7 Jan. 46
Colonel Von Bonin. Since anti-partisan
warfare also was under the sole command of the respective army group
commander in operational areas for instance, in Army Group
Center under Field Marshal Kluge and later Busch and since
police troops for the most part could not be spared from the Reich
Commissariats, the direction of this warfare lay practically always
entirely in the hands of the Army. In the same way orders were issued
not by Himmler but by the OKH. SS and Police troops transferred to
operational areas from the Reichskommissariate to support the army
groups were likewise under the latter's command. Such transfers were
frequent and therefore resulted in harm to anti-partisan warfare in
the Reichskommissariate. According to a specific agreement between
Himmler and the OKW and OKH, the direction of individual operations
lay in the hands of the troop leader who commanded the largest troop
contingent. It was therefore possible that an Army general could have
SS and Police under him; and, on the other hand, that army troops
could be placed under a general of the SS and Police. Anti-partisan
warfare in operational areas could never be ordered by Himmler. I
could merely request the OKH to order it, until 1944, mostly through
the intervention of Generalquartiermeister Wagner or through State
Secretary Ganzenmüller The OKH then issued corresponding orders
to the army groups concerned for compliance.
"The severity and cruelty with which the intrinsically
diabolical partisan warfare was conducted by the Russians had already
resulted in Draconian laws being issued by Hitler for its conduct.
These orders, which were passed on to the troops through the OKW and
OKH, were equally applicable to army troops as well as to those of the
SS and Police. There was absolutely no difference in the manner in
which these two components carried on this warfare. Army soldiers were
exactly as embittered against the enemy as were those of the SS and
Police.
"As a result of this embitterment orders were ruthlessly carried
out by both components, a thing which was also quite in keeping with
Hitler's desires or intentions. As proof of this, the order of the OKW
and OKH can be adduced which directed that all captured partisans, for
instance, such as Jews, agents, and political commissars, should
without delay be handed over by the troops to the SD for special
treatment. This order also contained the provision that in
anti-partisan warfare no prisoners except the above-named be taken.
That