The 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich
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The Das Reich Division was the most infamous unit of the Waffen-SS. Originally a paramilitary formation raised to protect the members of the Nazi Party, it was founded in 1934 as the SS-Verfügungstruppe. During the invasion of Poland, the unit fought as a mobile infantry regiment. After the Battle of France, the SS-VT was officially renamed the Waffen-SS, and in 1941, the Verfügungs-Division was renamed Reich, later Das Reich.
By the time Das Reich took part in the battle of Moscow, it had lost sixty percent of its combat strength. It was pulled off the front in mid-1942 and sent to refit as a panzer-grenadier division. Returning to the Eastern Front, Das Reich took part in the fighting around Kharkov and Kursk. Late in the year, it was designated a panzer division.
In 1944, the unit was stationed in southern France when the Allies landed in Normandy. The following days saw the division commit atrocities, hanging one hundred local men in the town of Tulles in reprisal for German losses, and massacring 642 French civilians in Oradour-sur-Glane, allegedly in retaliation for partisan activity in the area. Later in the Normandy fighting, Das Reich was encircled in the Roncey pocket by US 2nd Armored Division, losing most of their armored equipment. Das Reich surrendered in May 1945.
“Another fascinating piece of military history from the opposite point of view . . . this doesn’t purport to be an illustrated history of the Reich, but it damn well is!” —Books Monthly
Yves Buffetaut
Yves Buffetaut is an internationally respected French military historian and editor of Histoire & Collections major magazine, Militaria. He lives in France.
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The 2nd SS Panzer Division Das Reich - Yves Buffetaut
Men of the Verfügungstruppe during maneuvers before the war. They are wearing steel helmets from World War I. (Lemo)
The Creation of the Division and its Baptism by Fire
In the early days, the Schützstaffel, or SS, was simply a security service that protected the officials of the Nazi Party—NSDAP—against attacks by their opponents, notably the communists of the KPD. From little more than a group of Bavarian bouncers in the 1920s, the Munich-based SS would, over the following years, become a veritable army within an army, their role continuing to grow until Nazi Germany’s final collapse in 1945. Arguably the most emblematic unit of the SS was the Das Reich Division.
Providing protection for Hitler and the other officials of the Nazi Party initially only required a handful of men, but as the NSDAP became increasingly established in German political life and expanded well beyond the borders of Bavaria, more and more men were needed. They were given paramilitary training and uniforms; soon they were paid directly by the party, after it had representatives, or deputies,
in the Reichstag. It was no longer a mere security service, but a veritable private militia, housed in barrack-like lodgings.
For a while, the SS groups were renamed Politische Bereitschaften
(roughly, political readiness units
), which demonstrates the political character of their paramilitary role. It is notable that in the early years, the other branch of the SS, the Allgemeine SS—or General SS—did not have that same paramilitary element. It was the Politische Bereitschaften that would ultimately be transformed into the Waffen-SS, though lines between the two branches during World War II would sometimes become blurred.
In Profile:
Heinrich Himmler
Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler. The title, meaning Head of the SS
was purely political and did not imply any operational command role. It was created in 1926 and only five men held it, of whom Himmler (1929–45) was the most famous. (Rights reserved)
A true mystery in history, Himmler became the second most powerful man in the Third Reich, despite a personage that by no means resembled the Aryan ideal he was so fanatic to pursue. General Guderian, for one, could not figure him out, calling him the most impenetrable of all Hitler’s disciples,
though he said he also went out of his way to be polite.
As head of the SS, Himmler constructed a vast empire of murder, persecution, surveillance, and foreign intelligence, beginning with the decapitation of his rival organization, the SA, in the Night of the Long Knives
in 1934. The only one of his creations that wasn’t cloaked in secrecy was the Waffen-SS, which earned renown for battlefield courage throughout the war.
In 1961 Albert Speer—Hitler’s architect and economic czar—became the West’s favorite Nazi with his memoir, Inside the Third Reich.
Less well known is Speer’s final book, Infiltration,
subtitled How Heinrich Himmler Schemed to Build an SS Industrial Empire,
in which we learn of even greater ambitions on the part of the Reichsführer SS. Himmler committed suicide after the Third Reich’s fall, so we can still only speculate how a man so apparently nondescript became such a power, and a menace.
Hitler Comes to Power
On January 30th, 1933, the previous chaotic state of German politics came to a head. In 1932, the desperate economic situation in Germany—due in part to heavy reparations the country was forced to pay by the Treaty of Versailles in the aftermath of World War I—combined with a nationwide sense of frustration and discontent, provided the perfect catalyst for Adolf Hitler’s rise to power. His movement swept across Germany, using his charismatic personality and oratory skills to gain political support. In the election held in July of that year, the NSDAP won 230 seats in the Reichstag.
The breaking point for the German parliament came early the following year. In January 1933, the German President Paul von Hindenburg, intimidated by Hitler’s growing popularity and the thuggish nature of his cadre of supporters, the SA (or Brownshirts), initially refused to make him Chancellor, despite it being the obvious move and the will of the people. Even though the NSDAP had lost some ground compared to previous elections, it nevertheless remained the primary party in Germany in terms of number of deputies. The President eventually gave in after a series of complex negotiations involving ex-Chancellor Franz von Papen, a group of wealthy businessmen and the right-wing German National People’s Party (DNVP), and on January 30th, 1933, Hitler was named Chancellor. His rise to power was not, as many believe, a military coup, but actually a combination of democratic process and public pressure—a disturbing thought.
An SS detachment passes through the Brandenburg Gate, saluted by a crowd of Berliners shortly after Hitler’s ascension to the position of Chancellor in 1933. (Lemo)
Even before the Nazi Party came to power, the SS had become a separate body within the organization of the NSDAP, functioning (albeit unofficially) as a kind of police force for the party and its associates.
A guard of the SS Deutschland Regiment in front of Munich’s Ehrentempel—a mausoleum erected in 1935 in memory of 16 Nazi Party activists who were killed during an attempted coup on November 8th/9th, 1923. (Rights reserved)
What followed, however, was less democratic, though it exceeds the scope of this study. Insofar as the SS is concerned, however, Hitler continued to establish his authority: the Allgemeine SS began to permeate all aspects of daily life in Germany, while the ranks of political paramilitary detachments, the Politische Bereitschaften, continued to grow and infiltrate the larger German towns in order to prevent any counter-revolutionary attempts (the NSDAP was at this time seen as a revolutionary party). This rapid development necessitated a reorganization of the SS.
On December 14th, 1934, under the supervision of Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, the former Politische Bereitschaften—including Hitler’s personal bodyguard, the Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler—was reorganized into units of a purely military nature, the Verfügungstruppe (Combat Support Force, or literally dispositional troops,
i.e. at Hitler’s personal disposal).
The structure of the Verfügungstruppe (VT) was replicated from that of the army, with each regiment made up of a number of battalions. Special names were given to its organizations in order to differentiate them from the army proper. The sub-units were not, therefore, regiments per se, but standarten, even though, subsequently and for simplification, the term regiment
reappeared later.