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The SS-Verfügungstruppe
(SS-VT) (English: SS Dispositional Troops) was formed in 1934 as
combat troops for the NSDAP. By 1940 these military SS units had become
the nucleus of the Waffen-SS.
On August 17, 1938 Adolf Hitler decreed that the SS-VT was
neither a part of the police nor the German Wehrmacht but
military-trained men at the disposal of the Führer in war or peace.
Formation
LSSAH troops undergo a drill inspection in
Berlin, November 1938.
The SS-VT was formed on September 24, 1934 from a merger of
various Nazi and paramilitary formations such as the SS Special
Detachments (SS-Sonderkommandos) and the Headquarters
Guard (SS-Stabswache) units. The recruits were
trained to be combat-ready infantry according to the German Army
(Wehrmacht Heer)
regulations [1]. The
unit was officially designated SS-Verfügungstruppe
("Dispositional troops," i.e. troops at the personal disposal of
the Führer). The existence of the SS-Verfügungstruppe (known as
SS-VT) was publicly declared on 16 March 1935.
The SS-VT trained alongside Hitler’s personal body guard the
Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler (LAH), which after 13 April
1934, was known as the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
(LSSAH).[2] The
LSSAH continued to serve exclusively as a personal protection unit
and honor guard during this timeframe.
By 1937 the SS was divided into three branches: the Allgemeine-SS (General SS), the
SS-Verfügungstruppe, and the SS-Totenkopfverbände (SS-TV)
which administered the concentration camps. [3]
The military formations under Himmler's command on 1 September
1939 consisted of several subgroups:
- Hitler's bodyguard unit the Leibstandarte SS Adolf
Hitler under Obergruppenführer [4] Josef "Sepp"
Dietrich.
- The Inspectorate of Verfügungstruppe under
Brigadeführer Paul Hausser, which commanded the
Deutschland, Germania and Der Führer
regiments.
- The Inspectorate of Concentration Camps under
Gruppenführer Theodor Eicke, which fielded four
militarized Death's-Head
Standarten comprising camp guards of the SS-Totenkopfverbände. These
would be formed into a division [5] after
the conquest of Poland, and folded into the Waffen-SS in August
1940. These troops wore the SS-TV skull and crossbones rather than
the SS-VT "SS" runes.
- There were in addition combat-trained non-SS units of
Obergruppenführer Kurt Daluege's Ordnungspolizei which reported to
Himmler in his capacity as Chief of German Police. For the 1940
campaigns these also would be formed into a division, which would be placed
under Waffen-SS control in January 1941 and merged into it in
February 1942.
Early
operations
Elements of the SS-VT served with the Wehrmacht during the
occupation of the Sudetenland, Austria, and Czechoslovakia. The
SS-VT regiments Deutschland and Germania along
with the Leibstandarte participated in the invasion of
Poland, with Der Fuhrer (recruited in Austria after
the Anschluss) in
reserve at Prague. [6] In
September 1939, a combined unit of SS-VT and Heer
troops conducted operations as Panzer Division Kempf
during the invasion of
Poland. It fought alongside regular Wehrmacht units at Rozan, Modlin, Lomza and Kmiczyn. The division was disbanded near the
Polish city of Nidzica on 7
October 1939.
Events during the invasion of Poland raised doubts over the
combat effectiveness of the SS-VT. Their willingness to fight was
never in any doubt; at times they were almost too eager to fight.
The OKW
(Wehrmacht High Command) reported that the SS-VT had
unnecessarily exposed themselves to risks and acted recklessly,
incurring heavier losses than Army troops. They also stated that
the SS-VT was poorly trained and its officers unsuitable for
command. In its defence the SS-VT insisted that it had been
hampered by its fighting piecemeal instead of as one formation, and
being improperly equipped to carry out what had been required of
it. Heinrich Himmler insisted that that the SS-VT should be allowed
to fight in its own formations, under its own commanders, while the
OKW tried to have the SS-VT disbanded altogether. Hitler, unwilling
to upset either the Army or Himmler, chose a different path. He
ordered that the SS-VT form its own Divisions but the Divisions
would be under Army command.[7]
Development of the
Waffen-SS
In the wake of the Polish Invasion, there were four SS combat
regiments: Leibstandarte, Deutschland,
Germania and Der Führer. The latter three were
reorganized into the SS-Verfügungs-Division,[8] and the
Leibstandarte was expanded into a motorized brigade. In
addition there were the armed but ill-trained
Totenkopfstandarten; three of these together with SS Heimwehr
Danzig were organized into the Totenkopf-Division under Eicke's
command. A further division, the Polizei-Division, was
created from the Ordnungspolizei. These formations
took part in Operation Fall Gelb against the
Low Countries and France in 1940.
The SS-VT troops first saw action in the main drive for the
Dutch central front around Rotterdam.[9] After
the city had been captured, the Division, along with other
divisions, intercepted a French force and forced them back to the area of
Zeeland and Antwerp. They were next used to
mop-up small pockets of resistance in the areas already captured by
the German advance.
The SS-VT was renamed the "Waffen-SS" in a speech made by Adolf Hitler in July
1940; on 1 August Himmler established the Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS
(Waffen-SS Command Office) within the new SS-Führungshauptamt (FHA) under
Obergruppenführer Hans Jüttner. The Totenkopf
Division and other SS-TV combat units were transferred to FHA
control.
In December 1940 the Germania Regiment would be removed
from the Verfügungs-Division and used to form the cadre of a new
division, SS-Division Germania,[10]
comprising mostly "Nordic" volunteers from the newly-conquered
territories, Danes, Norwegians, Dutch and Flemings; it was soon
renamed Wiking. At the start of 1941 the
Verfügungs-Division would be redubbed "Reich" (in
1942 "Das Reich"), and the Polizei division
brought under Waffen-SS administration. [11] The
Leibstandarte would be expanded to a division for Operation
Barbarossa.
When the Waffen-SS divisions were assigned numbers much later in
the war these first formations, Leibstandarte, Das Reich,
Totenkopf, Polizei and Wiking would be recognized as
SS divisions 1 through 5.
See also
References
- ^ Waffen-SS at Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^
Cook, Stan and Bender, R. James. Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler
- Volume One, R. James Bender Publishing, 1994, p 19
- ^
Organisationsbuch der NSDAP, 3rd Ed. (1937) p. 424
- ^
Equivalent to a full General. The independence of the LSSAH can be
partly explained by Dietrich's rank, as well as his personal
friendship with Hitler
- ^
Actually only the 1st (Oberbayern), 2nd
(Brandenburg) and 3rd (Thüringen)
TK-Standarten were formed into the Totenkopf
division. The 4th (Ostmark) was assigned to occupation
duties until it was incorporated into the 2nd SS Infantry Regiment
in preparation for Barbarossa. http://sturmvogel.orbat.com/ss-tk.html
- ^
http://www.germanamericanvoice.com/Stories/SS-STANDARTE%20DER%20FUEHRER.htm
- ^
Flaherty, T.H (2004). The Third
Reich: The SS. Time-Life Books, Inc. (re-print). ISBN 1 84447 073
3.
p 149
- ^
Flaherty, T.H (2004). The Third
Reich: The SS. Time-Life Books, Inc. (re-print). ISBN 1 84447 073
3.
- ^
Windrow, Martin & Burn, Cristopher
(1992). The Waffen-SS, Edition 2. Osprey Publishing. ISBN
0850454255.
- ^
Ripley, Tim . The Waffen-SS at War: Hitler's Praetorians 1925-1945
(2004) p. 52 .
- ^
The Polizei division only formally become part of the SS
in February 1942; until then its members continued to wear
Ordnungspolizei insignia and it did not include "SS" in
its name.
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