7 Jan. 46
DR. STAHMER: But you were appointed, as you said, to
fight the partisans and you must have had combat units for the purpose?
VON DEM BACH-ZELEWSKI: No, I had no such units.
DR. STAHMER: Then how did you conduct your fight against the partisans?
VON DEM BACH-ZELEWSKI: In each case, I went to the respective
commander, discussed the operation with him and asked for the necessary
troops, unless they were put at my disposal, as it often happened, by
the OKW or the OKH directly.
DR. STAHMER: You asked for troops, unless they were put at your
disposal. But then these troops assigned to you were under your command,
were they not?
VON DEM BACH-ZELEWSKI: No, only if I personally commanded the
operation. Otherwise, as I said, either the competent general of the
Wehrmacht or, in the area of the civil government, the higher SS and
police Leader commanded the operation. It was expressly noted in the
directive containing my appointment as Chief of the Anti-Partisan Combat
Units, that I could request authority to command an operation only if
the authority of two higher SS and police leaders or of two Wehrmacht
commanders overlapped, thus calling for a higher authority to handle the
conflicting responsibilities.
DR. STAHMER: Did you never personally command an operation?
VON DEM BACH-ZELEWSKI: Yes, I conducted one operation in 1943.
DR. STAHMER: In what way?
VON DEM BACH-ZELEWSKI: This undertaking took place in the fall of 1943,
in the region of Idrizza Polotsk. I first flew to the Army Group Center
and talked the matter over with the then chief, General Krebs. Then I
went on to Army Group North and discussed the same matter with Field
Marshal Küchler. Küchler. organized all the troops of the SS
and Police and also the Wehrmacht formations in the rear areas into a
so-called corps under the command of Jaeckel. The Army Group Center did
the same with its own forces, and also formed a corps under the command
of the Higher SS and Police Leader in the area. I myself, with my staff,
was in command of both, and Colonel Von Mellenthin of the OKH was
assigned to me as liaison officer. Then I conducted the enterprise
personally. In the meantime the front had been broken through in foggy
weather, and I made the independent decision of turning against the Red
Army forces which had broken through; thus my units became the front
line.
DR. STAHMER: You said a little while ago that you had been decorated
with the Knight's Cross. Did you receive this decoration for this
undertaking alone?