Waffen-SS Kriegsberichters Hamsun and Sveinsson Björnsson

SS-Unterscharführer Arild Hamsun
Björn Sveinsson Björnsson as SS-Hauptscharführer
According to various sources, the left photograph shows the Norwegian SS-Unterscharführer Arild Hamsun, son of the famous writer and Nobel Prize winner in Literature Knut Hamsun. Public domain. The right photograph shows the then SS-Hauptscharführer Björn Sveinsson Björnsson, son of the wartime Icelandic President. Fair use. They both served with SS-Standarte Kurt Eggers and were attached to SS-Regiment Nordland of the SS-Division Wiking as war correspondents. Arild Hamsun, whos famous father meant that the Germans were fighting for all Europeans, received the Iron Cross Second Class in October 1943. After the war he was sentenced to a short prison sentence before he took over his parents’ farm Nørholm in Grimstad in Norway. The Icelandic President's son Björn Sveinsson Björnsson joined the Waffen-SS in 1941 and followed Regiment Nordland on the advance on Rostov-on-Don, Kuran Valley and the Kaucasus-mountains before heading up the Nazi propaganda machine in occupied Denmark. He was taken prisoner in May 1945 and held in custody in Denmark but was released the following year to great public outrage. Upon his release he traveled incognito to Sweden and was smuggled back into Iceland. Björn Sveinsson Björnsson decamped for Argentina in 1949 before moving to Germany. He worked at Encyclopædia Britannica and his memoirs were published in 1989 entitled Ævi mín og sagan sem ekki mátti segja (My life and a story not allowed to be told). SS-Unterscharführer Arild Hamsun died aged 74 in 1988 in Grimstad in Norway and SS-Untersturmführer Björn Sveinsson Björnsson died aged 89 in 1998 in Borgarnes in Iceland. 

Ludwig Kepplinger, the first Waffen-SS NCO Knight's Cross Winner

IJssel bridge at Westervoort seen from the east side
SS-Gruppenführer Papa Hausser and SS-Untersturmführer Kepplinger
Kepplinger as SS-Hauptsturmführer at SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz
Kepplinger as SS-Sturmbannführer and commander in Normandy
The Austrian SS-Hauptscharführer Ludwig Kepplinger was the first NCO in the Waffen-SS to be awarded the Knight's Cross. On May 10 1940 Kepplinger was part of a 18 man unit of SS-Standarte Der Führer that was given the task of capturing the Dutch fort of Westervoort and an important rail and road bridge across the IJssel river near Arnhem. Finding the bridge that was his primary objective blown, he and his men stormed over the tangled remains and attacked the enemy positions on the opposite bank. Kepplinger and two other SS men managed to reach the other side of the bridge and attacked the enemy bunker with machine pistols and hand grenades. Part of Kepplinger's Knight's Cross recommendation reads as follows…“With only two men Kepplinger clambered over the destroyed Ijssel bridge with the aim of taking possession of the village of Westervoort, which was bristling with MGs... During the crossing of the river Kepplinger and his two men came under strong fire. Even though the probability of this operation's success was considerably small, maybe impossible, Kepplinger was able to enter the village in a terrific charge by using every bit of available cover. Then a tough battle began between the 90-man garrison and the three German troops. Kepplinger was able to force the surrender of one part of Westervoort after another. This was only possible by a ruthless disregard of his own life... At 10:00 the village of Westervoort was in the hands of the three SS men. The soldiers of the village, heavily fortified with MGs, had previously held a position that rendered a crossing of the 100 metre wide Ijssel essentially impossible. Now they laid down their arms before a force that was laughably inferior in numbers and equipment. It should be noted that the German artillery had neither conducted a preparatory barrage nor supported the attack of the three SS men... An attack of the Bataillon across the Ijssel without control of Westervoort would likely have resulted in a great many soldiers losing their lives... In the following battles, which saw the Grebbe position reached, Kepplinger once again distinguished himself in an outstanding way as a Zugführer. Wounded several times, Kepplinger made the choice to remain on the battlefield and once again stormed at the head of his Zug...“ Kepplinger was shot once in the hand, twice in the upper thigh and twice in the lower abdomen during the attacks on Dutch bunkers and fortified positions. After recovering from his wounds he was given command of the 10.Kompanie of SS-Regiment Westland of SS-Division Wiking. Kepplinger subsequently rose to the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer and commanded SS-Panzer-Abteilung 17 of 17.SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Götz von Berlichingen during the Normandy Invasion in 1944. On August 6 1944 the Knight's Cross holder Kepplinger was ambushed and murdered by French partisans in Villiers-Charlemagne in Normandy. His body was found 35 years later. Top image: SS medics and grenadiers of SS-Standarte Der Führer at the IJssel bridge at Westervoort. The photo was taken just after Kepplinger's capture of Westervoort on May 10 1940. The German ambulance to the right is a Phänomen Granit 25 H (Kfz.31). Credit: Stadtarchiv Emmerich am Rhein. FU. Second image from top: SS-Commander Paul Hausser presenting the Knight's Cross to the then SS-Untersturmführer Kepplinger on September 4 1940. Credit: OTL Marwan. Commons: Bundesarchiv. Third still from top: Kepplinger as SS-Hauptsturmführer at SS-Junkerschule Bad Tölz. Bottom still: Kepplinger as SS-Sturmbannführer and commander of SS-Panzer-Abteilung 17 of Götz von Berlichingen on a Sd.Kfz. 251 armored vehicle in Normandy in June 1944. Stills from Die Deutsche Wochenschau.

German Panzers and Infantry during the Blitzkrieg against France

Panzergeneral Heinz Guderian during the Blitzkrieg against France
SS-Standarte Germania during the Blitzkrieg against France
Generalleutnant Heinz Wilhelm Guderian's Panzer Corps spearheaded the drive through the Ardennes and over the Meuse River. He led the attack that broke the French lines at the Battle of Sedan ending with the British Expeditionary Force and French forces trapped at Dunkirk. The priority placed on the Panzer Divisions facilitated the speed and aggression of the German advance. The advance throug the Low Countries and France was so rapid that German units were often in danger of overstretching their supply lines. This Race-to-the-Channel took its toll on the troops. The military genius of Heinz Guderian remains admirable even today, for it was his tactics that brought the German Reich its swift victory over Europe in the first years of the war. He became one of the principal architects of armored warfare and the Blitzkrieg. Left image: Heinz Guderian in his Sd.Kfz. 251 mobile command half-track during the Battle of France in May 1940 - note the legendary Enigma code machine. A failure of operational security (OPSEC) explains the fact that Kriegsberichter Leutnant Eric Borchert was able to take this incredible photo. The author and photographer Borchert was later killed in action on October 10 1941 during the Axis Siege of Tobruk in Libya. c. Bundesarchiv. Right image: men of SS-Standarte Germania during the Blitzkrieg against France. The soldier on the left carries the legs of a mortar over his shoulder and is armed with the old 9mm P 08 Luger automatic pistol. Although withdrawn from service the Luger remained a popular possession among German (and Allied) troops. During the Polish and French campaigns the tabs were ordered to be removed, however the cuff titles remained. The South Tyrol-born photographer SS-KB Friedrich Zschäckel was a holder of the Iron Cross First Class, and was promoted SS-Obersturmführer on April 20 1943. This makes him one of the highest-ranking SS combat photographers, as well as one of the most well-traveled. He served with Reich in 1941, Nord and Leibstandarte in 1942, Totenkopf and Das Reich in 1943 and Hitlerjugend in 1944. Before the war, Zschäckel taught photography in München with Adolf Hitler's official photographer Heinrich Hoffmann. Fritzel Zschäckel is believed to have died in October 1944, but reliable sources claims that he died aged 62 on July 23 1973 in Buenos Aires in Argentina. Credit: Mateusz Pietruszkiewicz. c. Bundesarchiv.

ϟϟ-Grenadiers during the Battle of France

Tip of the Spear: BMW R75 of Germania
Waffen-SS im Westen
The BMW R75 was the powerful and highly reliable motorcycle, which equipped the Aufklärungsabteilung (lit. reconnaissance detachment). The Aufklärungsabteilung was a heavily armed unit that advanced well to the fore of the main body and was capable of fighting for tactical intelligence if necessary. The addition of the sidecar meant that three men could be transported on each machine, which gave the unit the advantage of mobility with added firepower. Images: Kradschützen of the SS-Standarte Germania in an effort to keep up the pressure on enemy forces falling back. After the British counterattack at Arras, the SS-Verfügungs-Division, along with the Infanterie-Regiment Leibstandarte SS, were moved to hold the perimeter around Dunkirk and reduce the size of the pocket containing the encircled British Expeditionary Force and French forces. Right image: volunteers of the Waffen-SS walking the roads of Northern France while sweat trickling down their dusty faces. Originally published in the wartime photograthic journal Waffen-SS im Westen - Ein Bericht in Bildern in the spring of 1941. Both images taken by SS-Kriegsberichter Friedrich Zschäckel. Commons: Bundesarchiv.

ϟϟ-Gruppenführer der Waffen-SS Hausser and the Miracle of Dunkirk

SS-Gruppenführer Paul Hausser
SS-Standarte Germania
On May 24 1940, German divisions would squeeze both the surrounded British and French forces at Dunkirk. There is no doupt that they could have either destroyed, or haven taken, the whole of the British Expeditionary Force and three French field armies prisoner. Almost 400,000 British, Belgian, and French troops lined up in the water and on the beaches of Dunkirk. Their fate seemed to be sealed, but something extraordinary happened, what is known as the Miracle of Dunkirk. It was for friend or foe, an unexpected and fateful turn of events, as Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler himself giving the British the chance to escape. All that was wished for from Britain, was that they recognized Germany's place on the Continent. The target of coming up to peace with Britain, in all honor, had motivated Hitler to spare the British. The English military historian Liddell Hart wrote after 1945, that the German Reich had absolutely no plans for war against Britain. Germany had imagined itself as a very important partner for Britain. Together they could oppose the Kremlin's global machinations. The halt order has been the subject of much discussion by historians. Left image: an interesting picture of the excellent divisional commander Paul Hausser writing orders with staff from SS-Standarte Germania. The presence of captured British soldiers suggests that this photograph was taken as the Waffen-SS pushed northward. Commons: Bundesarchiv. Right image: armed with a 9mm MP38, often called Schmeisser, plus stick-grenadiers in his belt, this SS-Oberscharführer of SS-Standarte Germania leads his men along a roadside during the Western Campaign. This photo appears on the cover of the book Voices of the Waffen SS by Gerry Villani. Both photos by SS-Kriegsberichter Friedrich Zschäckel in 1940. Commons: Bundesarchiv.

The first non-Germanic SS formations made up of Slavs

Obermullah Waffen-Hauptsturmführer der SS Nureddin Namangani
Volksdeutsche of 7.SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division Prinz Eugen
Bosnian Muslims of Kroatische SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division
Bosnian Muslims of 13.Waffen-Gebirgs-Division der SS Handschar
Following the Balkan campaign many Slavic units were set up under direct control of SS to restore order in occupied Yugoslavia. These units marked the expansion of the SS into a multi-ethnic military force. The new formations were made up of Albanians, Bosnian Muslims, Croats and Serbs with mostly Volksdeutsche (ethnic German) officers from Romania and Serbia. The Balkan SS formations were involved in internal security operations and anti-partisan warfare during the war. Poorly equipped and poorly trained their performance was of minor military value and the formations were heavily involved in war crimes and atrocities. Murder, rape and mass executions were all too common in Yugoslavia during World War II. The resistance groups divided into two main movements - the Yugoslav royalist and Serbian nationalist Chetniks and the Communist Partisans. Also operating in the Balkan was the Russisches Schutzkorps Serbien composed of anti-communist White Russian émigrés who plundered peasants in the areas within which they operated, and the 1.Kosaken-Kavallerie-Division composed of eastern Cossacks who committed a number of atrocities against the civilian population including several mass rapes and routine summary executions. Other divisions designated to the Balkans as anti-partisan mountain divisions were the Volksdeutsche division SS-Freiwilligen-Division Prinz Eugen, redesignated as the 7.SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division Prinz Eugen in Oct. 1943, and the Kroatische SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division, redesignated as the 13.Waffen-Gebirgs-Division der SS Handschar in May 1944. Prinz Eugen was made up of Volksdeutsche from Croatia, Serbia, Hungary and Romania, and famed for its cruelty and accused of a number of war crimes in their anti-partisan operations. The Handschar was composed of Bosnian Muslims or ethnic Bosniaks. It earned a reputation for brutality and savagery, not only during combat operations, but also through atrocities committed against Serb and Jewish civilians. Top clip: members of the SS could be of any religion except Judaism. This clip shows the Uzbek Imam Waffen-Hauptsturmführer der SS Nureddin Namangani leading a prayer with Central Asian and Caucasian Muslim SS volunteers. Fair use. Second image: according to some accounts, a photo of an SS-Untersturmführer of SS-Gebirgsjäger-Regiment 14 of the 7.SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division Prinz Eugen in Montenegro or Serbia in 1944 by Austrian explorer and photographer Ernst A. Zwilling. Credit: Karl Mensburg. Commons: Bundesarchiv. Third image: ethnic Bosniaks of the Kroatische SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division in 1943. Being non-Germanic, its members were not entitled to wear the SS runes collar patch. Headgear was the SS M43 fez: a field gray model to be worn in combat and a red model while off duty. Credit: Richard White. Fair use. Bottom image: ethnic Bosniaks of the 13.Waffen-Gebirgs-Division der SS Handschar in the Balkan Mountains of Bosnia in 1944. Credit: Julius Backman Jääskeläinen. Fair use.

ϟϟ-Standarte „Totenkopf“ and the Le Paradis Massacre

SS-Standarte Totenkopf
SS-Totenkopf-Aufklärungs-Abteilung
Leichter Panzerspähwagen Sd.kfz.222 of the Totenkopf
The only documented example of war crimes against the Totenkopf were committed over a span of a few weeks during May-June 1940. The Le Paradis massacre committed by a company of SS-Standarte Totenkopf took place on May 27 1940 during the Battle of France, at a time when the British Expeditionary Force was attempting to retreat through the Pas-de-Calais region during the Battle of Dunkirk. The 14.Kompanie under the command of SS-Hauptsturmführer Fritz Knöchlein executed 97 British prisoners of the Royal Norfolk Regiment at the town of Le Paradis. News of the massacre spread to neighbouring German divisions and General Erich Höpner, commander of the German forces in France, was determined to have Fritz Knöchlein dismissed if charges of mistreatment or killing of prisoners could be brought. However none of these investigations were ever successful, possibly because Fritz Knöchlein stated that the British had been using dumdum bullets, thus violating the Hague Convention of 1899. In that case, the British soldiers no longer had any rights as prisoners of war, but were illegal combatants who could be treated accordingly. Regardless, many Waffen-SS officers were appalled by the massacre; some reportedly challenged Fritz Knöchlein to a duel, although none were ever fought. After World War II, Fritz Knöchlein was located, tried and convicted by a war crimes court. Knöchlein was executed by the British in 1949 in Hamelin at the age of 37. Following the campaign in France, the Totenkopf would be refitted with new personnel, who served with distinction on the Eastern Front. Top clip showing the tactical marking of the Totenkopf. Bottom images: an SS-Untersturmführer and his driver in a light armoured reconnaissance vehicle wearing early Panzer uniforms. The men belonged to the SS-Totenkopf-Aufklärungs-Abteilung, later redesigned as SS-Panzer-Aufklärungs-Abteilung 3 Totenkopf. Note pink Waffenfarbe and collar patches. Source: collection of David Williams. Fair use.

ϟϟ-Regiment „Leibstandarte ϟϟ“ and the Wormhoudt Massacre

Adolf Hitler's entourage drive through Bruxelles shortly after the German invasion
French soldiers of 158e régiment d'infanterie taken POWs in Walloon Region
Senegalese Tirailleurs of French Colonial Army taken POWs in Northern France
After the expulsion of the British Expeditionary Forces from the continental mainland and the Belgian capitulation at the end of May 1940, the second phase of the Western Offensive began, the Battle for France. Men from the 2nd battalion of the Leibstandarte SS under the command of the then SS-Hauptsturmführer Wilhelm Mohnke are believed to have been involved in the Wormhoudt massacre in France on May 28 1940, where 80 something British and French POWs were killed. For several years, the massacre remained unknown, until some of the British survivors told of what they had lived through. Although no reputable historian denies that a massacre took place, no one has ever been formally charged in this case. It proved impossible in 1947 to construct a sufficiently strong case to bring prosecutions. In 1988, the case was reopened but a German prosecutor came to the conclusion that there was insufficient evidence to bring charges. Top image: on the morning of June 1 1940, while the battle for France was still unfolding, German dictator Adolf Hitler and his entourage took a short flight to Brussels. His six-wheeled Mercedes-Benz W31 type G4 was guarded by men of the Leibstandarte SS during his surprise visit to Flanders. It was here that Hitler had won the Iron Cross 2nd Class for bravery back in 1914, an event which he described as the happiest day of his life. In this photo, the column can be seen near Le Palais de Justice in Brussels. At the time this photo was taken the nearest unit of the British Expeditionary Force was only 20 km distant. Photo by Hitler's official photographer Heinrich Hoffmann. Credit: Erenow. Originally publ. in the Illustreiter Beobachter in June 13 1940. Middle image: soldiers of the French 158th Infantry Regiment taken POWs by Oberst Rudolf von Tschudi's Infanterie-Regiment 469. Photo taken in Thulin on May 23 1940 by Kriegsberichter Leutnant Eric Borchert, and publ. in 1941 in his book Entscheidende Stunden. This particular photo was taken at the end of Place du Calvarie, today Place des Français. His negatives were later captured by the French Army when they entered Strasbourg in 1945, and are now retained by the ECPAd. Lt. Borchert himself was KIA in Libya on Oct. 10 1941 accompanying GenLt. Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps. Credit: Rui Manuel Candeias. Bottom image: German Signal Corps with French colonial POWs in June 1940. Unlike their white compatriots, the colonial prisoners were imprisoned in Frontstalags in France rather than being brought to Germany. Although no precise estimates exist, the number of French soldiers captured during the Battle of France is generally recognised around 1.8 million. Credit: Julius Backman Jääskeläinen. c. Bundesarchiv. Note: The photos are not related to the context of the article.

Surrender Invites Death: Fighting the Allies in Normandy

Unidentified Waffen-SS POW
Unidentified Waffen-SS POW






















In many cases members of the Waffen-SS, whose courage and chivalry had often been acknowledged even by their military opponents, were brutally beaten and murdered after they surrendered their arms to Allied forces. Surrender by individuals or small groups was not nearly as common in the Waffen-SS as in the regular Wehrmacht. Individual SS men surrendered in some numbers early in the Normandy invasion, but this became less common as fear of mistreatment became widespread. Most incidents involving Allied personnel alleged by historians to have been war crimes under the law of war in operation at the time were, for a variety of reasons, not investigated by the Allied powers, or were investigated and a decision was taken not to prosecute. Images: youthful members of the highly motivated and much-feared Waffen-SS captured on the outskirts of Caen by the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division in June 1944. Library and Archives Canada. Both photos in the Public domain.

Waffen-SS Regiments After the Conclusion of the Western Campaign 1940

SS-Sturmmann poses in Panzer uniform
SS-Regiment Leibstandarte SS






















The Waffen-SS did not played the same important role in the 1940 battles as they did in the battles to come. Nonetheless, the Infanterie-Regiment Leibstandarte SS and the SS-Verfügungs-Division had demonstrated their combat ability and readiness to fight during the Western Campaign.The three SS-Standarten of the SS-Verfügungs-Division were to be the nucleus of the Waffen-SS in its subsequent rapid expansion. After the campaign had ended the SS-V-Division spend some time guarding the border with Vichy France. The unoccupied Free Zone in the southern part of metropolitan France, often called Régime de Vichy, remained responsible for the civil administration of all France as well as the French colonial empire. The Leibstandarte SS spent six months in Metz in northeast France and was expanded to brigade size (6,500 men). Initially, the Leibstandarte SS was going to be given a partial lead role in the planned invasion of England. To prepare for the upcoming invasion, the regiment trained extensively in amphibious warfare. Left image: some sources claim that this photograph shows a SS-Sturmmann named Herbert Pantke. According to those sources, Pantke served in the SS-Panzerspähzug of the motorized infantry regiment Leibstandarte SS during the western campaign in 1940. The panzer man is wearing the black Panzer-Schutzmütze. This headgear consisted of the soft padded crash helmet. By order dated January 15 1941, the black Panzer beret was abolished and replaced by black Panzer field caps. Private collection. Right image: tankers of the Leibstandarte SS being decorated by commander SS-Obergruppenführer Sepp Dietrich following the West Campaign. Photo by SS-Kriegsberichter Johannes Bergmann. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Fair use.

Cease-fire, signed on June 22 1940, went into effect on June 25 1940

Waffen-SS distributing food to the needy in June 1940
The men of the Leibstandarte SS enjoyed the beauty of Paris
Notre Dame in the summer of 1940
On June 22 1940 the last combat effective French army still in the field was encircled and 500,000 men marched into captivity. The order to cease-fire came at 01:35 hours on June 25 1940. The battle for France was finally over for the men of the Waffen-SS. But some were left behind. In the campaign which had taken no less than seven weeks, three countries had been defeated by the German Armed Forces. The German concept of Blitzkrieg had been perfected in the western theatre of war. Members of the SS-Regiment Leibstandarte SS experiencing the very best of occupied Paris following the Battle of France. The German soldier in 1940 felt on top of the world and firmly believed at this stage that final victory was in sight. They had outflanked the Maginot Lina and arrived in an undefended Paris on June 14 1940. They continued their drive south through Champaign, Dijon, Burgundy, by the 25th June the ceasefire came into effect and the Waffen-SS were near Bordeaux. Accolades of praise for their bravery and sacrifice poured in, they had proved themselves ferocious and fearless on the battlefields. In 1940 the Waffen-SS began to recruit volunteers in the conquered territories from the ethnic German and Germanic populations. A sufficient number of volunteers came forward requiring the Waffen-SS to open a new training camp just for foreign volunteers at Sennheim in Alsace-Lorraine. Non-Germanic volunteers were not considered to be part of the SS directly, which still maintained its strict racial criteria; instead they were considered to be foreign nationals serving under the command of the SS. Top image: members of the Waffen-SS distributing foods to Belgian or French refugees in June 1940. Commons: Bundesarchiv. Fair use. Bottom clips: Leibstandarte SS in occupied Paris in 1940. Die Deutsche Wochenschau. Fair use.

The Brits and the Franco-German Armistice Negotiations at Compiégne

Soldiers of Leibstandarte SS in occupied Paris after the victory in France
SS Volunteers enjoy their leave at Berlin's Strandbad Wannsee
Waffen-SS in Occupied Paris
On July 19 1940, Adolf Hitler tried once more for conciliatory negotiations with the British opponents. But Churchill remained resolute. The war moved into the next round. The Blitz, i.e. the air raids on London, began only after Britain had continuously bombarded German cities for three month. Pointless restraint was at an end. On July 21 1940, Hitler and his high command, waited to receive the French Peace Delegation in Compiégne. The negotiations took place and were sealed in the same railway salon-wagon as had been used on November 8 1918 for the Surrender Treaty of the German Empire. However, it was certainly no repeat performance of humiliation as had happened on that autumn day. Then, the German envoys were treated with abuse, and already as prisoners of war, by the French Marshal Ferdinand Foch. However, in July 1940, Germany
's opponents were treated with military honor, the negotiations were handled correctly. For the Parisians, the occupation was a series of frustrations and shortages.  A curfew was in effect from nine in the evening until five in the morning; at night, the city went dark. Rationing of food, tobacco, coal and clothing was imposed from September 1940. Most French citizens fell firmly in neither of the two camps, collaborator or resistor, and instead sought simply to navigate through a changing society, and outlast the occupation in peace. Top image: men of SS-Regiment Leibstandarte SS at an outdoor café in occupied Paris in July 1940. The many relationships between German soldiers and French women produced tens of thousands of children born during the occupation. Photo taken by the war correspondent SS-Kriegsberichter Johannes Bergmann. Fair use. Middle image: two Waffen-SS volunteers enjoy their leave from France at Berlin's most popular beach on the Wannsee in late June 1940. Photo from the Süddeutsche Zeitung. Fair use. Bottom image: Waffen-SS men photographed in July 1940 at Palais de Chaillot in Paris with the Eiffel Tower in the background. Süddeutsche Zeitung. FU.

After the French Campaign: Expansion of the Waffen-SS

German-Austrian SS-Standarte Der Führer in the Netherlands
Swearing-in ceremony of Dutch SS Volunteers
Up to 20,000 Dutch joined the Waffen-SS to fight the Bolshevik Russia
After the French campaign, the SS-Verfügungstruppe was officially renamed the Waffen-SS. It was reorganized and received its own high command in August 1940. SS-Standarte Germania was given the responsibility of acting as the core for an entirely new division, the multi-national SS-Division Wiking, comprising troops from Scandinavia and the Low Countries as well from Germany. This process had already started in April 1940 with the formation of SS-Standarte Nordland (using Danish, Norwegian and Swedish volunteers), and in June 1940 with the formation of SS-Standarte Westland (using mainly Dutch and Flemish volunteers). These regiments were incorporated into the Wiking. In 1941, the Estonian SS-Freiwilligen-Panzergrenadier-Batallion Narwa was also added to Westland. The SS-Standarte Deutschland together with the Austrian Der Führer were formed into the SS-Division Reich and the SS-Regiment Leibstandarte SS was redesignated SS-Division Leibstandarte-SS Adolf Hitler in 1941. By the following spring, the new structure created six Waffen-SS divisions: Leibstandarte SS, Reich, Totenkopf, Polizei, Wiking and Kampfgruppe (later Division) Nord. These were at first no larger than reinforced brigades, and would not be fully manned and equipped till late in 1941. Top image: volunteers of the German-Austrian SS-Standarte Der Führer in cooperation with the Dutch police force of Amsterdam on May 15 1940. Police authorities in German-occupied countries and regions collaborated closely with the German occupation authorities. Nazi ideology became central to police training and police practice. Nationaal Archief. Fair use. Middle and bottom clips showing a swearing-in ceremony of Dutch SS volunteers in May 1942. As the Nederlandsche SS was supposed to be an elite corps, not everybody was allowed to become a member. There were selections based on race, attitude to life, personality and physical condition. Clips from the French documentary Dans la tête des SS.

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