staff with ruthless disregard for other constituencies, such as war heroes and the nobility".{{sfn|Murray|Millett|2001|p=22}} Seeckt's determination that the ''Reichswehr'' be an elite cadre force that would serve as the nucleus of an expanded military when the chance for restoring conscription came essentially led to the creation of a new army, based upon, but very different from, the army that existed in World War I.{{sfn|Murray|Millett|2001|p=22}} In the 1920s, Seeckt and his officers developed new doctrines that emphasized speed, aggression, combined arms and initiative on the part of lower officers to take advantage of momentary opportunities.{{sfn|Murray|Millett|2001|p=22}} Though Seeckt retired in 1926, the army that went to war in 1939 was largely his creation.{{sfn|Wheeler-Bennett|1967|p=22}}
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Germany was forbidden to have an air force by the Versailles treaty; nonetheless, Seeckt created a clandestine cadre of air force officers in the early 1920s. These officers saw the role of an air force as winning air superiority, tactical and strategic bombing and providing ground support. That the ''Luftwaffe'' did not develop a strategic bombing force in the 1930s was not due to a lack of interest, but because of economic limitations.{{sfn|Murray|Millett|2001|p=33}} The leadership of the Navy led by Grand Admiral [[Erich Raeder]], a close protégé of [[Alfred von Tirpitz]], was dedicated to the idea of reviving Tirpitz's High Seas Fleet. Officers who believed in submarine warfare led by Admiral [[Karl Dönitz]] were in a minority before 1939.{{sfn|Murray|Millett|2001|p=37}}
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By 1922, Germany had begun covertly circumventing the conditions of the Versailles treaty. A secret collaboration with the [[Soviet Union]] began after the [[Treaty of Rapallo (1922)|Treaty of Rapallo]].{{sfn|Wheeler-Bennett|1967|p=131}} Major-General {{Interlanguage link|Otto Hasse (General)|de|Otto Hasse (General)|lt=Otto Hasse}} traveled to Moscow in 1923 to further negotiate the terms. Germany helped the Soviet Union with industrialization and Soviet officers were to be trained in Germany. German tank and air-force specialists could exercise in the Soviet Union and German chemical weapons research and manufacture would be carried out there along with other projects.{{sfn|Zeidler|2006|pp=106–111}} In 1924 a [[Lipetsk fighter-pilot school|fighter-pilot school]] was established at Lipetsk, where several hundred German air force personnel received instruction in operational maintenance, navigation, and aerial combat training over the next decade until the Germans finally left in September 1933.{{sfn|Cooper|1981|pp=382–383}} However, the arms buildup was done in secrecy, until Hitler came to power and it received broad political support.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=10}}
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==Nazi rise to power==
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{{further|Nazism and the Wehrmacht|German re-armament}}
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After the death of President [[Paul von Hindenburg]] on 2 August 1934, [[Adolf Hitler]] assumed the office of [[President of Germany (1919–1945)|President of Germany]], and thus became commander in chief. In February 1934, the Defence Minister [[Werner von Blomberg]], acting on his own initiative, had all of the Jews serving in the ''Reichswehr'' given an automatic and immediate [[dishonorable discharge]].{{sfn|Förster|1998|p=268}} Again, on his own initiative Blomberg had the armed forces adopt [[Nazi symbolism|Nazi symbols]] into their uniforms in May 1934.{{sfn|Wheeler-Bennett|1967|p=312}} In August of the same year, on Blomberg's initiative and that of the ''Ministeramt'' chief General [[Walther von Reichenau]], the entire military took the [[Hitler oath]], an oath of personal loyalty to Hitler. Hitler was most surprised at the offer; the popular view that Hitler imposed the oath on the military is false.{{sfn|Kershaw|1998|p=525}} The oath read: "I swear by God this sacred oath that to the Leader of the German empire and people, Adolf Hitler, supreme commander of the armed forces, I shall render unconditional obedience and that as a brave soldier I shall at all times be prepared to give my life for this oath".{{sfn|Broszat|Buchheim|Jacobsen|Krausnick|1999|p=18}}
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By 1935, Germany was openly flouting the military restrictions set forth in the Versailles Treaty: [[German re-armament]] was announced on 16 March with the "Edict for the Buildup of the ''Wehrmacht''" ({{lang-de|Gesetz für den Aufbau der Wehrmacht}}){{sfn|Müller|2016|p=7}} and the reintroduction of conscription.{{sfn|Fischer|1995|p=408}} While the size of the standing army was to remain at about the 100,000-man mark decreed by the treaty, a new group of conscripts equal to this size would receive training each year. The conscription law introduced the name "''Wehrmacht''"; the ''Reichswehr'' was officially renamed the Wehrmacht on 21 May 1935.{{sfn|Stone|2006|p=316}} Hitler's proclamation of the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s existence included a total of no less than 36 divisions in its original projection, contravening the Treaty of Versailles in grandiose fashion. In December 1935, General [[Ludwig Beck]] added 48 tank battalions to the planned rearmament program.{{sfn|Tooze|2006|p=208}} Hitler originally set a time frame of 10 years for remilitarization, but soon shortened it to four years.{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=12-13}} With the [[remilitarization of the Rhineland]] and the ''Anschluss'', the German Reich's territory increased significantly, providing a larger population pool for conscription.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=13}}
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==Personnel and recruitment==
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R43590, Potsdam, Musterung für die Wehrmacht.jpg|thumb|Inspection of German conscripts|alt=Men standing in line waiting for a medical check|211x211px]]
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Recruitment for the ''Wehrmacht'' was accomplished through voluntary enlistment and conscription, with 1.3&nbsp;million being drafted and 2.4&nbsp;million volunteering in the period 1935–1939.{{sfn|U.S. War Department|1945|pp=I-57|p=}}{{Sfn|Müller|2016|p=12}} The total number of soldiers who served in the ''Wehrmacht'' during its existence from 1935 to 1945 is believed to have approached 18.2&nbsp;million.{{Sfnm|1a1=Overmans|1y=2004|1p=215|2a1=Müller|2y=2016|2p=16|3a1=Wette|3y=2006|3p=77}} The German military leadership originally aimed at a homogeneous military, possessing traditional [[Prussian militarism|Prussian military]] values. However, with Hitler's constant wishes to increase the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s size, the Army was forced to accept citizens of lower class and education, decreasing internal cohesion and appointing officers who lacked real-war experience from previous conflicts, especially [[World War I]] and the [[Spanish Civil War]].{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=13-14}}
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The effectiveness of officer training and recruitment by the Wehrmacht has been identified as a major factor in its early victories as well as its ability to keep the war going as long as it did even as the war turned against Germany.{{sfn|Miller|2013|p=292–293}}{{sfn|Kjoerstad|2010|p=6}}
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[[File:Nazi World War II poster Danzig is German.jpg|alt=|thumb|316x316px|Common themes in [[Propaganda in Nazi Germany|Nazi propaganda]] revolved around national humiliation after the [[Treaty of Versailles]], seen as a ''diktat'' (dictation) by Germans. This poster expresses that the corridor of "Danzig is German"; ceded to Poland as maritime access, it simultaneously divided East Prussia from the rest of Germany.]]
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As the Second World War intensified, ''[[Kriegsmarine]]'' and ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' personnel were increasingly transferred to the army, and "voluntary" enlistments in the ''SS'' were stepped up as well. Following the [[Battle of Stalingrad]] in 1943, fitness and physical health standards for ''Wehrmacht'' recruits were drastically lowered, with the regime going so far as to create "special diet" battalions for men with severe stomach ailments. Rear-echelon personnel were more often sent to front-line duty wherever possible, especially during the final two years of the war where, inspired by constant propaganda, the oldest and [[Hitler Youth|youngest]] were being recruited and driven by instilled fear and fanaticism to serve on the fronts and, often, to fight to the death, whether judged to be cannon fodder or elite troops.{{sfn|U.S. War Department|1945|p=I-3}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-177-1465-16, Griechenland, Soldaten der "Legion Freies Arabien".jpg|thumb|An [[Afro-Arab]] soldier of the [[Free Arabian Legion]]|alt=An African in German uniform sitting on a chair, next to two other soldiers having a cigarette]]
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Prior to World War II, the ''Wehrmacht'' strove to remain a purely ethnic German force; as such, minorities within and outside of Germany, such as the Czechs in annexed Czechoslovakia, were exempted from military service after Hitler's takeover in 1938. Foreign volunteers were generally not accepted in the German armed forces prior to 1941.{{sfn|U.S. War Department|1945|p=I-3}} With the [[Operation Barbarossa|invasion of the Soviet Union]] in 1941, the government's positions changed. German propagandists wanted to present the war not as a purely German concern, but as a multi-national [[crusade]] against the so-called [[Jewish Bolshevism]].{{sfn|Förster|1988|p=266}} Hence, the ''Wehrmacht'' and the ''SS'' began to seek out recruits from occupied and neutral countries across Europe: the Germanic populations of the Netherlands and Norway were recruited largely into the ''SS'', while "non-Germanic" people were recruited into the ''Wehrmacht''. The "voluntary" nature of such recruitment was often dubious, especially in the later years of the war, when even Poles living in the [[Polish Corridor]] were declared "ethnic Germans" and drafted.{{sfn|U.S. War Department|1945|p=I-3}}
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After Germany's defeat in the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], the ''Wehrmacht'' also made substantial use of personnel from the [[Soviet Union]], including the [[Caucasian Muslim Legion]], [[Turkestan legion]], Crimean Tatars, ethnic Ukrainians and Russians, [[Cossack]]s, and others who wished to fight against the Soviet regime or who were otherwise induced to join.{{sfn|U.S. War Department|1945|p=I-3}} Between 15,000–20,000 anti-communist [[White émigrés]] who had left Russia after the [[Russian Revolution]] joined the ranks of the ''Wehrmacht'' and ''Waffen-SS'', with 1,500 acting as [[Language interpretation|interpreters]] and more than 10,000 serving in the guard force of the [[Russian Protective Corps]].{{sfn|Beyda|2014|pp=448}}{{sfn|Müller|2014|pp=222}}
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{| class="wikitable"
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|-
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! !! 1939 !! 1940 !! 1941 !! 1942 !! 1943 !! 1944 !! 1945
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|-
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|''Heer''|| 3,737,000 || 4,550,000 || 5,000,000 || 5,800,000 || 6,550,000 || 6,510,000 || 5,300,000
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|-
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|''Luftwaffe''|| 400,000 || 1,200,000 || 1,680,000 || 1,700,000 || 1,700,000 || 1,500,000 || 1,000,000
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|-
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|''Kriegsmarine''|| 50,000 || 250,000 || 404,000 || 580,000 || 780,000 || 810,000 || 700,000
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|-
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|''Waffen–SS''|| 35,000 || 50,000 || 150,000 || 230,000 || 450,000 || 600,000 || 830,000
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|-
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! Total || 4,220,000 || 6,050,000 || 7,234,000 || 8,310,000 || 9,480,000 || 9,420,000 || 7,830,000
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|-
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| colspan=8| Source:{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=36}}
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|}
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===Women in the ''Wehrmacht''===
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{{main|Wehrmachthelferin}}
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{{See also|Women in Nazi Germany}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-768-0147-15, Paris, Wehrmachtshelferinnen.jpg|thumb|''Wehrmachthelferinnen'' in occupied Paris, 1940]]
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In the beginning, women in Nazi Germany were not involved in the ''Wehrmacht'', as Hitler ideologically opposed conscription for women,{{sfn|Greenwald|1981|p=125}} stating that Germany would "''not form any section of women grenade throwers or any corps of women elite snipers.''"{{sfn|Sigmund|2004|p=184}} However, with many men going to the front, women were placed in auxiliary positions within the ''Wehrmacht'', called ''Wehrmachtshelferinnen'' ({{literally|Female Wehrmacht Helper}}),{{Sfn|United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|n.d.}} participating in tasks as:
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* telephone, telegraph and transmission operators,
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* administrative clerks, [[Copy typist|typists]] and messengers,
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* operators of listening equipment, in anti-aircraft defense, operating projectors for anti-aircraft defense, employees within meteorology services, and auxiliary civil defense personnel
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* volunteer nurses in military health service, as the [[German Red Cross]] or other voluntary organizations.
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They were placed under the same authority as ([[Hiwi (volunteer)|Hiwis]]), auxiliary personnel of the army ({{lang-de|Behelfspersonal}}) and they were assigned to duties within the Reich, and to a lesser extent, in the occupied territories, for example in the [[General government|general government of occupied Poland]], in [[German military administration in occupied France during World War II|France]], and later in [[German occupation of Yugoslavia|Yugoslavia]], in [[Axis occupation of Greece|Greece]] and in [[Romania in World War II|Romania]].{{Sfn|Kompisch|2008|p=219}}
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By 1945, 500,000 women were serving as ''Wehrmachtshelferinnen'', half of whom were volunteers, while the other half performed obligatory services connected to the war effort ({{lang-de|Kriegshilfsdienst}}).{{Sfn|United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|n.d.}}
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==Command structure==
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[[File:Wehrmacht structure (1935-1938).svg|thumb|alt=Drawing of the structure of the Wehrmacht (1935–1938)|Structure of the ''Wehrmacht'' (1935–1938)]]
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[[File:Wehrmacht structure (1939-1945).svg|thumb|alt=Drawing of the structure of the Wehrmacht (1939–1945)|Structure of the ''Wehrmacht'' (1939–1945)]]
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Legally, the [[commander-in-chief]] of the ''Wehrmacht'' was Adolf Hitler in his capacity as Germany's head of state, a position he gained after the death of President [[Paul von Hindenburg]] in August 1934. With the creation of the ''Wehrmacht'' in 1935, Hitler elevated himself to Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces,{{sfn|documentArchiv.de|2004|loc=§3}} retaining the position until his suicide on 30 April 1945.{{sfn|Broszat|1985|p=295}} The title of Commander-in-Chief was given to the [[Ministry of the Reichswehr|Minister of the ''Reichswehr'']] [[Werner von Blomberg]], who was simultaneously renamed the Reich Minister of War.{{sfn|documentArchiv.de|2004|loc=§3}} Following the [[Blomberg-Fritsch Affair]], Blomberg resigned and Hitler abolished the Ministry of War.{{sfn|Stein|2002|p=18}} As a replacement for the ministry, the ''Wehrmacht'' High Command ''[[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]]'' (OKW), under Field Marshal [[Wilhelm Keitel]], was put in its place.{{sfn|Megargee|2000|pp=41–42}}
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Placed under the OKW were the three branch High Commands: ''[[Oberkommando des Heeres]]'' (OKH), ''[[Oberkommando der Marine]]'' (OKM), and ''[[Oberkommando der Luftwaffe]]'' (OKL). The OKW was intended to serve as a joint command and coordinate all military activities, with Hitler at the top.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|pp=104–105}} Though many senior officers, such as [[Erich von Manstein|von Manstein]], had advocated for a real tri-service Joint Command, or appointment of a single Joint Chief of Staff, Hitler refused. Even after the defeat at Stalingrad, Hitler refused, stating that Göring as ''[[Reichsmarschall]]'' and Hitler's deputy, would not submit to someone else or see himself as an equal to other service commanders.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|pp=105–106}} However, a more likely reason was Hitler feared it would break his image of having the "Midas touch" concerning military strategy.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|pp=105–106}}
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With the creation of the OKW, Hitler solidified his control over the ''Wehrmacht''. Showing restraint in the beginning of the war, Hitler also became increasingly involved in military operations at every scale.{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=18-20}}
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Additionally, there was a clear lack of cohesion between the three High Commands and the OKW, as senior generals were unaware of the needs, capabilities and limitations of the other branches.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|p=105}} With Hitler serving as Supreme Commander, branch commands were often forced to fight for influence with Hitler. However, influence with Hitler not only came from rank and merit, but also who Hitler perceived as loyal, leading to inter-service rivalry, rather than cohesion between his military advisers.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|p=106}}
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==Branches==
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===Army===
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{{Main|German Army (1935–1945)}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-217-0465-32A, Russland, Soldaten auf dem Marsch.jpg|thumb|alt=Soldiers walking towards the camera|"Foot-mobile" infantry of the ''Wehrmacht'', 1942]]
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The German Army furthered concepts pioneered during [[World War I]], combining ground (''Heer'') and air force (''Luftwaffe'') assets into [[combined arms]] teams.{{sfn|Palmer|2010|pp=96–97}} Coupled with traditional war fighting methods such as [[encirclement]]s and the "[[battle of annihilation]]", the ''Wehrmacht'' managed many lightning quick victories in the first year of World War II, prompting foreign journalists to create a new word for what they witnessed: ''[[Blitzkrieg]]''. Germany's immediate military success on the field at the start of the Second World War coincides the favorable beginning they achieved during the First World War, a fact which some attribute to their superior officer corps.{{sfn|Mosier|2006|pp=11–24}}
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The ''Heer'' entered the war with a minority of its formations [[Armoured warfare|motorized]]; infantry remained approximately 90% foot-borne throughout the war, and artillery was primarily [[Horses in World War II|horse-drawn]]. The motorized formations received much attention in the world press in the opening years of the war, and were cited as the reason for the success of the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|invasions of Poland]] (September 1939), [[Operation Weserübung|Denmark and Norway]] (April 1940), [[Battle of France|Belgium, France, and Netherlands]] (May 1940), [[Balkans Campaign (World War II)|Yugoslavia and Greece]] (April 1941) and the early stage of [[Operation Barbarossa]] in the Soviet Union (June 1941).{{Sfn|Frieser|2005|pp=4–5}}
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After Hitler declared war on the United States in December 1941, the [[Axis powers]] found themselves engaged in campaigns against several major industrial powers while Germany was still in transition to a war economy. German units were then overextended, undersupplied, outmaneuvered, outnumbered and defeated by its enemies in decisive battles during 1941, 1942, and 1943 at the [[Battle of Moscow]], the [[Siege of Leningrad]], [[battle of Stalingrad|Stalingrad]], [[Tunisia Campaign|Tunis]] in [[North African Campaign|North Africa]], and the [[Battle of Kursk]].{{Sfn|Atkinson|2002|p=536}}{{Sfn|Jukes|2002|p=31}}
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[[File:Advance of the Panzerjager-Abteilung 39-AC1942.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Armored vehicle convoy moving through a dessert|A tank destroyer battalion, part of the 21 ''Panzer'' Division of the ''[[Afrika Korps]]'']]
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The German Army was managed through [[Mission-type tactics|mission-based tactics]] (rather than order-based tactics) which was intended to give commanders greater freedom to act on events and exploit opportunities. In public opinion, the German Army was, and sometimes still is, seen as a high-tech army. However, such modern equipment, while featured much in propaganda, was often only available in relatively small numbers.{{sfn|Zeiler|DuBois|2012|pp=171–172}} Only 40% to 60% of all units in the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] were motorized, baggage trains often relied on horse-drawn trailers due to poor roads and weather conditions in the Soviet Union, and for the same reasons many soldiers marched on foot or used bicycles as [[bicycle infantry]]. As the fortunes of war turned against them, the Germans were in constant retreat from 1943 and onward.{{sfn|Zhukov|1974|pp=110–111}}{{rp|142}}{{sfn|Corrigan|2011|p=353}}{{sfn|Bell|2011|pp=95, 108}}
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The [[Panzer division]]s were vital to the German army's early success. In the strategies of the ''Blitzkrieg'', the ''Wehrmacht'' combined the mobility of light tanks with airborne assault to quickly progress through weak enemy lines, enabling the German army to quickly and brutally take over Poland and France.{{sfn|Trueman|2015a}} These tanks were used to break through enemy lines, isolating regiments from the main force so that the infantry behind the tanks could quickly kill or capture the enemy troops.{{sfn|History.com Editors|2010}}
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===Air Force===
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{{Main|Luftwaffe}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 141-0864, Kreta, Landung von Fallschirmjägern.jpg|thumb|right|alt=German paratrooper landing with others in the sky behind him|German paratroopers landing on [[Battle of Crete|Crete]]]]
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Originally outlawed by the Treaty of Versailles, the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' was officially established in 1935, under the leadership of [[Hermann Göring]].{{sfn|Fischer|1995|p=408}} First gaining experience in the [[Spanish Civil War]], it was a key element in the early ''Blitzkrieg'' campaigns (Poland, France 1940, USSR 1941). The ''Luftwaffe'' concentrated production on fighters and (small) tactical bombers, like the [[Messerschmitt Bf 109]] fighter and the [[Junkers Ju 87]] ''Stuka'' dive bomber.{{sfn|Tooze|2006|pp=125–130}} The planes cooperated closely with the ground forces. Overwhelming numbers of fighters assured air-supremacy, and the bombers would attack command- and supply-lines, depots, and other support targets close to the front. The ''Luftwaffe'' would also be used to transport paratroopers, as first used during [[Operation Weserübung]].{{sfn|Outze|1962|p=359}}{{sfn|Merglen|1970|p=26}} Due to the Army's sway with Hitler, the ''Luftwaffe'' was often subordinated to the Army, resulting in it being used as a tactical support role and losing its strategic capabilities.{{sfn|Hayward|1999|p=106}}
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The Western Allies' strategic bombing campaign against German industrial targets, particularly the round the clock [[Combined Bomber Offensive]] and [[Defence of the Reich]], deliberately forced the ''Luftwaffe'' into a war of attrition.{{sfn|Darling|2008|p=181}} With German fighter force destroyed the Western Allies had air supremacy over the battlefield, denying support to German forces on the ground and using its own fighter-bombers to attack and disrupt. Following the losses in [[Operation Bodenplatte]] in 1945, the ''Luftwaffe'' was no longer an effective force.{{sfn|Girbig|1975|p=112}}
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===Navy===
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{{Main|Kriegsmarine}} {{See also|Blockade of Germany (1939–1945)|Plan Z}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101II-MW-3491-06, St. Nazaire, Uboot U 94, Karl Dönitz.jpg|thumb|alt=Several people looking at a submarine with its crew on the deck|[[Karl Dönitz]] inspecting the [[Saint-Nazaire submarine base]] in France, June 1941]]
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The Treaty of Versailles disallowed submarines, while limiting the size of the ''[[Reichsmarine]]'' to six battleships, six cruisers, and twelve destroyers.{{sfn|Craig|1980|pp=424–432}} Following the creation of the ''Wehrmacht'', the navy was renamed the ''Kriegsmarine''.{{sfn|documentArchiv.de|2004|loc=§2}}
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With the signing of the [[Anglo-German Naval Agreement]], the Germany was allowed to increase its navy's size to be 35:100 tonnage of the Royal Navy, and allowed for the construction of U-boats.{{sfn|Maiolo|1998|pp=35–36}} This was partly done to appease Germany, and because Britain believed the ''Kriegsmarine'' would not be able to reach the 35% limit until 1942.{{sfn|Maiolo|1998|pp=57–59}} The navy was also prioritized last in the German rearmament scheme, making it the smallest of the branches.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=17}}{{sfn|Maiolo|1998|p=60}}
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In the [[Battle of the Atlantic]], the initially successful German [[U-boat]] fleet arm was eventually defeated due to Allied technological innovations like [[sonar]], [[radar]], and the breaking of the [[Enigma machine|Enigma]] code.{{sfn|Syrett|2010|pp=xi–xii}}
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Large surface vessels were few in number due to construction limitations by international treaties prior to 1935. The "pocket battleships" {{Ship|German pocket battleship|Admiral Graf Spee||2}} and {{Ship|German pocket battleship|Admiral Scheer||2}} were important as commerce raiders only in the opening year of the war.{{sfn|Bidlingmaier|1971|pp=76–77}} No [[aircraft carrier]] was operational, as German leadership lost interest in the {{Ship|German aircraft carrier|Graf Zeppelin||2}} which had been launched in 1938.{{sfn|Whitley|1984|p=30}}
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Following the loss of the {{Ship|German battleship|Bismarck}} in 1941, with Allied air-superiority threatening the remaining battle-cruisers in French Atlantic harbors, the ships were ordered to make the [[Channel Dash]] back to German ports.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1985|p=246}}{{sfn|Hinsley|1994|pp=54–57}}{{sfn|Richards|1974|pp=223–225, 233, 236–237}} Operating from fjords along the coast of Norway, which had been occupied since 1940, [[Arctic convoys of World War II|convoys from North America]] to the Soviet port of Murmansk could be intercepted though the {{Ship|German battleship|Tirpitz||2}} spent most of her career as [[fleet in being]].{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1985|pp=248}} After the appointment of Karl Dönitz as Grand Admiral of the ''Kriegsmarine'' (in the aftermath of the [[Battle of the Barents Sea]]), Germany stopped constructing battleships and cruisers in favor of U-boats.{{sfn|Trueman|2015b}} Though by 1941, the navy had already lost a number of its large surface ships, which could not be replenished during the war.{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=71–72}}
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The ''Kriegsmarine''{{'}}s most significant contribution to the German war effort was the deployment of its nearly 1,000 U-boats to strike at Allied convoys.{{sfn|Müller|2016|pp=71–72}} The German naval strategy was to attack the convoys in an attempt to prevent the United States from interfering in Europe and to starve out the British.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=72}} [[Karl Doenitz]], the U-Boat Chief, began unrestricted submarine warfare which cost the Allies 22,898 men and 1,315 ships.{{sfn|Hughes|Costello|1977}} The U-boat war remained costly for the Allies until early spring of 1943 when the Allies began to use countermeasures against U-Boats such as the use of Hunter-Killer groups, airborne radar, torpedoes and mines like the [[Mark 24 mine|FIDO]].{{sfn|Hickman|2015}} The submarine war cost the ''Kriegsmarine'' 757 U-boats, with more than 30,000 U-boat crewmen killed.{{sfn|Niestle|2014|loc=Introduction}}
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===Coexistence with the Waffen-SS===
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{{main|Waffen-SS}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-712-0475-03, Litauisch-lettische Grenze, Lagebesprechung.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Two soldiers in different uniforms sitting and looking over a map|An army ''Oberleutnant'' with a ''SS''-''Hauptsturmführer'' from the ''Waffen-SS'' in 1944]]
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In the beginning, there was friction between the ''SS'' and the army, as the army feared the ''SS'' would attempt to become a legitimate part of the armed forces of the Third Reich, partly due to the fighting between the limited armaments, and the perceived fanaticism towards Nazism.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|pp=433, 438}} However, on 17 August 1938, Hitler codified the role of the ''SS'' and the army as to the end the feud between the two.{{sfn|Stein|2002|p=20}} The arming of the ''SS'' was to be "procured from the ''Wehrmacht'' upon payment", however "in peacetime, no organizational connection with the ''Wehrmacht'' exists."{{sfn|Stein|2002|pp=20–21}} The army was however allowed to check the budget of the ''SS'' and inspect the combat readiness of the ''SS'' troops.{{sfn|Stein|2002|p=22}} In the event of mobilization, the ''Waffen-SS'' field units could be placed under the operational control of the OKW or the OKH. All decisions regarding this, would be at Hitler's personal discretion.{{sfn|Stein|2002|p=22}}
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Though there existed conflict between the ''SS'' and ''Wehrmacht'', many ''SS'' officers were former army officers, which insured continuity and understanding between the two.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|p=438}} Throughout the war, army and ''SS'' soldiers worked together in various combat situations, creating bonds between the two groups.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|p=437}} [[Heinz Guderian|Guderian]] noted that every day the war continued the Army and the ''SS'' became closer together.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|p=437}} Towards the end of the war, army units would even be placed under the command of the ''SS'', in Italy and the Netherlands.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|p=437}} The relationship between the ''Wehrmacht'' and the ''SS'' improved; however, the ''Waffen-SS'' was never considered "the fourth branch of the ''Wehrmacht''.” {{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|p=438}}
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==Theatres and campaigns==
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The ''Wehrmacht'' directed combat operations during World War II (from 1 September 1939&nbsp;– 8 May 1945) as the [[German Reich]]'s armed forces umbrella command-organization. After 1941 the [[OKH]] became the ''de facto'' Eastern Theatre higher-echelon command-organization for the ''Wehrmacht'', excluding ''[[Waffen-SS]]'' except for operational and tactical combat purposes. The [[OKW]] conducted operations in the Western Theatre. The operations by the ''Kriegsmarine'' in the North and Mid-Atlantic can also be considered as separate theatres, considering the size of the [[area of operations]] and their remoteness from other theatres.
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The ''Wehrmacht'' fought on other fronts, sometimes three simultaneously; redeploying troops from the intensifying theatre in the East to the West after the [[Normandy landings]] caused tensions between the General Staffs of both the OKW and the OKH – as Germany lacked sufficient materiel and manpower for a two-front war of such magnitude.{{sfn|Fritz|2011| pp= 366–368}}
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===Eastern theatre===
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{{Main|Eastern Front (World War II)}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1989-030-27, Russland, Infanterie vor brennendem Haus.jpg|thumb|alt=Several soldiers walking away from a burning house.|upright|German troops in the [[Soviet Union]], October 1941]]
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Major campaigns and battles in Eastern and Central Europe included:
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* [[Occupation of Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany|Czechoslovakian campaign]] (1938–1945)
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*[[Invasion of Poland (1939)|Invasion of Poland]] (''Fall Weiss'')
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* [[Operation Barbarossa]] (1941), conducted by [[Army Group North]], [[Army Group Centre]], and [[Army Group South]]
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* [[Battle of Moscow]] (1941)
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* [[Battles of Rzhev]] (1942–1943)
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* [[Battle of Stalingrad]] (1942–1943)
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* [[Battle of the Caucasus]] (1942–1943)
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* [[Battle of Kursk]] (Operation Citadel) (1943)
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* [[Battle of Kiev (1943)|Battle of Kiev]] (1943)
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* [[Operation Bagration]] (1944)
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* [[Nazi security warfare]] – largely carried out by [[Security Division (Wehrmacht)|security divisions of the ''Wehrmacht'']], by [[Order Police]] and by ''Waffen-SS'' units in the occupied territories behind Axis front-lines.
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===Western theatre===
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1994-036-09A, Paris, Parade auf der Champs Elysée.jpg|thumb|alt=Soldiers walking down Champs-Élysées, with Arc de Triomphe in the back| German soldiers in occupied Paris]]
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{{Main|Western Front (World War II)}}
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* [[Phoney War]] (''Sitzkrieg'', September 1939 to May 1940) between the invasion of Poland and the Battle of France
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* [[Operation Weserübung]]
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** [[German invasion of Denmark (1940)|German invasion of Denmark]] – 9 April 1940
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** The [[Norwegian Campaign]] – 9 April to 10 June 1940
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* ''Fall Gelb''
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**[[Battle of Belgium]] 10 to 28 May 1940
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**[[German invasion of Luxembourg]] 10 May 1940
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**[[Battle of the Netherlands]] – 10 to 17 May 1940
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**[[Battle of France]] – 10 May to 25 June 1940
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* [[Battle of Britain]] (1940)
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* [[Battle of the Atlantic]] (1939–1945)
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* [[Operation Overlord|Battle of Normandy]] (1944)
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* [[Operation Dragoon|Allied invasion of southern France]] (1944)
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* [[Ardennes Offensive]] (1944–1945)
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* [[Defense of the Reich]] air-campaign, 1939 to 1945
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===Mediterranean theatre===
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1976-091-06, Nordafrika, Panzer III.jpg|thumb|alt=German tank in the foreground with a burning wreck in the back|German tanks during a counter-attack in North Africa, 1942]]
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{{Main|Mediterranean Theatre of World War II}}
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For a time, the [[Battle of the Mediterranean|Axis Mediterranean Theatre]] and the [[North African Campaign]] were conducted as a [[Military campaign|joint campaign]] with the [[Regio Esercito|Italian Army]], and may be considered a separate [[Theater (warfare)|theatre]].
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* [[Balkans Campaign (World War II)|Invasion of the Balkans and Greece]] (Operation Marita) (1940–1941)
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* [[Battle of Crete]] (1941)
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* The [[North African Campaign]] in Libya, Tunisia and Egypt between the UK and Commonwealth (and later, U.S.) forces and the Axis forces
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* The [[Italian Campaign (World War II)|Italian Theatre]] was a continuation of the Axis defeat in North Africa, and was a campaign for defence of Italy
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==Casualties==
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{{Main|German casualties in World War II}}
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[[File:World War II military deaths in Europe by theater and by year.png|thumb|alt=Illustration of combat casualties during WWII|80% of the ''Wehrmacht'''s [[World War II casualties|military deaths]] were in the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]].{{sfn|Duiker|2015|p=138}}]]
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[[File:Cemetery of German soldiers in Toila 24.jpg|thumb|alt=Commemoration stone with names of fallen soldiers|upright|A German war cemetery in Estonia]]
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More than 6,000,000 soldiers were wounded during the conflict, while more than 11,000,000 became prisoners. In all, approximately 5,318,000 soldiers from Germany and other nationalities fighting for the German armed forces—including the ''Waffen-SS'', ''Volkssturm'' and foreign collaborationist units—are estimated to have been killed in action, died of wounds, died in custody or gone missing in World War II. Included in this number are 215,000 Soviet citizens conscripted by Germany.{{sfn|Overmans|2004|p=335}}
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According to Frank Biess,
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{{quote|German casualties took a sudden jump with the defeat of the Sixth Army at Stalingrad in January 1943, when 180,310 soldiers were killed in one month. Among the 5.3&nbsp;million Wehrmacht casualties during the Second World War, more than 80 per cent died during the last two years of the war. Approximately three-quarters of these losses occurred on the Eastern front (2.7&nbsp;million) and during the final stages of the war between January and May 1945 (1.2&nbsp;million).{{sfn|Biess|2006|p=19}}}}
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[[Jeffrey Herf]] wrote that:
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{{quote|Whereas German deaths between 1941 and 1943 on the western front had not exceeded three per cent of the total from all fronts, in 1944 the figure jumped to about 14 per cent. Yet even in the months following D-day, about 68.5 per cent of all German battlefield deaths occurred on the eastern front, as a Soviet blitzkrieg in response devastated the retreating Wehrmacht.{{sfn|Herf|2006|p=252}}}}
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In addition to the losses, at the hands of the elements and enemy fighting, at least 20,000 soldiers were executed as sentences by the military court.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=30}} In comparison, the Red Army executed 135,000,{{efn|135,000 executed; 422,700 sent to penal units at the front and 436,600 imprisoned after sentencing.{{sfn|Krivosheev|2010|p=219}}}}{{sfn|Krivosheev|2010|p=219}}{{sfn|Mikhalev|2000|p=23}} France 102, the US 146 and the UK 40.{{sfn|Müller|2016|p=30}}
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==War crimes==
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{{Main|War crimes of the Wehrmacht|Consequences of German Nazism|Nazi human experimentation}}
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Nazi propaganda had told ''Wehrmacht'' soldiers to wipe out what were variously called Jewish Bolshevik subhumans, the Mongol hordes, the Asiatic flood and the red beast.{{sfn|Evans|1989|pp=58–60}} While the principal perpetrators of the civil suppression behind the front lines amongst German armed forces were the Nazi German "political" armies (the ''[[SS-Totenkopfverbände]]'', the ''[[Waffen-SS]]'', and the ''[[Einsatzgruppen]]'', which were responsible for mass killings, primarily by implementation of the so-called [[Final Solution of the Jewish Question]] in occupied territories), the traditional armed forces represented by the ''Wehrmacht'' committed and ordered war crimes of their own (e.g. the [[Commissar Order]]), particularly during the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|invasion of Poland in 1939]]{{sfn|Böhler|2006|pp=183–184, 189, 241}} and later in the [[Operation Barbarossa|war against the Soviet Union]].
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===Cooperation with the SS===
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Prior to the outbreak of war, Hitler informed senior ''Wehrmacht'' officers that actions "which would not be in the taste of German generals", would take place in occupied areas and ordered them that they "should not interfere in such matters but restrict themselves to their military duties".{{sfn|Stein|2002|pp=29–30}} Some ''Wehrmacht'' officers initially showed a strong dislike for the ''SS'' and objected to the army committing war crimes with the ''SS'', though these objections were not against the idea of the atrocities themselves.{{sfn|Bartov|1999|pp=146–47}} Later during the war, relations between the ''SS'' and ''Wehrmacht'' improved significantly.{{sfn|Hilberg|1985|p=301}} The common soldier had no qualms with the ''SS'', and often assisted them in rounding up civilians for executions.{{sfn|Datner|1964|pp=20–35}}{{sfn|Datner|1967|pp=67–74}}
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The Army's Chief of Staff General [[Franz Halder]] in a directive declared that in the event of guerrilla attacks, German troops were to impose "collective measures of force" by massacring entire villages.{{sfn|Förster|1989|p=501}} Cooperation between the ''SS Einsatzgruppen'' and the ''Wehrmacht'' involved supplying the killing squads with weapons, ammunition, equipment, transport, and even housing.{{sfn|Hilberg|1985|p=301}} Partisan fighters, Jews, and Communists became synonymous enemies of the Nazi regime and were hunted down and exterminated by the ''Einsatzgruppen'' and ''Wehrmacht'' alike, something revealed in numerous field journal entries from German soldiers.{{sfn|Fritz|2011| pp=92–134}} Hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of Soviet civilians died from starvation as the Germans requisitioned food for their armies and fodder for their draft horses.{{sfn|Megargee|2007|p=121}} According to [[Thomas Kühne]]: "an estimated 300,000–500,000 people were killed during the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s [[Nazi security warfare]] in the Soviet Union."{{sfn|Smith|2011|p=542}}
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While secretly listening to conversations of captured German generals, British officials became aware that the German Army had taken part in the atrocities and mass killing of Jews and were guilty of war crimes.{{sfn|Christensen|Poulsen|Smith|2015|pp=435–436}} American officials learned of the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s atrocities in much the same way. Taped conversations of soldiers detained as POWs revealed how some of them voluntarily participated in mass executions.{{sfn|Neitzel|Welzer|2012|pp=136–143}}
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===Crimes against civilians===
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-166-0527-06A, Kreta, Kondomari, Erschießung von Zivilisten.jpg|alt=Dead civilians shot in reprisal by German paratroopers|thumb|Civilians executed by German [[Fallschirmjäger|paratroopers]] in [[Massacre of Kondomari|Kondomari]]]]
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[[File:Germans take civilians to execution.jpg|alt=Soldiers escorting civilians with bound hands|thumb|German troops marching civilians to execution]]
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{{main|Anti-partisan operations in World War II|German military brothels in World War II}}
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{{See also|Category:World War II massacres}}
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During the war, the ''Wehrmacht'' committed numerous war crimes against the civilian population in occupied countries. This includes massacres of civilians and running forced brothels in occupied areas.
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Massacres would in many cases come as reprisals for acts of resistance. With these reprisals, the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s response would vary in severity and method, depending on the scale of resistance and whether it was in East or West Europe.{{sfn|Marston|Malkasian|2008|pp=83–90}} Often, the number of hostages to be shot was calculated based on a ratio of 100&nbsp;hostages executed for every German soldier killed and 50&nbsp;hostages executed for every German soldier wounded.{{sfn|Pavlowitch|2007|p=61}} Other times civilians would be rounded up and shot with machine guns.{{sfn|Markovich|2014|loc=s. 139, note 17}}
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To combat German officials' fear of venereal disease and [[onanism]],{{sfn|Gmyz|2007}} the ''Wehrmacht'' established numerous brothels throughout Nazi Germany and its occupied territories.{{sfn|Joosten|1947|p=456}} Women would often be kidnapped off the streets and forced to work in the brothels,{{sfn|Lenten|2000|pp=33–34}} with an estimated minimum of 34,140 women being forced to serve as prostitutes.{{sfn|Herbermann|Baer|Baer|2000|pp=33–34}}
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===Crimes against POWs===
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{{Main|German mistreatment of Soviet prisoners of war}}
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[[File:Partisan youth execution.jpg|alt=Soldiers putting blindfolded people up against a wall|thumb|Sixteen blindfolded [[Yugoslav Partisans|Partisan]] youth awaiting execution by German forces in Serbia, 20 August 1941]]
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While the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s prisoner-of-war camps for inmates from the west generally satisfied the humanitarian requirement prescribed by international law,{{sfn|Le Faucheur|2018}} prisoners from Poland and the USSR were incarcerated under significantly worse conditions. Between the launching of Operation Barbarossa in the summer of 1941 and the following spring, 2.8&nbsp;million of the 3.2&nbsp;million [[Nazi crimes against Soviet POWs|Soviet prisoners]] taken died while in German hands.{{sfn|Davies|2006|p=271}}
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===Criminal and genocidal organization===
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{{See also|High Command Trial}}
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The [[Nuremberg Trials]] of the major war criminals at the end of World War II found that the ''Wehrmacht'' was not an inherently criminal organization, but that it had committed crimes in the course of the war.{{sfn|Lillian Goldman Law Library|2008}} Among German historians, the view that the ''Wehrmacht'' had participated in wartime atrocities, particularly on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]], grew in the late 1970s and the 1980s.{{sfn|Wildt|Jureit|Otte|2004|p=30}} In the 1990s, public conception in Germany was influenced by controversial reactions and debates about the [[Wehrmachtsausstellung|exhibition of war crime]] issues.{{sfn|Wildt|Jureit|Otte|2004|p=34}}
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More recently, the judgement of Nuremberg has come under question. The Israeli historian [[Omer Bartov]], a leading expert on the ''Wehrmacht''{{sfn|Bartov|1999|pp=131–132}} wrote in 2003 that the ''Wehrmacht'' was a willing instrument of genocide, and that it is untrue that the ''Wehrmacht'' was an apolitical, professional fighting force that had only a few "bad apples".{{sfn|Bartov|2003|p=xiii}} Bartov argues that far from being the "untarnished shield", as successive German apologists stated after the war, the ''Wehrmacht'' was a criminal organization.{{sfn|Bartov|1999|p=146}} Likewise, the historian [[Richard J. Evans]], a leading expert on modern German history, wrote that the ''Wehrmacht'' was a genocidal organization.{{sfn|Evans|1989|pp=58–60}} The historian [[Ben H. Shepherd]] writes that "There is now clear agreement amongst historians that the German ''Wehrmacht'' ... identified strongly with National Socialism and embroiled itself in the criminality of the Third Reich."{{sfn|Shepherd|2003|pp=49–81}} British historian [[Ian Kershaw]] concludes that the ''Wehrmacht''<nowiki/>'s duty was to ensure that the people who met Hitler's requirements of being part of the [[Aryan race|Aryan]] ''[[Herrenvolk]]'' ("Aryan master race") had living space. He wrote that:
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{{quote|The Nazi revolution was broader than just the Holocaust. Its second goal was to eliminate Slavs from central and eastern Europe and to create a ''Lebensraum'' for Aryans.&nbsp;... As Bartov (''The Eastern Front; Hitler's Army'') shows, it barbarised the German armies on the eastern front. Most of their three million men, from generals to ordinary soldiers, helped exterminate captured Slav soldiers and civilians. This was sometimes cold and deliberate murder of individuals (as with Jews), sometimes generalised brutality and neglect.&nbsp;... German soldiers' letters and memoirs reveal their terrible reasoning: Slavs were 'the Asiatic-Bolshevik' horde, an inferior but threatening race.{{sfn|Kershaw|1997|p=150}}}}
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Several high-ranking ''Wehrmacht'' officers, including [[Hermann Hoth]], [[Georg von Küchler]], [[Georg-Hans Reinhardt]], [[Karl von Roques]], [[Walter Warlimont]] and others, were convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the [[High Command Trial]] given sentences ranging from time served to life.{{sfn|Hebert|2010|pp=216–219}}
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==Resistance to the Nazi regime==
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{{Main|German Resistance}}
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1972-025-10, Hitler-Attentat, 20. Juli 1944.jpg|alt=Several people looking inside a destroyed room|thumb|[[Martin Bormann]], [[Hermann Göring]], and [[Bruno Loerzer]] surveying the damage made by the 20 July plot]]
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Originally, there was little [[German Resistance|resistance]] within the ''Wehrmacht'', as Hitler actively went against the Treaty of Versailles and recovering the army's honor.{{sfn|Balfour|2005|p=32}} The first major resistance began in 1938 with the [[Oster conspiracy]], where several members of the military wanted to remove Hitler from power, as they feared a war with Czechoslovakia would ruin Germany.{{sfn|Jones|2008|pp=73–74}} However, following the success of the early campaigns in Poland, Scandinavia and France, belief in Hitler was restored.{{sfn|Balfour|2005|p=32}} With the defeat in [[Battle of Stalingrad|Stalingrad]], trust in Hitler's leadership began to wane.{{sfn|Bell|2011|pp=104–05, 107}} This caused an increase in resistance within the military. The resistance culminated in the [[20 July plot]] (1944), when a group of officers led by [[Claus von Stauffenberg]] attempted to assassinate Hitler. The attempt failed, resulting in the execution of 4,980 people{{sfn|Kershaw|2001|p=693}} and the standard military salute being replaced with the [[Hitler salute]].{{sfn|Allert|2009|p=82}}
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Some members of the ''Wehrmacht'' did save Jews and non-Jews from the [[concentration camp]]s and/or mass murder. [[Anton Schmid]] – a sergeant in the army – helped between 250 and 300 Jewish men, women, and children escape from the [[Vilna Ghetto]] in Lithuania.{{sfn|Schoeps|2008|p=502}}{{sfn|Bartrop|2016|p=247}}{{sfn|Wette|2014|p=74}} He was court-martialed and executed as a consequence. [[Albert Battel]], a reserve officer stationed near the Przemysl ghetto, blocked an ''SS'' detachment from entering it. He then evacuated up to 100 Jews and their families to the barracks of the local military command, and placed them under his protection.{{sfn|Yad Vashem|n.d.}} [[Wilm Hosenfeld]]—an army captain in Warsaw—helped, hid, or rescued several Poles, including Jews, in occupied Poland. He helped the Polish-Jewish composer [[Władysław Szpilman]], who was hiding among the city's ruins, by supplying him with food and water.{{sfn|Szpilman|2002|p=222}}
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According to [[Wolfram Wette]], only three ''Wehrmacht'' soldiers are known for being executed for rescuing Jews: [[Anton Schmid]], Friedrich Rath and Friedrich Winking.{{sfn|Timm|2015}}
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==After World War II==
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[[File:Kapitulationserklaerung der Deutschen Wehrmacht, 8 Mai 1945.jpg|right|thumb|German Instrument of Surrender, 8 May 1945 – [[German-Russian Museum|Berlin-Karlshorst]]]]
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Following the [[German Instrument of Surrender|unconditional surrender]] of the ''Wehrmacht'', which went into effect on 8 May 1945, some ''Wehrmacht'' units remained active, either independently (e.g. in Norway), or under Allied command as police forces.{{sfn|Fischer|1985|pp=322, 324}} The last ''Wehrmacht'' unit to come under Allied control was an isolated weather station in Svalbard, which formally surrendered to a Norwegian relief ship on 4 September.{{sfn|Barr|2009|p=323}}
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On 20 September 1945, with Proclamation No. 2 of the [[Allied Control Council]] (ACC), "[a]ll German land, naval and air forces, the S.S., S.A., S.D. and Gestapo, with all their organizations, staffs and institution, including the General Staff, the Officers' corps, the Reserve Corps, military schools, war veterans' organizations, and all other military and quasi-military organizations, together with all clubs and associations which serve to keep alive the military tradition in Germany, shall be completely and finally abolished in accordance with the methods and procedures to be laid down by the Allied Representatives."{{sfn|Allied Control Authority|1946a}} The ''Wehrmacht'' was officially dissolved by the ACC Law 34 on 20 August 1946,{{sfn|Large|1996|p=25}} which proclaimed the OKW, OKH, the [[Ministry of Aviation (Nazi Germany)|Ministry of Aviation]] and the OKM to be "disbanded, completely liquidated and declared illegal".{{sfn|Allied Control Authority|1946b}}
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===Military operational legacy===
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Immediately following the end of the war, many were quick to dismiss the ''Wehrmacht'' due to its failures and claim allied superiority.{{sfn|Hastings|1985}} However, historians have since reevaluated the ''Wehrmacht'' in terms of fighting power and tactics, giving it a more favorable assessment, with some calling it one of the best in the world, {{Sfnm|1a1=Van Creveld|1y=1982|1p=3|2a1=Hastings|2y=1985|3a1=Gray|3y=2007|3pp=148}} partly due to its ability to regularly inflict higher losses than it received, while it fought outnumbered and outgunned.{{Sfnm|1a1=O'Donnell|1y=1978|1p=61|2a1=Hastings|2y=1985|3a1=Gray|3y=2007|3pp=148}}
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Israeli military historian [[Martin van Creveld]], who attempted to examine the military force of the ''Wehrmacht'' in a purely military context, concluded: "The German army was a superb fighting organization. In point of morale, elan, troop cohesion and resilience, it was probably had no equal among twentieth century armies."{{sfn|Van Creveld|1982|p=163}} German historian [[Rolf-Dieter Müller]] comes to the following conclusion:" In the purely military sense [...] you can indeed say that the impression of a superior fighting force rightly exists. The proverbial efficiency was even greater than previously thought, because the superiority of the opponent was much higher than at that time German officers suspected. The analysis of Russian archive files finally gives us a clear picture in this regard."{{sfn|Bönisch|Wiegrefe|2008|p=51}} Strategic thinker and professor [[Colin S. Gray]] believed that the ''Wehrmacht'' possessed outstanding tactical and operational capabilities. However, following a number of successful campaigns, German policy began to have victory disease, asking the ''Wehrmacht'' to do the impossible. The continued use of the ''Blitzkrieg'' also led to Soviets learning the tactic and using it against the ''Wehrmacht''.{{sfn|Gray|2002|pp=21–22}}
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===Historical revisionism===
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{{main|Myth of the clean Wehrmacht}}
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Soon after the war ended, former ''Wehrmacht'' officers, veterans' groups and various far-right authors began to state that the ''Wehrmacht'' was an apolitical organization which was largely innocent of Nazi Germany's war crimes and crimes against humanity.{{sfn|Wette|2006|p=236-238}} Attempting to benefit from the clean ''Wehrmacht'' myth, veterans of the ''[[Waffen-SS]]'' declared that the organisation had virtually been a branch of the ''Wehrmacht'' and therefore had fought as "honourably" as it. Its veterans organisation, [[HIAG]], attempted to cultivate a myth of their soldiers having been "Soldiers like any other".{{sfn|Wienand|2015|p=39}}
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===Post war militaries===
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-34150-0001, Bonn, Theodor Blank, Bundeswehrfreiwillige.jpg|thumb|Former ''Wehrmacht'' generals [[Adolf Heusinger]] and [[Hans Speidel]] being sworn into the newly founded ''Bundeswehr'' on 12 November 1955]]
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Following the division of Germany, many former ''Wehrmacht'' and ''SS'' officers in West Germany feared a Soviet invasion of the country. To combat this, several prominent officers created a [[Schnez-Truppe|secret army]], unknown to the general public and without mandate from the Allied Control Authority or the West German government.{{sfn|Wiegrefe|2014}}{{sfn|Peck|2017}}
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By the mid-1950s, tensions of the [[Cold War]] led to the creation of separate military forces in the [[West Germany|Federal Republic of Germany]] and the socialist [[German Democratic Republic]]. The West German military, officially created on 5 May 1955, took the name ''[[Bundeswehr]]'' ({{literal translation|Federal Defence}}). Its East German counterpart—created on 1 March 1956—took the name [[National People's Army]] ({{lang-de|Nationale Volksarmee}}). Both organizations employed many former ''Wehrmacht'' members, particularly in their formative years,{{sfn|Knight|2017}} though neither organization considered themselves successors to the ''Wehrmacht''.{{sfn|Bickford|2011|p=127}}{{sfn|Christmann|Tschentscher|2018|loc=§79}}{{sfn|Scholz|2018}} However, according to historian [[Hannes Heer]] "Germans still have a hard time, when it comes to openly dealing with their Nazi past", as such of the 50 military bases named after ''Wehrmacht'' soldiers, only 16 bases have changed names.{{sfn|Groeneveld|Moynihan|2020}}
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''Wehrmacht'' veterans in West Germany have received pensions through the ''War Victims' Assistance Act'' ({{lang-de|Bundesversorgungsgesetz}}) from the government.{{sfn|AFP|2019}}{{sfn|Binkowski|Wiegrefe|2011}} According to ''The Times of Israel'', "The benefits come through the Federal Pension Act, which was passed in 1950 to support war victims, whether civilians or veterans of the ''Wehrmacht'' or ''Waffen-SS''."{{sfn|Axelrod|2019}}
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==See also==
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* [[Bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers]]
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* [[German resistance to Nazism]]
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* [[Glossary of German military terms]]
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* [[Glossary of Nazi Germany]]
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* [[Nazism and the Wehrmacht]]
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* [[Wehrmacht Propaganda Troops]]
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==Notes==
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{{notelist}}
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==References==
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===Citations===
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{{Reflist|22em}}
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===Bibliography===
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====Printed====
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{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
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* {{cite book |last=Allert |first=Tilman |translator-last1=Chase |translator-first1=Jefferson |title=The Hitler Salute: On the Meaning of a Gesture |publisher=Picador |date=2009 |isbn=9780312428303 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |author1=Allied Control Authority |title=Enactments and Approved Papers of the Control Council and Coordinating Committee |date=1946a |volume=I |url=https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/Military_Law/Enactments/Volume-I.pdf |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |author1=Allied Control Authority |title=Enactments and Approved Papers of the Control Council and Coordinating Committee |date=1946b |volume=IV |url=https://www.loc.gov/rr/frd/Military_Law/Enactments/Volume-IV.pdf |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Armbrüster |first1=Thomas |title=Management and Organization in Germany |date=2005 |publisher=Ashgate Publishing|isbn=978-0-7546-3880-3 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Atkinson |first1=Rick |title=An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942–1943 |date=2002 |publisher=Abacus |isbn=978-0-349-11636-5 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Balfour |first1=Michael |title=Withstanding Hitler |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York |isbn=978-0-415-00617-0 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=xUXderzLltwC&pg=PR3&lpg=PR3 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last1=Barr |first1=W. |title=Wettertrupp Haudegen: The last German Arctic weather station of World War II: Part 2 |journal=Polar Record |date=2009 |volume=23 |issue=144 |pages=323–334 |doi=10.1017/S0032247400007142 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Bartov |first1=Omer |authorlink1=Omer Bartov |title=The Eastern Front, 1941–45: German Troops and the Barbarisation of Warfare |date=1986 |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-312-22486-8 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Bartov |first1=Omer |authorlink1=Omer Bartov |title=Hitler's Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the Third Reich |date=1991 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-19-506879-5 |ref=harv |url=https://archive.org/details/hitlersarmysoldi00bart}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Bartov |first1=Omer |authorlink1=Omer Bartov |editor1-last=Leitz |editor1-first=Christian |title=The Third Reich: The Essential Readings |date=1999 |publisher=Blackwell |location=London |isbn=978-0-631-20700-9 |chapter=Soldiers, Nazis and War in the Third Reich |pages=129–150 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Bartov |first1=Omer |authorlink1=Omer Bartov |title=Germany's War and the Holocaust: Disputed Histories |url=https://archive.org/details/germanyswarholoc00bart |url-access=registration |date=2003 |publisher=Cornell University Press |location=Ithaca |isbn=978-0-631-20700-9 |ref=harv}}
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*{{cite book |last1=Bartrop |first1=Paul R. |authorlink1=Paul R. Bartrop |title=Resisting the Holocaust: Upstanders, Partisans, and Survivors |date=2016 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=9781610698788 |url=https://books.google.com/books/about/Resisting_the_Holocaust.html?id=iLbyjgEACAAJ |ref=harv}}
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*{{cite book |last1=Bell |first1=P.M.H. |title=Twelve Turning Points of the Second World War |date=2011 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven and London |isbn=978-0300187700 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last1=Beyda |first1=Oleg |title='Iron Cross of the Wrangel's Army': Russian Emigrants as Interpreters in the Wehrmacht |journal=The Journal of Slavic Military Studies |date=2014 |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=430–448 |doi=10.1080/13518046.2014.932630 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Bickford |first1=Andrew |title=Fallen Elites: The Military Other in Post–Unification Germany |date=2011 |publisher=Stanford University Press |location=Stanford |isbn=978-0804773966 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=sELghp1BIbgC&pg=PA127 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Biess |first1=Frank |title=Homecomings: returning POWs and the legacies of defeat in postwar Germany |date=2006 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-12502-2 |ref=harv}}
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*{{cite book |last1=Bidlingmaier |first1=Gerhard |title=Warship Profile 4 |chapter=KM Admiral Graf Spee |year=1971 |pages=73–96 |publisher=Profile Publications |location=Windsor, England |oclc=20229321 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Böhler |first1=Jochen |title=Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg. Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939 |publisher=Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag |location=Frankfurt |year=2006 |isbn=978-3-596-16307-6 |language=German |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal |last1=Bönisch |first1=Georg |last2=Wiegrefe |first2=Klaus |title=Schandfleck der Geschichte |journal=Der Spiegel |date=2008 |issue=15 |pages=50–52 |url=http://magazin.spiegel.de/EpubDelivery/spiegel/pdf/56479827 |accessdate=15 January 2019 |language=German |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite journal|last=Bos|first=Pascale|date=2006|title=Feminists Interpreting the Politics of Wartime Rape: Berlin, 1945; Yugoslavia, 1992–1993 | journal=Journal of Women in Culture and Society|volume=31|pages=996–1025|ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Broszat |first1=Martin |title=The Hitler State: The Foundation and Development of the Internal Structure of the Third Reich |date=1985 |publisher=Longman |location=London |isbn=978-0-582-48997-4 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Broszat |first1=Martin |last2=Buchheim |first2=Hans |last3=Jacobsen |first3=Hans-Adolf |last4=Krausnick |first4=Helmut |authorlink4=Helmut Krausnick |title=Anatomie des SS-Staates Vol.1 |date=1999 |publisher=Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag |location=München |language=German |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Christensen |first1=Claus Bundgård |author-link1=Claus Bundgård Christensen |last2=Poulsen |first2=Niels Bo |last3=Smith |first3=Peter Scharff |date=2015 |title=Waffen-SS : Europas nazistiske soldater |trans-title= Waffen-SS: Europe's Nazi soldiers |language= Danish |edition=1 |location=Lithuania |publisher=Gyldendal A/S |isbn=978-87-02-09648-4 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Cooper |first1=Matthew |title=The German Air Force, 1933–1945: An Anatomy of Failure |date=1981 |publisher=Jane's Publications |isbn=978-0-53103-733-1 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Corrigan |first1=Gordon |title=The Second World War: a Military History |date=2011 |publisher=Atlantic |location=London |isbn=978-0-857-89135-8 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Craig |first1=Gordon |title=Germany, 1866–1945 |url=https://archive.org/details/germany1866194500crai |url-access=registration |date=1980 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford and New York |isbn=978-0-19-502724-2 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Darling |first1=Kev |title=Aircraft of the 8th Army Air Force 1942–1945 |date=2008 |publisher=Big Bird Aviation |series=USAAF Illustrated |isbn=978-0-9559840-0-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=egyEOAvbmi0C&pg=PA181 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Datner |first1=Szymon |authorlink1=Szymon Datner |title=Crimes against Prisoners-of-War: Responsibility of the Wehrmacht |publisher=Zachodnia Agencja Prasowa |location=Warszawa |year=1964 |oclc=5975828 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Datner |first1=Szymon |authorlink1=Szymon Datner |title=55 Dni Wehrmachtu w Polsce |trans-title=55 days of the Wehrmacht in Poland |publisher=Wydawn, Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej |location=Warszawa |year=1964 |language=Polish |oclc=5975828 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Davies |first1=Norman |title=Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory |publisher=Pan Books |location=London |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-330-35212-3 |ref=harv|title-link=Europe at War 1939–1945: No Simple Victory}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Davies |first1=W. |title=German Army Handbook |date=1973 |publisher=Ian Allan Ltd. |location=Shepperton, Surrey |isbn=978-0-7110-0290-6 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Duiker |first1=William J. |title=Contemporary World History |chapter=The Crisis Deepens: The Outbreak of World War II |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gd0bCgAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&pg=PT159 |date=2015 |publisher=Cengage Learning |location=Shepperton, Surrey |isbn=978-1-285-44790-2 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Evans |first1=Anthony A. |title=World War II: An Illustrated Miscellany |date=2005 |publisher=Worth Press |isbn=978-1-84567-681-0 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Evans |first1=Richard J. |title=In Hitler's Shadow West German Historians and the Attempt to Escape the Nazi Past |date=1989 |publisher=Pantheon |location=New York |isbn=978-0-394-57686-2 |ref=harv |url=https://archive.org/details/inhitlersshadow00rich}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Evans |first1=Richard J. |title=The Third Reich at War |url=https://archive.org/details/thirdreichatwar00evan_0 |url-access=registration |year=2008 |publisher=Penguin |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-0-14-311671-4 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Fest |first1=Joachim |authorlink1=Joachim Fest |title=Plotting Hitler's Death—The Story of the German Resistance |publisher=Henry Holt and Company |location=New York |year=1996 |isbn=978-0-8050-4213-9 |ref=harv |url=https://archive.org/details/plottinghitlersd00joac}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Fischer |first1=Alexander |title=Teheran – Jalta – Potsdam: Die sowjetischen Protokolle von den Kriegskonferenzen derGrossen Drei |year=1985 |publisher=Verlag Wissenschaft und Politik |isbn=978-3-8046-8654-0 |language=German |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Fischer |first1=Klaus |title=Nazi Germany: A New History |year=1995 |publisher=Continuum |location=New York, NY |isbn=978-0-82640-797-9 |language=German |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Frieser |first1=Karl-Heinz |translator-last1=Greenwood |translator-first1=J. T. |title=Blitzkrieg-legende: der westfeldzug 1940 |trans-title=The Blitzkrieg Legend: The 1940 Campaign in the West |year=2005 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis |isbn=978-1-59114-294-2 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Förster |first1=Jürgen |authorlink1=Jürgen Förster |editor1-last=Marrus |editor1-first=Michael |editor1-link=Michael Marrus |title=The Nazi Holocaust Part 3 The "Final Solution": The Implementation of Mass Murder vol.2 |date=1989 |publisher=Meckler Press |location=Westpoint |isbn=978-0-88736-255-2 |pages=494–520 |chapter=The Wehrmacht and the War of Extermination Against the Soviet Union |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Förster |first1=Jürgen |authorlink1=Jürgen Förster |editor1-last=Berenbaum |editor1-first=Michael |editor2-last=Peck |editor2-first=Abraham |title=The Holocaust and History The Known, the Unknown, the Disputed and the Reexamined |url=https://archive.org/details/holocausthistory00bere_1 |url-access=limited |date=1998 |publisher=Indian University Press |location=Bloomington |isbn=978-0-253-33374-2 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/holocausthistory00bere_1/page/266 266]–283 |chapter=Complicity or Entanglement? The Wehrmacht, the War and the Holocaust |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Förster |first1=Jürgen |authorlink1=Jürgen Förster |editor1-last=Erickson |editor1-first=Ljubica |editor2-last=Erickson |editor2-first=Mark |title=Russia War, Peace and Diplomacy |date=2004 |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson |location=London |isbn=978-0-297-84913-1 |pages=117–129 |chapter=The German Military's Image of Russia |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Fritz |first1=Stephen |year=2011 |title=Ostkrieg: Hitler's War of Extermination in the East |publisher=The University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington |isbn=978-0-8131-3416-1 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Garzke |first1=William H. |last2=Dulin |first2=Robert O. |title=Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II |year=1985 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, Maryland |isbn=978-0-87021-101-0 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Girbig |first1=Werner |title=Six Months to Oblivion: The Eclipse of the Luftwaffe Fighter Force Over the Western Front, 1944/45 |date=1975 |publisher=Schiffer Publishing Ltd. |isbn=978-0-88740-348-4 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Goda |first1=Norman |authorlink1=Norman J.W. Goda |editor1-last=Kreike |editor1-first=Emmanuel |editor2-last=Jordan |editor2-first=William Chester |title=Corrupt Histories |date=2005 |publisher=Hushion House |location=Toronto |isbn=978-1-58046-173-3 |pages=413–452 |chapter=Black Marks: Hitler's Bribery of his Senior Officers During World War II |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Gray |first1=Colin |authorlink1=Colin S. Gray |title=Defining and Achieving Decisive Victory |date=2002 |publisher=Strategic Studies Institute |isbn=978-1-58487-089-0 |url=http://ssi.armywarcollege.edu/pdffiles/pub272.pdf |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite book |last1=Gray |first1=Colin |authorlink1=Colin S. Gray |title=War, Peace & International Relations – An Introduction to Strategic History |date=2007 |publisher=Routledge |url=https://epdf.tips/war-peace-and-international-relations-an-introduction-to-strategic-history-strat.html |isbn=978-0415594875 |ref=harv}}
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{{refend}}
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====Online====
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{{refbegin|30em}}
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* {{cite news |author1=AFP |title=Germany struggles to stop Nazi war payment suspicions |url=https://www.thelocal.de/20190228/in-focus-germany-struggles-to-stop-nazi-war-payment-suspicions |work=The Local |date=28 February 2019 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite news |last1=Axelrod |first1=Toby |title=German Jewish leader urges cancellation of pension payments to former SS members |url=https://www.timesofisrael.com/german-jewish-leader-urges-cancellation-of-pension-payments-to-former-ss-members/ |accessdate=12 June 2019 |work=timesofisrael.com |agency=The Times of Israel |date=27 March 2019 |ref=harv}}
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*{{cite news |last1=Binkowski |first1=Rafael |last2=Wiegrefe |first2=Klaus |title=How Waffen SS Veterans Exploited Postwar Politics |url=https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/the-brown-bluff-how-waffen-ss-veterans-exploited-postwar-politics-a-792984.html |work=Der Spiegel |date=21 October 2011 |ref=harv}}
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* {{cite web |last1=Christmann |first1=Rainer M. |last2=Tschentscher |first2=A. |title=BVerfGE 36, 1 - Grundlagenvertrag|url=http://www.servat.unibe.ch/dfr/bv036001.html |website=servat.unibe.ch |publisher=Das Fallrecht |date=5 February 2018 |accessdate=17 January 2019 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=Department of State |title=RG 84: Switzerland |url=https://www.archives.gov/research/holocaust/finding-aid/civilian/rg-84-switzerland.html |website=National Archives |accessdate=16 May 2019 |date=15 August 2016 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite journal |editor1=documentArchiv.de |title=Wehrgesetz Vom 21. Mai 1935 |journal=Reichsgesetzblatt |orig-year=1935 |date=3 February 2004 |volume=I |pages=609–614 |url=http://www.documentarchiv.de/ns/1935/wehrgesetz.html |accessdate=6 April 2019 |trans-title=Military Law of 21 May 1935 |publisher=Reich Ministry of Interior |location=Berlin |language=German |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Gmyz |first1=Cezary |title=Seksualne niewolnice III Rzeszy |trans-title=Sex Slaves of the Third Reich |url=https://www.wprost.pl/105285/Seksualne-niewolnice-III-Rzeszy |accessdate=11 March 2019 |agency=Wprost |date=22 November 2007 |language=Polish |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Groeneveld |first1=Josh |last2=Moynihan |first2=Ruqayyah |title=The German army is still struggling to come to terms with its Nazi past, according to historians |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/why-german-army-still-wont-address-nazi-past-2019-6?r=US&IR=T |accessdate=21 September 2020 |work=businessinsider.com |agency=Business Insider |date=3 April 2020}}
  +
* {{cite web |last1=Hickman |first1=Kennedy |title=Battle of the Atlantic in World War II |url=https://www.thoughtco.com/battle-of-the-atlantic-2361424 |website=Thoughtco |publisher= Dotdash publishing |date=2015 |accessdate=20 May 2015 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=History.com Editors |title=Germans invade Poland |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/germans-invade-poland |website=History |publisher=A&E Television Networks |accessdate=21 May 2015 |date=4 March 2010 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Knight |first1=Ben |title=The German military and its troubled traditions |url=https://www.dw.com/en/the-german-military-and-its-troubled-traditions/a-38863290 |work=Deutsche Welle |date=16 May 2017 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |last1=Le Faucheur |first1=Christelle |title=Were US POWs Starved to Death in German Camps? |url=https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/were-us-pows-starved-death-german-camps |website=[[The National WWII Museum]] |accessdate=11 February 2019 |date=23 July 2018 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=Lillian Goldman Law Library |title=Judgement : The Accused Organizations |url=http://avalon.law.yale.edu/imt/judorg.asp#staff |website=Avalon |publisher=Lillian Goldman Law Library |accessdate=17 January 2019 |date=2008 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Peck |first1=Michael |title=Exposed: The Secret Ex-Nazi Army That Guarded West Germany |url=https://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/exposed-the-secret-ex-nazi-army-guarded-west-germany-19326 |accessdate=11 January 2019 |agency=The National Interest |publisher=Center for the National Interest |date=4 February 2017 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=Reichsgesetzblatt |title=''Die Verfassungen in Deutschland'' I, no. 52 |url=http://www.verfassungen.de/de/de33-45/Wehrmachtaufbau35.htm |date=1935 |language=German |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Scholz |first1=Kay-Alexander |title=German army instills new traditions to move away from troubled history |url=https://www.dw.com/en/german-army-instills-new-traditions-to-move-away-from-troubled-history/a-43174083 |accessdate=16 January 2019 |agency=DW News |publisher=Deutsche Welle |date=28 March 2018 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite news |last1=Timm |first1=Sylvia |title=Verdienstorden der Bundesrepublik für Historiker Wolfram Wette |trans-title=Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany for Historian Wolfram Wette |url=http://www.badische-zeitung.de/waldkirch/verdienstorden-der-bundesrepublik-fuer-historiker-wolfram-wette--104266163.html |accessdate=22 December 2016 |agency=[[Badische Zeitung]] |date=4 May 2015 |language=German |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |last1=Trueman |first1=Chris N. |title=Blitzkrieg |url=https://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/world-war-two/world-war-two-and-eastern-europe/blitzkrieg/ |website=historylearningsite.co.uk |publisher=HistoryLearningSite |accessdate=20 May 2015 |date=14 May 2015a |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |last1=Trueman |first1=Chris N. |title=The Battle of Barents Sea |url=https://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/world-war-two/war-in-the-atlantic/the-battle-of-barents-sea/ |website=historylearningsite.co.uk |publisher=HistoryLearningSite |accessdate=13 May 2015 |date=18 May 2015b |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=USHMM |title=The German Military and the Holocaust |date=n.d. |website=United States Holocaust Memorial Museum—Holocaust Encyclopedia |url=https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-german-military-and-the-holocaust |access-date=13 January 2019 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=United States Holocaust Memorial Museum |title=Women in the Third Reich |url=https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/women-in-the-third-reich |date=n.d. |accessdate=8 September 2019 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite magazine |last1=Wiegrefe |first1=Klaus |title=Nazi Veterans Created Illegal Army |url=http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/wehrmacht-veterans-created-a-secret-army-in-west-germany-a-969015.html |accessdate=11 January 2019 |agency=Spiegel Online |magazine=Der Spiegel |date=14 May 2014 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |last1=Wildt |first1=Michael |last2=Jureit |first2=Ulrike |last3=Otte |first3=Birgit |title=Crimes of the German Wehrmacht |publisher=Hamburg Institute for Social Research |year=2004 |url=http://www.verbrechen-der-wehrmacht.de/pdf/vdw_en.pdf |accessdate=28 November 2008 |ref=harv}}
  +
* {{cite web |author1=Yad Vashem |title=The Righteous Among The Nations |url=http://db.yadvashem.org/righteous/family.html?language=en&itemId=4042973 |website=Yad Vashem |publisher=The World Holocaust Remembrance Center |accessdate=16 January 2019 |date=n.d. |ref=harv}}
  +
{{refend}}
  +
  +
==External links==
  +
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20070627134826/http://h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=22564917013611 ''The Wehrmacht: A Criminal Organization?''] Review of [[Hannes Heer]] and [[Klaus Naumann]]'s 1995 work ''Vernichtungskrieg – Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941–1944'' by Jörg Bottger
  +
* [http://www.yadvashem.org/odot_pdf/Microsoft%20Word%20-%202021.pdf ''Wehrmacht Propaganda Troops and the Jews''] – an article by [[Daniel Uziel]]
  +
  +
===Videos===
  +
* "How the Red Army Defeated Germany: The Three Alibis": {{YouTube|zinPbUZUHDE}}—lecture by [[Jonathan House|Jonathan M. House]] of the [[U.S. Army Command and General Staff College]], via the official channel of [[Dole Institute of Politics]].
  +
* "Fighting a Lost War: The German Army in 1943": {{YouTube|1SdO-btKuds}}—lecture by [[Robert Citino]], via the official channel of the [[U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center]].
  +
* "Mindset of WWII German Soldiers": {{YouTube|4eIn0IBsnBE}}—interview with the historian [[Sönke Neitzel]] discussing his book ''Soldaten: On Fighting, Killing and Dying'', via the official channel of [[The Agenda]], a programme of [[TVOntario]], a Canadian public television station.
  +
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=el_rjd9mukw "A Blind Eye and Dirty Hands: The Wehrmacht's Crimes"] – lecture by the historian [[Geoffrey P. Megargee]], via the YouTube channel of the [[Wiener Library for the Study of the Holocaust and Genocide]]
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{{World War II}}
   
 
{{Wikipedia|Wehrmacht}}
 
{{Wikipedia|Wehrmacht}}
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[[Category:Wehrmacht|Wehrmacht]]
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[[Category:Disbanded armed forces]]
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[[Category:1935 establishments in Germany]]
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[[Category:1940s disestablishments in Germany]]
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[[Category:Military of Nazi Germany]]
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[[Category:Military units and formations established in 1935]]
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[[Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1946]]

Latest revision as of 01:03, 4 February 2024

Wehrmacht
Red flag with black Nordic cross, black swastika in the center and black iron cross in the upper left corner
Reichskriegsflagge, the war flag and naval ensign of the Wehrmacht (1938–45 version)
Black cross with white and black outline
Emblem of the Wehrmacht, the Balkenkreuz, a stylized version of the Iron Cross seen in varying proportions
Motto Gott mit uns[4]
Founded 16 March 1935
Disbanded 20 September 1945[1][lower-alpha 1]
Service branches
Headquarters Maybach II, Wünsdorf
Leadership
Supreme
Commander
Commander-in-chief
Minister of War Werner von Blomberg
Chief of the Wehrmacht High Command Wilhelm Keitel
Manpower
Military age 18–45
Conscription 1–2 years
Reaching military
age annually
700,000 (1935)[5]
Active personnel 18,000,000 (total served)[6]
Expenditures
Budget
  • 19 billion ℛℳ (1939) (€141 billion in 2009)
  • 89 billion ℛℳ (1944) (€597 billion in 2009)[lower-alpha 2]
Percent of GDP
Industry
Domestic suppliers
Foreign suppliers
Related articles
History History of Germany during World War II
Ranks

The Wehrmacht (German pronunciation: [ˈveːɐ̯maxt], lit. defence force) was the unified armed forces of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945. It consisted of the Heer (army), the Kriegsmarine (navy) and the Luftwaffe (air force). The designation "Wehrmacht" replaced the previously-used term Reichswehr, and was the manifestation of the Nazi regime's efforts to rearm Germany to a greater extent than the Treaty of Versailles permitted.[11]

After the Nazi rise to power in 1933, one of Adolf Hitler's most overt and audacious moves was to establish the Wehrmacht, a modern offensively-capable armed force, fulfilling the Nazi régime's long-term goals of regaining lost territory as well as gaining new territory and dominating its neighbours. This required the reinstatement of conscription, and massive investment and defense spending on the arms industry.[12]

The Wehrmacht formed the heart of Germany's politico-military power. In the early part of the Second World War, the Wehrmacht employed combined arms tactics (close-cover air-support, tanks, and infantry) to devastating effect in what became known as Blitzkrieg (lightning war). Its campaigns in France (1940), the Soviet Union (1941), and North Africa (1941/42) are regarded by historians as acts of boldness.[13] At the same time, the far-flung advances strained the Wehrmacht's capacity to the breaking point, culminating in its first major defeat in the Battle of Moscow (1941); by late 1942, Germany was losing the initiative in all theatres. The German operational art proved no match to the war-making abilities of the Allied coalition, making the Wehrmacht's weaknesses in strategy, doctrine, and logistics readily apparent.[14]

Closely cooperating with the SS and the Einsatzgruppen, the German armed forces committed numerous war crimes (despite later denials and promotion of the myth of the clean Wehrmacht).[15] The majority of the war crimes took place in the Soviet Union, Poland, Yugoslavia, Greece and Italy, as part of the war of annihilation against the Soviet Union, the Holocaust and Nazi security warfare.

During World War II about 18 million men served in the Wehrmacht.[16] By the time the war ended in Europe in May 1945, German forces (consisting of the Heer, the Kriegsmarine, the Luftwaffe, the Waffen-SS, the Volkssturm, and foreign collaborateur units) had lost approximately 11,300,000 men,[17] about half of whom were missing or killed during the war. Only a few of the Wehrmacht's upper leadership went on trial for war crimes, despite evidence suggesting that more were involved in illegal actions.[18][19] According to Ian Kershaw, most of the three million Wehrmacht soldiers who invaded the USSR participated in committing war crimes.[20]

Origin

Etymology

The German term "Wehrmacht" stems from the compound word of German language: wehren, "to defend" and Macht, "power, force".[lower-alpha 3] It has been used to describe any nation's armed forces; for example, Britische Wehrmacht meaning "British Armed Forces". The Frankfurt Constitution of 1849 designated all German military forces as the "German Wehrmacht", consisting of the Seemacht (sea force) and the Landmacht (land force).[21] In 1919, the term Wehrmacht also appears in Article 47 of the Weimar Constitution, establishing that: "The Reich's President holds supreme command of all armed forces [i.e. the Wehrmacht] of the Reich". From 1919, Germany's national defense force was known as the Reichswehr, a name that was dropped in favor of Wehrmacht on 21 May 1935.[22]

Background

Bundesarchiv Bild 102-16108, Vereidigung von Reichswehr-Soldaten auf Hitler

Reichswehr soldiers swearing the Hitler oath in August 1934

In January 1919, after World War I ended with the signing of the armistice of 11 November 1918, the armed forces were dubbed Friedensheer (peace army).[23] In March 1919, the national assembly passed a law founding a 420,000-strong preliminary army, the Vorläufige Reichswehr. The terms of the Treaty of Versailles were announced in May, and in June, Germany signed the treaty that, among other terms, imposed severe constraints on the size of Germany's armed forces. The army was limited to one hundred thousand men with an additional fifteen thousand in the navy. The fleet was to consist of at most six battleships, six cruisers, and twelve destroyers. Submarines, tanks and heavy artillery were forbidden and the air-force was dissolved. A new post-war military, the Reichswehr, was established on 23 March 1921. General conscription was abolished under another mandate of the Versailles treaty.[24]

The Reichswehr was limited to 115,000 men, and thus the armed forces, under the leadership of Hans von Seeckt, retained only the most capable officers. The American historians Alan Millet and Williamson Murray wrote "In reducing the officers corps, Seeckt chose the new leadership from the best men of the general staff with ruthless disregard for other constituencies, such as war heroes and the nobility".[25] Seeckt's determination that the Reichswehr be an elite cadre force that would serve as the nucleus of an expanded military when the chance for restoring conscription came essentially led to the creation of a new army, based upon, but very different from, the army that existed in World War I.[25] In the 1920s, Seeckt and his officers developed new doctrines that emphasized speed, aggression, combined arms and initiative on the part of lower officers to take advantage of momentary opportunities.[25] Though Seeckt retired in 1926, the army that went to war in 1939 was largely his creation.[26]

Germany was forbidden to have an air force by the Versailles treaty; nonetheless, Seeckt created a clandestine cadre of air force officers in the early 1920s. These officers saw the role of an air force as winning air superiority, tactical and strategic bombing and providing ground support. That the Luftwaffe did not develop a strategic bombing force in the 1930s was not due to a lack of interest, but because of economic limitations.[27] The leadership of the Navy led by Grand Admiral Erich Raeder, a close protégé of Alfred von Tirpitz, was dedicated to the idea of reviving Tirpitz's High Seas Fleet. Officers who believed in submarine warfare led by Admiral Karl Dönitz were in a minority before 1939.[28]

By 1922, Germany had begun covertly circumventing the conditions of the Versailles treaty. A secret collaboration with the Soviet Union began after the Treaty of Rapallo.[29] Major-General Otto Hasse [de] traveled to Moscow in 1923 to further negotiate the terms. Germany helped the Soviet Union with industrialization and Soviet officers were to be trained in Germany. German tank and air-force specialists could exercise in the Soviet Union and German chemical weapons research and manufacture would be carried out there along with other projects.[30] In 1924 a fighter-pilot school was established at Lipetsk, where several hundred German air force personnel received instruction in operational maintenance, navigation, and aerial combat training over the next decade until the Germans finally left in September 1933.[31] However, the arms buildup was done in secrecy, until Hitler came to power and it received broad political support.[32]

Nazi rise to power

After the death of President Paul von Hindenburg on 2 August 1934, Adolf Hitler assumed the office of President of Germany, and thus became commander in chief. In February 1934, the Defence Minister Werner von Blomberg, acting on his own initiative, had all of the Jews serving in the Reichswehr given an automatic and immediate dishonorable discharge.[33] Again, on his own initiative Blomberg had the armed forces adopt Nazi symbols into their uniforms in May 1934.[34] In August of the same year, on Blomberg's initiative and that of the Ministeramt chief General Walther von Reichenau, the entire military took the Hitler oath, an oath of personal loyalty to Hitler. Hitler was most surprised at the offer; the popular view that Hitler imposed the oath on the military is false.[35] The oath read: "I swear by God this sacred oath that to the Leader of the German empire and people, Adolf Hitler, supreme commander of the armed forces, I shall render unconditional obedience and that as a brave soldier I shall at all times be prepared to give my life for this oath".[36]

By 1935, Germany was openly flouting the military restrictions set forth in the Versailles Treaty: German re-armament was announced on 16 March with the "Edict for the Buildup of the Wehrmacht" (German language: Gesetz für den Aufbau der Wehrmacht)[37] and the reintroduction of conscription.[38] While the size of the standing army was to remain at about the 100,000-man mark decreed by the treaty, a new group of conscripts equal to this size would receive training each year. The conscription law introduced the name "Wehrmacht"; the Reichswehr was officially renamed the Wehrmacht on 21 May 1935.[39] Hitler's proclamation of the Wehrmacht's existence included a total of no less than 36 divisions in its original projection, contravening the Treaty of Versailles in grandiose fashion. In December 1935, General Ludwig Beck added 48 tank battalions to the planned rearmament program.[40] Hitler originally set a time frame of 10 years for remilitarization, but soon shortened it to four years.[41] With the remilitarization of the Rhineland and the Anschluss, the German Reich's territory increased significantly, providing a larger population pool for conscription.[42]

Personnel and recruitment

Men standing in line waiting for a medical check

Inspection of German conscripts

Recruitment for the Wehrmacht was accomplished through voluntary enlistment and conscription, with 1.3 million being drafted and 2.4 million volunteering in the period 1935–1939.[43][5] The total number of soldiers who served in the Wehrmacht during its existence from 1935 to 1945 is believed to have approached 18.2 million.[16] The German military leadership originally aimed at a homogeneous military, possessing traditional Prussian military values. However, with Hitler's constant wishes to increase the Wehrmacht's size, the Army was forced to accept citizens of lower class and education, decreasing internal cohesion and appointing officers who lacked real-war experience from previous conflicts, especially World War I and the Spanish Civil War.[44]

The effectiveness of officer training and recruitment by the Wehrmacht has been identified as a major factor in its early victories as well as its ability to keep the war going as long as it did even as the war turned against Germany.[45][46]

File:Nazi World War II poster Danzig is German.jpg

Common themes in Nazi propaganda revolved around national humiliation after the Treaty of Versailles, seen as a diktat (dictation) by Germans. This poster expresses that the corridor of "Danzig is German"; ceded to Poland as maritime access, it simultaneously divided East Prussia from the rest of Germany.

As the Second World War intensified, Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe personnel were increasingly transferred to the army, and "voluntary" enlistments in the SS were stepped up as well. Following the Battle of Stalingrad in 1943, fitness and physical health standards for Wehrmacht recruits were drastically lowered, with the regime going so far as to create "special diet" battalions for men with severe stomach ailments. Rear-echelon personnel were more often sent to front-line duty wherever possible, especially during the final two years of the war where, inspired by constant propaganda, the oldest and youngest were being recruited and driven by instilled fear and fanaticism to serve on the fronts and, often, to fight to the death, whether judged to be cannon fodder or elite troops.[47]

An African in German uniform sitting on a chair, next to two other soldiers having a cigarette

An Afro-Arab soldier of the Free Arabian Legion

Prior to World War II, the Wehrmacht strove to remain a purely ethnic German force; as such, minorities within and outside of Germany, such as the Czechs in annexed Czechoslovakia, were exempted from military service after Hitler's takeover in 1938. Foreign volunteers were generally not accepted in the German armed forces prior to 1941.[47] With the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, the government's positions changed. German propagandists wanted to present the war not as a purely German concern, but as a multi-national crusade against the so-called Jewish Bolshevism.[48] Hence, the Wehrmacht and the SS began to seek out recruits from occupied and neutral countries across Europe: the Germanic populations of the Netherlands and Norway were recruited largely into the SS, while "non-Germanic" people were recruited into the Wehrmacht. The "voluntary" nature of such recruitment was often dubious, especially in the later years of the war, when even Poles living in the Polish Corridor were declared "ethnic Germans" and drafted.[47]

After Germany's defeat in the Battle of Stalingrad, the Wehrmacht also made substantial use of personnel from the Soviet Union, including the Caucasian Muslim Legion, Turkestan legion, Crimean Tatars, ethnic Ukrainians and Russians, Cossacks, and others who wished to fight against the Soviet regime or who were otherwise induced to join.[47] Between 15,000–20,000 anti-communist White émigrés who had left Russia after the Russian Revolution joined the ranks of the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS, with 1,500 acting as interpreters and more than 10,000 serving in the guard force of the Russian Protective Corps.[49][50]

1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
Heer 3,737,000 4,550,000 5,000,000 5,800,000 6,550,000 6,510,000 5,300,000
Luftwaffe 400,000 1,200,000 1,680,000 1,700,000 1,700,000 1,500,000 1,000,000
Kriegsmarine 50,000 250,000 404,000 580,000 780,000 810,000 700,000
Waffen–SS 35,000 50,000 150,000 230,000 450,000 600,000 830,000
Total 4,220,000 6,050,000 7,234,000 8,310,000 9,480,000 9,420,000 7,830,000
Source:[51]

Women in the Wehrmacht

Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-768-0147-15, Paris, Wehrmachtshelferinnen

Wehrmachthelferinnen in occupied Paris, 1940

In the beginning, women in Nazi Germany were not involved in the Wehrmacht, as Hitler ideologically opposed conscription for women,[52] stating that Germany would "not form any section of women grenade throwers or any corps of women elite snipers."[53] However, with many men going to the front, women were placed in auxiliary positions within the Wehrmacht, called Wehrmachtshelferinnen (lit. Female Wehrmacht Helper),[54] participating in tasks as:

  • telephone, telegraph and transmission operators,
  • administrative clerks, typists and messengers,
  • operators of listening equipment, in anti-aircraft defense, operating projectors for anti-aircraft defense, employees within meteorology services, and auxiliary civil defense personnel
  • volunteer nurses in military health service, as the German Red Cross or other voluntary organizations.

They were placed under the same authority as (Hiwis), auxiliary personnel of the army (German language: Behelfspersonal) and they were assigned to duties within the Reich, and to a lesser extent, in the occupied territories, for example in the general government of occupied Poland, in France, and later in Yugoslavia, in Greece and in Romania.[55]

By 1945, 500,000 women were serving as Wehrmachtshelferinnen, half of whom were volunteers, while the other half performed obligatory services connected to the war effort (German language: Kriegshilfsdienst).[54]

Command structure

Drawing of the structure of the Wehrmacht (1935–1938)

Structure of the Wehrmacht (1935–1938)

Drawing of the structure of the Wehrmacht (1939–1945)

Structure of the Wehrmacht (1939–1945)

Legally, the commander-in-chief of the Wehrmacht was Adolf Hitler in his capacity as Germany's head of state, a position he gained after the death of President Paul von Hindenburg in August 1934. With the creation of the Wehrmacht in 1935, Hitler elevated himself to Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces,[56] retaining the position until his suicide on 30 April 1945.[57] The title of Commander-in-Chief was given to the Minister of the Reichswehr Werner von Blomberg, who was simultaneously renamed the Reich Minister of War.[56] Following the Blomberg-Fritsch Affair, Blomberg resigned and Hitler abolished the Ministry of War.[58] As a replacement for the ministry, the Wehrmacht High Command Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW), under Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel, was put in its place.[59]

Placed under the OKW were the three branch High Commands: Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH), Oberkommando der Marine (OKM), and Oberkommando der Luftwaffe (OKL). The OKW was intended to serve as a joint command and coordinate all military activities, with Hitler at the top.[60] Though many senior officers, such as von Manstein, had advocated for a real tri-service Joint Command, or appointment of a single Joint Chief of Staff, Hitler refused. Even after the defeat at Stalingrad, Hitler refused, stating that Göring as Reichsmarschall and Hitler's deputy, would not submit to someone else or see himself as an equal to other service commanders.[61] However, a more likely reason was Hitler feared it would break his image of having the "Midas touch" concerning military strategy.[61]

With the creation of the OKW, Hitler solidified his control over the Wehrmacht. Showing restraint in the beginning of the war, Hitler also became increasingly involved in military operations at every scale.[62]

Additionally, there was a clear lack of cohesion between the three High Commands and the OKW, as senior generals were unaware of the needs, capabilities and limitations of the other branches.[63] With Hitler serving as Supreme Commander, branch commands were often forced to fight for influence with Hitler. However, influence with Hitler not only came from rank and merit, but also who Hitler perceived as loyal, leading to inter-service rivalry, rather than cohesion between his military advisers.[64]

Branches

Army

Soldiers walking towards the camera

"Foot-mobile" infantry of the Wehrmacht, 1942

The German Army furthered concepts pioneered during World War I, combining ground (Heer) and air force (Luftwaffe) assets into combined arms teams.[65] Coupled with traditional war fighting methods such as encirclements and the "battle of annihilation", the Wehrmacht managed many lightning quick victories in the first year of World War II, prompting foreign journalists to create a new word for what they witnessed: Blitzkrieg. Germany's immediate military success on the field at the start of the Second World War coincides the favorable beginning they achieved during the First World War, a fact which some attribute to their superior officer corps.[66]

The Heer entered the war with a minority of its formations motorized; infantry remained approximately 90% foot-borne throughout the war, and artillery was primarily horse-drawn. The motorized formations received much attention in the world press in the opening years of the war, and were cited as the reason for the success of the invasions of Poland (September 1939), Denmark and Norway (April 1940), Belgium, France, and Netherlands (May 1940), Yugoslavia and Greece (April 1941) and the early stage of Operation Barbarossa in the Soviet Union (June 1941).[67]

After Hitler declared war on the United States in December 1941, the Axis powers found themselves engaged in campaigns against several major industrial powers while Germany was still in transition to a war economy. German units were then overextended, undersupplied, outmaneuvered, outnumbered and defeated by its enemies in decisive battles during 1941, 1942, and 1943 at the Battle of Moscow, the Siege of Leningrad, Stalingrad, Tunis in North Africa, and the Battle of Kursk.[68][69]

Armored vehicle convoy moving through a dessert

A tank destroyer battalion, part of the 21 Panzer Division of the Afrika Korps

The German Army was managed through mission-based tactics (rather than order-based tactics) which was intended to give commanders greater freedom to act on events and exploit opportunities. In public opinion, the German Army was, and sometimes still is, seen as a high-tech army. However, such modern equipment, while featured much in propaganda, was often only available in relatively small numbers.[70] Only 40% to 60% of all units in the Eastern Front were motorized, baggage trains often relied on horse-drawn trailers due to poor roads and weather conditions in the Soviet Union, and for the same reasons many soldiers marched on foot or used bicycles as bicycle infantry. As the fortunes of war turned against them, the Germans were in constant retreat from 1943 and onward.[71]:142[72][73]

The Panzer divisions were vital to the German army's early success. In the strategies of the Blitzkrieg, the Wehrmacht combined the mobility of light tanks with airborne assault to quickly progress through weak enemy lines, enabling the German army to quickly and brutally take over Poland and France.[74] These tanks were used to break through enemy lines, isolating regiments from the main force so that the infantry behind the tanks could quickly kill or capture the enemy troops.[75]

Air Force

German paratrooper landing with others in the sky behind him

German paratroopers landing on Crete

Originally outlawed by the Treaty of Versailles, the Luftwaffe was officially established in 1935, under the leadership of Hermann Göring.[38] First gaining experience in the Spanish Civil War, it was a key element in the early Blitzkrieg campaigns (Poland, France 1940, USSR 1941). The Luftwaffe concentrated production on fighters and (small) tactical bombers, like the Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter and the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bomber.[76] The planes cooperated closely with the ground forces. Overwhelming numbers of fighters assured air-supremacy, and the bombers would attack command- and supply-lines, depots, and other support targets close to the front. The Luftwaffe would also be used to transport paratroopers, as first used during Operation Weserübung.[77][78] Due to the Army's sway with Hitler, the Luftwaffe was often subordinated to the Army, resulting in it being used as a tactical support role and losing its strategic capabilities.[64]

The Western Allies' strategic bombing campaign against German industrial targets, particularly the round the clock Combined Bomber Offensive and Defence of the Reich, deliberately forced the Luftwaffe into a war of attrition.[79] With German fighter force destroyed the Western Allies had air supremacy over the battlefield, denying support to German forces on the ground and using its own fighter-bombers to attack and disrupt. Following the losses in Operation Bodenplatte in 1945, the Luftwaffe was no longer an effective force.[80]

Navy

Several people looking at a submarine with its crew on the deck

Karl Dönitz inspecting the Saint-Nazaire submarine base in France, June 1941

The Treaty of Versailles disallowed submarines, while limiting the size of the Reichsmarine to six battleships, six cruisers, and twelve destroyers.[24] Following the creation of the Wehrmacht, the navy was renamed the Kriegsmarine.[81]

With the signing of the Anglo-German Naval Agreement, the Germany was allowed to increase its navy's size to be 35:100 tonnage of the Royal Navy, and allowed for the construction of U-boats.[82] This was partly done to appease Germany, and because Britain believed the Kriegsmarine would not be able to reach the 35% limit until 1942.[83] The navy was also prioritized last in the German rearmament scheme, making it the smallest of the branches.[84][85]

In the Battle of the Atlantic, the initially successful German U-boat fleet arm was eventually defeated due to Allied technological innovations like sonar, radar, and the breaking of the Enigma code.[86]

Large surface vessels were few in number due to construction limitations by international treaties prior to 1935. The "pocket battleships" Admiral Graf Spee and Admiral Scheer were important as commerce raiders only in the opening year of the war.[87] No aircraft carrier was operational, as German leadership lost interest in the Graf Zeppelin which had been launched in 1938.[88]

Following the loss of the German battleship Bismarck in 1941, with Allied air-superiority threatening the remaining battle-cruisers in French Atlantic harbors, the ships were ordered to make the Channel Dash back to German ports.[89][90][91] Operating from fjords along the coast of Norway, which had been occupied since 1940, convoys from North America to the Soviet port of Murmansk could be intercepted though the Tirpitz spent most of her career as fleet in being.[92] After the appointment of Karl Dönitz as Grand Admiral of the Kriegsmarine (in the aftermath of the Battle of the Barents Sea), Germany stopped constructing battleships and cruisers in favor of U-boats.[93] Though by 1941, the navy had already lost a number of its large surface ships, which could not be replenished during the war.[94]

The Kriegsmarine's most significant contribution to the German war effort was the deployment of its nearly 1,000 U-boats to strike at Allied convoys.[94] The German naval strategy was to attack the convoys in an attempt to prevent the United States from interfering in Europe and to starve out the British.[95] Karl Doenitz, the U-Boat Chief, began unrestricted submarine warfare which cost the Allies 22,898 men and 1,315 ships.[96] The U-boat war remained costly for the Allies until early spring of 1943 when the Allies began to use countermeasures against U-Boats such as the use of Hunter-Killer groups, airborne radar, torpedoes and mines like the FIDO.[97] The submarine war cost the Kriegsmarine 757 U-boats, with more than 30,000 U-boat crewmen killed.[98]

Coexistence with the Waffen-SS

Two soldiers in different uniforms sitting and looking over a map

An army Oberleutnant with a SS-Hauptsturmführer from the Waffen-SS in 1944

In the beginning, there was friction between the SS and the army, as the army feared the SS would attempt to become a legitimate part of the armed forces of the Third Reich, partly due to the fighting between the limited armaments, and the perceived fanaticism towards Nazism.[99] However, on 17 August 1938, Hitler codified the role of the SS and the army as to the end the feud between the two.[100] The arming of the SS was to be "procured from the Wehrmacht upon payment", however "in peacetime, no organizational connection with the Wehrmacht exists."[101] The army was however allowed to check the budget of the SS and inspect the combat readiness of the SS troops.[102] In the event of mobilization, the Waffen-SS field units could be placed under the operational control of the OKW or the OKH. All decisions regarding this, would be at Hitler's personal discretion.[102]

Though there existed conflict between the SS and Wehrmacht, many SS officers were former army officers, which insured continuity and understanding between the two.[103] Throughout the war, army and SS soldiers worked together in various combat situations, creating bonds between the two groups.[104] Guderian noted that every day the war continued the Army and the SS became closer together.[104] Towards the end of the war, army units would even be placed under the command of the SS, in Italy and the Netherlands.[104] The relationship between the Wehrmacht and the SS improved; however, the Waffen-SS was never considered "the fourth branch of the Wehrmacht.” [103]

Theatres and campaigns

The Wehrmacht directed combat operations during World War II (from 1 September 1939 – 8 May 1945) as the German Reich's armed forces umbrella command-organization. After 1941 the OKH became the de facto Eastern Theatre higher-echelon command-organization for the Wehrmacht, excluding Waffen-SS except for operational and tactical combat purposes. The OKW conducted operations in the Western Theatre. The operations by the Kriegsmarine in the North and Mid-Atlantic can also be considered as separate theatres, considering the size of the area of operations and their remoteness from other theatres.

The Wehrmacht fought on other fronts, sometimes three simultaneously; redeploying troops from the intensifying theatre in the East to the West after the Normandy landings caused tensions between the General Staffs of both the OKW and the OKH – as Germany lacked sufficient materiel and manpower for a two-front war of such magnitude.[105]

Eastern theatre

Several soldiers walking away from a burning house.

German troops in the Soviet Union, October 1941

Major campaigns and battles in Eastern and Central Europe included:

Western theatre

Soldiers walking down Champs-Élysées, with Arc de Triomphe in the back

German soldiers in occupied Paris

Mediterranean theatre

German tank in the foreground with a burning wreck in the back

German tanks during a counter-attack in North Africa, 1942

For a time, the Axis Mediterranean Theatre and the North African Campaign were conducted as a joint campaign with the Italian Army, and may be considered a separate theatre.

Casualties

Illustration of combat casualties during WWII

80% of the Wehrmacht's military deaths were in the Eastern Front.[106]

Commemoration stone with names of fallen soldiers

A German war cemetery in Estonia

More than 6,000,000 soldiers were wounded during the conflict, while more than 11,000,000 became prisoners. In all, approximately 5,318,000 soldiers from Germany and other nationalities fighting for the German armed forces—including the Waffen-SS, Volkssturm and foreign collaborationist units—are estimated to have been killed in action, died of wounds, died in custody or gone missing in World War II. Included in this number are 215,000 Soviet citizens conscripted by Germany.[107]

According to Frank Biess,

German casualties took a sudden jump with the defeat of the Sixth Army at Stalingrad in January 1943, when 180,310 soldiers were killed in one month. Among the 5.3 million Wehrmacht casualties during the Second World War, more than 80 per cent died during the last two years of the war. Approximately three-quarters of these losses occurred on the Eastern front (2.7 million) and during the final stages of the war between January and May 1945 (1.2 million).[108]

Jeffrey Herf wrote that:

Whereas German deaths between 1941 and 1943 on the western front had not exceeded three per cent of the total from all fronts, in 1944 the figure jumped to about 14 per cent. Yet even in the months following D-day, about 68.5 per cent of all German battlefield deaths occurred on the eastern front, as a Soviet blitzkrieg in response devastated the retreating Wehrmacht.[109]

In addition to the losses, at the hands of the elements and enemy fighting, at least 20,000 soldiers were executed as sentences by the military court.[110] In comparison, the Red Army executed 135,000,[lower-alpha 4][111][112] France 102, the US 146 and the UK 40.[110]

War crimes

Nazi propaganda had told Wehrmacht soldiers to wipe out what were variously called Jewish Bolshevik subhumans, the Mongol hordes, the Asiatic flood and the red beast.[113] While the principal perpetrators of the civil suppression behind the front lines amongst German armed forces were the Nazi German "political" armies (the SS-Totenkopfverbände, the Waffen-SS, and the Einsatzgruppen, which were responsible for mass killings, primarily by implementation of the so-called Final Solution of the Jewish Question in occupied territories), the traditional armed forces represented by the Wehrmacht committed and ordered war crimes of their own (e.g. the Commissar Order), particularly during the invasion of Poland in 1939[114] and later in the war against the Soviet Union.

Cooperation with the SS

Prior to the outbreak of war, Hitler informed senior Wehrmacht officers that actions "which would not be in the taste of German generals", would take place in occupied areas and ordered them that they "should not interfere in such matters but restrict themselves to their military duties".[115] Some Wehrmacht officers initially showed a strong dislike for the SS and objected to the army committing war crimes with the SS, though these objections were not against the idea of the atrocities themselves.[116] Later during the war, relations between the SS and Wehrmacht improved significantly.[117] The common soldier had no qualms with the SS, and often assisted them in rounding up civilians for executions.[118][119]

The Army's Chief of Staff General Franz Halder in a directive declared that in the event of guerrilla attacks, German troops were to impose "collective measures of force" by massacring entire villages.[120] Cooperation between the SS Einsatzgruppen and the Wehrmacht involved supplying the killing squads with weapons, ammunition, equipment, transport, and even housing.[117] Partisan fighters, Jews, and Communists became synonymous enemies of the Nazi regime and were hunted down and exterminated by the Einsatzgruppen and Wehrmacht alike, something revealed in numerous field journal entries from German soldiers.[121] Hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of Soviet civilians died from starvation as the Germans requisitioned food for their armies and fodder for their draft horses.[122] According to Thomas Kühne: "an estimated 300,000–500,000 people were killed during the Wehrmacht's Nazi security warfare in the Soviet Union."[123]

While secretly listening to conversations of captured German generals, British officials became aware that the German Army had taken part in the atrocities and mass killing of Jews and were guilty of war crimes.[124] American officials learned of the Wehrmacht's atrocities in much the same way. Taped conversations of soldiers detained as POWs revealed how some of them voluntarily participated in mass executions.[125]

Crimes against civilians

Dead civilians shot in reprisal by German paratroopers

Civilians executed by German paratroopers in Kondomari

Soldiers escorting civilians with bound hands

German troops marching civilians to execution

During the war, the Wehrmacht committed numerous war crimes against the civilian population in occupied countries. This includes massacres of civilians and running forced brothels in occupied areas.

Massacres would in many cases come as reprisals for acts of resistance. With these reprisals, the Wehrmacht's response would vary in severity and method, depending on the scale of resistance and whether it was in East or West Europe.[126] Often, the number of hostages to be shot was calculated based on a ratio of 100 hostages executed for every German soldier killed and 50 hostages executed for every German soldier wounded.[127] Other times civilians would be rounded up and shot with machine guns.[128]

To combat German officials' fear of venereal disease and onanism,[129] the Wehrmacht established numerous brothels throughout Nazi Germany and its occupied territories.[130] Women would often be kidnapped off the streets and forced to work in the brothels,[131] with an estimated minimum of 34,140 women being forced to serve as prostitutes.[132]

Crimes against POWs

Soldiers putting blindfolded people up against a wall

Sixteen blindfolded Partisan youth awaiting execution by German forces in Serbia, 20 August 1941

While the Wehrmacht's prisoner-of-war camps for inmates from the west generally satisfied the humanitarian requirement prescribed by international law,[133] prisoners from Poland and the USSR were incarcerated under significantly worse conditions. Between the launching of Operation Barbarossa in the summer of 1941 and the following spring, 2.8 million of the 3.2 million Soviet prisoners taken died while in German hands.[134]

Criminal and genocidal organization

The Nuremberg Trials of the major war criminals at the end of World War II found that the Wehrmacht was not an inherently criminal organization, but that it had committed crimes in the course of the war.[135] Among German historians, the view that the Wehrmacht had participated in wartime atrocities, particularly on the Eastern Front, grew in the late 1970s and the 1980s.[136] In the 1990s, public conception in Germany was influenced by controversial reactions and debates about the exhibition of war crime issues.[137]

More recently, the judgement of Nuremberg has come under question. The Israeli historian Omer Bartov, a leading expert on the Wehrmacht[138] wrote in 2003 that the Wehrmacht was a willing instrument of genocide, and that it is untrue that the Wehrmacht was an apolitical, professional fighting force that had only a few "bad apples".[139] Bartov argues that far from being the "untarnished shield", as successive German apologists stated after the war, the Wehrmacht was a criminal organization.[140] Likewise, the historian Richard J. Evans, a leading expert on modern German history, wrote that the Wehrmacht was a genocidal organization.[113] The historian Ben H. Shepherd writes that "There is now clear agreement amongst historians that the German Wehrmacht ... identified strongly with National Socialism and embroiled itself in the criminality of the Third Reich."[141] British historian Ian Kershaw concludes that the Wehrmacht's duty was to ensure that the people who met Hitler's requirements of being part of the Aryan Herrenvolk ("Aryan master race") had living space. He wrote that:

The Nazi revolution was broader than just the Holocaust. Its second goal was to eliminate Slavs from central and eastern Europe and to create a Lebensraum for Aryans. ... As Bartov (The Eastern Front; Hitler's Army) shows, it barbarised the German armies on the eastern front. Most of their three million men, from generals to ordinary soldiers, helped exterminate captured Slav soldiers and civilians. This was sometimes cold and deliberate murder of individuals (as with Jews), sometimes generalised brutality and neglect. ... German soldiers' letters and memoirs reveal their terrible reasoning: Slavs were 'the Asiatic-Bolshevik' horde, an inferior but threatening race.[20]

Several high-ranking Wehrmacht officers, including Hermann Hoth, Georg von Küchler, Georg-Hans Reinhardt, Karl von Roques, Walter Warlimont and others, were convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity at the High Command Trial given sentences ranging from time served to life.[142]

Resistance to the Nazi regime

Several people looking inside a destroyed room

Martin Bormann, Hermann Göring, and Bruno Loerzer surveying the damage made by the 20 July plot

Originally, there was little resistance within the Wehrmacht, as Hitler actively went against the Treaty of Versailles and recovering the army's honor.[143] The first major resistance began in 1938 with the Oster conspiracy, where several members of the military wanted to remove Hitler from power, as they feared a war with Czechoslovakia would ruin Germany.[144] However, following the success of the early campaigns in Poland, Scandinavia and France, belief in Hitler was restored.[143] With the defeat in Stalingrad, trust in Hitler's leadership began to wane.[145] This caused an increase in resistance within the military. The resistance culminated in the 20 July plot (1944), when a group of officers led by Claus von Stauffenberg attempted to assassinate Hitler. The attempt failed, resulting in the execution of 4,980 people[146] and the standard military salute being replaced with the Hitler salute.[147]

Some members of the Wehrmacht did save Jews and non-Jews from the concentration camps and/or mass murder. Anton Schmid – a sergeant in the army – helped between 250 and 300 Jewish men, women, and children escape from the Vilna Ghetto in Lithuania.[148][149][150] He was court-martialed and executed as a consequence. Albert Battel, a reserve officer stationed near the Przemysl ghetto, blocked an SS detachment from entering it. He then evacuated up to 100 Jews and their families to the barracks of the local military command, and placed them under his protection.[151] Wilm Hosenfeld—an army captain in Warsaw—helped, hid, or rescued several Poles, including Jews, in occupied Poland. He helped the Polish-Jewish composer Władysław Szpilman, who was hiding among the city's ruins, by supplying him with food and water.[152]

According to Wolfram Wette, only three Wehrmacht soldiers are known for being executed for rescuing Jews: Anton Schmid, Friedrich Rath and Friedrich Winking.[153]

After World War II

Kapitulationserklaerung der Deutschen Wehrmacht, 8 Mai 1945

German Instrument of Surrender, 8 May 1945 – Berlin-Karlshorst

Following the unconditional surrender of the Wehrmacht, which went into effect on 8 May 1945, some Wehrmacht units remained active, either independently (e.g. in Norway), or under Allied command as police forces.[154] The last Wehrmacht unit to come under Allied control was an isolated weather station in Svalbard, which formally surrendered to a Norwegian relief ship on 4 September.[155]

On 20 September 1945, with Proclamation No. 2 of the Allied Control Council (ACC), "[a]ll German land, naval and air forces, the S.S., S.A., S.D. and Gestapo, with all their organizations, staffs and institution, including the General Staff, the Officers' corps, the Reserve Corps, military schools, war veterans' organizations, and all other military and quasi-military organizations, together with all clubs and associations which serve to keep alive the military tradition in Germany, shall be completely and finally abolished in accordance with the methods and procedures to be laid down by the Allied Representatives."[156] The Wehrmacht was officially dissolved by the ACC Law 34 on 20 August 1946,[157] which proclaimed the OKW, OKH, the Ministry of Aviation and the OKM to be "disbanded, completely liquidated and declared illegal".[158]

Military operational legacy

Immediately following the end of the war, many were quick to dismiss the Wehrmacht due to its failures and claim allied superiority.[159] However, historians have since reevaluated the Wehrmacht in terms of fighting power and tactics, giving it a more favorable assessment, with some calling it one of the best in the world, [160] partly due to its ability to regularly inflict higher losses than it received, while it fought outnumbered and outgunned.[161]

Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld, who attempted to examine the military force of the Wehrmacht in a purely military context, concluded: "The German army was a superb fighting organization. In point of morale, elan, troop cohesion and resilience, it was probably had no equal among twentieth century armies."[162] German historian Rolf-Dieter Müller comes to the following conclusion:" In the purely military sense [...] you can indeed say that the impression of a superior fighting force rightly exists. The proverbial efficiency was even greater than previously thought, because the superiority of the opponent was much higher than at that time German officers suspected. The analysis of Russian archive files finally gives us a clear picture in this regard."[163] Strategic thinker and professor Colin S. Gray believed that the Wehrmacht possessed outstanding tactical and operational capabilities. However, following a number of successful campaigns, German policy began to have victory disease, asking the Wehrmacht to do the impossible. The continued use of the Blitzkrieg also led to Soviets learning the tactic and using it against the Wehrmacht.[164]

Historical revisionism

Soon after the war ended, former Wehrmacht officers, veterans' groups and various far-right authors began to state that the Wehrmacht was an apolitical organization which was largely innocent of Nazi Germany's war crimes and crimes against humanity.[165] Attempting to benefit from the clean Wehrmacht myth, veterans of the Waffen-SS declared that the organisation had virtually been a branch of the Wehrmacht and therefore had fought as "honourably" as it. Its veterans organisation, HIAG, attempted to cultivate a myth of their soldiers having been "Soldiers like any other".[166]

Post war militaries

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-34150-0001, Bonn, Theodor Blank, Bundeswehrfreiwillige

Former Wehrmacht generals Adolf Heusinger and Hans Speidel being sworn into the newly founded Bundeswehr on 12 November 1955

Following the division of Germany, many former Wehrmacht and SS officers in West Germany feared a Soviet invasion of the country. To combat this, several prominent officers created a secret army, unknown to the general public and without mandate from the Allied Control Authority or the West German government.[167][168]

By the mid-1950s, tensions of the Cold War led to the creation of separate military forces in the Federal Republic of Germany and the socialist German Democratic Republic. The West German military, officially created on 5 May 1955, took the name Bundeswehr (lit. Federal Defence). Its East German counterpart—created on 1 March 1956—took the name National People's Army (German language: Nationale Volksarmee). Both organizations employed many former Wehrmacht members, particularly in their formative years,[169] though neither organization considered themselves successors to the Wehrmacht.[170][171][172] However, according to historian Hannes Heer "Germans still have a hard time, when it comes to openly dealing with their Nazi past", as such of the 50 military bases named after Wehrmacht soldiers, only 16 bases have changed names.[173]

Wehrmacht veterans in West Germany have received pensions through the War Victims' Assistance Act (German language: Bundesversorgungsgesetz) from the government.[174][175] According to The Times of Israel, "The benefits come through the Federal Pension Act, which was passed in 1950 to support war victims, whether civilians or veterans of the Wehrmacht or Waffen-SS."[176]

See also

Notes

  1. The official dissolution of the Wehrmacht began with the German Instrument of Surrender of 8 May 1945. Reasserted in Proclamation No. 2 of the Allied Control Council on 20 September 1945, the dissolution was officially declared by ACC Law No. 34 of 20 August 1946.[2][3]
  2. Total GDP: 75 billion (1939) & 118 billion (1944)[7]
  3. See the Wiktionary article for more information.
  4. 135,000 executed; 422,700 sent to penal units at the front and 436,600 imprisoned after sentencing.[111]

References

Citations

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  2. Allied Control Authority 1946a, p. 81.
  3. Allied Control Authority 1946b, p. 63.
  4. Armbrüster 2005, p. 64.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Müller 2016, p. 12.
  6. Overmans 2004, p. 215.
  7. Harrison 2000, p. 10.
  8. Tooze 2006, p. 181.
  9. Evans 2008, p. 333.
  10. Department of State 2016.
  11. Taylor 1995, pp. 90–119.
  12. Kitchen 1994, pp. 39–65.
  13. Van Creveld 1982, p. 3.
  14. Müller 2016, pp. 58–59.
  15. Hartmann 2013, pp. 85–108.
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