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Waffen-SS

Page 54

by Adrian Gilbert


  Seyffardt, Hendrick, 137, 194

  Seyffardt Regiment, 271

  Sicherheitsdienst (SD), 332

  Siebken, Bernhard, 411

  Siegel, Hans, 386

  Siegrune symbol, 13

  Sierk, Otto, 212

  Simon, Max, 80, 310

  Army Group North’s campaign and, 142, 148

  on Eastern Front during winter 1941–1942, 186, 188

  Eicke and, 63–64

  Kharkov counterstroke and, 216

  Operation Nordwind and, 370

  on Slavs, 132–133

  Totenkopf Division and, 222

  Skorzeny, Otto, 233, 363, 377–378

  Slavs, Nazi view of as inferior, 43, 132–133

  Slovakia, 243, 294, 296–297

  Sonderkommando Dirlewanger, 106

  Sørensen, Per, 187

  Soviet Union

  antipartisan warfare in, 288

  German prisoners of war and, 408

  See also Eastern Front; individual republics; Red Army; Stalin, Josef

  Spanish Division, on Eastern Front 1942–1943, 191

  Speer, Albert, 238, 373, 399

  Springer, Heinz, 163

  SS (Schustzstaffel), 1. See also Waffen-SS

  SS-Verfugüngs (SS-V), 57–59

  disarmament of Dutch Army and, 100

  invasion of France and, 82–84, 86, 90, 95, 97–98

  invasion of Netherlands and, 66, 68, 71–72, 75–77

  plans for invasion of Britain and, 101

  redeployment to the West, 59

  units transferred to Wiking Division, 104

  SS Verfügungstruppe (SS-VT), 16, 37

  Austrian recruits and, 41

  expansion of, 21

  function of relative to army, 39–40

  Hausser and, 27

  invasion of Poland and, 43–44

  regiments, 27

  Steiner and, 27–29

  See also Das Reich

  Stack, Hans-Gerhard, 25–26

  Stadler, Sylvester, 215, 385, 386–387, 389, 404

  Stahl, Erich (Erich Kern), 157

  Stalin, Josef, 127, 132, 139, 248, 250, 283, 409

  Stalingrad

  Operation Uranus, 208–209

  Sixth Army trapped in, 203

  Staudegger, Franz, 226–227

  Steiger, Martin, 215

  Stein, George, 400

  Steiner, Felix, 22, 24

  awards, 98

  on Berger, 61

  biographical sketch of, 27–29

  defense of Berlin and, 393, 400

  “Deutschland” and, 28–29, 45

  Die Freiwilligen der Waffen-SS, 138–139, 415

  at Eastern Front 1942–1943, 196, 197

  in Estonia, 272

  Germanic army corps and, 237–238

  HIAG and, 413

  invasion of Netherlands and, 75–77

  invasion of Ukraine and, 154–155, 158–159

  Kampfgruppe Steiner, 49, 50

  retreat from northern Eastern Front and, 267–268, 269–270

  Volksdeutsche and Germanic recruits to SS and, 110

  Wiking Division and, 104, 199, 200, 202–203

  Stemmermann, Wilhelm, 258

  Stennes, Walther, 12

  Sternicki, Mme., 82

  Stern (magazine), 414

  Strasser, Gregor, 19

  Streng, Ernst, 254–255

  Stroop, Jürgen, 294

  Student, Kurt, 68, 72, 75

  Sturmabteilung (SA), 10, 12–13, 18–20

  swastika, 13

  Sydnor, Charles, 39, 95–96

  Tiger tanks, 207, 225–227, 255–256, 316, 326–327, 349

  Tiso, Jozef, 296

  Tito. See Broz, Josip “Tito”

  Titschkus, Alfred, 284–285

  Toll, Otto, 325

  Tollenaere, Reimond, 136

  Totenkopf and crossbones, 13–14

  Totenkopf Division, 63–65, 66

  advance on Leningrad and, 141

  Army Group North’s campaign and, 141—150

  defense against Red Army in Hungary, 382

  defense of Warsaw and, 284–285

  on Eastern Front during winter 1941–1942, 185–189

  end of war and, 404

  in German-occupied France, 100

  improvements in soldierly bearing, 91

  invasion of France and, 79–82, 83, 84–85, 86–88, 92, 93, 95–96, 97, 98

  Kharkov counterstroke and, 214–215, 216

  leadership, 222

  military assessment of, 179, 421

  occupation of Vichy France and, 208

  Operation Barbarossa and, 130

  as part of Panzer Corps, 207

  retreat from Ukraine and, 253

  SS-VT and, 33

  training of, 103

  transfer to France 1942, 205

  Totenkopf Reiterstandarte, 105

  Totenkopf Standarte, 104

  Totenkopfstandarte IV “Ostmark,” 42

  Totenkopfstandarten, 39, 55, 61, 105, 287

  Totenkopfverbände (SS-TV), 16, 37–39

  training of SS troops, 21–22, 24–27

  Hitlerjugend Division, 221, 316–317

  Langemarck Brigade, 240

  Leibstandarte, 31, 32

  Panzer Corps, 208

  Totenkopf, 63, 64–65, 103

  Totenkopverbände, 37–38

  Treuenfeld, Karl von, 262, 265–266

  Tripartite Pact, 116

  Tsolakoglou, Georgios, 122

  Tuff, Olav, 134–135

  Tulle Massacre, 412

  Tychsen, Christian, 95, 342, 343

  Ukraine

  Army Group South’s invasion of, 153–164

  defense of, 253–266

  Hitler’s focus on, 171–172

  “Hunger Plan” and, 132

  Kharkov battle, 209–219

  massacres of Jews in, 134, 288

  Operation Bagration and, 277–282

  SS recruits from, 248–250

  support for Germans in, 248

  Wiking Division memorial in, 418–419

  Ukrainian Division, 277–280, 297, 422

  Ukrainian prisoners of war, 409

  Ullrich, Karl, 80, 96, 149, 186, 227–228, 389

  Umbrich, Fred, 243, 245, 300

  Vahl, Herbert-Ernst, 214, 222

  Versailles Treaty, 10, 32, 35, 40, 42

  Verton, Hendrik, 180–181

  Vichy France, German occupation of, 208

  Vogt, Fritz, 98

  Volker, Werner, 224

  Volkner, Werner, 27, 282, 285

  Volksdeutsche

  Allied invasion of France and, 332

  complaints about caliber of recruits, 244–245

  Hungarian, 378, 380

  Romanian, 113, 242–243, 245

  Yugoslavian, 118, 242–243

  as source of recruits for Waffen-SS, 107–113, 118, 238, 241–248, 261, 378, 380

  Volksdeutsche prisoners of war, 409–410

  Volksdorf, Werner, 405

  Volksgrenadier divisions, Germany’s final offensive in Belgium and, 363, 365

  VoMi, 112–113

  Voss, Johann, 273–274, 275, 371

  Vyazma encirclement, 174

  Wacker, Friedrich-Karl, 29

  Wäckerle, Hilmar, 16, 68–70, 73, 111, 134, 154

  Waffen-SS, 1, 22–23

  as Allied prisoners, 408–410

  army criticism of during invasion of Poland, 55, 56

  atrocities committed by, 3–4

  auxiliary and reserve units, 131

  casualty rates, 405

  clothing shortage and, 180

  comradeship and, 29, 399

  conflict with army over role of armed, 60

  continued resolve to keep fighting at war’s close, 398–399

  convergence with German army, 420–421

  corps system, 207–208

  creation of last round of divisions, 391–392

  cult status of, 4 />
  designation as, 62

  development into divisional size, 35–37

  divisional and unit histories, 416–417

  effect of Operation Barbarossa on strength of, 205–206

  equipment for, 206–207

  expansion of via induction of German youth, 178

  fall of Berlin Wall and collapse of communism and veterans of, 417–418

  Freikorps movement and, 11–12, 14

  general vs. armed, 37

  HIAG, 413–417

  Himmler appointed as head of, 9

  Hitler’s loss of confidence in, 400–401

  insignia, 13–14

  invasion of Poland and, 43–44

  Knight’s Crosses awarded to men of, 99

  military assessment of, 421–422

  modern assessment of, 420–422

  motto, 12

  multinational, 237–252 (see also national legions)

  numerical strengths on eve of Operation Barbarossa, 130–131

  Nuremberg trials and, 411–413

  origins of, 9, 14–15

  recruitment for (see recruitment for Waffen-SS)

  reorganization of following invasion of Poland, 57–59

  retreat from France, 352–353

  security in subject territories and, 287

  selection criteria, 23–24, 62–63, 109–110

  SS-VT and, 33

  surrender of, 397, 403–405

  training of troops (see training of SS troops)

  Ukrainian recruits and, 248–250

  uniforms of, 13

  veterans’ characterization of, 2–3

  view of veterans in Eastern Europe, 417–420

  war memoirs, 415–416

  Waffen-SS im Einsatz (Hausser), 415

  Wagner, Jürgen, 111

  Waldmüller, Hans, 340, 353

  Wallin, Erik, 398, 402

  Wallonia, 240, 421

  Wallonien Brigade, 241, 254

  Wallonien Division, 361

  Walloon Brigade, 258–260, 270, 271

  Walloon Legion, 199, 240–241

  Walther, Herbert, 29, 322, 327

  War Grave Memorial Foundation, 419

  war memoirs by Waffen-SS members, 416

  Warsaw

  fall of, 54

  Red Army offensive against, 282–285

  Warsaw Uprising, 282–283, 288, 294

  weather

  advance on Leningrad and, 149–150

  drive toward Moscow and, 175

  Germany’s final offensive in Belgium and, 364–365

  invasion of Ukraine and, 160–163

  Kharkov counterstroke and, 214–215, 217

  Red Army advance into Yugoslavia and, 385–386

  war on Eastern Front 1941–1942 and, 180–181

  war on Eastern Front 1942–1943 and, 203–204

  Wehrmacht, 35

  atrocities and, 2

  attitude toward SS, 36, 37

  counterinsurgency and, 288–289

  See also German army

  Weidinger, Otto, 99, 331–332, 333, 404–405

  Weiss, Alfred, 268

  Wenck, Walther, 393, 397

  Wendt, Werner, 218

  Westernhagen, Heinz von, 218

  Westland Regiment, 109, 111, 154, 156, 159

  Wiking Division, 104, 238

  antipartisan warfare and, 288

  in Chechen region, 199–203, 201–202

  defense against Red Army advance into Hungary, 382, 389

  defense of Kovel, 280–282

  defense of Ukraine against Red Army, 253, 254, 258–259, 260

  on Eastern Front during 1941–1942, 182, 189

  on Eastern Front during 1942–1943, 191, 195–199

  end of war and, 404

  foreign volunteers in, 110

  “Germania” Regiment and, 33

  high regard for, 179

  invasion of Ukraine and, 153, 154, 155–156, 158–159, 160–161

  leadership of, 110–111

  massacre of Jews in Galicia and, 134–135

  memorial in Ukraine, 418–419

  military assessment of, 421

  Operation Barbarossa and, 130, 131

  withdrawal from Caucasus region, 203–204

  Wiking-Ruf (magazine), 415

  Wilmot, Chester, 336

  Wilson, Henry, 119, 120

  Wisch, Theodor, 222, 351

  Witt, Franz, 120

  Witt, Fritz, 54, 76–77, 98, 160, 221

  Allied invasion of France and, 315, 316–318, 323, 327–328

  invasion of Greece and, 119–120

  Wittmann, Michael, 226, 255–256, 326–327, 349

  Witt Regiment, 213

  Wolff, Karl, 147

  Woltersdorf, Hans Werner, 244–245, 385, 387

  Wormhoudt killings, 89–90, 412

  Wünsche, Max, 89, 213, 221, 317, 324, 337, 340, 349, 351

  Yalta Conference, 409

  Yugoslavia

  antipartisan warfare in, 299–308, 311–312

  expansion of Waffen-SS and Volksdeutsche from, 241–243

  German defense from Soviet advance in, 379–380

  German invasion of, 116–118

  treatment of collaborators after the war in, 408–409

  Zahnfeld, Peter, 46, 101

  Zehender, August, 185

  Zeitzler, Kurt, 203

  Zistler, Friedrich, 325

 

 

 


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