70 years ago on this
date, 21 July 1944, one of the Generals in the German Resistance against Nazism,
Henning Von Tresckow, committed suicide. Nevertheless, I will honor him as a
hero by posting information about him from Wikipedia and other links.
Henning von Tresckow |
Born
|
10 January 1901
Magdeburg, Germany |
Died
|
21 July 1944 (aged 43)
Królowy Most, Poland Eastern Front |
Service/branch
|
Wehrmacht
|
Years of service
|
1917–1944
|
Rank
|
Generalmajor
|
Commands held
|
Chief of Staff of the 2nd Army
|
Battles/wars
|
World War I
World War II |
Spouse(s)
|
Erika von Falkenhayn
|
Other work
|
Drafted the Valkyrie plan for July 20 plot
|
Hermann Henning Karl Robert von Tresckow (January 10, 1901 – July 21, 1944)
was a Generalmajor
in the German Wehrmacht who organized German resistance against Adolf Hitler. He attempted to assassinate
Hitler in March 1943 and drafted the Valkyrie plan
for a coup against the German government. He was
described by the Gestapo as the "prime mover" and
the "evil spirit" behind the July 20 plot to assassinate Hitler. He
committed suicide on the Eastern Front upon the plot's failure.
The young Tresckow
|
Early
life
Tresckow
was born in Magdeburg into a noble family from the Brandenburg region of Prussia
with 300 years of military tradition that provided the Prussian Army with 21
generals. His father, later a cavalry general, had been present at Kaiser
Wilhelm I's coronation as the emperor of new German Empire at Versailles in
1871. His mother was the daughter of Count Robert Zedlitz-Trützschler, a
Prussian Minister of Education.
He
received most of his early education from tutors on his family's remote rural
estate; from 1913 to 1917, he was a student at the Gymnasium in the town of Goslar.
He joined the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards as an officer cadet at age of 16 and
became the youngest lieutenant in the Army in June 1918. In the Second Battle
of the Marne, he earned the Iron Cross 1st class for outstanding courage and
independent action against the enemy. At that time Count Siegfried von
Eulenberg, the commander of the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards, predicted that
"You, Tresckow, will either become chief of the General Staff or die on
the scaffold as a rebel."
Career
After
World War I, Tresckow stayed with the famed Infantry Regiment 9 Potsdam and
took part in the suppression of the Spartacist movement in January 1919, but
resigned from the Weimar Republic Reichswehr Army in 1920 in order to study law
and economics. He worked in a banking house and embarked on a world journey
visiting Britain, France, Brazil and the eastern United States in 1924 before
he had to abandon it to take care of family possessions back home. Like members
of many prominent Prussian families, Tresckow married into another family with
long-standing military traditions. In 1926, he married Erika von Falkenhayn,
only daughter of Erich von
Falkenhayn, the chief of the General Staff from 1914 to 1916, and
returned to military service, being sponsored by Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg. Nevertheless, he was not a typical Prussian officer. He wore his
uniform only when it was absolutely required and disliked the regimentation of
army life. He was lyrical, recited Rainer Maria Rilke,
and spoke several languages, including English and French.
In
1934, Tresckow began General Staff training at the War Academy and graduated as
the best of the class of 1936. He was assigned to the General Staff's 1st
Department (Operations), where he worked in close contact with Generals Ludwig Beck, Werner von Fritsch,
Adolf Heusinger and Erich von Manstein.
Studying the possible scenarios of war, he recognized the risks and weaknesses
in Hitler's desire to prepare for war in 1938.
Although
he supported the revision of the Polish Corridor, he opposed many of Hitler's
military and foreign policies including the Anschluss and the invasion of
Czechoslovakia. Nonetheless, Tresckow did spadework for the invasion plan of
Czechoslovakia and after the outbreak of World War II served as chief of staff of
the 228th Infantry Division during the invasion of Poland,
earning the Iron Cross first class. He was shocked that
Colonel-General Johannes Blaskowitz
had been the only general to protest to Hitler about the atrocities committed
by the SS in Poland and that his protests were dismissed as 'childish'.
Later
in 1939 and into 1940, he served as the second general staff officer of Army
Group A under Gerd von Rundstedt
and Erich von Manstein,
culminating in the invasion of France
in the spring of 1940. Ironically, Tresckow played a role in the adoption of
the Manstein Plan, which proved to be so
successful in the French campaign. Tresckow's former regimental comrade Rudolf Schmundt was Hitler's chief military
aide, and it was through the Tresckow-Schmundt channel that Manstein's plan,
after being rejected by Army High Command, was brought to Hitler's attention.
He is also said to have worked on developing the Manstein Plan itself as Günther Blumentritt's
deputy. After the fall of France,
he did not share the euphoria that swept Germany and brought Hitler to the peak
of his popularity. In October, he said in Paris to a secretary (the future wife
of Alfred Jodl), "If Churchill can induce America to join in the war, we
shall slowly but surely be crushed by material superiority. The most that will
be left to us then will be the Electorate of Brandenburg, and I'll be chief of
the palace guard."
From
1941 to 1943, he served under Field Marshal Fedor von Bock, his wife's uncle, and later
Field Marshal Günther von Kluge
as chief operations officer of the German Army Group Centre in Operation Barbarossa,
the invasion of the Soviet Union.
Subsequently in October and November 1943, he served in combat as the
commanding officer of Grenadier Regiment 442, defending the western bank of the
Dnieper River in Ukraine. From December 1943 until his death
in 1944, he served as Chief of Staff of the 2nd Army,
in areas which are now Belarus and eastern
Poland. During his World War II service, he was awarded the German Cross in Gold and other decorations.
Tresckow was thus very well connected with the Prussian aristocracy and high-ranking generals, highly
accomplished and independent-minded, and as such well-positioned for his effort
to overthrow the German government.
Heu
Aktion
As
Chief of Staff of the 2nd Army, Tresckow signed an order on 28 June 1944 to
abduct Polish and Ukrainian children in the so-called Heu-Aktion (Hay Action). Between 40,000 to
50,000 Polish and Ukrainian children aged 10 to 14 were kidnapped for Nazi
Germany's forced labour program. The order read in part "In operations
against gangs, any boys and girls taken between ages 10 and 13 who are
physically healthy, and whose parents either cannot be located or who, as
persons unable to work, are to be sent to the area earmarked for remaining
families (the dregs are to be sent to the Reich)."
The
kidnapped children were used as forced workers in the Todt organisation, Junker
factories and in German handicrafts as part of an operation to "lower
biological strength" of the enemies of Nazi Germany.
Kidnapping
of children by Nazi Germany has been classified by the Nuremberg Tribunal
as part of a systematic program of genocide. Alfred Rosenberg, who also signed
the documents for Heu Aktion, was found guilty by the Nuremberg Tribunal, and
his signing of the document was mentioned in the final verdict.
Henning von Tresckow’s quote [PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/273742] |
Opposition
to Hitler
Although
he was initially an enthusiastic supporter of Nazism because it opposed the Treaty
of Versailles, he was quickly disillusioned by 1934 when the Schutzstaffel
(SS) extrajudicially murdered many SA leaders and political opponents,
including two generals, in the Night of the
Long Knives (30 June 1934). The events of the 1930s, such as the
1938 Blomberg–Fritsch
Affair, further strengthened his antipathy to the Nazis. He regarded
the Kristallnacht
(state-sanctioned, nationwide pogrom of Jews) as
personal humiliation and degradation of civilization. He thus sought out
civilians and officers who opposed Hitler, such as Erwin von Witzleben,
who dissuaded Tresckow from resigning from the Army, arguing that they would be
needed when the day of reckoning came. By the summer of 1939, he told Fabian von
Schlabrendorff, his cousin by marriage, that "both duty and
honor demand from us that we should do our best to bring about the downfall of
Hitler and National Socialism to save Germany and Europe from barbarism."
In
the campaign against the Soviet Union, Tresckow resumed his resistance
activities with renewed urgency. He was appalled by the Commissar Order, the treatment of Russian
prisoners of war, and in particular the mass shootings of Jewish women and
children by the Einsatzgruppen
behind the lines. When he learned about the massacre of thousands of Jews at Borisov, Tresckow appealed passionately to
Field Marshal Fedor von Bock: "Never may such a thing happen again! And so
we must act now. We have the power in Russia!" (Although Bock personally
detested Nazism, he remained loyal to Hitler.) As the chief operations officer
of Army Group Center, he systematically placed officers who shared his views in
key positions. They included Lieutenant Colonel Georg Schulze-Büttger, Colonel Rudolf
Christoph Freiherr von Gersdorff, Major Carl-Hans
Graf von Hardenberg, Lieutenant Heinrich
Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort, Lieutenant Fabian von
Schlabrendorff, Lieutenant Philipp von
Boeselager and his brother Georg von Boeselager,
Lieutenant Colonel Hans-Alexander von Voss and Lieutenant Colonel Berndt von
Kleist among others, many of them from Tresckow's old Infantry Regiment 9.
The headquarters of Army Group Center thus emerged as the new nerve center of
Army resistance. At the end of September 1941, Tresckow sent his special
operations officer Schlabrendorff to Berlin to contact opposition groups and
declare that the staff of Army Group Center was "prepared to do
anything." This approach, made at the height of German expansion and the
nadir of anti-Hitler opposition, represented the first initiative to come from
the front and from the Army, as Ulrich von Hassell
noted in his diary. Schlabrendorff continued to serve as liaison between Army
Group Center and opposition circle around General Ludwig Beck, Carl Friedrich
Goerdeler and Colonel Hans Oster, the deputy head of Abwehr (German military intelligence) who was involved
in a 1938 coup attempt against Hitler (Oster Conspiracy). Oster's recruitment of
General Friedrich Olbricht,
head of the General Army Office headquarters, in 1942 linked this asset to
Tresckow's resistance group in Army Group Centre, creating a viable coup
apparatus.
Henning von Tresckow’s quote [PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/273743] |
Plots
against Hitler
Main
article: Operation Spark (1940)
It
was decided that Tresckow's group would assassinate Hitler and thereby provide
the 'spark' for the coup, which Olbricht would direct from Berlin. In late
1942, Olbricht indicated that he still needed about eight weeks to complete
preparations for the coup. Shortly thereafter, Tresckow traveled to Berlin to
discuss the few remaining questions and emphasize that time was running short.
In the winter of 1942, Olbricht declared: "We are ready. The spark can now
be set off." Tresckow assured the conspirators that he would take action
at the first available opportunity.
It
came on 13 March 1943, when Hitler finally visited troops on the Eastern Front
at Smolensk after a few cancellations and postponements. Under the initial
plan, a group of officers were to shoot Hitler collectively at a signal in the
officers' mess during lunch but Kluge, Commander of Army Group Center, who had
been informed about the plot, urged Tresckow not to carry it out saying,
"For heaven's sake, don't do anything today! It's still too soon for that!"
He argued that the German army and people were not ready to accept the coup and
would not understand such an act. He also feared a civil war between the Army
and SS, since Heinrich Himmler had canceled his visit and could not be killed
at the same time.
Tresckow,
however, had a backup plan. During the lunch in question, he asked Lieutenant
Colonel Heinz
Brandt, who was traveling with Hitler, whether he would be good enough to
take a bottle of Cointreau to Colonel Helmuth
Stieff (who was not yet a conspirator at that time) at Hitler's
headquarters in East Prussia as a payment for a lost bet. Brandt readily
agreed. The "Cointreau" was actually a bomb constructed of a British plastic
explosive "Plastic C" placed into the casing of a British
magnetic mine, with a timer consisting of a spring which would be gradually
dissolved by acid. Before Hitler's Condor
plane was to take off, Schlabrendorff activated the 30-minute
fuse and handed the package to Brandt, who boarded Hitler's plane. After
takeoff, a message was sent to the other Berlin conspirators by code that Operation Flash was under way, which they
expected to take place around Minsk. Yet when Hitler landed safely at his East Prussian
headquarters, it became obvious that the bomb had failed to detonate (the
extremely low temperatures in the unheated luggage compartment probably
prevented the fuse from working). The message of failure was quickly sent out
and Schlabrendorff retrieved the package to prevent discovery of the plot.
A
week later, on 21 March, Army Group Center organized a display of Russian Army
flags and weapons seized at the Eastern Front. It was exhibited at Zeughaus,
military museum in Berlin, which Hitler was to visit on Heroes' Memorial Day
with Himmler and Hermann Göring. Colonel Gersdorff volunteered to be the
suicide bomber, intending to explode a bomb on his person near Hitler while
serving as a tour guide. He had with him bombs with ten-minute fuses, knowing that
Hitler was scheduled to be in the museum for 30 minutes. But at the last
minute, just before Hitler was to arrive, the duration of his stay was reduced
to just eight minutes as a security precaution. Hitler breezed through in two
minutes. As a result Gersdorff could not accomplish his mission, the
assassination plan failed again and he barely managed to get out and defuse the
bombs.
Other plots
similarly failed because of Hitler's irregular habits and bad luck. Most
importantly, they had no access to Hitler since he no longer visited the front,
rarely visited Berlin and spent most of his time at the Wolf's Lair in Poland or the Berghof
in Bavaria. Tresckow lacked the required clearance to enter either site and the
extremely high security made any attempt impractical and unlikely to succeed.
The elimination of Oster's group in April 1943 (his deputy Hans von Dohnanyi and Lutheran theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer were arrested, and Oster was placed under house arrest) was a
further setback.
Tresckow
worked tirelessly to persuade army commanders such as Field Marshals Fedor von Bock, Günther von Kluge
and Erich von Manstein
to join in the conspiracy without much success. With unwitting help from
Schmundt, he placed like-minded officers as their adjutants and staff officers
to bring them closer to the conspiracy. Kluge sympathized with the conspirators
and at times seemed ready to act, only to become indecisive at critical
moments. Others refused outright, Manstein declaring, "Prussian field
marshals do not mutiny." Nonetheless, no one reported their treasonable
activities to the German government.
Erika and Henning von Tresckow.
|
Operation
Valkyrie
Main articles: 20 July plot and Operation Valkyrie
Eventually,
the conspirators came to rely more on the Reserve Army in Berlin and other
districts to stage a coup against the German government. Olbricht now put
forward a new strategy for staging a coup against Hitler. The Reserve Army had
an operational plan called Operation Walküre (Valkyrie), which was to be
used in the event that the disruption caused by the Allied bombing of German
cities caused a breakdown in law and order, or an uprising by the millions of
slave laborers from occupied countries now being used in German factories.
Olbricht suggested that this plan could be used to mobilize the Reserve Army to
take control of German cities, disarm the SS and arrest the Nazi leadership
once Hitler had been assassinated. During August and September 1943, Tresckow
took extended sick leave in Berlin to draft the "revised" Valkyrie
plan with fine details and precise timetables. Revised orders and additional
proclamations that would pin the blame for the uprising on the Nazi party were
typed by Tresckow's wife, Erika, and his secretary, Countess Margarete von
Oven, who wore gloves so as not to leave fingerprints. These 1943 papers were
recovered by the Soviets after the war and finally published in 2007, showing
Tresckow's central role in the conspiracy and the idealistic motivations of the
resistance group at that time. Knowledge of the Jewish Holocaust was
a major impetus for many officers involved.
But
when Tresckow was assigned to command of a battalion on the Eastern Front in
October 1943, he was no longer in position to actively plan or effect the coup.
Even his promotion a month later to Chief of Staff of the Second Army did not
bring him much closer. To gain access to Hitler, he proposed to his old comrade
General Rudolf Schmundt, Hitler's chief adjutant and Army
personnel chief, to create a new department of psychological and political
warfare to evaluate data and make reports directly to the Führer. Schmundt, who
was still well disposed toward his old friend but suspected that Tresckow
disapproved of the Führer, quietly let the matter drop. Tresckow also applied to
become General Adolf Heusinger's delegate in the Army High Command
(OKH) during the
latter's two-month leave, which would also give him access to Hitler's
meetings, but Heusinger, who was earlier approached by conspirators, rejected
it apparently for the same reason.
Colonel
Count Claus von Stauffenberg, who met Tresckow in August 1943 and worked
together on revising Operation Valkyrie, took the responsibility for planning
and implementing Hitler's assassination. By the time Stauffenberg was appointed
Chief of Staff of the Reserve Army and was ready to carry out the assassination
attempt, the Allies had already landed in Normandy. When Stauffenberg sent a
message to Tresckow through Lehndorff to ask whether there was any point in
making the attempt since there was no practical purpose to be served, Tresckow
urged him not only to attempt the assassination but to go ahead with the coup
in Berlin even if the assassination were to fail. He argued that there must be
an overt act of German opposition to Hitler regardless of the consequences. He
also told Philipp von Boeselager and Margarete von Oven that 16,000 people were
being killed daily not as casualties of war but as result of murders perpetrated
by the Germans, and Hitler had to be killed just to put an end to it. A few
days before the coup attempt, Tresckow confided to a friend that "in all
likelihood everything will go wrong". When asked whether the action was
necessary nonetheless, he replied, "Yes, even so."
Henning
von Tresckow’s quote [PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/273746]
|
Death
When
the assassination attempt on Hitler and the following coup in Berlin (the July
20 plot) had failed, Tresckow decided to commit suicide at the front in Królowy
Most near Białystok on July 21. His parting words to Schlabrendorff were:
"The whole world will vilify us now, but I am still totally convinced that we did the right thing. Hitler is the archenemy not only of Germany but of the world. When, in few hours' time, I go before God to account for what I have done and left undone, I know I will be able to justify what I did in the struggle against Hitler. God promised Abraham that He would not destroy Sodom if only ten righteous men could be found in the city, and so I hope for our sake God will not destroy Germany. No one among us can complain about dying, for whoever joined our ranks put on the shirt of Nessus. A man's moral worth is established only at the point where he is ready to give his life in defense of his convictions."
To
protect other conspirators, he staged an appearance of partisan attack by
firing his pistols and then dispatched himself by holding a hand grenade below
his chin and detonating it. He was buried in the family home in Wartenberg.
When the Nazis learned about his connections in late August, his body was
exhumed and taken to the crematorium in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
His wife was arrested on August 15 and her children taken away under Nazi
policy of Sippenhaft, meaning shared family guilt, but early in October she was
released again and survived the war.
Berlin memorial plaque for Erich Hoepner and
Henning von Tresckow in Berlin-Wilmersdorf, Germany
"In this building, built in 1895 for the former Royal-Prussian Artillery Testing
Commission, worked during WW2 the officers of the Resistance Colonel-General
Erich Hoepner and Major-General Henning von Tresckow"
|
Quotes
- "The assassination must be attempted at all costs. Even if it should not succeed, an attempt to seize power in Berlin must be made. What matters now is no longer the practical purpose of the coup, but to prove to the world and for the records of history that the men of the resistance dared to take the decisive step. Compared to this objective, nothing else is of consequence." (1944)
- "Remember this moment. If we don't convince the field marshal (Fedor von Bock) to fly to Hitler at once and have these orders (Commissar Order) canceled, the German people will be burdened with a guilt the world will not forget in a hundred years. This guilt will fall not only on Hitler, Himmler, Göring, and their comrades but on you and me, your wife and mine, your children and mine, that woman crossing the street, and those children over there playing ball." (1941)
- "Isn't it dreadful? Here we are, two officers of the German General Staff, discussing how best to murder our commander-in-chief. It must be done. This is our only chance... Hitler must be cut down like a rabid dog." (1943)
- "I cannot understand how people can still call themselves Christians and not be furious adversaries of Hitler's regime." (April 1943)
- "It is almost certain that we will fail. But how will future history judge the German people if not even a handful of men had the courage to put an end to that criminal?" (June 1944)
- "The idea of freedom can never be disassociated from real Prussia. The real Prussian spirit means a synthesis between restraint and freedom, between voluntary subordination and conscientious leadership, between pride in oneself and consideration for others, between rigor and compassion. Unless a balance is kept between these qualities, the Prussian spirit is in danger of degenerating into soulless routine and narrow-minded dogmatism." (1943, at his son's confirmation at Potsdam Garrison Church)
- "I would like to show the German people a film entitled 'Germany at the end of the war.' Then perhaps people would be alarmed and would realize where we are heading. People would agree with me that the superior warlord (Hitler) must disappear. But since we cannot show this movie, people will bring up the 'stab in the back' legend whenever we act against Hitler." (December 1941)
- "Every day, we are assassinating nearly 16,000 additional victims."
- "Hitler is a dancing dervish. He must be shot down." (1938)
- "Bans are laws for the stupid." (1942)
- "The Allies must be stupid if they don't see that the German military is stronger without Hitler than with him." (Alternate translation: "The Allies are not stupid; they see that the German military is stronger without Hitler than with him.")
Henning
von Tresckow’s quote [PHOTO SOURCE: http://izquotes.com/quote/273744]
|
Portrayals
in media
Henning
von Tresckow has been portrayed by the following actors in film:
- Kenneth Branagh in the 2008 United States film Valkyrie.
- Ulrich Tukur in the 2004 German film Stauffenberg.
INTERNET SOURCE: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Henning_von_Tresckow
Sourced
- The assassination must be attempted at all costs. Even if it should not succeed, an attempt to seize power in Berlin must be made. What matters now is no longer the practical purpose of the coup, but to prove to the world and for the records of history that the men of the resistance dared to take the decisive step. Compared to this objective, nothing else is of consequence.
- 1944. Fest, Joachim. Plotting Hitler's Death, 236
- It is almost certain that we will fail. But how will future history judge the German people, if not even a handful of men had the courage to put an end to that criminal?
- June 1944. Marcel Stein, Field Marshal Von Manstein, a Portrait, p247
- The whole world will vilify us now, but I am still totally convinced that we did the right thing. Hitler is the archenemy not only of Germany but of the world. When, in few hours' time, I go before God to account for what I have done and left undone, I know I will be able to justify what I did in the struggle against Hitler. God promised Abraham that He would not destroy Sodom if just ten righteous men could be found in the city, and so I hope that for our sake God will not destroy Germany. No one among us can complain about his death, for whoever joined our ranks put on the shirt of Nessus. A man's moral worth is established only at the point where he is ready to give up his life in defense of his convictions.
- July 21, 1944. Joachim Fest, Plotting Hitler's Death, 289-290
- Remember this moment. If we don't convince the field marshal (Fedor von Bock) to fly to Hitler at once and have these orders (Commissar Order) canceled, the German people will be burdened with a guilt the world will not forget in a hundred years. This guilt will fall not only on Hitler, Himmler, Göring, and their comrades but on you and me, your wife and mine, your children and mine, that woman crossing the street, and those children over there playing ball.
- 1941. Fest, Joachim. Plotting Hitler's Death, 175
- Robert Kane, Disobedience and Conspiracy in the German Army, 1918-1945, 163
- Isn't it dreadful? Here we are, two officers of the German General Staff, discussing how best to murder our commander in chief. It must be done. This is our only chance... Hitler must be cut down like a rabid dog.
- 1943. Roger Moorhouse, Killing Hitler, 249
- I cannot understand how people can still call themselves Christians and not be furious adversaries of Hitler's regime.
- April 1943. Bodo Scheurig, Henning Von Tresckow: Ein Preusse Gegen Hitler
- The idea of freedom can never be disassociated from real Prussia. The real Prussian spirit means a synthesis between restraint and freedom, between voluntary subordination and conscientious leadership, between pride in oneself and consideration for others, between rigor and compassion. Unless a balance is kept between these qualities, the Prussian spirit is in danger of degenerating into soulless routine and narrow-minded dogmatism.
- 1943, at his sons' confirmation at Potsdam Garrison Church. Michael Balfour, Withstanding Hitler, 1988, p130
- I would like to show the German people a film with the title 'Germany at the end of the war.' Then perhaps people would be alarmed and would realize where we are heading. People would agree with me that the superior warlord (Hitler) must disappear. But since we cannot show this movie people will create the legend of the 'stab in the back' whenever we will act against Hitler.
- December 1941. Bodo Scheurig, Henning von Tresckow, ein Preusse gegen Hitler, p135-6
- Every day, we are assassinating nearly 16,000 additional victims.
- Philipp von Boeselager, Daily Telegraph book review of Valkyrie: the Plot to Kill Hitler by Philipp von Boeselager , February 5, 2008.
- Hitler is a dancing dervish. He must be shot down.
- 1938. Roger Moorhouse, Killing Hitler, 237
- Bans are laws for the stupid.
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