1
Dec. 45
policy.
I co-operated with the Wehrmacht, as well as
with the Italian and Hungarian Governments with
the knowledge of the Austrian Government and the
competent authorities. There were matters of
politics which were not my domain.
DR.
SAUTER: But I believe, Witness, your memory
deceives you, because immediately after Hitler's
attack on Austria, you called on the General
Staff in Berlin and there you tried to get a
commission in the German Wehrmacht, and you now
deny this. You also filled in and signed a
questionnaire, in which you declared your
complete allegiance to the Greater German Reich
and to Adolf Hitler; and shortly afterwards you
took the oath of allegiance to Adolf Hitler
LAHOUSEN: Yes, of course, I did it
just as everybody else who was in the position
of being transferred from one office and
capacity to another.
DR. SAUTER:
Before, you said you did not apply for this
appointment, and I have information to the
contrary: That you, in the company of two or
three other officers were the first to go to
Berlin with the sole purpose of asking the Chief
of the German General Staff Beck to take you
into the German Army.
LAHOUSEN: I am
very glad that you mention this subject, because
it allows me to make my position perfectly
clear. It was not necessary for me to make an
application for my future position in the German
Wehrmacht. I was known because of my military
activities, just as any military attaché
is known in the country where he is accredited.
Moreover, I can easily explain why my
rise in office was so rapid. I have said that my
activities and my co-operation with the Austrian
Military Intelligence Service, which were not
determined by me but by my superior Austrian
office, were at that time directed against the
neighboring country of Czechoslovakia.
Czechoslovakia was the country that was next on
the list after Austria. Therefore, it was
natural that my later chief, Canaris, who knew
me from my former position, was very interested
in having me promoted in his department. He put
in a word for me, and so did Colonel General
Beck, whom I was visiting. Other people also
know this; and I have now told everything that
General Beck told me at that time.
DR.
SAUTER: Then it is true, you did go to Berlin
and apply to be transferred into the German
Wehrmacht, which you at first denied?
LAHOUSEN:
No, that is not true, I did not apply. Others
made the request. I can even say that I did not
go there: I flew there. Canaris, who knew me not
only in my military capacity but also in