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Hitler’s Police Battalions

Enforcing Racial War in the East

Edward B. Westermann

Foreword by Dennis Showalter

May 2005
256 pages, 19 photographs, 6-1⁄8 x 9-1⁄4
Modern War Studies
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1371-7, $34.95 (t)

book cover imageWhen the German Wehrmacht swarmed across Eastern Europe, an
elite corps followed close at its heels. Along with the SS and Gestapo, the Ordnungspolizei, or Uniformed Police, played a central role in Nazi genocide that until now has been generally neglected by historians of the war.

Beginning with the invasion of Poland, the Uniformed Police were charged with following the army to curb resistance, pacify the countryside, patrol Jewish ghettos, and generally maintain order in the conquered territories. Edward Westermann examines how this force emerged as a primary instrument of annihilation, responsible for the murder of hundreds of thousands of the Third Reich’s political and racial enemies. In Hitler’s Police Battalions he reveals how the institutional mindset of these “ordinary policemen” allowed them to commit atrocities without a second thought.

Westermann reveals initiatives pursued before the war by Heinrich Himmler and Kurt Daluege to create a culture within the existing police forces that fostered anti-Semitism and anti-Communism as institutional norms. Challenging prevailing interpretations of German culture, he draws on extensive archival research—including the testimony of former policemen—to illuminate this transformation.

Purged of dissidents, indoctrinated to idolize Hitler, and trained in military combat, these police battalions repeatedly conducted actions against Jews, Slavs, gypsies, asocials, and other groups on their own initiative, even when they had the choice not to. In addition to documenting these atrocities, Westermann examines cooperation between the Ordnungspolizei and the SS and Gestapo, and the close relationship between police and Wehrmacht in the conduct of the anti-partisan campaign.

Throughout, Westermann stresses the importance of ideological indoctrination within specific groups. It was the organizational culture of the Uniformed Police, he maintains, and not German culture in general that led these men to commit genocide. Hitler’s Police Battalions provides the most complete and comprehensive study to date of this neglected branch of Himmler’s SS and Police empire and adds a new dimension to our understanding of the Holocaust and the war on the Eastern front.

“The is the first truly comprehensive analysis of how the German police came to be transformed into an essentially militarized murder machine in the service of National Socialist ideology. An outstanding work of scrupulous research, profound insight, and balanced judgment.”—Gerhard L. Weinberg, author of A World at Arms

“An important study that helps us understand the institutional dynamics of Nazi mass murder and how ideology is transformed into action.”—Christopher R. Browning, author of Ordinary Men and The Origins of the Final Solution

“A superbly written work that takes us inside the Nazi mind.”—Donald M. McKale, author of Hitler’s Shadow War

“Destined to become a classic in the field of Holocaust Studies.”—Alexander B. Rossino, author of Hitler Strikes Poland

EDWARD B. WESTERMANN is professor of comparative military theory at the School of Advanced Air and Space Studies in Montgomery, Alabama, and the author of Flak: German Anti-Aircraft Defenses, 1914–1945.