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{{Short description|Planned Nazi civil administration of Russia}}
{{More citations needed|date=September 2007}}
{{More citations needed|date= September 2007}}
{{Infobox country
{{Infobox country
| conventional_long_name = Reichskommissariat Moskowien
| conventional_long_name = Reichskommissariat Moskowien
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| status_text = Projected [[Reichskommissariat]] of [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]
| status_text = Projected [[Reichskommissariat]] of [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]
| empire = Nazi Germany
| empire = Nazi Germany
| government_type = Civil administration
| government_type = Military administration
| year_start = N/A
| year_start =
| year_end = N/A
| year_end =
| event_start =
| event_start =
| life_span = N/A
| life_span =
| date_start =
| date_start =
| event_end =
| event_end =
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| symbol_type = Emblem
| symbol_type = Emblem
| symbol = Coat of arms of Germany
| symbol = Coat of arms of Germany
| image_map = File:Reichskommissariat_Moskowia.svg
| image_map =
| capital = initially [[Moscow]],<br />then ''not designated''
| capital = Initially [[Moscow]],<br />then ''not designated''
| common_languages =
| common_languages =
| currency =
| currency =
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}}
}}


'''Reichskommissariat Moskowien''' ('''RKM'''; {{lang-ru|Рейхскомиссариат Московия}}), also spelled as '''Moskau''', literally "[[Reich Commissariat]] of [[Muscovy]] (or [[Moscow]])", was the civilian occupation regime that [[Nazi Germany]] intended to create in central and northern [[European Russia]] during [[World War II]], one of several similar ''[[Reichskommissariat]]''. It was also known initially as the '''Reichskommissariat Russland''' (Reich Commissariat of [[Russia]]). [[Siegfried Kasche]] was the projected ''Reichskomissar'', but due to the German failure to occupy the territories intended to form the ''Reichskommissariat'', it remained on paper only.
'''Reichskommissariat Moskowien''' ('''RKM'''; {{lang-ru| Рейхскомиссариат Московия| Reykhskomissariat Moskoviya |Reich Commissariat of Muscovy}}) was the civilian occupation-regime that [[Nazi Germany]] intended to establish in central and northern [[European Russia]] during [[World War II]], one of several similar ''[[Reichskommissariat]]e''. It was also known initially as the '''Reichskommissariat Russland''' ({{lit|Reich Commissariat of Russia|lk=no}}), but was later renamed as part of German policies of partitioning the Russian state. [[Siegfried Kasche]] was the projected ''Reichskomissar'', but due to the [[Wehrmacht]]'s failure to occupy the territories intended to form the ''Reichskommissariat'', it remained on paper only.


==Background==
==Background==
[[File:Eastern Front 1941-06 to 1941-12.png|thumb|right|275px|The [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] during [[Operation Typhoon]], 1941]]
[[File:Eastern Front 1941-06 to 1941-12.png|thumb|right|275px|The [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] during [[Operation Typhoon]], 1941]]
Nazi Germany intended to destroy [[Russia]] permanently, irrespective of whether it was [[Capitalism|capitalist]], [[Bolshevism|communist]] or [[Tsarism|tsarist]]. [[Adolf Hitler]]'s ''[[Lebensraum]]'' policy, expressed in ''[[Mein Kampf]]'', was to dispossess the [[Russians|Russian]] inhabitants&nbsp;– as was to happen with other [[Slavs]] in [[Poland]] and most of [[Eastern Europe]]- and to either expel most of them beyond the [[Ural mountains]] or to exterminate them by various means. Under ''[[Generalplan Ost]]'', German [[Settler colonialism|colonial settlement]] was to be encouraged.
Nazi Germany intended to destroy [[Russia]] and the [[Russians|Russian people]] as a historical and cultural entity permanently, irrespective of whether it was [[Capitalism|capitalist]], [[Bolshevism|communist]] or [[Tsarism|tsarist]]. [[Adolf Hitler]]'s ''[[Lebensraum]]'' policy, expressed in ''[[Mein Kampf]]'', was to dispossess the Russian inhabitants – as was to happen with other [[Slavic people|Slavs]] in [[Poland]] and most of [[Eastern Europe]] and to either expel most of them beyond the [[Ural Mountains]] or to exterminate them by various means. Under the genocidal ''[[Generalplan Ost]]'', German [[Settler colonialism|colonial settlement]] was to be encouraged in these former Slavic regions.


As the campaign against the Soviet Union advanced eastward, the occupied territories would gradually be transferred from military to civilian administration. Hitler's final decision on its administration entailed the new eastern territories being divided into four ''[[Reichskommissariat]]s'' in order to destroy Russia as a geographical entity by dividing it into as many different parts as possible. These new institutions were to be under the nominal supervision of [[Reichsleiter]] [[Alfred Rosenberg]] as head of the [[Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories]]. The leaders of these provinces, the [[Reichskommissar]]s, would however be direct subordinates of Hitler himself, and answerable only to him. Conquered territories of most of Russia proper were initially to become a ''Reichskommissariat Russland'' (Reich Commissariat of Russia) according to Rosenberg's plans, although this was later changed to ''Moskowien'' ([[Muscovy]]) informally also known as ''Moskau'' (Moscow). These eastern districts were thought to be the most sensitive to administer of the conquered territories. As a consequence, they would be managed from the regional capitals and directly by the German government in [[Berlin]].
As the campaign against the [[Soviet Union]] advanced eastward, the occupied territories would gradually be transferred from military to civilian administration. Hitler's final decision on its administration entailed the new eastern territories being divided into four ''[[Reichskommissariat]]s'' in order to destroy [[Russia]] as a geographical entity by dividing it into as many different parts as possible. These new institutions were to be under the nominal supervision of [[Reichsleiter]] [[Alfred Rosenberg]] as head of the [[Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories]].


The leaders of these provinces, the [[Reichskommissar]]s, would however be direct subordinates of Hitler himself, and answerable only to him. Conquered territories of most of Russia proper were initially to become a ''Reichskommissariat Russland'' (Reich Commissariat of Russia) according to Rosenberg's plans, although this was later changed to ''Moskowien'' ([[Muscovy (disambiguation)|Muscovy]]) informally also known as ''Moskau'' ([[Moscow]]). These eastern districts were thought to be the most sensitive to administer of the conquered territories. As a consequence, they would be managed from the regional capitals and directly by the German government in [[Berlin]].
The plans were never fulfilled as the German military's plans to capture [[Moscow]] and central Russia in the [[Operation Typhoon]] failed. The transfer of conquered territories to Nazi civilian rule was therefore never completed.

The plans were never fulfilled as the German military's plans to capture [[Moscow]] and central Russia in the [[Operation Typhoon]] failed. The transfer of conquered territories to Nazi civilian rule therefore never materialized.


==Territorial planning==
==Territorial planning==
{{Further|Ural Mountains in Nazi planning}}
{{Further|Ural Mountains in Nazi planning}}
The envisioned province included most of [[European Russia]] between the [[Ural mountains]] (as well as some districts east of it, including the city of [[Yekaterinburg|Sverdlovsk]]) and its boundaries with [[Finland]], the [[Baltic states]], [[Belarus]], and [[Ukraine]]. The Russian parts of the Caucasus region were to be controlled by a separate [[Reichskommissariat Kaukasus]], while the rest of southern Russia was to be integrated into the [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] for its intended extension eastward to the border with [[Kazakhstan]]. Smaller parts that were excluded were the [[Pskov]], [[Smolensk]] and [[Leningrad]] areas (included in the [[Reichskommissariat Ostland]]), and [[Eastern Karelia]] and the [[Kola peninsula]], which were promised to Germany's co-belligerent Finland in 1941 for its contribution to the campaign in the east. It would therefore encompass more or less the same lands that were once under the control of the medieval state of [[Muscovy]]. Its final territory was to be bounded on the west by the Reichskommissariat Ostland and the border with [[Finland]], on the north by the [[Arctic ocean]], in the east by the [[Ural Mountains]] and [[Ural River]], and in the south by the massively expanded Reichskommissariat Ukraine.
The envisioned province included most of [[European Russia]] between the [[Ural mountains]] (as well as some districts east of it, including the city of [[Yekaterinburg|Sverdlovsk]]) and its boundaries with [[Finland]], the [[Baltic states]], [[Belarus]], and [[Ukraine]]. The Russian parts of the [[Caucasus]] region were to be controlled by a separate [[Reichskommissariat Kaukasien]], while the rest of southern Russia was to be integrated into the [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] for its intended extension eastward to the border with [[Kazakhstan]]. Smaller parts that were excluded were the [[Pskov]], [[Smolensk]] and [[Leningrad]] areas (included in the [[Reichskommissariat Ostland]]), and [[Eastern Karelia]] and the [[Kola peninsula]], which were promised to Germany's ally Finland in 1941 for its contribution to the conquest of the east. It would therefore encompass more or less the same lands that were once under the control of the medieval state of [[Grand Duchy of Moscow|Muscovy]]. Its final territory was to be bounded on the west by the Reichskommissariat Ostland and the border with [[Finland]], on the north by the [[Arctic Ocean]], in the east by the [[Ural Mountains]] and [[Ural River]], and in the south by the massively expanded [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]].


The planned administrative subdivisions of the province were largely based boundary-wise on the pre-existing Russian [[oblasts]], and supposed to be seated in [[Leningrad]], [[Nizhny Novgorod|Gorki]], [[Tula, Russia|Tula]], Moscow, [[Kazan]], [[Kirov, Kirov Oblast|Kirov]], [[Perm|Molotov]], and [[Ufa]].
The planned administrative subdivisions of the province were largely based boundary-wise on the pre-existing Russian [[oblasts]], and supposed to be seated in [[Leningrad]], [[Nizhny Novgorod|Gorki]], [[Tula, Russia|Tula]], Moscow, [[Kazan]], [[Kirov, Kirov Oblast|Kirov]], [[Perm, Russia|Molotov]], and [[Ufa]].


The administrative capital was tentatively proposed as Moscow, the historical and political center of the Russian state. As the German armies were approaching the Soviet capital in the [[Operation Typhoon]] in the autumn of 1941, Hitler determined that Moscow, like Leningrad and [[Kiev]], would be levelled and its 4 million inhabitants killed, to destroy it as a potential center of Bolshevist resistance. For this purpose Moscow was to be covered by a large [[artificial lake]] which would permanently submerge it,<ref>Oscar Pinkus (2005). ''The war aims and strategies of Adolf Hitler'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=gPnjXC1lEJ8C&pg=PA228 p. 228]. MacFarland & Company Inc. Publishers.</ref><ref>Fabian Von Schlabrendorff (1947). ''They Almost Killed Hitler: Based on the Personal Account of Fabian Von Schlabrendorf'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=-qt8muyq2jkC&pg=PA35 p. 35]. Gero v. S. Gaevernitz.</ref> by opening the sluices of the [[Moscow Canal|Moscow-Volga Canal]].<ref name="zeit">Ganzenmüller, Jörg (18 July 2011). ''[http://www.zeit.de/zeit-geschichte/2011/02/Kriegsziele-Generalplan-Ost/seite-2 Blockade Leningrads: Hunger als Waffe]''. Zeit Online. Retrieved 6 November 2011. (In German)</ref> During the advance on Moscow [[Otto Skorzeny]] was tasked with capturing these dam structures.<ref name="zeit"/>
The administrative capital was tentatively proposed as Moscow, the historical and political center of the Russian state. As the German armies were approaching the Soviet capital in the [[Operation Typhoon]] in the autumn of 1941, Hitler determined that Moscow, like Leningrad and [[Kiev]], would be levelled and its 4 million inhabitants killed, to destroy it as a potential center of Bolshevist resistance. For this purpose Moscow was to be covered by a large [[artificial lake]] which would permanently submerge it,<ref>Oscar Pinkus (2005). ''The war aims and strategies of Adolf Hitler'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=gPnjXC1lEJ8C&pg=PA228 p. 228]. MacFarland & Company Inc. Publishers.</ref><ref>Fabian Von Schlabrendorff (1947). ''They Almost Killed Hitler: Based on the Personal Account of Fabian Von Schlabrendorf'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=-qt8muyq2jkC&pg=PA35 p. 35]. Gero v. S. Gaevernitz.</ref> by opening the sluices of the [[Moscow Canal|Moscow-Volga Canal]].<ref name="zeit">Ganzenmüller, Jörg (18 July 2011). ''[http://www.zeit.de/zeit-geschichte/2011/02/Kriegsziele-Generalplan-Ost/seite-2 Blockade Leningrads: Hunger als Waffe]''. Zeit Online. Retrieved 6 November 2011. (In German)</ref> During the advance on Moscow [[Otto Skorzeny]] was tasked with capturing these dam structures.<ref name="zeit"/>


During a conference on 16 July 1941, Hitler stated his personal desires on the division of the eastern territories to be acquired for Germany.<ref name="ghdi">[http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=1549 Martin Bormann's Minutes of a Meeting at Hitler’s Headquarters (July 16, 1941).] German History in Documents and Images. Retrieved 14 May 2011.</ref> The [[Crimean peninsula]], together with a large hinterland to its north encompassing much of the southern Ukraine was to be "cleared" of all existing foreigners and exclusively settled by Germans (as with the ''Schutzstaffel's [[Wehrbauer]]'' proposals) becoming Reich territory (part of Germany).<ref name="ghdi"/> The formerly [[Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria|Austrian part]] of [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]] was to be treated in a similar fashion. In addition the [[Baltic states]], the "[[Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic|Volga colony]]" and the Baku district (as a military concession) would also have to be annexed to the Reich.<ref name="ghdi"/>
During a conference on 16 July 1941, Hitler stated his personal desires on the division of the eastern territories to be acquired for Germany.<ref name="ghdi">[http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org/sub_document.cfm?document_id=1549 Martin Bormann's Minutes of a Meeting at Hitler’s Headquarters (July 16, 1941).] German History in Documents and Images. Retrieved 14 May 2011.</ref> The [[Crimean peninsula]], together with a large hinterland to its north encompassing much of the southern Ukraine was to be "cleared" of all existing foreigners and exclusively settled by Germans (as with the ''[[Schutzstaffel|Schutzstaffel's]] [[Wehrbauer]]'' proposals) becoming Reich territory (part of Germany).<ref name="ghdi"/> The formerly [[Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria|Austrian part]] of [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]] was to be treated in a similar fashion. In addition the [[Baltic states]], the "[[Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic|Volga colony]]" and the Baku district (as a military concession) would also have to be annexed to the Reich.<ref name="ghdi"/>


At first, the plans had assumed an eastern limit at the "[[A-A line]]", a notional boundary running along the [[Volga river]] between the two cities of [[Archangelsk]] and [[Astrakhan]]. Since it was expected well-ahead of the operation that the Soviet Union would in all likelihood not be totally defeated by military means despite being reduced to a [[rump state]], aerial bombardments were to be carried out — despite the near-total [[Luftwaffe#Development_and_equipment|lack of a strategic bomber design]] in the Luftwaffe's arsenal with which to perform such raids — against the remaining enemy industrial centers further to the east.
At first, the plans had assumed an eastern limit at the "[[A-A line]]", a notional boundary running along the [[Volga river]] between the two cities of [[Archangelsk]] and [[Astrakhan]]. Since it was expected well-ahead of the operation that the Soviet Union would in all likelihood not be totally defeated by military means despite being reduced to a [[rump state]], aerial bombardments were to be carried out — despite the near-total [[Luftwaffe#Development_and_equipment|lack of a strategic bomber design]] in the Luftwaffe's arsenal with which to perform such raids — against the remaining enemy industrial centers further to the east.
Line 67: Line 70:
Koch rejected his nomination in June of that year because it was, as he described it, "entirely negative", and was later given control of [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] instead.<ref name="kay2"/> Hitler proposed [[Wilhelm Kube]] as an alternative, but this was rejected after [[Hermann Göring]] and Rosenberg deemed him too old for the position (Kube was then in his mid-fifties), and instead assigned him to [[Belarus]]. SA-[[Obergruppenführer]] [[Siegfried Kasche]], the German envoy in [[Zagreb]], was selected instead.<ref>Kay (2006), pp. 181-182.</ref> [[Senate of Hamburg|Hamburg senator]] and [[Sturmabteilung|SA]] General [[:de:Wilhelm von Allwörden|Wilhelm von Allwörden]] promoted himself to be nominated as the Commissioner for Economic Affairs for the Moscow area.<ref>Angelika Ebbinghaus, Karsten Linne (1997). ''Kein abgeschlossenes Kapitel: Hamburg im "Dritten Reich"''. Europäische Verlagsanstalt. {{ISBN|3434520066}}. p. 79</ref> Kasche's nomination was opposed by [[Heinrich Himmler]], who considered Kasche's SA background as being a problem and characterized him to Rosenberg as "a man of the desk, in no wise energetic or strong, and an outspoken enemy of the SS".<ref>Dallin, Alexander (1981). ''German rule in Russia, 1941-1945: a study of occupation policies''. Westview. p. 296</ref>
Koch rejected his nomination in June of that year because it was, as he described it, "entirely negative", and was later given control of [[Reichskommissariat Ukraine]] instead.<ref name="kay2"/> Hitler proposed [[Wilhelm Kube]] as an alternative, but this was rejected after [[Hermann Göring]] and Rosenberg deemed him too old for the position (Kube was then in his mid-fifties), and instead assigned him to [[Belarus]]. SA-[[Obergruppenführer]] [[Siegfried Kasche]], the German envoy in [[Zagreb]], was selected instead.<ref>Kay (2006), pp. 181-182.</ref> [[Senate of Hamburg|Hamburg senator]] and [[Sturmabteilung|SA]] General [[:de:Wilhelm von Allwörden|Wilhelm von Allwörden]] promoted himself to be nominated as the Commissioner for Economic Affairs for the Moscow area.<ref>Angelika Ebbinghaus, Karsten Linne (1997). ''Kein abgeschlossenes Kapitel: Hamburg im "Dritten Reich"''. Europäische Verlagsanstalt. {{ISBN|3434520066}}. p. 79</ref> Kasche's nomination was opposed by [[Heinrich Himmler]], who considered Kasche's SA background as being a problem and characterized him to Rosenberg as "a man of the desk, in no wise energetic or strong, and an outspoken enemy of the SS".<ref>Dallin, Alexander (1981). ''German rule in Russia, 1941-1945: a study of occupation policies''. Westview. p. 296</ref>


[[Erich von dem Bach-Zalewski]] was to become the regional [[Higher SS and Police Leader]], and was already assigned to [[Army Group Centre]] as ''HSSPF-Russland-Mitte'' (Central Russia) for this purpose.<ref name="kay2"/> [[Odilo Globocnik]], then the SS and Police Leader in [[Lublin]] was to head Generalkommissariat [[Yekaterinburg|Sverdlovsk]], the easternmost district of Moskowien.<ref name="kay2"/> Rosenberg suggested [[Wolf-Heinrich Graf von Helldorf]] as ''Hauptkommissar'' of the [[Yaroslavl]] district.<ref>(German) [[Christian Gerlach|Gerlach, Christian]] (1999). ''Kalkulierte Morde''. Hamburger Edition.</ref>
[[Erich von dem Bach-Zalewski]] was to become the regional [[Higher SS and Police Leader]], and was already assigned to [[Army Group Centre]] as ''HSSPF-Russland-Mitte'' ([[Central Russia]]) for this purpose.<ref name="kay2"/> [[Odilo Globocnik]], then the [[SS and police leader|SS and Police Leader]] in [[Lublin]] was to head Generalkommissariat [[Yekaterinburg|Sverdlovsk]], the easternmost district of Moskowien.<ref name="kay2"/> Rosenberg suggested [[Wolf-Heinrich Graf von Helldorf]] as ''Hauptkommissar'' of the [[Yaroslavl]] district.<ref>(German) [[Christian Gerlach|Gerlach, Christian]] (1999). ''Kalkulierte Morde''. Hamburger Edition.</ref>


==Planned policies==
==Planned policies==
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==See also==
==See also==
*[[Collaboration in the German-occupied Soviet Union]]
*[[Russian volunteer units with Axis forces]]
*[[Battle of Moscow]]
*[[Battle of Moscow]]
*[[Lokot Autonomy]]
*[[Lokot Autonomy]]
Line 88: Line 91:
*Rich, Norman (1974). Hitler’s War Aims: the Establishment of the New Order. New York: Norton. {{ISBN|978-0-393055-09-2}}.
*Rich, Norman (1974). Hitler’s War Aims: the Establishment of the New Order. New York: Norton. {{ISBN|978-0-393055-09-2}}.
*Wasser, Bruno (1993). Himmler's Raumplanung im Osten: Der Generalplan Ost in Polen 1940-1944. Basel: Birkhäuser. {{ISBN|3-540-30951-9}}.
*Wasser, Bruno (1993). Himmler's Raumplanung im Osten: Der Generalplan Ost in Polen 1940-1944. Basel: Birkhäuser. {{ISBN|3-540-30951-9}}.
*Müller, Rolf-Dieter and Ueberschär, Gerd R. (2009). [[Hitler's War in the East 1941−1945]]: A Critical Assessment, 3rd Edition. New York: [[Berghan Books]]. {{ISBN|978-1-84545-501-9}}.
*Müller, Rolf-Dieter and Ueberschär, Gerd R. (2009). [[Hitler's War in the East 1941−1945]]: A Critical Assessment, 3rd Edition. New York: Berghan Books. {{ISBN|978-1-84545-501-9}}.


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 12:49, 19 July 2024

Reichskommissariat Moskowien
StatusProjected Reichskommissariat of Germany
CapitalInitially Moscow,
then not designated
GovernmentMilitary administration
Reichskommissar 
• (projected)
Siegfried Kasche
Historical eraWorld War II

Reichskommissariat Moskowien (RKM; Russian: Рейхскомиссариат Московия, romanizedReykhskomissariat Moskoviya, lit.'Reich Commissariat of Muscovy') was the civilian occupation-regime that Nazi Germany intended to establish in central and northern European Russia during World War II, one of several similar Reichskommissariate. It was also known initially as the Reichskommissariat Russland (lit.'Reich Commissariat of Russia'), but was later renamed as part of German policies of partitioning the Russian state. Siegfried Kasche was the projected Reichskomissar, but due to the Wehrmacht's failure to occupy the territories intended to form the Reichskommissariat, it remained on paper only.

Background

[edit]
The Eastern Front during Operation Typhoon, 1941

Nazi Germany intended to destroy Russia and the Russian people as a historical and cultural entity permanently, irrespective of whether it was capitalist, communist or tsarist. Adolf Hitler's Lebensraum policy, expressed in Mein Kampf, was to dispossess the Russian inhabitants – as was to happen with other Slavs in Poland and most of Eastern Europe – and to either expel most of them beyond the Ural Mountains or to exterminate them by various means. Under the genocidal Generalplan Ost, German colonial settlement was to be encouraged in these former Slavic regions.

As the campaign against the Soviet Union advanced eastward, the occupied territories would gradually be transferred from military to civilian administration. Hitler's final decision on its administration entailed the new eastern territories being divided into four Reichskommissariats in order to destroy Russia as a geographical entity by dividing it into as many different parts as possible. These new institutions were to be under the nominal supervision of Reichsleiter Alfred Rosenberg as head of the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories.

The leaders of these provinces, the Reichskommissars, would however be direct subordinates of Hitler himself, and answerable only to him. Conquered territories of most of Russia proper were initially to become a Reichskommissariat Russland (Reich Commissariat of Russia) according to Rosenberg's plans, although this was later changed to Moskowien (Muscovy) informally also known as Moskau (Moscow). These eastern districts were thought to be the most sensitive to administer of the conquered territories. As a consequence, they would be managed from the regional capitals and directly by the German government in Berlin.

The plans were never fulfilled as the German military's plans to capture Moscow and central Russia in the Operation Typhoon failed. The transfer of conquered territories to Nazi civilian rule therefore never materialized.

Territorial planning

[edit]

The envisioned province included most of European Russia between the Ural mountains (as well as some districts east of it, including the city of Sverdlovsk) and its boundaries with Finland, the Baltic states, Belarus, and Ukraine. The Russian parts of the Caucasus region were to be controlled by a separate Reichskommissariat Kaukasien, while the rest of southern Russia was to be integrated into the Reichskommissariat Ukraine for its intended extension eastward to the border with Kazakhstan. Smaller parts that were excluded were the Pskov, Smolensk and Leningrad areas (included in the Reichskommissariat Ostland), and Eastern Karelia and the Kola peninsula, which were promised to Germany's ally Finland in 1941 for its contribution to the conquest of the east. It would therefore encompass more or less the same lands that were once under the control of the medieval state of Muscovy. Its final territory was to be bounded on the west by the Reichskommissariat Ostland and the border with Finland, on the north by the Arctic Ocean, in the east by the Ural Mountains and Ural River, and in the south by the massively expanded Reichskommissariat Ukraine.

The planned administrative subdivisions of the province were largely based boundary-wise on the pre-existing Russian oblasts, and supposed to be seated in Leningrad, Gorki, Tula, Moscow, Kazan, Kirov, Molotov, and Ufa.

The administrative capital was tentatively proposed as Moscow, the historical and political center of the Russian state. As the German armies were approaching the Soviet capital in the Operation Typhoon in the autumn of 1941, Hitler determined that Moscow, like Leningrad and Kiev, would be levelled and its 4 million inhabitants killed, to destroy it as a potential center of Bolshevist resistance. For this purpose Moscow was to be covered by a large artificial lake which would permanently submerge it,[1][2] by opening the sluices of the Moscow-Volga Canal.[3] During the advance on Moscow Otto Skorzeny was tasked with capturing these dam structures.[3]

During a conference on 16 July 1941, Hitler stated his personal desires on the division of the eastern territories to be acquired for Germany.[4] The Crimean peninsula, together with a large hinterland to its north encompassing much of the southern Ukraine was to be "cleared" of all existing foreigners and exclusively settled by Germans (as with the Schutzstaffel's Wehrbauer proposals) becoming Reich territory (part of Germany).[4] The formerly Austrian part of Galicia was to be treated in a similar fashion. In addition the Baltic states, the "Volga colony" and the Baku district (as a military concession) would also have to be annexed to the Reich.[4]

At first, the plans had assumed an eastern limit at the "A-A line", a notional boundary running along the Volga river between the two cities of Archangelsk and Astrakhan. Since it was expected well-ahead of the operation that the Soviet Union would in all likelihood not be totally defeated by military means despite being reduced to a rump state, aerial bombardments were to be carried out — despite the near-total lack of a strategic bomber design in the Luftwaffe's arsenal with which to perform such raids — against the remaining enemy industrial centers further to the east.

Political leadership

[edit]

Rosenberg had initially proposed Erich Koch, notorious even among the Nazis as a particularly brutal leader,[5] as Reichskommissar of the province on 7 April 1941.[6]

This occupation will indeed have a completely different character to that in the Baltic Sea provinces, in the Ukraine and in the Caucasus.[nb 1] It will be geared towards the oppression of any Russian or Bolshevist resistance and [sic] requires an absolutely ruthless personality, not only on the part of the military representation but also the potential political leadership. The resulting tasks need not be recorded.

— Alfred Rosenberg, memo dated 7 April 1941[6]

Koch rejected his nomination in June of that year because it was, as he described it, "entirely negative", and was later given control of Reichskommissariat Ukraine instead.[5] Hitler proposed Wilhelm Kube as an alternative, but this was rejected after Hermann Göring and Rosenberg deemed him too old for the position (Kube was then in his mid-fifties), and instead assigned him to Belarus. SA-Obergruppenführer Siegfried Kasche, the German envoy in Zagreb, was selected instead.[7] Hamburg senator and SA General Wilhelm von Allwörden promoted himself to be nominated as the Commissioner for Economic Affairs for the Moscow area.[8] Kasche's nomination was opposed by Heinrich Himmler, who considered Kasche's SA background as being a problem and characterized him to Rosenberg as "a man of the desk, in no wise energetic or strong, and an outspoken enemy of the SS".[9]

Erich von dem Bach-Zalewski was to become the regional Higher SS and Police Leader, and was already assigned to Army Group Centre as HSSPF-Russland-Mitte (Central Russia) for this purpose.[5] Odilo Globocnik, then the SS and Police Leader in Lublin was to head Generalkommissariat Sverdlovsk, the easternmost district of Moskowien.[5] Rosenberg suggested Wolf-Heinrich Graf von Helldorf as Hauptkommissar of the Yaroslavl district.[10]

Planned policies

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Note that this comment needs to be read in the context of Rosenberg's rejected plan to make use of the Soviet Union's non-Russian ethnic groups in these regions (Balts, Ukrainians, et al) by presenting the German invasion as a liberation from Russian rule and promising them political independence.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Oscar Pinkus (2005). The war aims and strategies of Adolf Hitler, p. 228. MacFarland & Company Inc. Publishers.
  2. ^ Fabian Von Schlabrendorff (1947). They Almost Killed Hitler: Based on the Personal Account of Fabian Von Schlabrendorf, p. 35. Gero v. S. Gaevernitz.
  3. ^ a b Ganzenmüller, Jörg (18 July 2011). Blockade Leningrads: Hunger als Waffe. Zeit Online. Retrieved 6 November 2011. (In German)
  4. ^ a b c Martin Bormann's Minutes of a Meeting at Hitler’s Headquarters (July 16, 1941). German History in Documents and Images. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d Kay (2006), p. 88.
  6. ^ a b Kay, Alex J. (2006). Exploitation, Resettlement, Mass Murder: Political and Economic Planning for German Occupation Policy in the Soviet Union, 1940-1941, p. 79. Berghahn Books.
  7. ^ Kay (2006), pp. 181-182.
  8. ^ Angelika Ebbinghaus, Karsten Linne (1997). Kein abgeschlossenes Kapitel: Hamburg im "Dritten Reich". Europäische Verlagsanstalt. ISBN 3434520066. p. 79
  9. ^ Dallin, Alexander (1981). German rule in Russia, 1941-1945: a study of occupation policies. Westview. p. 296
  10. ^ (German) Gerlach, Christian (1999). Kalkulierte Morde. Hamburger Edition.

Sources

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  • Rich, Norman (1973). Hitler’s War Aims: Ideology, the Nazi State, and the Course of Expansion. New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-05454-3.
  • Rich, Norman (1974). Hitler’s War Aims: the Establishment of the New Order. New York: Norton. ISBN 978-0-393055-09-2.
  • Wasser, Bruno (1993). Himmler's Raumplanung im Osten: Der Generalplan Ost in Polen 1940-1944. Basel: Birkhäuser. ISBN 3-540-30951-9.
  • Müller, Rolf-Dieter and Ueberschär, Gerd R. (2009). Hitler's War in the East 1941−1945: A Critical Assessment, 3rd Edition. New York: Berghan Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-501-9.
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