Read Hitler's Foreign Executioners Online
Authors: Christopher Hale
On 30 June, Bandera's henchman Yaroslav Stetsko arrived in L'viv. The son of a Greek Catholic priest, Stetsko (b. 1912) was a hyperactive and ruthless young man. He had risen to the top of the OUN thanks to his fanatical dedication; he became a member of the Homeland Executive when he was 20 and was asked to join the Provid, or Leadership, seven years later. When Melnyk and Bandera split, Stetsko sided with Bandera. He had taken a lead role setting up Bandera's network of cells and special action groups in Soviet-occupied Ukraine.
At the end of the day on 30 June, Stetsko summoned the local OUN action group and informed them that he would shortly proclaim âthe restoration [sic] of the Ukrainian state'. He ordered OUN men who had seized the radio station to stand by. At 8 p.m. that evening, Stetsko called hundreds of Ukrainians to a public meeting at the Prosvita Society building in the old city. Wearing an army trench coat, Stetsko arrived late, accompanied by Abwehr officer Professor Koch and another officer. When Stetsko rose to speak, his spectacles glittering in the candlelight that provided the only illumination, he astonished his audience by proclaiming, as a representative of OUN-B, the birth of a âsovereign and united' Ukrainian state. Stetsko then dashed to the radio station where he read out the proclamation again. His broadcast was picked up by the OUN in Kraków and soon afterwards in Berlin. Bandera and Stetsko caught Rosenberg and Abwehr chief
Canaris, who had recruited the Ukrainian battalions, on the back foot. Preoccupied with the Wehrmacht's exhilarating eastward rush, they had missed the nationalist plot that had been hatched up under their noses.
On 3 July, Stetsko sent a letter to Hitler, it began by congratulating âHis Excellency the Führer and Reichschancellor', prematurely as it would turn out, for defeating âMuscovite Bolshevism'. Stetsko informed Hitler that the Ukrainian people had a vital role to play as Germany extended âthe construction of a New Europe to its eastern part'. The âsovereign state' of Ukraine would take its place as a âfully fledged, free member of the European family of nations'.
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Stetsko's letter did not reach the Reich Chancellery until two weeks later â by then Bandera's free Ukraine was no more.
Stetsko's rash declaration was a bolt from the blue. The Wehrmacht was then fighting its way towards Kiev and, for a week, there was little the German authorities could do to damp down the chaos in L'viv. In Kraków, however, the General Government under Secretary Ernst Kundt and other high officials of the General Government reacted swiftly. They summoned Bandera and other OUN-B leaders to a conference. Kundt informed Bandera in the most direct terms that Germany was a conquering nation not a liberating power. The Reich was not an ally of the Ukrainians because there was no such national entity as Ukraine. Only Hitler and the Wehrmacht high command had the natural right, as conquerors, to form a new government. When Hitler described Ukraine as a âGarden of Eden', it meant that he viewed it as a tabula rasa, to be cultivated by German settlers. âIn twenty years,' he prophesied,âthe Ukraine will already be a home for twenty million inhabitants beside the natives. In three hundred years, our country will be one of the loveliest gardens in the world. As for the natives, we'll have to screen them carefully.'
It is of course not difficult to understand why the Ukrainians believed they would get away with proclaiming an independent Ukraine. Canaris had appeared to endorse their demands for a free Ukraine. Rosenberg's fickle ideas about a âfree Ukraine' had only been mooted in secret documents. But in the Nazi âChaos State', in which foreign policy was a many-headed monster, it is not difficult to understand that Bandera believed he could seize the initiative. At that humiliating meeting in Kraków, Kundt brutally disabused him. âOnly Adolf Hitler,' he bellowed,âcan determine what will happen [in the Ukraine].'
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On 5 July, the Germans arrested Bandera and other members of the Ukrainian National Committee. Although the OUN-B refused to withdraw the proclamation of independence, Ukraine had gone the way of the Carpatho-Ukraine.
As Stetsko read out his proclamation on the evening of 30 June, Germans and Ukrainians had begun killing Jews in the streets of L'viv and other cities in western Ukraine. This was not a coincidence. The proclamation and pogroms had the same
ideological source. On 9 July, German security police dragged Stetsko off to Berlin, but then released him under house arrest. He spent his time composing a six-page apologia, or
zhyttiepys
, that he had translated into German. It would be hard to exaggerate its historical significance. It reveals OUN strategy and thinking in 1941 â without benefit of post-war rationalisation. Stetsko assumed that the Germans would grant to Ukraine the same âindependent' status as Slovakia or Croatia. In other words, client regimes committed to radical domestic policies and aggressive handling of the âJewish problem'. Stetsko did not regard the proclamation as hostile to Germany. He emphasises that Hans Koch and some German army officers had attended his meeting â and one of them had read out a âgreeting'.
In short, while Stetsko insisted on sovereignty, he worked hard to reassure the Germans that any Ukrainian state would provide military and economic support to the Reich. His
zhyttiepys
conveys an even more sinister promise: âI fully appreciate,' he wrote,âthe undeniably harmful and hostile role of the Jews, who are helping Moscow to enslave Ukraine.' He went on: âI therefore support the destruction of the Jews and the expedience of bringing German methods of exterminating Jewry to Ukraine, barring their assimilation and the like.' In Berlin, the German translator removed the words âdestruction' and âextermination' and retained only the reference to âGerman methods'.
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OUN apologists point out that at its April 1941 conference in Kraków, Andrii Melnyk denounced pogroms (while insisting that the OUN âcombats the Jews as the prop of the Muscovite-Bolshevik regime'). They stress that Stetsko wrote his
zhyttiepys
under house arrest: everything he said and wrote was read by German officials. But many other OUN briefing papers express identical sentiments. The OUN-B âGuidelines', for example, published in May 1941, state that liquidation of Polish, Muscovite and Jewish activists âis permitted'. Jews are characterised as the prop of the Soviet regime and the NKVD âboth individually and as a national group'. âWe will adopt any methods', declared another OUN leader that lead to the âdestruction' of the Jews. One OUN policy document states that since Jews welcomed the Russians with flowers, the Ukrainians must greet the Germans âwith Jewish heads'.
As soon as Hitler learned of events in L'viv, he acted promptly. Following Bandera's humiliation in Kraków, the German military authorities withdrew the âNachtigall' and âRoland' battalions from the front. Some recruits would end up in an SS Schuma battalion â No 201. Hitler had Bandera and Stetsko, the architects of the July declaration of independence, arrested and deported to the Sachsenhausen camp near Berlin, where
they waited out the rest of the war. A furious Hitler reminded anyone who would listen that in 1918 the perfidious Ukrainians had murdered German General Hermann von Eichhorn in Kiev. OUN treachery reinforced Hitler's conviction that all eastern peoples had to be treated with extreme caution. He ordered that only Germans be permitted to âbear arms' â an edict that SS Chief Himmler would openly disobey.
Following a conference convened at his Rastenburg military headquarters on 16 July, Hitler exacted âterritorial' revenge on the OUN upstarts by attaching East Galicia to the General Government. Hitler assigned the Ukrainian rump, Volhynia and âRight Bank Ukraine' to the Reich Commissariat Ukraine ruled by Commissar Erich Koch â who once remarked that âIf I find a Ukrainian who is worthy of sitting at the same table with me, I must have him shot'. German strategy would gut the Ukrainian lands of their mineral and agricultural riches; its peoples would be reduced to slavery. German administrators would be imported to form a new ruling elite as mayors, farm leaders, school directors and above all militia chiefs.
Although Hitler called the east âour India', he would deprive Slavs of their schools and universities, even books, so that they would not become semi-educated nuisances. He had no time for Rosenberg's proposal that suitable Ukrainians form an anti-Bolshevik national administration or that they be encouraged to take up arms against Stalin. âEven when it might seem expedient to summon foreign peoples to arms, one day it would prove our absolute and irretrievable undoing.'
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According to one of Rosenberg's officials, Otto Bräutigam, Hitler explained to Rosenberg:
If I allow those people to take part in the abolition of Bolshevism with their own blood, they will one day want me to pay for it and I won't be free in the political setup of the European East territories anymore. If they want to help the Germans, they should go and work in the German factories so that German soldiers are free to fight at the front.
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More than a million Ukrainians lost their lives under German rule between 1941, when Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, and 1944, when the Soviet army evicted the German occupiers.
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The victims included Ukrainian Jews and Roma prisoners of war, and many tens of thousands deported to Germany for brutal and merciless âlabour service'. Karel Berkhoff writes that the Reichskommissariat Ukraine resembled, on a massively enlarged scale, a German concentration camp like Dachau. Terror, public beatings and executions, abuse, humiliation: these were the basic instruments of German rule. And yet many Ukrainians when they held positions of power zealously implemented Nazi policy â and rejoiced when their Germans conquerors deported and murdered Jews.
Explicit order by the Reichsführer-SS: All Jews must be shot. Drive the female Jews into the swamps.
Order to SS cavalry brigade, 31 July 1941
As Reinhard Heydrich's Special Task Forces swept into Lithuania and Ukraine, unleashing âa Holocaust by bullets', Heinrich Himmler prepared his own SS onslaught. This shadow war began in early August 1941, in the vast Pripet Marshes (sometimes referred to as the Pinsk Marshes) that straddled northern Ukraine and southern Belorussia â a no-man's-land that lay slap-bang across the middle of the fast-moving German front line and defied conventional military attack. This shadow war would be fought by specialised military divisions, the SS brigades, and their objectives and tactics would shape SS strategy for the duration of the war. Many non-German recruits served in the three SS brigades, including ethnic Germans and Danes. But these little-known SS brigades possess an even greater significance. Himmler's secret war decisively influenced the part all non-German militias would play in this âCrusade against Bolshevism'. They would become the vanguard troops for a new kind of combat that Himmler called âbandit warfare'.
The Pripet campaign was assigned to SS-Gruppenführer Hermann Fegelein, Himmler's golden boy, and the SS cavalry brigade âFlorian Geyer'. Himmler instructed his favourite: âhold fast to the great ideas of the Führer' with âuncompromising severity, drastic action'. The Pripet action heralded a decisive escalation of the war against the âJewish-Bolshevik' enemies of the Reich. Himmler ordered Fegelein to treat all male Jews âas plunderers' (meaning they could be summarily executed) and to drown their womenfolk in the marshes. For the first time,
Himmler's orders referred to all Jews, not only men. Himmler disguised this
schwere Aufgabe
(grave task) as an anti-partisan special action â and until the very end of the war, the SS âbandit war' against partisans would be covert genocide.
Hitler had proposed using this deception at the summit meeting that took place on 16 July. âThis partisan warfare,' he told the Nazi leaders gathered at the âWolf's Lair' in Rastenburg, âgives us an advantage by enabling us to destroy everything in our path. In this vast area, peace must be imposed as quickly as possible, and to achieve this, it is necessary to execute anyone who doesn't give us a straight look.'
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Hitler did not refer explicitly to Jews, although in anti-Semitic literature they are often slandered as âshifty'. In any case, the German military doctrine of Bandenbekämpfung (bandit warfare) offered the Germans both a code of conduct and a cover story. The mythic figure of the deceitful bandit (âwho doesn't give us a straight look') was entwined with the equally mendacious Jew, who was in turn the representative of Bolshevism. In military reports, any use of the nobler term âpartisan' was forbidden. Himmler took up the idea with enthusiasm. After another meeting with Hitler, this time in Berlin, he made a note: âJewish question / exterminate as partisans.
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This lethal equation that conflated the figure of the Jew with the âBolshevik bandit' dominated German strategic thinking. On the Eastern Front, army general Max Schenckendorff invited his colleague SS-Obergruppenführer Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski and Einsatzgruppe commander Arthur Nebe to design a course of lectures to âexchange experience' between the army and the SS; their core maxim was âWhere the partisan is, the Jew is, and where the Jew is, the partisan is'.
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