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Encyclopedia > Walter von Reichenau
Field-Marshal Walther von Reichenau
Field-Marshal Walther von Reichenau

Walther von Reichenau (August 16, 1884 - January 17, 1942), German military commander, was the son of a Prussian general and joined the German Army in 1902. During World War I he served on the Western Front. He won the Iron Cross and by 1918 was a captain.


Reichenau stayed in the army under the Weimar Republic as a General Staff officer. From 1931 he was Chief of Staff to the Inspector of Signals at the Reichswehr Ministry, and later served with General Werner von Blomberg in East Prussia. His uncle, an ardent Nazi, introduced him to Adolf Hitler in 1932 and Reichenau became a convert, joining the Nazi Party soon after.


When Hitler came to power in January 1933, Blomberg became Minister of War and Reichenau was appointed head of the Ministerial Office, acting as liaison officer between the Army and the Nazi Party. He played a leading role in persuading Nazi leaders such as Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler that the power of Ernst Röhm and the SA must be broken if the Army was to support the Nazi regime. This lead directly to the "Night of the Long Knives" of July 1934.


In 1935 Reichenau was promoted to Lieutenant-General and was appointed commander in Munich. By 1938, when Blomberg was forced out of the Army command, Reichanau was Hitler's first choice to succeed him, but older leaders such as Gerd von Rundstedt and Franz Halder refused to serve under him, and Hitler backed down.


In September 1939, Reichenau commanded the 10th Army during the invasion of Poland. In 1940 he led the 6th Army during the invasion of Belgium and France, and in July Hitler promoted him to Field-Marshal.


During the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Reichenau again commanded the 6th Army, which captured Kiev and Kharkov. Unlike many German Army commanders, Reichenau was an active anti-Semite and supported the work of the SS Einsatzgruppen in exterminating the Jews in the occupied Soviet territories. He encouraged his soldiers to commit atrocities against the Jews, telling them: "We have to exact a harsh but just retribution on the Jewish subhumans."


For this reason Reichenau was one of Hitler's favourite generals. In November 1941 he sacked Walther von Brauchitsch as Commander-in-Chief and again tried to appoint Reichenau to the post. But again the senior Army leaders rejected Reichenau as being "too political" and Hitler appointed Halder instead.


In January 1942 he suffered a severe heart attack, and it was decided to fly him to a hospital in Germany. He was killed when the plane carrying him to Leipzig crashed on landing.


External link

  • The "Reichenau Order" (http://www.ns-archiv.de/krieg/untermenschen/reichenau.shtml) from October 12, 1941.


 
German Field Marshals (Generalfeldmarschall) of World War II

Werner von Blomberg | Hermann Göring | Walther von Brauchitsch | Albert Kesselring | Wilhelm Keitel | Günther von Kluge | Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb | Fedor von Bock | Wilhelm List | Erwin von Witzleben | Walther von Reichenau | Erhard Milch | Hugo Sperrle | Gerd von Rundstedt | Erwin Rommel | Georg von Küchler | Erich von Manstein | Friedrich Paulus | Ewald von Kleist | Maximilian von Weichs | Ernst Busch | Wolfram von Richthofen | Walther Model | Ferdinand Schörner | Robert Ritter von Greim

Honorary: Eduard von Böhm-Ermolli

 
German Grand Admirals (Großadmiral) of World War II

Erich Raeder | Karl Dönitz


  Results from FactBites:
 
Walther von Reichenau - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (637 words)
Walther von Reichenau (August 16, 1884 - January 17, 1942), German military commander, was the son of a Prussian general and joined the German Army in 1902.
In September 1939, von Reichenau commanded the 10th Army during the invasion of Poland.
A few historians such as Walter Görlitz have sought to defend von Reichenau, summarizing his October 1941 "Reichenau Order" as "demanding that the troops keep their distance from the Russian civilian population." Actually, the order included such cruel directives as killing any Russian civilian found travelling without a permit and away from his home village.
Erwin von Witzleben - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (987 words)
Job-Wilhelm Georg "Erwin" von Witzleben (born 4 December 1881 in Breslau; died 8 August 1944 in Berlin, executed) was a German army officer (by 1940 a generalfeldmarschall) and in the Second World War an Army commander and a resistance fighter in the July 20 Plot.
In the Wehrmacht, von Witzleben was promoted to major-general on 1 February 1934 and moved to Potsdam as the new commander of the Third Infantry Division.
von Witzleben, however, was arrested on 20 July 1944 – the day of von Stauffenberg's attempt on Hitler's life at the Wolf's Lair in East Prussia – upon arriving at OKH-HQ (Oberkommando des Heeres Headquarters) in Berlin to assume command of the coup forces.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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