German spies in the Red Army during the Second World War. The actions of German intelligence before the war with the USSR Military intelligence of the Second World War

Nathan Hale

Considered the first American spy. At home, he became a symbol of the struggle of his people for independence. As a young patriotic teacher, with the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, Hale joined the army. When Washington needed a spy, Nathan volunteered. He obtained the necessary information in a week, but at the very last moment he signaled not to his own, but to the English boat, which resulted in the death penalty.

Major John Andre

The British intelligence officer was well known in the best houses of New York during American war for independence. After he was caught, the scout was sentenced to death by hanging.

James Armistead Lafayette

Became the first African-American agent during the American Revolution. His reports played an important role in the defeat of the British troops at the Battle of Yorktown.

Belle Boyd

Miss Boyd became a spy at the age of 17. She served the Confederacy throughout the American Civil War in Dixie, the North, and England. For her invaluable help during the campaign in the Shenandoah Valley, General Jackson awarded her the rank of captain, took her as an adjutant and allowed her to attend all the reviews of his army.

Emeline Pigott

She served in the Confederate Army in North Carolina. She was arrested several times, but each time after her release she returned to her activities.

Elizabeth Van Lew

Elizabeth was the Northerners' most valuable intelligence agent during the American Civil War in 1861. After her retirement in 1877, for the rest of her life, she was supported by the family of a federal soldier, whom she once helped to escape.

Thomas Miller Beach

Was an English spy who served in the Northern Army during the American civil war. He was not officially caught, but he had to give up his espionage activities.

Christian Snook Guerhronye

The Dutch traveler and Islamic scholar undertook a scientific journey to Arabia and spent a whole year in Mecca and Jida under the guise of a Muslim jurist.

Fritz Joubert Ducaine

For 10 years, he managed to organize the largest German spy network in the country. He himself explained this by a desire to take revenge on the British for the burning of his family estate. Last years The spy spent his life in poverty in the city hospital.

Mata Hari

The modern prototype of the femme fatale. An exotic dancer, she was executed in 1917 for spying for Germany.

Sydney Reilly

The British spy was nicknamed the "King of Spy". The super agent organized many conspiracies, in connection with which he became very popular in the film industry of the USSR and the West. It is believed that James Bond was written off from him.

Cambridge Five

The core of the network of Soviet agents in the UK, recruited in the 1930s at the University of Cambridge. When the network was exposed, none of its members were punished. Members: Kim Philby, Donald McLean, Anthony Blunt, Guy Burgess, John Cairncross.

Richard Sorge

Soviet spy during the Second World War. He also worked as a journalist in Germany and Japan, where he was arrested on charges of espionage and hanged.

Virginia Hall

An American volunteered for special operations During the Second World War. Working in occupied France, Hall coordinated resistance activities in Vichy, was a correspondent for the New York Post, and was also on the Gestapo's most wanted list.

Nancy Grace Augusta Wake

With the German invasion of France, the girl and her husband joined the ranks of the Resistance, becoming an active member. Afraid of being caught, Nancy left the country herself, ending up in London in 1943. There she was trained as a professional intelligence officer and returned to France a year later. She was engaged in organizing the supply of weapons and recruiting new members of the Resistance. After her husband's death, Nancy returned to London.

George Koval

In the mid-1940s, a Soviet atomic intelligence officer obtained for Moscow the most valuable information on the Manhattan nuclear project in the United States and was recently posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Russia for this.

Elyas Bazna

He worked as a valet to the British ambassador in Turkey. Taking advantage of the ambassador's habit of taking secret documents home from the embassy, ​​he began to make photocopies of them and sell them to the German attache Ludwig Moisisch.

Julius and Ethel Rosenberg

Spouses Julius and Ethel, American communists, became the only civilians executed in the United States for transferring American nuclear secrets to the USSR.

Klaus Fuchs

A German nuclear physicist came to England in 1933. Klaus worked on a top secret British project atomic bomb, and later on the American Manhattan project. He was arrested and imprisoned after it became clear that he was passing information to the USSR.

  1. I came across an interesting document, which also mentions the Smolensk region.
    Many posts mention German intelligence and counterintelligence agencies.
    I propose to purposefully post in this thread Interesting Facts by them.

    TOP SECRET
    TO THE MINISTERS OF STATE SECURITY OF THE UNION AND AUTONOMOUS REPUBLICS
    TO THE HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS OF THE MGB OF TERRITORIES AND REGIONS
    TO THE HEADS OF COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENTS OF THE MGB MILITARY DISTRICT, TROOP GROUPS, FLEET AND FLEET
    TO THE HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS AND SECURITY DEPARTMENTS OF THE MGB FOR RAILWAY AND WATER TRANSPORT
    At the same time, a "Collection of reference materials on the German intelligence agencies operating against the USSR during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945" is sent.
    The collection includes verified data on the structure and activities of the central apparatus of the "Abwehr" and the Main Directorate of Imperial Security of Germany - RSHA, their bodies operating against the USSR from the territory of neighboring countries, on the East German front and on the territory temporarily occupied by the Germans Soviet Union.
    ... Use the materials of the collection in undercover development of persons suspected of belonging to German intelligence agents, and in exposing arrested German spies during the investigation.
    Minister of State Security of the USSR
    S.IGNATIEV
    October 25, 1952 mountains Moscow
    (from directive)
    In preparing an adventure unprecedented in its dimensions, Hitlerite Germany attached particular importance to the organization of a powerful intelligence service.
    Soon after seizing power in Germany, the Nazis created a secret state police - the Gestapo, which, along with the terrorist suppression of opponents of the Nazi regime inside the country, organized political intelligence abroad. The leadership of the Gestapo was carried out by Heinrich Himmler, the imperial leader of the guard detachments (SS) of the fascist party.
    The scale of espionage and provocative activities within the country and abroad by the intelligence of the fascist party - the so-called. the security service (SD) of the guard detachments, which henceforth became the main intelligence organization in Germany.
    The German military intelligence and counterintelligence "Abwehr" significantly intensified its work, for the leadership of which in 1938 the "Abwehr-Abroad" Directorate of the General Staff of the German Army was created.
    In 1939, the Gestapo and the SD were merged into the Imperial Security Main Directorate (RSHA), which in 1944 also included military intelligence and counterintelligence "Abwehr".
    The Gestapo, the SD and the Abwehr, as well as the foreign department of the fascist party and the German Foreign Ministry launched active subversive and espionage activities against the countries targeted for attack. Nazi Germany and especially against the Soviet Union.
    German intelligence played a significant role in the capture of Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Norway, Belgium, France, Yugoslavia, Greece and the fascistization of Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. Relying on its agents and accomplices from the ruling bourgeois circles, using bribery, blackmail and political assassinations, German intelligence helped to paralyze the resistance of the peoples of these countries to German aggression.
    In 1941, having started an aggressive war against the Soviet Union, the leaders of fascist Germany set the task for German intelligence: to launch espionage and sabotage and terrorist activities at the front and in the Soviet rear, as well as mercilessly suppress resistance Soviet people fascist invaders in the temporarily occupied territory.
    For these purposes, together with the troops of the Nazi army, a significant number of specially created German reconnaissance, sabotage and counterintelligence agencies were sent to Soviet territory - operational groups and special commands of the SD, as well as the Abwehr.
    CENTRAL APPARATUS "ABWERA"
    The German military intelligence and counterintelligence body "Abwehr" (translated as "Otpor", "Protection", "Defense") was organized in 1919 as a department of the German War Ministry and was officially listed as the counterintelligence body of the Reichswehr. In reality, from the very beginning, Abwehr conducted active intelligence work against the Soviet Union, France, England, Poland, Czechoslovakia and other countries. This work was carried out through the Abverstelle - the Abwehr units - at the headquarters of the border military districts in the cities of Koenigsberg, Breslavl, Poznan, Stettin, Munich, Stuttgart and others, official German diplomatic missions and trading companies abroad. Abverstelle of the internal military districts carried out only counterintelligence work.
    Abwehr was headed by: Major General Temp (from 1919 to 1927), Colonel Schvantes (1928-1929), Colonel Bredov (1929-1932), Vice Admiral Patzig (1932-1934), Admiral Canaris (1935-1943) and from January to July 1944 Colonel Hansen.
    In connection with the transition of fascist Germany to open preparations for an aggressive war, in 1938 the Abwehr was reorganized, on the basis of which the Abwehr-Abroads Directorate was created at the headquarters of the High Command of the German Armed Forces (OKW). This department was given the task of organizing extensive intelligence and subversive work against the countries that fascist Germany was preparing to attack, especially against the Soviet Union.
    In accordance with these tasks, departments were created in the Abwehr-Abroad Administration:
    "Abwehr 1" - intelligence;
    "Abwehr 2" - sabotage, sabotage, terror, uprisings, decomposition of the enemy;
    "Abwehr 3" - counterintelligence;
    "Ausland" - foreign department;
    "CA" - the central department.
    _______WALLY HQ_______
    In June 1941, to organize reconnaissance, sabotage and counterintelligence activities against the Soviet Union and to manage this activity, a special body of the Abwehr-Abroad Management on the Soviet-German front was created, conventionally called the Wally headquarters, field mail N57219.
    In accordance with the structure of the Central Directorate of "Abwehr-Abroad", the headquarters of "Valli" consisted of the following units:
    Department "Valley 1" - leadership of military and economic intelligence on the Soviet-German front. Chief - major, later lieutenant colonel, Bown (surrendered to the Americans, used by them to organize intelligence activities against the USSR).
    The section consisted of abstracts:
    1 X - reconnaissance of ground forces;
    1 L - reconnaissance of the air force;
    1 Wi - economic intelligence;
    1 D - production of fictitious documents;
    1 I - providing radio equipment, ciphers, codes
    Personnel department.
    Secretariat.
    Under the control of "Valley 1" were reconnaissance teams and groups attached to the headquarters of army groups and armies to conduct reconnaissance work in the relevant sectors of the front, as well as economic intelligence teams and groups that collected intelligence data in prisoner of war camps.
    To provide agents deployed to the rear Soviet troops, with fictitious documents at Valley 1 there was a special team of 1 G. It consisted of 4-5 German engravers and graphic artists and several prisoners of war recruited by the Germans who knew office work in the Soviet Army and Soviet institutions.
    Team 1 G was engaged in the collection, study and production of various Soviet documents, award signs, stamps and seals of Soviet military units, institutions and enterprises. The team received forms of difficult-to-execute documents (passports, party cards) and orders from Berlin.
    The 1 G team supplied the Abwehr teams, which also had their own 1 G groups, with prepared documents, and instructed them regarding changes in the procedure for issuing and processing documents on the territory of the Soviet Union.
    To provide the deployed agents with military uniforms, equipment and civilian clothing, Wally 1 had warehouses of captured Soviet uniforms and equipment, a tailor's and shoe workshops.
    Since 1942, Wally 1 was directly subordinate to the special agency Son der Staff Russia, which carried out undercover work to identify partisan detachments, anti-fascist organizations and groups in the rear of the German armies.
    "Valli 1" was always located in the immediate vicinity of the department of foreign armies of the headquarters of the high command of the German army on the Eastern Front.
    The "Valli 2" department led the Abwehr teams and Abwehr groups to carry out sabotage and terrorist activities in units and in the rear of the Soviet Army.
    The head of the department at first was Major Zeliger, later Oberleutnant Müller, then Captain Becker.
    From June 1941 until the end of July 1944, the Wally 2 department was stationed in places. Sulejuwek, from where, during the offensive of the Soviet troops, he left deep into Germany.
    At the disposal of "Wally 2" in seats. Suleyuwek were warehouses of weapons, explosives and various sabotage materials to supply the Abwehrkommandos.
    The Wally 3 department supervised all counterintelligence activities of the Abwehrkommandos and Abwehrgroups subordinate to it in the fight against Soviet intelligence officers, the partisan movement and the anti-fascist underground on the occupied Soviet territory in the zone of front, army, corps and divisional rear areas.
    Even on the eve of the attack of fascist Germany on the Soviet Union, in the spring of 1941, all the army groups of the German army were given one reconnaissance, sabotage and counterintelligence team of the Abwehr, and the armies were given Abwehr groups subordinate to these commands.
    Abwehrkommandos and Abwehrgroups with their subordinate schools were the main organs of the German military intelligence and counterintelligence operating on the Soviet-German front.
    In addition to the Abwehrkommandos, the Wally headquarters was directly subordinate to: the Warsaw School for the Training of Intelligence Officers and Radio Operators, which was then transferred to East Prussia, in places. Neuhof; reconnaissance school in places. Niedersee (East Prussia) with a branch in the mountains. Arise, organized in 1943 to train scouts and radio operators left in the rear of the advancing Soviet troops.
    In some periods, the headquarters of the "Valli" was attached to a special aviation detachment of Major Gartenfeld, which had from 4 to 6 aircraft for being thrown into the Soviet rear of agents.
    ABWERKOMAND 103
    Abwehrkommando 103 (until July 1943 it was called Abwehrkommando 1B) was attached to the German army group "Mitte". Field mail N 09358 B, call sign of the radio station - "Saturn".
    The head of Abwehrkommando 103 until May 1944 was Lieutenant Colonel Gerlitz Felix, then Captain Beverbrook or Bernbruch, and from March 1945 until disbanded, Lieutenant Bormann.
    In August 1941, the team was stationed in Minsk on Lenina street, in a three-story building; in late September - early October 1941 - in tents on the banks of the river. Berezina, 7 km from Borisov; then relocated to places. Krasny Bor (6-7 km from Smolensk) and housed in the former. dachas of the Smolensk Regional Executive Committee. In Smolensk on the street. Fortress, d. 14 was the headquarters (office), the head of which was Captain Sieg.
    In September 1943, due to the retreat of the German troops, the team moved to the area of ​​vil. Dubrovka (near Orsha), and in early October - to Minsk, where she was until the end of June 1944, located along Communist Street, opposite the building of the Academy of Sciences.
    In August 1944, the team was in the field. Lekmanen 3 km from the mountains. Ortelsburg (East Prussia), having crossing points in the towns of Gross Shimanen (9 km south of Ortelsburg), Zeedranken and Budne Soventa (20 km northwest of Ostrolenka, Poland); in the first half of January 1945, the team was stationed in places. Bazin (6 km from the city of Wormditta), in late January - early February 1945 - in places. Garnekopf (30 km east of Berlin). In February 1945 in the mountains. Pasewalk on Markshtrasse, house 25, there was a collection point for agents.
    In March 1945, the team was in the mountains. Zerpste (Germany), from where she moved to Schwerin, and then through a number of cities at the end of April 1945 arrived in places. Lenggris, where on May 5, 1945, the entire official staff dispersed in different directions.
    The Abwehrkommando carried out active reconnaissance work against the Western, Kalinin, Bryansk, Central, Baltic and Belorussian fronts; conducted reconnaissance of the deep rear of the Soviet Union, sending agents to Moscow and Saratov.
    In the first period of its activity, the Abwehrkommando recruited agents from among Russian White émigrés.
    and members of Ukrainian and Belarusian nationalist organizations. Since the autumn of 1941, agents were recruited mainly in prisoner-of-war camps in Borisov, Smolensk, Minsk, and Frankfurt am Main. Since 1944, the recruitment of agents was carried out mainly from the police and personnel of the "Cossack units" formed by the Germans and other traitors and traitors to the Motherland who fled with the Germans.
    The agents were recruited by recruiters known under the nicknames "Roganov Nikolai", "Potemkin Grigory" and a number of others, the official employees of the team - Zharkov, aka Stefan, Dmitrienko.
    In the autumn of 1941, the Borisov intelligence school was created under the Abwehr command, in which most of the recruited agents were trained. From the school, the agents were sent to the transit and crossing points, known as the S-camps and the state bureau, where they received additional instructions on the merits of the assignment received, equipped according to the legend, supplied with documents, weapons, after which they were transferred to the subordinate bodies of the Abwehr command.
    ABWERKTEAM NBO
    Naval intelligence Abwehrkommando, conditionally named "Nahrichtenbeobachter" (abbreviated as NBO), was formed in late 1941 - early 1942 in Berlin, then sent to Simferopol, where it was located until October 1943 on the street. Sevastopolskaya, 6. Operationally, it was directly subordinated to the Abwehr-Abroad Administration and was attached to the headquarters of Admiral Schuster, who commanded the German naval forces of the southeastern basin. Until the end of 1943, the team and its units had a common field mail N 47585, from January 1944 -19330. The call sign of the radio station is "Tatar".
    Until July 1942, the captain of the naval service, Bode, was the head of the team, and from July 1942, the corvette captain Rikgoff.
    The team collected intelligence data on the Soviet Union's navy in the Black and Azov Seas and on the river fleets of the Black Sea basin. At the same time, the team conducted reconnaissance and sabotage work against the North Caucasian and 3rd Ukrainian fronts, and during their stay in the Crimea, they fought against partisans.
    The team collected intelligence data through agents thrown into the rear of the Soviet Army, as well as by interviewing prisoners of war, mostly former servicemen of the Soviet navy and local residents who had anything to do with the navy and merchant fleet.
    Agents from among the traitors to the Motherland underwent preliminary training in special camps in places. Tavel, Simeiz and places. Rage. Part of the agents for deeper training was sent to the Warsaw intelligence school.
    The transfer of agents to the rear of the Soviet Army was carried out on planes, motor boats and boats. Scouts were left as part of residencies in settlements liberated by the Soviet troops. Agents, as a rule, were transferred in groups of 2-3 people. The group was assigned a radio operator. Radio stations in Kerch, Simferopol and Anapa kept in touch with the agents.
    Later, the NBO agents, who were in special camps, were transferred to the so-called. "Legion of the Black Sea" and other armed detachments for punitive operations against the partisans of the Crimea and carrying out garrison and guard duty.
    At the end of October 1943, the NBO team relocated to Kherson, then to Nikolaev, from there in November 1943 to Odessa - the village. Big Fountains.
    In April 1944, the team moved to the mountains. Brailov (Romania), in August 1944 - in the vicinity of Vienna.
    Reconnaissance operations in the areas of the front line were carried out by the following Einsatzkommandos and forward detachments of the NBO:
    "Marine Abwehr Einsatzkommando" (naval front-line intelligence team) Lieutenant Commander Neumann began operations in May 1942 and operated on the Kerch sector of the front, then near Sevastopol (July 1942), in Kerch (August), Temryuk (August-September), Taman and Anapa (September-October), Krasnodar, where it was located on Komsomolskaya st., 44 and st. Sedina, d. 8 (from October 1942 to mid-January 1943), in the village of Slavyanskaya and mountains. Temryuk (February 1943).
    Advancing with the advanced units of the German army, the Neumann team collected documents from surviving and sunken ships, in the institutions of the Soviet fleet and interviewed prisoners of war, obtained intelligence data through agents thrown into the Soviet rear.
    At the end of February 1943, the Einsatzkommando, leaving in the mountains. Temryuk head post, moved to Kerch and located on the 1st Mitridatskaya street. In mid-March 1943, another post was created in Anapa, headed first by sergeant major Schmalz, later by Sonderführer Harnack, and from August to September 1943 by Sonderführer Kellermann.
    In October 1943, in connection with the retreat of the German troops, the Einsatzkommando and its subordinate posts moved to Kherson.
    "Marine Abwehr Einsatzkommando" (naval front-line intelligence team). Until September 1942, it was headed by Lieutenant Baron Girard de Sucanton, later Oberleutnant Cirque.
    In January - February 1942, the team was in Taganrog, then moved to Mariupol and settled in the buildings of the rest house of the plant named after Ilyich, in the so-called. "White cottages".
    During the second half of 1942, the team "processed" prisoners of war in the Bakhchisaray camp "Tolle" (July 1942), in Mariupol (August 1942) and Rostov (end of 1942) camps.
    From Mariupol, the team transferred agents to the rear of the Soviet Army units operating on the coast of the Sea of ​​\u200b\u200bAzov and in the Kuban. The training of scouts was carried out in Tavelskaya and other schools of the NBO. In addition, the team independently trained agents in safe houses.
    Of these apartments in Mariupol identified: st. Artema, d. 28; st. L. Tolstoy, 157 and 161; Donetskskaya st., 166; Fontannaya st., 62; 4th Slobodka, 136; Transportnaya st., 166.
    Individual agents were instructed to infiltrate Soviet intelligence agencies and then seek to be transferred to the German rear.
    In September 1943, the team left Mariupol, proceeded through Osipenko, Melitopol and Kherson, and in October 1943 stopped in the mountains. Nikolaev - Alekseevskaya st., 11,13,16,18 and Odessa st., 2. In November 1943, the team moved to Odessa, st. Schmidta (Arnautskaya), 125. In March-April 1944, through Odessa - Belgrade, she left for Galati, where she was located along the Main Street, 18. During this period, the team had in the mountains. Reni on Dunayskaya street, 99, the main communication post, which threw agents into the rear of the Soviet Army.
    During their stay in Galați, the team was known as the Whiteland intelligence agency.
    sabotage and reconnaissance teams and groups
    The sabotage and reconnaissance teams and the Abwehr 2 groups were engaged in the recruitment, training and transfer of agents with tasks of a sabotage-terrorist, insurgent, propaganda and intelligence nature.
    At the same time, teams and groups created from traitors to the Motherland special fighter units (jagdkommandos), various national formations and Cossack hundreds to capture and hold strategically important objects in the rear of the Soviet troops until the approach of the main forces of the German army. The same units were sometimes used for military reconnaissance of the front line of defense of the Soviet troops, the capture of "tongues", and the undermining of individual fortified points.
    During operations, the personnel of the units were equipped in the uniform of the military personnel of the Soviet Armies.
    During the retreat, the agents of the teams, groups and their units were used as torchbearers and demolition workers to set fire to settlements, destroy bridges and other structures.
    Agents of reconnaissance and sabotage teams and groups were thrown into the rear of the Soviet Army in order to decompose and induce military personnel to treason. Distributed anti-Soviet leaflets, conducted verbal agitation at the forefront of defense with the help of radio installations. During the retreat, she left anti-Soviet literature in the settlements. Special agents were recruited to distribute it.
    Along with subversive activities in the rear of the Soviet troops, teams and groups at their place of deployment actively fought against the partisan movement.
    The main contingent of agents was trained in schools or courses with teams and groups. Individual training of agents was practiced by employees of the intelligence agency.
    The transfer of sabotage agents to the rear of the Soviet troops was carried out with the help of aircraft and on foot in groups of 2-5 people. (one is a radio operator).
    The agents were equipped and supplied with fictitious documents in accordance with the developed legend. Received tasks to organize the undermining of trains, railroad tracks, bridges and other structures on the railways going to the front; destroy fortifications, military and food depots and strategically important facilities; commit terrorist acts against officers and generals of the Soviet Army, party and Soviet leaders.
    Agents-saboteurs were also given reconnaissance missions. The deadline for completing the task was from 3 to 5 or more days, after which the password agents returned to the side of the Germans. Agents with missions of a propaganda nature were transferred without specifying a return date.
    Reports of agents about acts of sabotage carried out by them were checked.
    In the last period of the war, the teams began to prepare sabotage and terrorist groups to leave behind the lines of the Soviet troops.
    For this purpose, bases and storage facilities with weapons were laid in advance, explosives, food and clothing, which were to be used by sabotage groups.
    6 sabotage teams operated on the Soviet-German front. Each Abwehrkommando was subordinate to 2 to 6 Abwehrgroups.
    KOITREVIDATIVE TEAMS AND GROUPS
    The counterintelligence teams and Abwehr 3 groups operating on the Soviet-German front in the rear of the German army groups and armies to which they were attached carried out active undercover work to identify Soviet intelligence officers, partisans and underground workers, and also collected and processed captured documents.
    Counterintelligence teams and groups re-recruited some of the detained Soviet intelligence agents, through whom they conducted radio games in order to misinform the Soviet intelligence agencies. Counterintelligence teams and groups threw some of the recruited agents into the Soviet rear in order to infiltrate the MGB and intelligence departments of the Soviet Army in order to study the working methods of these bodies and identify Soviet intelligence officers trained and thrown into the rear of the German troops.
    Each counterintelligence team and group had full-time or permanent agents recruited from traitors who had proven themselves on practical work. These agents moved along with teams and groups and infiltrated the established German administrative institutions and enterprises.
    In addition, at the place of deployment, teams and groups created an agent network of local residents. During the retreat of the German troops, these agents were transferred to the disposal of the reconnaissance Abwehr groups or remained in the rear of the Soviet troops with reconnaissance missions.
    Provocation was one of the most common methods of undercover work of the German military counterintelligence. So, agents under the guise of Soviet intelligence officers or persons transferred to the rear of the German troops by the command of the Soviet Army with a special assignment settled with Soviet patriots, entered into their confidence, gave tasks directed against the Germans, organized groups to go over to the side of the Soviet troops. Then all these patriots were arrested.
    For the same purpose, false partisan detachments were created from agents and traitors to the Motherland.
    The counterintelligence teams and groups carried out their work in contact with the organs of the SD and the GUF. They conducted undercover development of suspicious, from the point of view of the Germans, persons, and the obtained data was transferred to the bodies of the SD and the GUF for implementation.
    On the Soviet-German front, there were 5 counterintelligence Abwehrkommandos. Each was subordinate to 3 to 8 Abwehrgroups, which were attached to the armies, as well as rear commandant's offices and security divisions.
    ABVERKOMAIDA 304
    It was formed shortly before the German attack on the USSR and attached to the Nord army group. Until July 1942, it was called "Abwehrkommando 3 Ts". Field mail N 10805. The call sign of the radio station is "Shperling" or "Shperber".
    The team leaders were majors Klyamrot (Cla-mort), Gesenregen.
    During the invasion of German troops into the depths of Soviet territory, the team was successively located in Kaunas and Riga, in September 1941 moved to the mountains. Pechory, Pskov region; in June 1942 - to Pskov, on Oktyabrskaya street, 49, and was there until February 1944.
    During the offensive of the Soviet troops, the team from Pskov was evacuated to places. White Lake, then - in the village. Turaido, near the mountains. Sigulda, Latvian SSR.
    From April to August 1944, there was a branch of the team in Riga, called "Renate"
    In September 1944, the team moved to Liepaja; in mid-February 1945 - in the mountains. Sweenemünde (Germany).
    During their stay on the territory of the Latvian SSR, the team led great job on radio games with Soviet intelligence agencies through radio stations with the call signs "Penguin", "Flamingo", "Reiger", "Elster", "Eizvogel", "Vale", "Bachstelze", "Hauben-Taucher" and "Stint".
    Before the war, German military intelligence carried out active intelligence work against the Soviet Union by sending in agents, trained mainly on an individual basis.
    A few months before the start of the war, Abverstelle Koninsberg, Abverstelle Stettin, Abverstelle Vienna and Abverstelle Krakow organized reconnaissance and sabotage schools for the mass training of agents.
    At first, these schools were staffed with cadres recruited from white émigré youth and members of various anti-Soviet nationalist organizations (Ukrainian, Polish, Belarusian, etc.). However, practice has shown that agents from the White emigrants were poorly oriented in Soviet reality.
    With the deployment of hostilities on the Soviet-German front, German intelligence began to expand the network of reconnaissance and sabotage schools for the training of qualified agents. Agents for training in schools were now recruited mainly from among prisoners of war, an anti-Soviet, treacherous and criminal element who had penetrated the ranks of the Soviet Army and defected to the Germans, and to a lesser extent from anti-Soviet citizens who remained in the temporarily occupied territory of the USSR.
    The Abwehr authorities believed that agents from prisoners of war could be quickly trained for intelligence work and easier to infiltrate in parts of the Soviet Army. The profession and personal qualities of the candidate were taken into account, with preference given to radio operators, signalmen, sappers and persons who had a sufficient general outlook.
    Agents from the civilian population were selected on the recommendation and with the assistance of German counterintelligence and police agencies and leaders of anti-Soviet organizations.
    The basis for recruiting agents in schools was also anti-Soviet armed formations: the ROA, various so-called Germans created from traitors. "national legions".
    Those who agreed to work for the Germans were isolated and, accompanied by German soldiers or the recruiters themselves, were sent to special test camps or directly to schools.
    When recruiting, methods of bribery, provocations and threats were also used. Those arrested for real or imaginary offenses were offered to atone for their guilt by working for the Germans. Usually, the recruits were previously tested in practical work as counterintelligence agents, punishers and police officers.
    The final registration of recruitment was carried out at the school or test camp. After that, a detailed questionnaire was filled out for each agent, a subscription was selected on a voluntary agreement to cooperate with German intelligence, the agent was assigned a nickname under which he was listed at school. In a number of cases, recruited agents were sworn in.
    At the same time, 50-300 agents were trained in intelligence schools, and 30-100 agents were trained in sabotage and terrorist schools.
    The training period for agents, depending on the nature of their future activities, was different: for scouts in the near rear - from two weeks to a month; deep rear scouts - from one to six months; saboteurs - from two weeks to two months; radio operators - from two to four months or more.
    In the deep rear of the Soviet Union, German agents acted under the guise of seconded military personnel and civilians, the wounded, discharged from hospitals and having exemptions from military service, evacuated from areas occupied by the Germans, etc. In the front line, the agents acted under the guise of sappers, carrying out mining or clearing the front line of defense, signalmen, engaged in wiring or correcting communication lines; snipers and reconnaissance officers of the Soviet Army performing special tasks of the command; the wounded heading to the hospital from the battlefield, etc.
    The most common fictitious documents with which the Germans supplied their agents were: identity cards of command personnel; various types of travel orders; settlement and clothing books of command personnel; food certificates; extracts from orders for transfer from one part to another; powers of attorney to receive various types of property from warehouses; certificates of medical examination with the conclusion of the medical commission; certificates of discharge from the hospital and permission to leave after injury; red army books; exemption certificates military service due to illness; passports with appropriate registration marks; work books; certificates of evacuation from settlements occupied by the Germans; party tickets and candidate cards of the CPSU(b); Komsomol tickets; award books and temporary certificates of awards.
    After completing the task, the agents had to return to the body that prepared them or transferred them. To cross the front line, they were provided with a special password.
    Those who returned from the mission were carefully checked through other agents and through repeated oral and written cross-examinations about dates, places
    location on the territory of the Soviet Union, the route to the place of the assignment and return. Exceptional attention was paid to finding out whether the agent was detained by the Soviet authorities. The returning agents isolated themselves from each other. Testimony and reports of internal agents were compared and carefully rechecked.
    BORISOV INTELLIGENCE SCHOOL
    The Borisov school was organized in August 1941 by the Abwehrkommando 103, at first it was located in the village. Furnaces, in the former military camp (6 km south of Borisov on the road to Minsk); field mail 09358 B. The head of the school was Captain Jung, then Captain Uthoff.
    In February 1942, the school was transferred to the village. Katyn (23 km west of Smolensk).
    In places. A preparatory department was created in the furnace, where the agents were checked and preliminary trained, and then sent to the places. Katyn for intelligence training. In April 1943, the school was transferred back to vil. Furnaces.
    The school trained intelligence agents and radio operators. It simultaneously trained about 150 people, including 50-60 radio operators. The term of training for scouts is 1-2 months, for radio operators 2-4 months.
    When enrolling in a school, each scout was given a nickname. It was strictly forbidden to give your real name and ask others about it.
    Trained agents were transferred to the rear of the Soviet Army, 2-3 people each. (one - a radio operator) and alone, mainly in the central sectors of the front, as well as in the Moscow, Kalinin, Ryazan and Tula regions. Some of the agents had the task of sneaking into Moscow and settling there.
    In addition, school-trained agents were sent to partisan detachments to identify their deployment and location of bases.
    The transfer was carried out by aircraft from the Minsk airfield and on foot from the settlements of Petrikovo, Mogilev, Pinsk, Luninets.
    In September 1943, the school was evacuated to the territory of East Prussia in the village. Rosenstein (100 km south of Koenigsberg) and was located there in the barracks of the former French prisoner of war camp.
    In December 1943, the school relocated to places. Malleten near vil. Neundorf (5 km south of the mountains. Lykk), where she was until August 1944. Here the school organized its branch in the village. Flisdorf (25 km south of Lykk).
    Agents for the branch were recruited from prisoners of war of Polish nationality and trained for intelligence work in the rear of the Soviet Army.
    In August 1944, the school relocated to the mountains. Mewe (65 km south of Danzig), where it was located on the outskirts of the city, on the banks of the Vistula, in the building of the former. German school of officers, and was encrypted as a newly formed military unit. Together with the school he was transferred to the village. Grossweide (5 km from Mewe) and the Flisdorf branch.
    At the beginning of 1945, in connection with the offensive of the Soviet Army, the school was evacuated to the mountains. Bismarck, where it was disbanded in April 1945. Part of the staff of the school went to the mountains. Arenburg (on the Elbe River), and some agents, dressed in civilian clothes, crossed into the territory occupied by units of the Soviet Army.
    OFFICIAL COMPOSITION
    Jung is a captain, head of the organ. 50-55 years old, medium height, stout, gray-haired, bald.
    Uthoff Hans - captain, head of the organ since 1943. Born in 1895, medium height, stout, bald.
    Bronikovsky Erwin, aka Gerasimovich Tadeusz - captain, deputy head of the body, in November 1943 he was transferred to the newly organized school of resident radio operators in places. Niedersee as Deputy Head of School.
    Pichch - non-commissioned officer, radio instructor. Estonian resident. Speaks Russian. 23-24 years old, tall, thin, light brown-haired, gray eyes.
    Matyushin Ivan Ivanovich, nickname "Frolov" - teacher of radio engineering, former military engineer of the 1st rank, born in 1898, a native of the mountains. Tetyushi of the Tatar ASSR.
    Rikhva Yaroslav Mikhailovich - translator and head. clothing warehouse. Born in 1911, a native of the mountains. Kamenka Bugskaya, Lviv region.
    Lonkin Nikolai Pavlovich, nicknamed "Lebedev" - teacher of undercover intelligence, graduated from the intelligence school in Warsaw. Former soldier of the Soviet border troops. Born in 1911, a native of the village of Strakhovo, Ivanovsky District, Tula Region.
    Kozlov Alexander Danilovich, nickname "Menshikov" - intelligence teacher. Born in 1920, a native of the village of Aleksandrovka, Stavropol Territory.
    Andreev, aka Mokritsa, aka Antonov Vladimir Mikhailovich, nickname "Worm", nickname "Voldemar" - teacher of radio engineering. Born in 1924, native of Moscow.
    Simavin, nickname "Petrov" - an employee of the body, a former lieutenant of the Soviet Army. 30-35 years old, medium height, thin, brunette, long, thin face.
    Jacques is the house manager. 30-32 years old, average height, scar on the nose.
    Shinkarenko Dmitry Zakharovich, nickname "Petrov" - head of the office, also engaged in the production of fictitious documents, former colonel Soviet army. Born in 1910, a native of the Krasnodar Territory.
    Panchak Ivan Timofeevich - sergeant major, foreman and translator.
    Vlasov Vladimir Alexandrovich - captain, head of the training unit, teacher and recruiter in December 1943.
    Berdnikov Vasily Mikhailovich, aka Bobkov Vladimir - foreman and translator. Born in 1918, a native of the village. Trumna, Oryol region.
    Donchenko Ignat Evseevich, nickname "Dove" - ​​head. warehouse, born in 1899, a native of the village of Rachki, Vinnitsa region.
    Pavlogradsky Ivan Vasilyevich, nickname "Kozin" - an employee of the intelligence point in Minsk. Born in 1910, a native of the village of Leningradskaya, Krasnodar Territory.
    Kulikov Alexey Grigorievich, nickname "Monks" - teacher. Born in 1920, a native of the village of N.-Kryazhin, Kuznetsk district, Kuibyshev region.
    Krasnoper Vasily, possibly Fedor Vasilyevich, aka Anatoly, Alexander Nikolaevich or Ivanovich, nickname "Viktorov" (possibly a surname), nickname "Wheat" - a teacher.
    Kravchenko Boris Mikhailovich, nickname "Doronin" - captain, teacher of topography. Born in 1922, native of Moscow.
    Zharkov, onzhe Sharkov, Stefan, Stefanen, Degrees, Stefan Ivan or Stepan Ivanovich, possibly Semenovich-lieutenant, teacher until January 1944, then head of the S-camp of the Abwehrkommando 103.
    Popinako Nikolai Nikiforovich, nickname "Titorenko" - physical training teacher. Born in 1911, a native of the village of Kulnovo, Klintsovsky district, Bryansk region.
    SECRET FIELD POLICE (SFP)
    The secret field police - "Geheimfeldpolizei" (GFP) - was the police executive body of military counterintelligence in the army. In peacetime, the GUF bodies did not operate.
    The directives of the GUF units were received from the Abwehr Abroad Directorate, which included a special report of the FPdV (field police of the armed forces), headed by police colonel Krichbaum.
    The GFP units on the Soviet-German front were represented by groups at the headquarters of army groups, armies and field commandant's offices, as well as in the form of commissariats and commands - at corps, divisions and individual local commandant's offices.
    The SFG groups at the armies and field commandant's offices were headed by field police commissars, subordinate to the head of the field police of the corresponding army group and at the same time to the Abwehr officer of the 1st Central army department or field commandant's office. The group consisted of 80 to 100 employees and soldiers. Each group had from 2 to 5 commissariats, or the so-called. "Outdoor teams" (Aussenkommando) and "Outdoor squads" (Aussenstelle), the number of which varied depending on the situation.
    The secret field police performed the functions of the Gestapo in the combat zone, as well as in the near army and front rear areas.
    Its task was mainly to make arrests at the direction of military counterintelligence, conduct investigations into cases of treason, treason, espionage, sabotage, anti-fascist propaganda among the German army, as well as reprisals against partisans and other Soviet patriots who fought against the fascist invaders.
    In addition, the current instructions assigned to the subdivisions of the GUF:
    Organization of counterintelligence measures to protect the headquarters of the serviced formations. Personal protection of the unit commander and representatives of the main headquarters.
    Observation of war correspondents, artists, photographers who were at the command instances.
    Control over the postal, telegraph and telephone communications of the civilian population.
    Facilitating censorship in the supervision of field postal communications.
    Control and monitoring of the press, meetings, lectures, reports.
    The search for the soldiers of the Soviet Army remaining in the occupied territory. Preventing the civilian population from leaving the occupied territory behind the front line, especially those of military age.
    Interrogation and observation of persons who appeared in the combat zone.
    The GUF bodies carried out counterintelligence and punitive activities in the occupied areas, close to the front line. To identify Soviet agents, partisans and Soviet patriots associated with them, the secret field police planted agents among the civilian population.
    The GUF units had groups of full-time agents, as well as small military formations (squadrons, platoons) of traitors to the Motherland for punitive actions against partisans, raids in settlements, protection and escort of those arrested.
    On the Soviet-German front, 23 HFP groups were identified.
    After the attack on the Soviet Union, the fascist leaders entrusted the bodies of the Main Directorate of Imperial Security of Germany with the task of physically exterminating Soviet patriots and ensuring the fascist regime in the occupied areas.
    For this purpose, a significant number of security police units and special forces were sent to the temporarily occupied Soviet territory.
    divisions of the RSHA: mobile operational groups and teams operating in the front line, and territorial bodies for the rear areas controlled by the civil administration.
    Mobile formations of the security police and the SD - operational groups (Einsatzgruppen) for punitive activities on Soviet territory - were created on the eve of the war, in May 1941. In total, four operational groups were created under the main groupings of the German army - A, B, C and D.
    The operational groups included units - special teams (Sonderkommando) for operations in the areas of the forward units of the army and operational teams (Einsatzkommando) - for operations in the rear of the army. The operational groups and teams were staffed by the most notorious thugs from the Gestapo and the criminal police, as well as SD employees.
    A few days before the outbreak of hostilities, Heydrich ordered the operational groups to take their starting points, from where they were to advance together with the German troops on Soviet territory.
    By this time, each group with teams and police units consisted of up to 600-700 people. commanders and rank and file. For greater mobility, all units were equipped with cars, trucks and special vehicles and motorcycles.
    Operational and special teams numbered from 120 to 170 people, of which 10-15 officers, 40-60 non-commissioned officers and 50-80 ordinary SS men.
    Tasks were assigned to operational groups, operational teams and special teams of the security police and SD:
    In the combat zone and near rear areas, seize and search office buildings and premises of party and Soviet bodies, military headquarters and departments, buildings of the state security bodies of the USSR and all other institutions and organizations where there could be important operational or secret documents, archives, file cabinets, etc. similar materials.
    To search for, arrest and physically destroy party and Soviet workers left in the German rear to fight the invaders, employees of intelligence and counterintelligence agencies, as well as captured commanders and political workers of the Soviet Army.
    To identify and repress communists, Komsomol members, leaders of local Soviet bodies, public and collective farm activists, employees and agents of Soviet intelligence and counterintelligence.
    Persecute and exterminate the entire Jewish population.
    In the rear areas to fight against all anti-fascist manifestations and illegal activities of the opponents of Germany, as well as to inform the commanders of the rear areas of the army about the political situation in the area under their jurisdiction.
    The operational organs of the security police and the SD planted among the civilian population agents recruited from the criminal and anti-Soviet element. Village elders, volost foremen, employees of administrative and other institutions created by the Germans, policemen, foresters, owners of buffets, snack bars, restaurants, etc. were used as such agents. Those of them who, before being recruited, held administrative positions (foremen, elders), were sometimes transferred to inconspicuous work: millers, accountants. The agency was obliged to monitor the appearance in cities and villages of suspicious and unfamiliar persons, partisans, Soviet paratroopers, to report on communists, Komsomol members, and former active public figures. Agents were reduced to residencies. The residents were traitors to the Motherland who had proven themselves to the invaders, who served in German institutions, city governments, land departments, construction organizations and etc.
    With the beginning of the offensive of the Soviet troops and the liberation of the temporarily occupied Soviet territories, part of the agents of the security police and the SD were left in the Soviet rear with reconnaissance, sabotage, insurgent and terrorist tasks. These agents were transferred to the military intelligence agencies for communication.
    "SPECIAL TEAM MOSCOW"
    Created in early July 1941, moved with the advanced units of the 4th Panzer Army.
    In the early days, the team was led by the head of the VII Department of the RSHA, SS Standartenführer Siks. When the German offensive failed, Ziks was recalled to Berlin. SS Obersturmführer Kerting was appointed chief, who in March 1942 became chief of the security police and SD of the “Stalino General District”.
    A special team advanced along the route Roslavl - Yukhnov - Medyn to Maloyaroslavets with the task of returning to Moscow with advanced units and capturing the objects of interest to the Germans.
    After the defeat of the Germans near Moscow, the team was taken to the mountains. Roslavl, where it was reorganized in 1942 and became known as the Special Team 7 C. In September 1943, the team was due to heavy losses in a collision with Soviet units in places. Kolotini-chi was disbanded.
    SPECIAL COMMAND 10 A
    A special team of 10 a (field mail N 47540 and 35583) acted jointly with the 17th German army, Colonel General Ruof.
    The team was led until mid-1942 by SS Obersturmbannführer Seetzen, then SS Sturmbannführer Christman.
    The team is widely known for their atrocities in Krasnodar. From the end of 1941 until the beginning of the German offensive in the Caucasian direction, the team was in Taganrog, and its detachments operated in the cities of Osipenko, Rostov, Mariupol and Simferopol.
    When the Germans advanced to the Caucasus, the team arrived in Krasnodar, and during this period its detachments operated on the territory of the region in the cities of Novorossiysk, Yeysk, Anapa, Temryuk, the villages of Varenikovskaya and Verkhne-Bakanskaya. At the trial in Krasnodar in June 1943, the facts of the monstrous atrocities of the team members were revealed: mockery of those arrested and burning of prisoners held in the Krasnodar prison; mass killings of patients in the city hospital, in the Berezansk medical colony and the children's regional hospital on the farm "Third River Kochety" in the Ust-Labinsk region; strangulation in cars - "gas chambers" of many thousands of Soviet people.
    The special team at that time consisted of about 200 people. The assistants to the head of Christman's team were employees Rabbe, Boos, Sargo, Salge, Hahn, Erich Meyer, Paschen, Vinz, Hans Münster; German military doctors Hertz and Schuster; translators Jacob Eicks, Sheterland.
    When the Germans retreated from the Caucasus, some of the team's official members were assigned to other security police and SD groups on the Soviet-German front.
    ________"ZEPPELIN"________
    In March 1942, the RSHA created a special reconnaissance and sabotage body under the code name "Unternemen Zeppelin" (Zeppelin Enterprise).
    In its activities, "Zeppelin" was guided by the so-called. "A plan of action for the political disintegration of the Soviet Union". The main tactical tasks of the Zeppelin were determined by this plan as follows:
    “... We must strive for tactics of the greatest possible variety. Special action groups should be formed, namely:
    1. Intelligence groups - to collect and transmit political information from the Soviet Union.
    2. Propaganda groups - for the dissemination of national, social and religious propaganda.
    3. Rebel groups - to organize and conduct uprisings.
    4. Subversive groups for political subversion and terror.
    The plan emphasized that political intelligence and sabotage activities in the Soviet rear were assigned to the Zeppelin. The Germans also wanted to create a separatist movement of bourgeois-nationalist elements, aimed at tearing away the union republics from the USSR and organizing puppet "states" under the protectorate of Nazi Germany.
    To this end, in the years 1941-1942, the RSHA, together with the Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Regions, created a number of so-called. "national committees" (Georgian, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Turkestan, North Caucasian, Volga-Tatar and Kalmyk).
    The listed "national committees" were chaired by:
    Georgian - Kedia Mikhail Mekievich and Gabliani Givi Ignatievich;
    Armenian - Abegyan Artashes, Baghdasaryan, he is also Simonyan, he is also Sargsyan Tigran and Sargsyan Vartan Mikhailovich;
    Azerbaijani - Fatalibekov, aka Fatalibey-li, aka Dudanginsky Abo Alievich and Israfil-Bey Israfailov Magomed Nabi Ogly;
    Turkestan - Valli-Kayum-Khan, aka Kayumov Vali, Khaitov Baimirza, aka Haiti Ogly Baimirza and Kanatbaev Karie Kusaevich
    North Caucasian - Magomaev Akhmed Nabi Idriso-vich and Kantemirov Alikhan Gadoevich;
    Volga-Tatar - Shafeev Abdrakhman Gibadullo-vich, he is Shafi Almas and Alkaev Shakir Ibragimovich;
    Kalmytsky - Balinov Shamba Khachinovich.
    At the end of 1942, in Berlin, the propaganda department of the headquarters of the German Army High Command (OKB), together with intelligence, created the so-called. "Russian Committee" headed by a traitor to the Motherland, former lieutenant general of the Soviet Army Vlasov.
    The "Russian Committee", as well as other "national committees", involved in the active struggle against the Soviet Union unstable prisoners of war and Soviet citizens who were taken to work in Germany, processed them in a fascist spirit and formed military units of the so-called. "Russian Liberation Army" (ROA).
    In November 1944, on the initiative of Himmler, the so-called. "Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia" (KONR), headed by the former head of the "Russian Committee" Vlasov.
    The KONR was tasked with uniting all anti-Soviet organizations and military formations from among the traitors to the Motherland and expanding their subversive activities against the Soviet Union.
    In its subversive work against the USSR, the Zeppelin acted in contact with the Abwehr and the main headquarters of the German army high command, as well as with the imperial ministry for the occupied eastern regions.
    Until the spring of 1943, the Zeppelin command center was located in Berlin, in the service building of the VI RSHA Directorate, in the Grunewald area, Berkaerst-Rasse, 32/35, and then in the Wannsee area - Potsdamer Strasse, 29.
    At first, the Zeppelin was led by SS-Sturmbannführer Kurek; he was soon replaced by SS-Sturmbannführer Raeder.
    At the end of 1942, Zeppelin merged with abstracts VI Ts 1-3 (intelligence against the Soviet Union), and the head of the EI Ts group, SS Obersturmbannführer Dr. Grefe, began to lead it.
    In January 1944, after Graefe's death, the Zeppelin was led by SS-Sturmbannführer Dr. Hengelhaupt, and from the beginning of 1945 until the surrender of Germany, by SS-Obersturmbannführer Rapp.
    The management staff consisted of the office of the head of the body and three departments with subdivisions.
    The CET 1 department was in charge of staffing and operational management of grassroots bodies, supplying agents with equipment and equipment.
    The CET 1 department included five subdivisions:
    CET 1 A - leadership and monitoring of the activities of grassroots bodies, staffing.
    CET 1 B - management of camps and account of agents.
    CET 1 C - security and transfer of agents. The subdivision had escort teams at its disposal.
    CET 1 D - material support of agents.
    CET 1 E - car service.
    Department CET 2 - agent training. The department had four subdivisions:
    CET 2 A - selection and training of agents of Russian nationality.
    CET 2 B - selection and training of agents from the Cossacks.
    CET 2 C - selection and training of agents from among the nationalities of the Caucasus.
    CET 2 D - selection and training of agents from among the nationalities of Central Asia. The department had 16 employees.
    The CET 3 department processed all materials on the activities of special camps for front teams and agents deployed to the rear areas of the USSR.
    The structure of the department was the same as in the CET 2 department. The department had 17 employees.
    At the beginning of 1945, the Zeppelin headquarters, along with other departments of the VI Directorate of the RSHA, was evacuated to the south of Germany. Most of the leading employees of the Zeppelin central apparatus ended up in the zone of American troops after the end of the war.
    ZEPPELIN TEAMS ON THE SOVIET-GERMAN FRONT
    In the spring of 1942, Zeppelin sent four special teams (Sonderkommandos) to the Soviet-German front. They were given to the operational groups of the security police and the SD under the main army groups of the German army.
    Special Zeppelin teams were engaged in the selection of prisoners of war for the training of agents in training camps, collected intelligence information about the political and military-economic situation of the USSR by interviewing prisoners of war, collected uniforms for equipping agents, various military documents and other materials suitable for use in intelligence work.
    All materials, documents and equipment were sent to the commanding headquarters, and selected prisoners of war were sent to special Zeppelin camps.
    The teams also transferred trained agents across the front line on foot and by parachute from aircraft. Sometimes agents were trained right there on the spot, in small camps.
    The transfer of agents by aircraft was carried out from special Zeppelin crossing points: at the Vysokoye state farm near Smolensk, in Pskov and the resort town of Saki near Evpatoria.
    Special teams at first had a small staff: 2 SS officers, 2-3 junior SS commanders, 2-3 translators and several agents.
    In the spring of 1943, special teams were disbanded, and instead of them, two main teams were created on the Soviet-German front - Russland Mitte (later renamed Russland Nord) and Russland Süd (otherwise - Dr. Raeder's Headquarters). In order not to scatter forces along the entire front, these teams concentrated their actions only in the most important directions: northern and southern.
    The Zeppelin's main command, with its constituent services, was a powerful intelligence body and consisted of several hundred employees and agents.
    The team leader reported only to the Zeppelin headquarters in Berlin, and in practical work he had complete operational independence, organizing the selection, training and transfer of agents on the spot. His actions, he was in contact with other intelligence agencies and the military command.
    "BATTLE UNION OF RUSSIAN NATIONALISTS" (BSRN)
    It was created in March 1942 in the Suvalkovsky leger of prisoners of war. Initially, the BSRN had the name "National Party of the Russian People." Its organizer is Gil (Rodionov). The "Combat Union of Russian Nationalists" had its own program and charter.
    Everyone who joined the BSRN filled out a questionnaire, received a membership card and took a written oath of allegiance to the "principles" of this union. The grassroots organizations of the BSRN were called "combat squads".
    Soon the leadership of the union from the Suwalkowski camp was transferred to the Zeppelin preliminary camp, on the territory of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. There, in April 1942, the BSRN center was created,
    The center was divided into four groups: military, special purpose(training of agents) and two training groups. Each group was led by a Zeppelin official. After some time, only one BSRN personnel training group remained in Sachsenhausen, and the rest left for other Zeppelin camps.
    The second training group of the BSRN began to be deployed in the mountains. Breslavl, where the "SS 20 Forest Camp" trained the leadership of special camps.
    The military group, headed by Gill, in the amount of 100 people. left for the mountains. Parcheva (Poland). There was created a special camp for the formation of "teams N 1".
    A special group dropped out in places. Yablon (Poland) and joined the Zeppelin reconnaissance school located there.
    In January 1943, a conference of organizations of the "Fighting Union of Russian Nationalists" was held in Breslavl, which was attended by 35 delegates. In the summer of 1943, part of the members of the BSRN joined the ROA.
    "RUSSIAN PEOPLE'S PARTY OF REFORMISTS" (RNPR)
    The "Russian People's Party of Reformists" (RNPR) was created in a prisoner of war camp in the mountains. Weimar in the spring of 1942 by the former major general of the Soviet Army, traitor to the Motherland Bessonov ("Katulsky").
    Initially, the RNPR was called the "People's Russian Party of Socialist Realists."
    By the autumn of 1942, the leading group of the "Russian People's Reformist Party" settled in the Zeppelin special camp, on the territory of the Buchenwald concentration camp, and formed the so-called. "Political Center for the Fight against Bolshevism" (PCB).
    The PCB published and distributed anti-Soviet magazines and newspapers among prisoners of war and developed a charter and program for its activities.
    Bessonov offered the leadership of Zeppelin his services in bringing an armed group into the northern regions of the USSR to carry out sabotage and organize uprisings.
    To develop a plan for this adventure and prepare an armed military formation of traitors to the Motherland, Bessonov's group was assigned a special camp in the former. monastery Leibus (near Breslavl). At the beginning of 1943, the camp was moved to places. Lindsdorf.
    The leaders of the Central Bank visited prisoner-of-war camps to recruit traitors to Bessonov's group.
    Subsequently, a punitive detachment was created from the participants in the PCB to fight the partisans, which operated on the Soviet-German front in the mountains. Great Luke.
    MILITARY FORMATIONS ______ "ZEPPELIN" ______
    In the Zeppelin camps, during the preparation of agents, a significant number of “activists” were eliminated who, for various reasons, were not suitable for being sent to the rear areas of the USSR.
    The "activists" of Caucasian and Central Asian nationalities expelled from the camps were mostly transferred to anti-Soviet military formations ("Turkestan Legion", etc.).
    From the expelled Russian "activists" "Zeppelin" in the spring of 1942 began to form two punitive detachments, called "teams". The Germans intended to create large selective armed groups to carry out subversive operations on a large scale in the Soviet rear.
    By June 1942, the first punitive detachment was formed - "squad N 1", numbering 500 people, under the command of Gill ("Rodionov").
    "Druzhina" was stationed in the mountains. Parchev, then moved to a specially created camp in the forest between the mountains. Parchev and Yablon. It was attached to Operational Group B of the security police and the SD and, on its instructions, served for some time to protect communications, and then acted against partisans in Poland, Belarus and the Smolensk region.
    Somewhat later, in the special camp of the SS "Guides", near the mountains. Lublin, was formed "squad N 2" numbering 300 people. led by a traitor to the Motherland, former captain of the Soviet Army Blazhevich.
    At the beginning of 1943, both "teams" were united under the command of Hill into the "first regiment of the Russian people's army." A counterintelligence department was created in the regiment, headed by Blazhevich.
    The "First Regiment of the Russian People's Army" received a special zone on the territory of Belarus, centered in seats. Meadows of the Polotsk region, for independent military operations against partisans. A special military uniform and insignia was introduced for the regiment.
    In August 1943, most of the regiment, led by Gill, went over to the side of the partisans. During the transition, Blazhevich and German instructors were shot. Gill was subsequently killed in battle.
    "Zeppelin" gave the rest of the regiment to the main team "Rusland Nord" and later used it as a punitive detachment and a reserve base for acquiring agents.
    In total, more than 130 reconnaissance, sabotage and counterintelligence teams of the Abwehr and SD and about 60 schools that trained spies, saboteurs and terrorists operated on the Soviet-German front.
    The publication was prepared by V. BOLTROMEYUK
    Consultant V. VINOGRADOV
    Magazine "Security Service" No. 3-4 1995

  2. SPECIAL COMMUNICATION about the detention of German intelligence agents TAVRIMA and SHILOVA.
    September 5 p. in at o'clock in the morning the head of the Karmanovsky RO NKVD - Art. militia lieutenant VETROV in the village. German intelligence agents were detained in Karmanovo:
    1. TAVRIN Petr Ivanovich
    2. SHILOVA Lidia Yakovlevna. The arrest was made under the following circumstances:
    At 1 hour 50 min. on the night of September 5, the Head of the Gzhatsky District Department of the NKVD - the captain of state security, comrade IVA-NOV, was informed by telephone from the post of the VNOS service that an enemy aircraft appeared in the direction of the city of Mozhaisk at an altitude of 2500 meters.
    At 3 o'clock in the morning from the air observation post for the second time it was reported by telephone that the enemy aircraft after shelling at the station. Kubinka, Mozhaisk - Uvarovka, Moscow region came back and began to land with a fire engine in the district of vil. Yakovleve - Zavrazhye, Karmanovsky district, Smolensk region about this The Gzhatsky RO of the NKVD informed the Karmanovsky RO of the NKVD and sent a task force to the indicated place of the plane crash.
    At 4 o'clock in the morning, the commander of the Zaprudkovskaya group for the protection of order, comrade. DIAMONDS by phone reported that an enemy aircraft had landed between vil. Zavrazhye and Yakovlevo. A man and a woman in the uniform of servicemen left the plane on a German-made motorcycle and stopped in the village. Yakovlevo, asked the way to the mountains. Rzhev and were interested in the location of the nearest regional centers. Teacher ALMAZOVA, living in the village. Almazovo, showed them the way to the regional center of Karmanovo and they left in the direction of the village. Samuylovo.
    For the detention of 2 servicemen who left the plane, the Head of the Gzhatsky RO of the NKVD, in addition to the exiled task force, informed the security groups at the s / councils and informed the Head of the Karmanovsky RO of the NKVD.
    Having received a message from the Head of the Gzhatsky RO of the NKVD, the head of the Karmanovsky RO - Art. militia lieutenant comrade VETROV with a group of workers of 5 people left to detain the indicated persons.
    2 kilometers from the village. Karma-novo in the direction of vil. Samuylovo early. RO NKVD comrade. VETROV noticed a motorcycle moving in the village. Karmanovo, and according to signs, he determined that those who were riding a motorcycle were those who left the landing plane, began to pursue them on a bicycle and overtook them in the village. Karmanovo.
    Riding on a motorcycle turned out to be: a man in a leather summer coat, with the shoulder straps of a major, had four orders and a gold star of the Hero of the Soviet Union.
    A woman in an overcoat with shoulder straps of a junior lieutenant.
    Having stopped the motorcycle and introduced himself as the head of the NKVD RO, comrade. VETROV demanded a document from a major riding a motorcycle, who presented an identity card in the name of Petr Ivanovich TAV-RIN - Deputy. Beginning OCD "Smersh" 39th Army of the 1st Baltic Front.
    At the suggestion of Comrade VETROV to follow to the RO NKVD, TAVRIN categorically refused, arguing that every minute is precious to him, as he arrived on an urgent call from the front.
    Only with the help of the arrived employees of the RO UNKVD, TAVRINA was delivered to the RO NKVD.
    In the district department of the NKVD, TAVRIN presented certificate No. 1284 dated 5/1X-44. with the stamp of the head of p.p. 26224 that he is sent to the mountains. Moscow, the Main Directorate of the NPO "Smersh" and a telegram of the Main Directorate of the KRO "Smersh" of the NPO of the USSR No. 01024 and a travel certificate of the same content.
    After checking the documents through the Head of the Gzhatsky RO NKVD comrade. IVANOV was requested by Moscow and it was established that TAVRIN was not called to the Main Directorate of the KRO "Smersh" by the NPO and that he did not appear at work in the KRO "Smersh" of the 39th army, he was disarmed and confessed that he was transferred by plane by German intelligence for sabotage and terror .
    During a personal search and in a motorcycle on which TAVRIN was following, 3 suitcases with various things, 4 order books, 5 orders, 2 medals, Golden Star Hero of the Soviet Union and guards badge, a number of documents in the name of TAVRIN, money in Soviet signs 428.400 rubles, 116 mastic seals, 7 pistols, 2 central combat hunting rifles, 5 grenades, 1 mine and a lot of ammunition.
    Detainees with things. evidence delivered to the NKVD of the USSR.
    P. p.
    7 DEP. OBB NKVD USSR
  3. Reconnaissance Battalion - Aufklarungsabtellung

    In peacetime, the Wehrmacht infantry divisions did not have reconnaissance battalions, their formation began only during the mobilization of 1939. The reconnaissance battalions were formed on the basis of thirteen cavalry regiments, united as part of the cavalry corps. By the end of the war, all cavalry regiments were divided into battalions, which were attached to divisions for reconnaissance. In addition, spare reconnaissance units stationed on the territory of the garrisons of individual divisions were formed from the cavalry regiments. Thus, the cavalry regiments ceased to exist, although towards the end of the war a new formation of cavalry regiments began. The reconnaissance battalions played the role of the "eyes" of the division. Scouts determined the tactical situation and protected the main forces of the division from unnecessary "surprises". Reconnaissance battalions were especially useful in a mobile war, when it was necessary to neutralize enemy reconnaissance and quickly detect the main enemy forces. In some situations, the reconnaissance battalion covered open flanks. During a fast offensive, scouts, along with sappers and tank destroyers, advanced in the forefront, forming a mobile group. The task of the mobile group was to quickly capture key objects: bridges, crossroads, dominant heights, etc. The reconnaissance units of infantry divisions were formed on the basis of cavalry regiments, so they retained the cavalry unit names. The reconnaissance battalions played a big role in the first years of the war. However, the need to decide a large number of tasks required from the commanders of the appropriate competence. It was especially difficult to coordinate the actions of the battalion due to the fact that it was partially motorized and its units had different mobility. Infantry divisions, formed later, no longer had cavalry units in their battalions, but received a separate cavalry squadron. Instead of motorcycles and cars, the scouts received armored cars.
    The reconnaissance battalion consisted of 19 officers, two officials, 90 non-commissioned officers and 512 soldiers - a total of 623 people. The reconnaissance battalion was armed with 25 light machine guns, 3 light grenade launchers, 2 heavy machine guns, 3 anti-tank guns and 3 armored vehicles. In addition, the battalion had 7 wagons, 29 cars, 20 trucks and 50 motorcycles (28 of them with sidecars). The staffing table called for 260 horses in the reconnaissance battalion, but in reality the battalion usually had more than 300 horses.
    The structure of the battalion was as follows:
    Battalion headquarters: commander, adjutant, deputy adjutant, intelligence chief, veterinarian, senior inspector (head of the repair detachment), senior treasurer and several staff members. The headquarters had horses and vehicles. The command vehicle was equipped with a 100-watt radio station.
    Department of couriers (5 cyclists and 5 motorcyclists).
    Communication platoon: 1 telephone department (motorized), radio communication department (motorized), 2 departments of portable radio stations type ”d” (on horseback), 1 telephone department (on horseback), 1 horse-drawn cart with signalmen's property. Total number: 1 officer, 29 non-commissioned officers and soldiers, 25 horses.
    Heavy weapons platoon: headquarters section (3 motorcycles with a sidecar), one section of heavy machine guns (two heavy machine guns and 8 motorcycles with a sidecar). The rear services and a bicycle platoon numbered 158 people.
    1. Cavalry squadron: 3 cavalry platoons, each with a headquarters section and three cavalry sections (each with 2 riflemen and one calculation of a light machine gun). Each squad has 1 non-commissioned officer and 12 cavalrymen. The armament of each cavalryman consisted of a rifle. In the Polish and French campaigns, cavalrymen of the reconnaissance battalions carried sabers, but in late 1940 and early 1941 sabers fell into disuse. The 1st and 3rd squads had an additional pack horse, which carried a light machine gun and boxes of ammunition. Each platoon consisted of one officer, 42 soldiers and non-commissioned officers, and 46 horses. However, the combat strength of the platoon was less, as it was necessary to leave the grooms who kept the horses.
    Convoy: one field kitchen, 3 HF1 horse-drawn carts, 4 HF2 horse-drawn carts (one of them housed a field forge), 35 horses, 1 motorcycle, 1 motorcycle with a sidecar, 28 non-commissioned officers and soldiers.
    2. Squadron of cyclists: 3 bicycle platoons: commander, 3 couriers, 3 squads (12 people and a light machine gun), one light mortar (2 motorcycles with a sidecar). 1 truck with spare parts and mobile workshop. The bicycle units of the Wehrmacht were equipped with an army bicycle of the 1938 model. The bicycle was equipped with a trunk, and the soldier's equipment was hung on the steering wheel. Boxes with machine gun cartridges were attached to the bicycle frame. Soldiers held rifles and machine guns behind their backs.
    3. Heavy weapons squadron: 1 cavalry battery (2 75 mm infantry guns, 6 horses), 1 tank destroyer platoon (3 37 mm anti-tank guns, motorized), 1 armored car platoon (3 light 4-wheeled armored vehicles (Panzerspaehwagen ), armed with machine guns, of which one armored car is radio-equipped (Funkwagen)).
    Convoy: camp kitchen (motorized), 1 truck with ammunition, 1 truck with spare parts and a camp workshop, 1 fuel truck, 1 motorcycle with a sidecar for transporting weapons and equipment. Non-commissioned officer and assistant gunsmith, food convoy (1 truck), convoy with property (1 truck), one motorcycle without a sidecar for the hauptfeldwebel and treasurer.
    The reconnaissance battalion usually operated 25-30 km ahead of the rest of the division's forces or took up positions on the flank. During the summer offensive of 1941, the cavalry squadron of the reconnaissance battalion was divided into three platoons and acted to the left and right of the offensive line, controlling a front up to 10 km wide. Cyclists operated close to the main forces, and armored vehicles covered the side roads. The rest of the battalion, along with all the heavy weapons, were kept ready to repel a possible enemy attack. By 1942, the reconnaissance battalion was being used more and more to reinforce the infantry. But for this task, the battalion was too small and poorly equipped. Despite this, the battalion was used as a last reserve, which plugged holes in the division's positions. After the Wehrmacht went on the defensive along the entire front in 1943, the reconnaissance battalions were practically not used for their intended purpose. All cavalry units were withdrawn from the battalions and merged into new cavalry regiments. From the remnants of the personnel, the so-called rifle battalions (such as light infantry) were formed, which were used to reinforce the bloodless infantry divisions.

  4. Chronology of sabotage and reconnaissance operations of the Abwehr (selectively, because there are many)
    1933 Abwehr began equipping foreign agents with portable shortwave radios
    Abwehr representatives hold regular meetings with the leadership of the Estonian special services in Tallinn. Abwehr is starting to create strongholds in Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, China and Japan to conduct sabotage and reconnaissance activities against the USSR
    1936 Wilhelm Canaris visits Estonia for the first time and conducts secret negotiations with the Chief of the General Staff of the Estonian Army and the head of the 2nd Department of Military Counterintelligence of the General Staff. An agreement was reached on the exchange of intelligence information on the USSR. Abwehr is starting to create an Estonian intelligence center, the so-called "Group 6513". The future Baron Andrey von Uexkul is appointed as a liaison officer between the "fifth column" of Estonia and the Abwehr
    1935. May. Abwehr receives official permission from the Estonian government to deploy sabotage and reconnaissance bases on Estonian territory along the border with the USSR and equips the Estonian special services with cameras with telescopic lenses and radio interception equipment to organize covert surveillance of the territory of a potential enemy. Photographic equipment is also installed on the lighthouses of the Gulf of Finland to photograph warships of the Soviet military fleet (RKKF).
    December 21: The delimitation of powers and the division of spheres of influence between the Abwehr and the SD was recorded in an agreement signed by representatives of both departments. The so-called "10 principles" assumed: 1. Coordination of the actions of the Abwehr, Gestapo and SD within the Reich and abroad. 2. Military intelligence and counterintelligence are the exclusive prerogative of the Abwehr. 3. Political intelligence - the diocese of the SD. 4. The whole complex of measures aimed at preventing crimes against the state on the territory of the Reich (surveillance, arrest, investigation, etc.) is carried out by the Gestapo.
    1937. Pickenbrock and Canaris leave for Estonia in order to intensify and coordinate intelligence activities against the USSR. To conduct subversive activities against the Soviet Union, the Abwehr used the services of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN). The Rovel Special Purpose Squadron based in Staaken is starting reconnaissance flights over the territory of the USSR. Subsequently, Xe-111, disguised as transport workers, flew at high altitude to the Crimea and the foothills of the Caucasus.
    1938 Oberst Maasing, retired, former head of the 2nd department of the Estonian General Staff(military counterintelligence), arrives in Germany. Under the leadership of the new head of the 2nd department, Oberst Willem Saarsen, the counterintelligence of the Estonian army is actually turning into a "foreign branch" of the Abwehr. Canaris and Pickenbrock fly to Estonia to coordinate sabotage and reconnaissance activities against the USSR. Until 1940, the Abwehr, together with the Estonian counterintelligence, threw sabotage and reconnaissance detachments into the territory of the USSR - among others, the “Gavrilov group” named after the leader. On the territory of the Reich, Abwehr-2 begins an active recruitment of agents among Ukrainian political emigrants. In the camp on Lake Chiemsee near Berlin-Tegel and in Quenzgut near Brandenburg open training centers for the preparation of saboteurs for actions in Russia and Poland.
    January. The Soviet government decides to close the diplomatic consulates of Germany in Leningrad, Kharkov, Tbilisi, Kyiv, Odessa, Novosibirsk and Vladivostok.
    As part of the Anti-Comintern Pact concluded in 1936 between the governments of Japan and Germany, the Japanese military attache in Berlin, Hiroshi Oshima and Wilhelm Canaris, signed an agreement in the Berlin Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the regular exchange of intelligence information about the USSR and the Red Army. The agreement provided for meetings at the level of heads of friendly counterintelligence organizations at least once a year to coordinate sabotage and reconnaissance operations of the Axis member countries.
    1939 During a visit to Estonia, Canaris expresses his wish to the Commander-in-Chief of the Estonian Armed Forces, General Laidoner, to orient the country's special services to collect information on the number and types of aircraft of the Soviet Air Force. Baron von Uexküll, a liaison officer of the Abwehr and Estonian special services, moved to permanent residence in Germany, but until 1940 he repeatedly went on business trips to the Baltic states.
    March 23: Germany annexes Memel (Klaipeda). March - April: The squadron of special purpose "Rovel" based in Budapest, secretly from the Hungarian authorities, makes reconnaissance flights over the territory of the USSR, in the region Kiev - Dnepropetrovsk - Zhytomyr - Zaporozhye - Krivoy Rog - Odessa.
    July: Canaris and Pickenbrock went on a business trip to Estonia. The Rovel squadron commander gave Canaris aerial photographs of certain regions of Poland, the USSR and Great Britain.
    Within six months, only in Torun Voivodeship (Poland) 53 Abwehr agents were arrested.
    September 12: The Abwehr leadership takes the first concrete steps to prepare an anti-communist uprising in Ukraine with the help of OUN militants and its leader Melnyk. Abwehr-2 instructors train 250 Ukrainian volunteers at a training camp near Dachstein.
    October: On the new Soviet-German border until the middle of 1941, the Abwehr equips radio interception posts and activates undercover intelligence. Canaris appoints Major Horachek as head of the Warsaw branch of the Abwehr. To intensify counterintelligence operations against the USSR, branches of the Abwehr are being created in Radom, Ciechanow, Lublin, Terespol, Krakow and Suwalki.
    November: The head of the Abwehr regional office in Warsaw, Major Horachek, deploys additional surveillance and information gathering services in Biala Podlaska, Wlodawa and Terespol, located opposite Brest on the other side of the Bug, in preparation for Operation Barbarossa. Estonian military counterintelligence seconded Hauptmann Lepp to Finland to collect intelligence information about the Red Army. The information received is forwarded to the Abwehr as agreed.
    The beginning of the Soviet-Finnish war (until March 12, 1940). Together with the Finnish counterintelligence VO "Finland", the Directorate of Ausland / Abwehr / OKW conduct active sabotage and reconnaissance activities on the front line. The Abwehr manages to obtain especially valuable intelligence information with the help of Finnish long-range patrols (the Kuismanen group - the Kola region, the Marttin group - the Kumu region and the Paatsalo group from Lapland).
    December. Abwehr carries out a massive recruitment of agents in Byala Podlaska and Vlodava and throws OUN saboteurs into the border zone of the USSR, most of which are neutralized by employees of the NKVD of the USSR.
    1940 On the instructions of the foreign department of the Abwehr, the Rovel Special Purpose Squadron increases the number of reconnaissance sorties over the territory of the USSR, using the runways of airfields in the occupied Czechoslovakia and Poland, air bases in Finland, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. The purpose of aerial reconnaissance is to collect information about the location of Soviet industrial facilities, compiling navigational charts of the network highways and rail tracks (bridges, railway junctions, sea and river ports), obtaining information about the deployment of the Soviet armed forces and the construction of airfields, border fortifications and long-term air defense positions, barracks, depots and defense industry enterprises. As part of the Oldenburg operation, the Design Bureau intends to "make an inventory of the sources of raw materials and centers for its processing in the West of the USSR (Ukraine, Belarus), in the Moscow and Leningrad regions, and in the oil production areas of Baku."
    To create a "fifth column" in the rear of the Red Army, the Abwehr forms the "Strelitz Special Purpose Regiment" (2,000 people) in Krakow, the "Ukrainian Legion" in Warsaw and the "Ukrainian Warriors" battalion in Lukenwald. As part of Operation Felix (occupation of the Strait of Gibraltar), the Abwehr is creating an operational center in Spain to collect information.
    February 13: At the headquarters of the Design Bureau, Canaris reports to General Yodl on the results of aerial reconnaissance over the territory of the USSR of the Rovel Special Purpose Squadron.
    February 22: Hauptmann of the Abwehr Leverkün with the passport of the Reichs diplomat leaves for Tabriz / Iran via Moscow to find out the possibilities for the operational-strategic deployment of an expeditionary army (army group) in the Asian region with the aim of invading the oil production areas of the Soviet Transcaucasus as part of the Barbarossa plan.
    March 10: The "insurgent headquarters" of the OUN sends sabotage groups to Lviv and the Volyn region to organize sabotage and civil disobedience.
    April 28: From the Bordufos airfield in northern Norway, reconnaissance aircraft of the Rovel Special Purpose Squadron conduct aerial photography of the northern territories of the USSR (Murmansk and Arkhangelsk).
    May: Abwehr 2 liaison officer Klee flies to a secret meeting in Estonia.
    July: Until May 1941, the NKVD of the Lithuanian SSR neutralized 75 Abwehr sabotage and reconnaissance groups.
    July 21 - 22: The Operations Department begins developing plans for a military campaign in Russia. August: OKW instructs the Ausland/Abwehr Directorate to conduct appropriate preparations as part of an offensive operation against the USSR.
    August 8: At the request of the chief of staff of the German Air Force, experts from the foreign department of the OKW draw up an analytical review of the military-industrial potential of the USSR and the colonial possessions of Great Britain (except for Egypt and Gibraltar).
    From December 1940 to March 1941, the NKVD of the USSR liquidated 66 Abwehr strongholds and bases in the border areas. For 4 months, 1,596 agents-saboteurs were arrested (of which 1,338 were in the Baltic States, Belarus and Western Ukraine). In late 1940 and early 1941, Argentine counterintelligence discovered several warehouses with German weapons.
    On the eve of the invasion of the USSR, the foreign department of the Abwehr carries out a massive recruitment of agents among Armenian (Dashnaktsutyun), Azerbaijani (Mussavat) and Georgian (Shamil) political emigrants.
    From the Finnish air bases, the Rovel special-purpose squadron conducts active aerial reconnaissance in the industrial regions of the USSR (Kronstadt, Leningrad, Arkhangelsk and Murmansk)
    1941 January 31: The German High Command of the German Land Forces (OKH) signs the plan for operational-strategic deployment ground forces in Operation Barbarossa.
    February 15: Hitler orders the OKB to conduct a large-scale operation to disinform the leadership of the Red Army on the German-Soviet border from February 15 to April 16, 1941.
    . March: Admiral Canaris issues an order to the Directorate to speed up intelligence operations against the USSR.
    March 11: The German Foreign Ministry assures the USSR military attache in Berlin that "the rumors about the redeployment of German troops in the area of ​​the German-Soviet border are a malicious provocation and do not correspond to reality."
    March 21: Von Bentivegni reports to the OKB on carrying out special measures (Abwehr-3) to disguise the Wehrmacht's advance to its starting positions on the Romanian-Yugoslav and German-Soviet borders.
    Abwehr major Schulze-Holtus, aka Dr. Bruno Schulze, travels to the USSR under the guise of a tourist. The major collects intelligence information about military and industrial facilities, strategic bridges, etc., located along the Moscow-Kharkov-Rostov-on-Don-Grozny-Baku railway line. Returning to Moscow, Schulze-Holthus passes the collected information to the German military attache.
    April-May: The NKVD registers the intensification of German intelligence activities on the territory of the USSR.
    April 30: Hitler sets the date for the attack on the USSR - June 22, 1941.
    May 7: The German military attache in the USSR, General Köstring, and his deputy, Oberst Krebs, report to Hitler on the military potential of the Soviet Union.
    May 15: Abwehr officers Tilike and Schulze-Holtus, undercover pseudonym "Zaba", conduct intensive reconnaissance of the border regions of the south of the USSR from the territory of Iran, using informant agents from among local residents. The son of the police chief of Tabriz and the staff officer of one of the Iranian divisions stationed in Tabriz were successfully recruited.
    May 25: The OKB issues "Directive No. 30", according to which the transfer of expeditionary troops to the zone of the British-Iraqi armed conflict (Iraq) is postponed indefinitely in connection with preparations for a campaign in the East. The OKB informs the General Staff of the Finnish Army about the timing of the attack on the USSR.
    June: SS Standartenführer Walter Schellenberg is appointed head of the 6th Directorate of the RSHA (SD Foreign Intelligence Service).
    After training in intelligence schools in Finland, the Abwehr-2 throws over 100 Estonian emigrants into the Baltic states (Operation Erna). Two groups of agents-saboteurs in the form of soldiers of the Red Army land on the island of Hiiumaa. The ship with the third Abwehr group is forced to leave the territorial waters of the USSR after a collision with Soviet border boats in the waters of the Gulf of Finland. A few days later, this sabotage and reconnaissance group parachuted into the coastal regions of Estonia. The commanders of the special units of the “front intelligence” of the Army Group “North” were tasked with collecting intelligence information about the strategic objects and fortifications of the Red Army in Estonia (especially in the Narva-Kohtla-Jarve-Rakvere-Tallinn region). The Abwehr sends agents from among Ukrainian emigrants to the USSR to compile and clarify "proscription lists" of Soviet citizens "to be destroyed in the first place" (communists, commissars, Jews ...).
    June 10: At a meeting of the top leadership of the Abwehr, the Sipo (security police) and the SD in Berlin, Admiral Canaris and SS Obergruppenführer Heydrich conclude an agreement on coordinating the actions of the Abwehrgroups, units of the security police and Einsatzgruppen (operational groups) of the SD on the territory of the USSR after the occupation. June 11: Sub-department "Abwehr-2" of the Krakow branch of Ausland / Abwehr / OKB throws 6 paratrooper agents into the territory of Ukraine with the task of blowing up sections of the Stolpu Novo - Kiev railway line on the night of June 21-22. The operation is aborted. The Design Bureau issues Directive No. 32 - 1. “On measures after the operation Barbarossa. 2. "On the support of the Arab liberation movement by all military, political and propaganda means with the formation of the "Sonderstab F (elmi)" at the headquarters of the commander-in-chief of the occupation forces in Greece (South-East)". June 14: The OKB sends the last directives before the attack on the USSR to the main headquarters of the invading armies. June 14 - 19: According to the order of the leadership, Schulze-Holthus drops agents from the territory of Northern Iran to the Kirovabad/Azerbaijan region to collect intelligence information about Soviet civilian and military airfields in this region. When crossing the border, an Abwehrgroup of 6 people collides with a border detachment and returns to the base. During the fire contact, all 6 agents receive severe gunshot wounds.
    June 18: Germany and Turkey sign the Mutual Cooperation and Non-Aggression Pact. Divisions of the 1st echelon of the Wehrmacht entered the area of ​​operational deployment on the Soviet-German border. The battalion of Ukrainian saboteurs "Nightingale" advances to the German-Soviet border in the Pantalovice area. June 19: The Abwehr branch in Bucharest reports to Berlin about the successful recruitment of about 100 Georgian emigrants in Romania. The Georgian diaspora in Iran is being effectively developed. June 21: The Ausland/Abwehr/OKW Directorate announces "readiness No. 1" to the departments of military counterintelligence at the headquarters of the fronts - "Headquarters of Valli-1, Valli-2 and Valli-3". The commanders of the special units of the "frontal intelligence" of the army groups "North", "Center" and "South" report to the leadership of the Abwehr about the advance to their original positions near the German-Soviet border. Each of the three Abwehrgroups includes from 25 to 30 saboteurs from among the local population (Russians, Poles, Ukrainians, Cossacks, Finns, Estonians ...) under the command of a German officer. After being thrown into the rear (from 50 to 300 km from the front line), soldiers and officers of the Red Army, dressed in military uniforms, commandos of the "front intelligence" units carry out acts of sabotage and sabotage. The “Brandenburgers” of Lieutenant Katwitz penetrate 20 km deep into the territory of the USSR, capture the strategic bridge across the Beaver (the left tributary of the Berezina) near Lipsk and hold it until the approach of the Wehrmacht tank reconnaissance company. The company of the battalion "Nightingale" seeps into the Radimno area. June 22: Beginning of Operation Barbarossa - attack on the USSR. Around midnight, on the site of the 123rd Infantry Division of the Wehrmacht, Brandenburg-800 saboteurs dressed in the uniform of German customs officers mercilessly shoot at the squad of Soviet border guards, ensuring a breakthrough of the border fortifications. At dawn, sabotage Abwehr groups strike in the area of ​​Augustow - Grodno - Golynka - Rudavka - Suwalki and capture 10 strategic bridges (Veyseiai - Porechye - Sopotskin - Grodno - Lunno - Bridges). The consolidated company of the 1st battalion "Brandenburg-800", reinforced by the company of the battalion "Nightingale", capture the city of Przemysl, cross the San and capture the bridgehead near Valava. Abwehr-3 "front intelligence" special units prevent the evacuation and destruction of secret documents of Soviet military and civilian institutions (Brest-Litovsk). The Ausland / Abwehr / OKW Directorate instructs Major Schulze-Holtus, Abwehr resident in Tabriz / Iran, to intensify the collection of intelligence information about the Baku oil industrial region, lines of communication and communication in the Caucasus-Persian Gulf region. June 24: With the help of the German ambassador in Kabul, Lahousen-Wivremont organizes anti-British sabotage actions on the Afghan-Indian border. The Ausland/Abwehr/OKW administration plans to raise a massive anti-British uprising on the eve of the landing of the Wehrmacht expeditionary army in this region. Oberleutnant Roser, authorized by the "commission for the conclusion of a truce", at the head of an intelligence unit, returns from Syria to Turkey. Brandenburg-800 saboteurs make night landings from an ultra-low altitude (50 m) between Lida and Pervomaisky. The "Brandenburgers" capture and hold for two days the railway bridge on the Lida - Molodechno line until the approach of the German tank division. During fierce fighting, the unit suffers severe losses. Reinforced company of the battalion "Nightingale" is redeployed near Lvov. June 26: Finland declares war on the USSR. Subversive units of "long-range intelligence" penetrate into the Soviet rear through gaps in the lines of defense. The Finnish intelligence services are transmitting the received intelligence reports to Berlin for systematization and examination.
    WAR.
    To be continued.
  5. 1941

    June 28: Saboteurs of the 8th company "Brandenburg-800" in the Red Army uniform seize and clear the bridge prepared for the explosion by the retreating Soviet troops across the Daugava near Daugavpils. During fierce battles, the company commander, Oberleutnant Knak, was killed, but still the company holds the bridge until the forward units of the North Army Group, which is rushing into Latvia, approach. June 29 - 30: During a lightning operation, the 1st battalion "Brandenburg-800" and reinforced companies of the battalion "Nightingale" occupy Lvov and take control of strategic objects and transport hubs. According to the "proscription lists" compiled by agents of the Krakow branch of the Abwehr, the Einsatzkommandos of the SD, together with the Nightingale Battalion, begin mass executions of the Jewish population of Lvov.
    As part of Operation Xenophon (the redeployment of German and Romanian divisions from the Crimea through the Kerch Strait to the Taman Peninsula), a platoon of Brandenburgers under Lieutenant Katwitz attacked the stronghold of the Red Army anti-aircraft searchlights at Cape Peklu.
    Von Lahousen-Wivremont, General Reinecke and SS-Obergruppenführer Müller (Gestapo) are holding a meeting in connection with a change in the procedure for keeping Soviet prisoners of war in accordance with the “Order on Commissars” signed by Keitel and the order “On the implementation of a racial program in Russia”. Abwehr-3 begins to conduct police raids and anti-partisan intimidation actions in the occupied territory of the USSR.
    July 1 - 8: During the attack on Vinnitsa/Ukraine, the Nightingale battalion punishers carry out mass executions of civilians in Sataniv, Yusvin, Solochev and Ternopil. July 12: Great Britain and the USSR sign an agreement on mutual assistance in Moscow. July 15-17: Dressed in Red Army uniforms, the commandos of the Nightingale Battalion and the 1st Brandenburg-800 Battalion attack the headquarters of one of the units of the Red Army in the forest near Vinnitsa. The attack bogged down on the move - the saboteurs suffered heavy losses. The remnants of the Nightingale Battalion were disbanded.
    August: Within 2 weeks, Abwehr agents carried out 7 major railway sabotage (Army Group Center).
    Autumn: By agreement with the OKL, a group of Abwehr agents was sent to the Leningrad Region to collect intelligence information about the location of strategic military facilities (airfields, arsenals) and the deployment of military units.
    September 11: Von Ribbentrop signs an order stating that “the institutions and organizations of the German Foreign Ministry are prohibited from employing active agents-executors of the Ausland/Abwehr/OKW. The ban does not apply to employees of military intelligence and counterintelligence who are not directly involved in sabotage operations or who organize sabotage actions through third parties...”.
    September 16: In Afghanistan, the reconnaissance group of Oberleutnant Witzel, aka Patan, is preparing to be dropped into the border region in the south of the USSR.
    September 25: Abwehr Major Shenk holds a meeting with the leaders of the Uzbek emigration in Afghanistan. October: The 9th company of the 3rd battalion "Brandenburg-800" parachutes in the area of ​​the Istra reservoir, which supplies water to Moscow. During the mining of the dam, employees of the NKVD discovered and neutralized the saboteurs.
    Late 1941: After the failure of the blitzkrieg plans on the Eastern Front, the Ausland/Abwehr/OKW Special attention actions of agents in the deep rear of the Red Army (in the Transcaucasian, Volga, Ural and Central Asian regions). The number of each special unit of the "front intelligence" of the Ausland / Abwehr / OKW Directorate on the Soviet-German front was increased to 55 - 60 people. In a forest camp near Ravaniemi, the 15th Brandenburg-800 company completed preparations for special operations on the Eastern Front. The saboteurs were given the task of organizing sabotage on the Murmansk-Leningrad railway line, the main communication artery of the northern grouping of Soviet troops, and interrupting the food supply to besieged Leningrad. "Headquarters Valley-3" begins to introduce agents into the Soviet partisan detachments.

  6. 1942 Finnish radio control posts and radio interception services decipher the content of radio messages from the High Command of the Red Army, which allows the Wehrmacht to carry out several successful naval operations to intercept Soviet convoys. By personal order of Hitler, the Ausland / Abwehr / OKW Directorate equips the signal troops of the Finnish army with the latest direction finders and radio transmitters. Finnish army coders, together with Abwehr experts, are trying to establish the places of permanent (temporary) deployment of military units of the Red Army by field mail numbers. Gerhard Buschmann, a former professional sports pilot, is appointed sector leader of the Abwehr branch in Revel. VO "Bulgaria" forms a special unit for the fight against partisans under the command of Sonderführer Kleinhampel. The "Baltic company" of the 1st battalion "Brandenburg-800" of Lieutenant Baron von Fölkersam is thrown into the rear of the Red Army. Commandos dressed in Red Army uniforms attack the divisional headquarters of the Red Army. "Brandenburgers" capture the strategic bridge near Pyatigorsk / USSR and hold it until the approach tank battalion Wehrmacht. Before the assault on Demyansk, 200 Brandenburg-800 saboteurs parachute in the area of ​​the Bologoye transport hub. "Brandenburgers" undermine sections of the railway track on the lines Bologoe - Toropets and Bologoe - Staraya Russa. Two days later, the NKVD units manage to partially liquidate the sabotage Abwehr group.
    January: Headquarters Valli-1 begins recruiting Russian agents in POW filtration camps.
    January - November: NKVD officers neutralize 170 agents of the Abwehr-1 and Abwehr-2 operating in the territory North Caucasus/THE USSR.
    March: Abwehr-3 anti-terrorist units take an active part in the suppression partisan movement in the occupied territory. The 9th company of the 3rd battalion "Brandenburg-800" begins to "clean up the area" near Dorogobuzh - Smolensk. After completing the combat mission, the 9th company is transferred to Vyazma.
    Special forces "Brandenburg-800" are trying to capture and destroy the strongholds and arsenals of the Red Army near Alakvetti in the Murmansk direction. Commandos meet fierce resistance and suffer heavy losses in battles with Red Army units and NKVD units.
    May 23: 350 Abwehr-2 commandos in Red Army uniform are involved in Operation Gray Head on the Eastern Front (Army Group Center). In the course of protracted battles, units of the Red Army destroy 2/3 of the personnel of the Abwehrgroup. The remnants of the special forces with fighting break through the front line.
    June: Finnish counterintelligence begins sending copies of intercepted radio messages from the Red Army and the Red Army Fleet to Berlin on a regular basis.
    End of June: The "Brandenburg-800 coast guard fighter company" was tasked with cutting the supply lines of the Red Army in the Kerch region on the Taman Peninsula / USSR.
    July 24 - 25: As a result of a lightning-fast landing operation, the reinforced Brandenburg-800 company of Hauptmann Grabert takes possession of the six-kilometer hydraulic structures (railway embankments, earthen dams, bridges) between Rostov-on-Don and Bataysk in the Don floodplain.
    July 25 - December 1942: Wehrmacht summer offensive in the North Caucasus/USSR. 30 commandos of the 2nd battalion "Brandenburg-800" in Red Army uniforms parachute in the area of ​​the North Caucasian Mineralnye Vody. Saboteurs mine and blow up a railway bridge on a branch Mineral water- Pyatigorsk. 4 Abwehr agents carry out terrorist acts against the commanders of the 46th Infantry and 76th Caucasian divisions of the Red Army, stationed near Kirovograd. August: The 8th Brandenburg-800 company is ordered to capture the bridges near Bataysk, south of Rostov-on-Don, and hold them until the approach of the Wehrmacht tank divisions. The Abwehrgroup of Lieutenant Baron von Felkersam in the form of NKGB fighters is thrown into the rear Soviet army with the aim of capturing oil production areas near Maikop. 25 Brandenburg commandos of Oberleutnant Lange are parachuted into the Grozny region with the task of capturing oil refineries and an oil pipeline. The Red Army soldiers of the security company shoot the sabotage group while still in the air. Having lost up to 60% of their personnel, the "Brandenburgers" are fighting their way through the Soviet-German front line. The 8th company of the 2nd battalion "Brandenburg-800" captures the bridge across the Belaya River near Maikop and prevents the redeployment of Red Army units. In the ensuing battle, the company commander, Lieutenant Prochazka, was killed. The Abwehrkommando of the 6th company "Brandenburg-800" in the Red Army uniform captures the road bridge and cuts the Maikop-Tuapse highway on the Black Sea. During fierce battles, the Red Army units almost completely destroy the Abwehr saboteurs. Dedicated Brandenburg-800 units, together with SD Einsatzkommandos, take part in anti-partisan raids between Nevelemi Vitebsk / Belarus.
    August 20: The Ausland/Abwehr/OKW Directorate deploys the "German-Arab Training Unit" (GAUP) from Cape Sounion/Greece to Stalino (now Donetsk/Ukraine) to participate in OKB sabotage and reconnaissance operations. August 28 - 29: "Brandenburg-800 long-range reconnaissance" patrols in Red Army uniforms go to the Murmansk railway and lay mines equipped with pressure and delayed fuses, as well as vibrating fuses. Autumn: Shtarkman, a career intelligence officer of the Abwehr, is thrown into the besieged Leningrad.
    Bodies of the NKGB arrest 26 paratroopers of the Abwehr in the Stalingrad region.
    October 1942 - September 1943: "Abwehrkommando 104" throws into the rear of the Red Army about 150 reconnaissance groups, from 3 to 10 agents each. Only two return across the front line!
    November 1: The "Special Purpose Training Regiment Brandenburg-800" was reorganized into the "Sonder Unit (Special Purpose Brigade) Brandenburg-800". November 2: Soldiers of the 5th Brandenburg Company in Red Army uniforms capture the bridge across the Terek near Darg-Koh. Parts of the NKGB liquidate saboteurs.
    End of 1942: The 16th company of the "Brandenburgers" was transferred to Leningrad. For three months, the commandos of the Bergman (Highlander) regiment, together with the Einsatzkommandos of the SD, take part in punitive operations in the North Caucasus / USSR (mass executions of the civilian population and anti-partisan raids).
    40 Abwehr radio operators of the “radio interception and surveillance centers” of the Far East Military District in Beijing and Canton daily decode about 100 intercepted radio messages from Soviet, British and American military radio stations. Late December 1942 - 1944: Together with the 6th Directorate of the RSHA (foreign intelligence service SD - Ausland / SD), Abwehr-1 and Abwehr-2 conduct anti-Soviet and anti-British activities in Iran.
  7. I would not want the members of the forum to have a misconception about the "Brandenburg" and, in general, about German intelligence. Therefore, I recommend that you familiarize yourself with the Abwehr combat log in its entirety. (Abr cited an excerpt from him). You can do this in Julius Mader's book "Abwehr: Shield and Sword of the Third Reich" Phoenix 1999 (Rostov-on-Don). it follows from the magazine that the Abwehr did not always act so famously, including against the USSR. By the way, the level of work of the Abwehr is visible from the case with Tavrin. The description is generally funny, to catch up with a motorcycle at a distance of 2 km on a bike, you need to be able to do it. Although, considering WHAT the motorcycle was carrying, it would probably have been possible to catch up with it on foot ... without two hunting rifles with cartridges, the agent could not do it. Yes, and 7 pistols for two ... it's impressive. Taurina is apparently 4, and the woman, as a weaker creature, 2. Or maybe they were thrown into our rear to hunt. 5 grenades and only 1 mine. There is no radio station, but there is a lot of cartridges. money just right, but 116 seals (a separate suitcase, not otherwise) - this is also impressive. And not a word about the crew of the aircraft, although it may simply not have been mentioned. They throw it along with their own motorcycle, and at the same time, the landing area in the very thick of the air defense is chosen (or the crew is such that they brought it to the wrong place). In general, a pro and nothing more.
    Such prompt detention of the spies is explained by the fact that the air defense systems of the Moscow region spotted the plane on which they arrived at about two in the morning in the Kubinka region. He was fired upon and, having received damage, lay down on the return course. But in the Smolensk region he made an emergency landing right in a field near the village of Yakovlevo. This did not go unnoticed by Almazov, the commander of the local public order group, who organized surveillance and soon reported by phone to the NKVD regional department that a man and a woman in Soviet military uniforms had left the enemy plane on a motorcycle in the direction of Karmanovo. A task force was sent to detain the fascist crew, and the head of the NKVD district department decided to arrest the suspicious couple personally. He was very lucky: for some reason, the spies did not offer the slightest resistance, although seven pistols, two center-fire hunting rifles, and five grenades were seized from them. Later, a special device called "Panzerknake" was found in the plane - for firing miniature armor-piercing incendiary projectiles.

    Runaway gambler

    The beginning of this story can be traced back to 1932, when an inspector of the city council, Pyotr Shilo, was arrested in Saratov. He lost at cards a large sum and paid with public money. Soon the crime was solved, and the unfortunate gambler faced a long sentence. But Shilo managed to escape from the bathhouse of the pre-trial detention center, and then, using false certificates, received a passport in the name of Pyotr Tavrin and even graduated from junior command staff courses before the war. In 1942, the false Tavrin was already a company commander and had good prospects. But special officers sat on his tail. On May 29, 1942, Tavrin was summoned for a conversation by an authorized representative of the special department of the regiment and bluntly asked if he had previously had the name Shilo? The fugitive gambler, of course, refused, but he realized that sooner or later he would be taken to clean water. That same night, Tavrin fled to the Germans.

    For several months he was transferred from one concentration camp to another. Once, an assistant to General Vlasov, the former secretary of the district committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks of Moscow, Georgy Zhilenkov, arrived in the “zone” to recruit prisoners for service in the ROA. Tavrin managed to take a liking to him and soon became a cadet of the Abwehr intelligence school. Communication with Zhilenkov continued here as well. It was this defrocked secretary who suggested to Tavrin the idea of ​​a terrorist attack against Stalin. She was very much to the liking of the German command. In September 1943, Tavrin was placed at the disposal of the head of the Zeppelin special reconnaissance and sabotage team, Otto Kraus, who personally supervised the preparation of the agent for an important special task.

    The scenario of the attack assumed the following. Tavrin, with the documents of Colonel SMERSH, Hero of the Soviet Union, a war invalid, enters the territory of Moscow, settles there in a private apartment, contacts the leaders of the anti-Soviet organization "Union of Russian Officers" General Zagladin from the personnel department of the People's Commissariat of Defense and Major Palkin from the headquarters of the reserve officer regiment. Together they are looking for the possibility of Tavrin's penetration into any solemn meeting in the Kremlin, which would be attended by Stalin. There, the agent must shoot the leader with a poisoned bullet. Stalin's death would be the signal for a large landing on the outskirts of Moscow, which would capture the "demoralized Kremlin" and put in power the "Russian cabinet" headed by General Vlasov.

    In the event that Tavrin failed to infiltrate the Kremlin, he was to ambush the vehicle carrying Stalin and blow it up with a Panzerknake capable of penetrating 45 millimeters of armor.

    In order to ensure the authenticity of the legend about the disability of “Colonel SMERSH Tavrin”, he underwent surgery on his stomach and legs, disfiguring them with jagged scars. A few weeks before the transfer of the agent across the front line, he was personally instructed twice by General Vlasov and three times by the well-known fascist saboteur Otto Skorzeny.

    female character

    From the very beginning, it was assumed that Tavrin should carry out the operation alone. But at the end of 1943, he met Lydia Shilova in Pskov, and this left an unexpected imprint on the further scenario of the operation.

    Lydia is young beautiful woman Before the war, she worked as an accountant in the housing office. During the occupation, like thousands of others, she worked according to the order of the German commandant. At first she was sent to the officer's laundry, then to the sewing workshop. There was a conflict with one of the officers. He tried to persuade the woman to cohabitation, but she could not overcome the disgust. The fascist, in retaliation, ensured that Lydia was sent to logging. Fragile and unprepared for work, she was melting before our eyes. And then the case brought her to Tavrin. In private conversations, he scolded the Germans, promised to help free Lydia from hard work. In the end, he proposed to marry him. At that time, she did not know that Peter was a German spy, and later he confessed this to her and proposed such a plan. She takes courses for radio operators and crosses the front line with him, and on Soviet territory they get lost and cut off all contact with the Germans. The war is coming to an end, and the Nazis will not be up to taking revenge on the fugitive agents. Lydia agreed. Later, during the investigation, it was established that she was completely unaware of the terrorist assignment for Tavrin and was sure that he was not going to work for the Germans on Soviet territory.

    Judging by the investigative and judicial materials, this seems to be true. How else can one explain the fact that Tavrin, armed to the teeth, offered no resistance during the arrest, and besides, he left the Panzerknak, a walkie-talkie, and many other spy accessories on the plane? So most likely there was no threat to Stalin's life in September 1944. Of course, it was beneficial for the Chekists to describe the Panzerknake operation that they had stopped in the most sinister colors. This allowed Beria to once again appear before Stalin in the role of the savior of the leader.

    Pay

    After the arrest of Tavrin and Shilova, a radio game was developed, codenamed "Fog". Shilova regularly maintained two-way radio communications with the German intelligence center. With these radiograms, the Chekists "foggy" the brains of German intelligence officers. Among the many meaningless telegrams was the following: “I met a woman doctor, has acquaintances in the Kremlin hospital. Processing." There were also telegrams informing about the failure of the batteries for the radio station and the impossibility of getting them in Moscow. They asked for help and support. In response, the Germans thanked the agents for their service and offered to unite with another group located in our rear. Naturally, this group was soon neutralized ... The last message sent by Shilova went to the intelligence center on April 9, 1945, but no answer was received: the end of the war was approaching. In peaceful days, it was assumed that one of the surviving former employees of German intelligence could go to the safe house of Tavrin and Shilova. But no one ever came.
    1943 in the area of ​​Plavsk to commit subversive actions.

It can be said with all certainty that the Nazi system of "total espionage" outwardly seemed very impressive. And this was based on a certain calculation.

It was a complex, ramified complex of intelligence organizations - a huge invisible mechanism, the interaction of all parts of which was ensured by the "Communication Headquarters" headed by Hess, placed on top of the pyramid. Each of these secret organizations created its own strongholds abroad and built up the links of the common espionage chain with which Hitlerite Germany entangled many countries of the world. In a word, in a short period of time from 1935 to the beginning of the Second World War, a fairly powerful system of intelligence organizations was created, fully focused on preparing for a "big war". The rulers of the Third Reich believed that even before hostilities were unleashed, the defense potential of the future enemy should be weakened. The war, according to their ideas, was to be the final open blow inflicted on the victim after his strength had been previously undermined from within.

In this presentation, we are not talking about all the components of the intelligence system of Nazi Germany, the total number of which was in the tens, but only about its main constituent parts who played the main role in the subversive activities directed against the Soviet Union.

Operation WICE

Among the organizations of "total espionage" of the Third Reich, for obvious reasons, the Abwehr, the intelligence and counterintelligence department under the supreme command of the armed forces of Germany, came to the fore. Its headquarters were located in a block of fashionable buildings on Tirpeschufer, where the Ministry of War had been located since the coronation of Kaiser Wilhelm II.

general purpose of the Abwehr was to pave the way for armed aggression by secret means. First of all, in a few years, he was supposed to provide the Nazi generals with intelligence information, on the basis of which it was supposed to launch the planning of aggression against Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Denmark and Norway, France, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg, England, Yugoslavia and Greece, Crete, Soviet Union, Switzerland, Portugal. At the same time, with the assistance of the Abwehr, the Wehrmacht high command began to develop military operations against the United States of America, the countries of the Near and Middle East and Africa.

“Admiring the British traditions and institutions of the British world empire,” writes G. Buchheit, Hitler hatched plans to create a comprehensive secret service like the Intelligence Service. This intention was bound to result sooner or later in the creation of the SS-SD security service.

So it actually happened. However, in the first years of the existence of the fascist dictatorship (1933-1934), practically no one was able to seriously challenge the priority of the Abwehr in matters of intelligence and counterintelligence. This was partly due to the fact that Hitler could not yet discount the Reichswehr, which was an important factor in the state. But only partially. The main reason was different: by the beginning of the war, the Abwehr managed to get ahead of other secret services and create a well-functioning and fully prepared intelligence apparatus for work in military conditions. By this time, the distinguishing feature of the Nazi system of military espionage was already clearly marked - complete subordination to the task of servicing the aggressive program of the rulers of the Third Reich. Information about the enemy was regarded as one of the most important means of warfare.

Having reached its greatest prosperity by 1938, by the time of open preparations for an aggressive war, the Abwehr, having set out to probe the strategic capabilities of the future enemy, was actively involved in collecting data on the state of its armed forces and defense industry. To do this, he systematically entangled with an agent network the countries that Nazi Germany intended to attack.

In general, the Abwehr, which, from the internal political body of the Reichswehr, which it was in the first place until now, under the conditions of the restoration of the armed forces, turned into a military and therefore mainly into a foreign policy intelligence service. Assuming the role of an operational headquarters for directing the activities of the extensive military intelligence agencies, it became an instrument of the most militaristic and reactionary forces of the military, in alliance with which German fascism was preparing the country and people for an aggressive war. Most Western and Soviet authors who study the history of the Abwehr come to this conclusion, although, as is known, there is no available material - documents, protocols, operational reports, official diaries of the Abwehr - is absent. Many decisions made by the leadership of the Abwehr in the interests of concealing their criminal essence were stated orally, or if they were expressed in writing, then due to the secret nature of the functions performed by military intelligence, they were coded. During the retreat of the German troops and on the eve of the final defeat of Nazi Germany, individual Abwehr services destroyed almost all the accumulated operational materials. Finally, a large number of documents were destroyed by the Gestapo when the Nazi regime was in its death throes so that they could not be used as physical evidence. Nevertheless, the materials that came to the attention of researchers allow us to get a fairly complete picture of the place of the Abwehr in the mechanism of aggression and, in particular, its role in planning, preparing and unleashing the Second World War.

... It happened on August 25, 1939. On that day, Hitler ordered the Wehrmacht to launch a surprise attack on neighboring Poland at 4:15 am on August 26 at 4:15 am. A special detachment formed by the Abwehr, headed by Lieutenant A. Herzner, went on an important task of the high command. He had to capture the mountain pass through the Blankovsky Pass, which had a special strategic importance: it was like a gate for the invasion of Nazi troops from the north of Czechoslovakia into the southern regions of Poland. The detachment was supposed to “remove” the local border guard, replacing it with their own soldiers dressed in Polish uniforms, thwart a possible attempt by the Poles to mine the railway tunnel and clear the section of the railway from artificial barriers.

But it so happened that the walkie-talkies with which the detachment was equipped could not receive signals in the conditions of a very rugged and wooded area. As a result, Herzner was unable to find out that the date of the attack on Poland was being moved from 25 August to 1 September.

The detachment, which included Polish-speaking "Volksdeutsche" (that is, Germans living outside the territory of the Reich), coped with the task assigned to it. Early on the morning of August 26, Lieutenant Herzner announced to more than two thousand unsuspecting Polish miners, officers and soldiers that they had been taken prisoner, locked them in warehouses, blew up the telephone exchange and, as he was ordered by order, "without a fight" captured the mountain pass . In the evening of the same day, Herzner's detachment retreated. The first victims of the Second World War were left lying on the pass...

The truth about the attack on the radio station in Gliwice

It is well known that before the start of the Second World War, there was one episode of German citizens in Polish uniforms attacking a German radio station in Gleiwitz (Gliwice), located on the border with Poland. The Nazis wanted to present their aggressive actions, with the help of which the war was unleashed, in the form of defensive measures. This trick of the Nazi elite for a long time remained a complete secret. For the first time, the former deputy chief of the Abwehr, General Lahousen, told the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg about this.

“The case about which I will testify,” Lahousen said at the time, “is one of the most mysterious carried out by intelligence. A few days, some time before that - I think it was in mid-August, the exact date can be established in the department log - Department I and my department, that is, II, were instructed to get Polish uniforms and equipment, as well as soldiers' books and other Polish army things for the action codenamed "Himmler". This instruction ... Canaris received from the headquarters of the Wehrmacht or from the Reich Defense Department ... Canaris told us that the prisoners of the concentration camps, dressed in this uniform, were supposed to attack the radio station in Gliwice ... Even the people from the SD who took part in this were removed, that is, killed."

Walter Schellenberg also speaks about the operation in Gliwice in his memoirs, referring to the information he received in a confidential conversation with the then SD employee Mehlhorn. According to Mehlhorn, in the last days of August 1939, he was summoned by the head of the imperial security service, Heydrich, and conveyed Hitler's order: by September 1, at any cost, create a concrete pretext for an attack on Poland, thanks to which she would appear in the eyes of the whole world as the initiator of aggression. The plan, Mehlhorn went on, was to attack the radio station in Gliwice. The Fuhrer instructed Heydrich and Canaris to take charge of this operation. Polish uniforms have already been delivered from the warehouses of the Wehrmacht by order of Colonel General Keitel.

To Schellenberg’s question, where did they think to get the Poles for the planned “attack”, Mehlhorn replied: “The devilish trick of this plan was to dress German criminals and concentration camp prisoners in Polish military uniforms, giving them weapons of Polish production and staging an attack on the radio station. It was decided to drive the attackers to the machine guns of the "guards" specially installed for this purpose.

Some details of this criminal armed action were given during interrogation by the US military investigator and another participant in it, Alfred Naujoks, the senior security officer we have already mentioned. According to his sworn testimony in the Nuremberg prison, Heydrich, the head of the Reich's main security office, ordered him around August 10, 1939 to stage an attack on the radio station building in Gliwice, creating the appearance that the attackers were Poles. “For the foreign press and for German propaganda,” Heydrich told him, “there is a need for practical proof of these Polish attacks ...” Naujoks had to take the radio station and hold it for as long as it took to read the text prepared in advance in the SD in front of the microphone. As planned, this was to be done by a German who knew Polish. The text contained the rationale that "the time has come for a battle between the Poles and the Germans."

Naujoks arrived in Gliwice two weeks before the events and had to wait there for the prearranged signal to start the operation. Between 25 and 31 August, he visited the chief of the Gestapo, Müller, whose headquarters, in connection with the operation being prepared, was temporarily located near the scene of action, in Opal, and discussed with him the details of the operation, in which more than a dozen criminals sentenced to death, called "canned goods". Dressed in Polish uniforms, they were to be killed in the course of the attack and left to lie at the scene so that it could be proven that they had died during the attack. At the final stage, representatives of the central press were supposed to be brought to Gliwice. This was, in general terms, a plan of provocation, sanctioned at the highest level.

Müller informed Naujoks that he had an order from Heydrich to single out one of the criminals to him. On the afternoon of August 31, Naujoks received an encrypted order from Heydrich, according to which the attack on the radio station was to take place on the same day at 20:00. Although Naujoks did not notice any gunshot wounds on him, his face was covered in blood, and he was in an unconscious state, in this state he was thrown at the very entrance to the radio station.

Successful capture of the Polish radio station by the Germans

As planned, at the appointed time at dawn, the attack team occupied the radio station, and a three to four minute text message was transmitted over the emergency radio transmitter. After that, shouting a few phrases at Polish and having fired up to a dozen random shots from pistols, the participants in the raid retreated, having previously shot their accomplices - their bodies were then shown as the corpses of "Polish servicemen" who allegedly attacked the radio station. The big press played it all up as a "successfully" repelled "armed attack" on a radio station in Gliwice.

On September 1 at 10 a.m., five hours after the raid on the radio station, Hitler, as scheduled, delivered a speech to the German people in the Reichstag. "Numerous incursions of the Poles into German territory, including an attack by regular Polish troops on the border radio station in Gliwice," the Führer began his speech and then, referring to the events in Gliwice, lashed out with threats against Poland and its government, presenting the case in this way, as if the cause of the hostilities undertaken by Germany were "unacceptable Polish provocations."

On the same day, the Reich Foreign Ministry sent a telegram to all its diplomatic missions abroad, informing them that “in order to protect against a Polish attack, German units launched an operation against Poland at dawn today. This operation should not be characterized as a war at the present time, but only as skirmishes provoked by the Polish attacks. Two days later, the ambassadors of England and France delivered an ultimatum to Germany on behalf of their governments. But this could no longer stop Hitler, who set as his goal at all costs to bring Germany to the borders of the Soviet Union, to seize "the barrier that separated Russia and the Reich." Indeed, according to the plans of the Nazis, the territory of Poland was to become the main springboard from which the invasion of the USSR was to begin. But it was impossible to do this without the conquest of Poland and an agreement with the West. Nazi Germany had been preparing for the capture of Poland since 1936. But the specific development and adoption of the strategic plan of armed aggression, called "Weiss", refers, according to the Abwehr, to April 1939; its basis was to be surprise and speed of action, as well as the concentration of overwhelming forces in decisive directions. All preparations for the attack on Poland were carried out in the strictest secrecy. Troops secretly, under the pretext of conducting exercises and maneuvers, were transferred to Silesia and Pomerania, from which two powerful blows were to be delivered. By the end of August, the troops, numbering more than 57 divisions, almost 2.5 thousand tanks and 2 thousand aircraft, were ready for a surprise invasion. They were just waiting for a command.

On September 3, three special trains departed from the Anhalt station in Berlin in the direction of the Polish border. These were trains with the headquarters of the armed forces of the Wehrmacht, as well as the headquarters of Goering and Himmler. On the train of Reichsführer-SS Himmler was Schellenberg, who had just been appointed head of the counterintelligence department of the Gestapo in the newly created Reichs main security office.

It should be noted that as a result of the long and systematic work of the Abwehr and other "total espionage" services, the German command at the time of the attack on Poland had quite complete data on the organization of its armed forces, knew much of what concerned plans for their strategic deployment in case of war, the number of divisions, their weapons and equipment with military equipment. The accumulated information clearly showed - the Nazis came to this conclusion - that the Polish army was not prepared for war. And in terms of numbers, and even more so in terms of the number of weapons and military equipment, it was significantly inferior to the Nazi army.

The subversive actions of the Nazis were not limited to military espionage staged on a large scale. The set of techniques and means used to disorganize the rear of the future enemy in advance, to paralyze his resistance, was much wider.

First of all, the "fifth column" raised its head, which, according to Hitler's instructions, was to psychologically decompose, demoralize and lead to a state of readiness to capitulate by preparatory measures. “It is necessary,” Hitler said, “based on agents within the country, to cause confusion, instill uncertainty and sow panic with the help of merciless terror and by the complete rejection of all humanity.”

It is known that since the spring of 1939, the Abwehr and the SD were actively engaged in inciting "popular uprisings" in Galicia and some other Ukrainian regions that were under the control of Poland. It was meant to lay the foundation for "Western Ukrainian statehood" with an eye to the subsequent Anschluss of Soviet Ukraine. Already after the attack on Poland, Kanarys received an order to organize a massacre among the Poles and Jews living there under the guise of an "uprising" in the Ukrainian and Belarusian regions, and then proceed to the formation of an "independent" Ukrainian entity. The Weiss Plan, signed by Hitler on April 11, 1939, provided that after the defeat of Poland, Germany would put Lithuania and Latvia under its control.

Already on the example of the Polish, as well as the Austrian and Czechoslovak events that preceded them, it was easy to be convinced of the sinister role of the Abwehr and other secret services, which were an integral part of the structure of the Hitlerite state apparatus. This, in fact, was recognized by the Nazis themselves - the organizers of the "secret war". “I don’t think Briganian intelligence has ever played such an important role as German intelligence as an instrument for implementing the political course of the country’s leadership,” wrote Wilhelm Hoettl, an Austrian professional intelligence officer who entered in 1938 in SD and subsequently worked under Schellenberg. “In some cases, our secret service deliberately staged certain incidents or accelerated impending events if this was in the interests of policymakers.”



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