The actions of German intelligence at the beginning of World War II. German intelligence Hans von Seeckt opened a new Russia for Germany

DIY 18.01.2022
DIY

German intelligence

The main intelligence center responsible for collecting information about the Soviet Union was the department of the High Command of the Ground Forces (OKH), called "Foreign Armies - East" (FHO). Established in 1938, the FHO was responsible for military information on Poland, the Scandinavian countries, some Balkan countries, the USSR, China, and Japan. But, beginning on July 31, 1940, when Hitler gave the OKH the order to prepare to move to the East, the FHO focused on the Soviet Union.

The head of the Foreign Armies - East department, Colonel Kinzel, gave a generalized assessment of the Red Army at the end of 1939: “In numerical terms, a powerful military tool. - The main emphasis falls on the "mass of troops." - Organization, equipment and controls are insufficient. - The principles of leadership are unsatisfactory, the leadership itself is too young and inexperienced ... - The quality of the troops in a difficult combat situation is doubtful. The Russian "mass" does not reach the level of an army equipped with modern weapons and higher-class leadership.

In the process of creating the Barbarossa plan, the participants were largely influenced by the strategic assessments of the USSR (Rusland-bild) periodically produced by the General Staff. According to them, the Soviet Union, like the former tsarist Russia, was a "colossus with feet of clay." An unexpected quick blow should knock him off his feet. According to leading German generals, the Red Army in 1940-1941 was a clumsy cluster of military units, incapable of operational initiative at all command levels, adapted only to the mechanical form of planning and operational behavior, and most importantly, not ready to wage a modern war. This assessment was particularly influenced by the actions of the Red Army in Poland and against Finland. These two campaigns were recognized as the most obvious evidence that the Red Army, firstly, had not recovered from the almost complete destruction of the officer corps during the "great purges", and secondly, had not mastered the new military equipment, had not joined the process mastering modern technology.

It is quite obvious that the quick victory of the Wehrmacht over the French army, which in the 1920s and 1930s seemed to many the most powerful military force in Europe, played a perverse role. Faith in the military-technical superiority of Germany was no longer questioned at any level. The German leadership, even in the event of a war with the USSR, expected quick decisive results. From now on, the problem of "Barbarossa" was considered as a problem of smoothly coordinated plans, correct operational preparation.

The above organization "Foreign Armies - East" (FHO), as mentioned, was instructed to analyze the capabilities of the Red Army after the end of the Polish campaign. Starting in the autumn of 1939, the FHO identified five channels of information: 1) radio intelligence; 2) reports of Abwehr agents and emigrants from the Baltics; 3) reports of the German military attaches; 4) allied intelligence reports; 5) testimonies of deserters from the Red Army. The Germans showed great skill in radio interception, in radio intelligence, but this source, limited in terms of space and function, did not give grounds for strategic assessments, did not allow judging the deployment of Red Army units, especially those located beyond the Urals. The Germans knew absolutely nothing about the military recruitment system.

The work of the FHO ended with the creation of an extensive memorandum “The military power of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Regulations on 01/01/1941. Two thousand copies of this document were printed by January 15, 1941. It spoke about the presence in the USSR of sixteen military districts and two military commissariats, led by the People's Commissariat of Defense. Radio reconnaissance and aerial photography enabled the FHO to identify eleven Soviet armies in the European part of the USSR. According to the memorandum, the USSR could mobilize from eleven to twelve million people. But the authors of the memorandum doubted the possibility of mobilizing such a mass of troops, since the country did not have enough officers, uniforms and equipment, and the factories needed labor.

The memorandum defined the volume of human masses that make up the Red Army: 20 armies, 20 infantry corps (150 infantry divisions), 9 cavalry corps (32-36 cavalry divisions), 6 mechanized corps, 36 motorized-mechanized brigades. The number of infantry divisions at the end of 1940 was determined by the number 121. From the memorandum, in essence, it followed that the FHO did not know the exact number of divisions of the Red Army and their location. The FHO made a big mistake by deciding that all Soviet tanks were obsolete models. German experts did not know about the existence of the T-34 tanks, although they showed themselves most conspicuously at Khalkhin Gol.

As for the balance of power between Germany and Russia, Hitler personally said that the armored forces of the USSR were "numerically the largest in the world." The number of Soviet tanks was determined at ten thousand units. Germany had three and a half thousand tanks. And this did not cause Hitler any fears. The Germans considered most of the Soviet tanks hopelessly outdated. Curiosity was caused only by the heaviest tank in the world - the KV-1 (43.5 tons), which first appeared (according to German information) in service in 1940.

German intelligence made a mistake two and a half times. The Red Army had 24,000 tanks. And among them is a tank, the creators of which we all owe. This is an ingenious model "T-34". A major miscalculation of German intelligence was that she did not pay attention to this tank, although hundreds of "thirty-fours" participated in battles with the Japanese in the late 30s. The frontal armor of the T-34 in 1941 reflected the fire of German guns of almost any caliber.

The assessment of the German Luftwaffe of the Soviet Air Force is in line with the same trend. On February 1, 1941, Berlin counted 10,500 Soviet aircraft, 7,500 of which were stationed in the European part of the USSR. The OKH headquarters thought it was better: 5655 aircraft in the European part of the Union. Of these, only 60 percent are ready for combat, and only 100-200 aircraft have a modern design. In fact, at the time of the German attack, the Red Army had 18 thousand aircraft of all types, and Halder later bitterly had to write in his diary: "The Luftwaffe significantly underestimated the number of enemy aircraft."

The key issue was the balance of ground forces. In January 1941, the FHO determined the size of the Red Army in peacetime at 2 million soldiers, the military - at 4 million. In fact, on January 1, 1941, there were 4 million soldiers in the ranks of the Red Army, and by June - 5 million.

In August 1940, General Marx counted 171 divisions in the Red Army (117 infantry, 24 cavalry, 30 mechanized brigades); On March 29, 1941, General Halder noted that the Russians "have 15 divisions more than we previously believed." Already in last days the Germans established that there were 226 divisions in the European part of the USSR - this is a rather sharp increase that caused discomfort among the Germans. But they, these new realities, no longer influenced the fatal march of Nazi Germany. The Germans discovered the terrible truth for themselves in the second month of what they saw as a blitzkrieg.

The FHO memorandum made two important conclusions that directly related to the planning of Barbarossa.

First. The bulk of the Soviet troops will be located to the south and north of the Pripyat marshes in order to close the places of the breakthrough of the German troops and for counterattacks on the flanks of the German armies. Doubts were immediately expressed about the ability of the Red Army to carry out such operations, given the general level of military leadership and training of troops, the general level of organization, as well as the state of Soviet railways and highways.

Second. The strength of the Red Army lies in its numbers, as well as the stoicism, firmness and courage of a single soldier. These qualities should especially manifest themselves in defense. If in the Finnish campaign the Soviet soldier fought without enthusiasm, then in the event of a German invasion, he will be more steadfast. In general, German analysts did not see much difference between the Russian soldier of the First and Second World Wars. “The Soviet Union today retains only the external form, and not the true essence of the Marxist doctrine ... The state is controlled by the bureaucratic methods of persons blindly loyal to Stalin, the economy is controlled by engineers and managers who owe everything to the new regime and are truly devoted to it.” It was emphasized that "the Russian character - heavy, mechanical, withdrawing from decisions and responsibility - has not changed."

The general assessment of the Red Army is as follows: “Clumsiness, schematism, the desire to avoid decision-making and responsibility ... The weakness of the Red Army lies in the clumsiness of officers of all ranks, their attachment to formulas, insufficient training, as required by modern standards, the desire to avoid responsibility and the obvious inefficiency of the organization in all aspects." There was a lack of a competent, highly professional military leadership capable of replacing the generals who died in the purges, the backwardness of the troop training system, and insufficient military supplies to equip them.

The last assessment of the Red Army, carried out by the organization "Foreign Armies - East", dates back to May 20, 1941. Number in the European part: 130 infantry divisions, 21 cavalry, 5 armored, 36 motorized-mechanized brigades. The arrival of reinforcements from Asia is unlikely for political reasons. In essence, the FHO called for neglecting the divisions located in the Far East.

The following is very important: the FHO believed that in the event of an attack from the West, the withdrawal of the bulk of Soviet troops into the depths of Russia - following the example of 1812 - was impossible. It was predicted that defensive battles would be fought in a strip about thirty kilometers deep using fortifications created in advance. The same fortifications will serve as starting bases for counterattacks. The Red Army will try to stop the German offensive near the border and transfer combat operations to enemy territory. Consequently, the fate of the war will be decided at the border. Large-scale troop movements should not be expected. Hitler fully shared this illusion, and it cost Germany dearly. (In just a few weeks, the OKH would receive information similar to the report of the 41st Panzer Corps: "The materials presented give only a very superficial picture of the alleged resistance of the enemy.")

One of the reasons for the inefficiency of the German intelligence service was, as already mentioned, the fact that the German codebreakers never managed to read the ciphers of the Red Army command and Soviet intelligence. In this regard, she had no achievements, like the British and Americans. The Germans were able to infiltrate a few agents into the Red Army headquarters at the divisional and army levels, as well as in the rear, but they never succeeded in infiltrating the Soviet General Staff, the Ministry of Defense, or any institution above the army level. Attempts to get into the upper echelon of the GRU, NKVD, and then SMERSH were unsuccessful. Moreover, as it turned out after the war, the German lost unconditionally in the competition between the two intelligence services: the most valuable agents of the Abwehr transmitted information containing disinformation. This, above all, concerns the three leading agents of the Abwehr, whose reports and assessments of the USSR directly influenced military planning in Germany. This refers to "Max", located in Sofia, "Stex" in Stockholm and Ivar Lissner in Harbin. They have been working with Moscow's knowledge from the very beginning and have been spreading strategic disinformation. As the American researcher D. Thomas writes, “The FHO was vulnerable to Soviet disinformation, especially at the strategic level, not only because of the lack of reliable basic information about Soviet plans, but also because of a specifically German way of thinking. Namely: there was a sense of superiority that led to an underestimation of Soviet military capabilities; the emphasis on Soviet military shortcomings, which does not allow for a correct assessment of Soviet operational capabilities; a tendency to "mirror-image" Soviet intentions; over-centralization of the evaluation process in the hands of a small group of analysts. (However, even observing the outcome of the aggression, not all German authorities stigmatized the FHO. For example, General Jodl during interrogations in 1945 stated: “In general, I was satisfied with the work of our intelligence services. Their best result was the exact identification of the location of Russian troops in early 1941 years in Western Belarus and Ukraine").

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German intelligence did not have too many bright personalities in the field of intelligence, one of them was General Oskar Niedermeier

He is known for being

-participated in secret expeditions to Afghanistan

--discovered a lot in terms of relations between the Weimar Republic and the Soviet government

-- recruited all the traitors in the USSR from Radek to Tukhachevsky

--was suspected of betrayal under Hitler, of working for the West or the USSR, or in general for both sides

- fought in the USSR

--was arrested in 1944 by the Nazis for defeatism

Oskar von Niedermeier was born in 1885 in Bavaria, in the town of Freising. Oskar's father was an architect, but his son chose a military career and in 1910 graduated from the artillery school in Munich.

At the same time, Oscar studied at the University of Munich at the Faculty of Geography, Ethnography and Geology.

And in 1912, artillery lieutenant Niedermeier went on a scientific expedition to the East, organized and financed by the University of Munich. Within two years, Niedermeier visited India, Arabia, Egypt, Palestine, but spent most of his time in Persia.

In August 1914, Lieutenant Niedermeier, as part of the tenth artillery regiment, went to the Western Front, but already in October 1914 he was recalled to Berlin to carry out a secret mission in the East.

The military expedition to the countries of the Middle East was organized on the initiative of the Turkish Minister of War Enver Pasha by the German and Turkish General Staffs.

Niedermeier himself put it this way:

I began my service in the German army in 1905, and in the first [years] of service I served in the 10th artillery regiment, which at that time was stationed in the mountains. Erlangen. With the regiment, I underwent initial military training and in 1906, after graduating from school, received the military rank of lieutenant.

Then I was seconded from the regiment to study at an artillery school in the mountains. Munich, which he graduated in 1910, and upon graduation was again sent to the 10th Artillery] Regiment, where he served continuously until 1912.

From 1912 to 1914 I participated in a scientific military expedition and was in Persia, India, Arabia, Egypt, Palestine and Syria, the purpose of the expedition was to study the geography and geology of these areas. There was this expedition from the Academy of Sciences of Munich. At the beginning of the First Imperialist War, I had the rank of lieutenant, and by that time I was in France on a business trip.

At the end of 1914, by order of the General Staff, I received an assignment with a regiment to go on an expedition [to Persia] and Afghanistan to attack the British colonies from the indicated sides, in particular, India.

At the same time, I had a task from the General Staff: to collect data on the British army in the indicated places.

It was undertaken with the aim of involving the countries of the Middle East in the war, in particular, in order to persuade Afghanistan to enter the war on the side of Germany, and also to raise an insurgency against the British in Persia, Afghanistan, Balochistan and India, which was supposed to distract from the main fronts large allied forces.

Oskar Niedermeier second from right, Afghanistan, 1916

The expedition consisted of about 350 people, including 40 German officers. The rank and file was staffed by Persians, Afghans and Indians, who, as they knew the local situation well, were recruited from among the prisoners of war. Some of the privates were Turkish soldiers. The 29-year-old lieutenant Niedermeier was appointed the head of the entire expedition.

Taking advantage of the fact that there were no Russian troops in Luristan (a region in Central Persia), the expedition freely crossed the country from west to east, advancing through deserted deserts - in the same way that Niedermeier went during the scientific expedition in 1912-1914.

Upon arrival in Kabul, he negotiated many times with Emir Khabibullah Khan and representatives of the Afghan government circles. Niedermeier, on behalf of the Kaiser, promised the emir, if he entered the war on the side of Germany, to help him create the so-called Great Afghanistan, that is, to annex English and Persian Balochistan to it.

The emir, on the one hand, agreed to declare war on the allies, but on the other hand, he was afraid that he would not be able to resist the allies on his own.

And Khabibulla Khan put forward a condition - to send several German divisions to Afghanistan.

Khabibullah Khan

However, Germany was physically unable to do this, and the emir refused to oppose the Entente, declaring his neutrality, although he carried it out only formally. Niedermeier carried out a series of measures in Afghanistan that caused great concern among the British and forced them to keep a group of troops of up to 80 thousand people on the Afghan border in India.

According to Niedermeier, almost the entire Persian gendarmerie worked for the Germans. The Persian gendarmerie was led by Swedish officers who had been recruited by the Germans even before the start of the war.

As a result, the Germans managed to create large armed detachments from individual tribes in Persia, Afghanistan and India, which, acting covertly, attacked groups of British soldiers. In particular, such detachments were created from Bacriars, Kashchai, Kalhor in Persia, Afrid-Mahmands, Banners - in Afghanistan and India.

In agreement with the emir, Niedermeier and his officers began to reorganize the Afghan army and the General Staff. They organized several officer schools and even a military academy.

German officers served as teachers, as well as a significant part of the Austrian officers who fled to Afghanistan from Russian captivity.

From left to right: Lieutenant Günther Voigt, Lieutenant Oskar Niedermeier, Lieutenant Commander Kurt Wagner

Under the leadership of German officers, a defensive line was built to protect Kabul, which was defiantly directed against India. Under the leadership of Niedermeier, maneuvers were carried out by Afghan troops, which also had a "demonstrative direction" against India. In addition, at the initiative of Niedermeier, an artillery range was set up on the border with India, where they constantly fired

But, curiously, the interrogators did not even want to clarify what was at stake, and quickly turned the conversation to another topic.

Von Niedermeier did not raise any more talk about his "wide communication" with Russian diplomats and the military. So we will never know about the secret negotiations between the Russian authorities in Persia and the German intelligence officer.

Afghanistan at the beginning of the 20th century is the place where the career of General Niedermeier started. F

To get rid of the "Afghan Lawrence", the British authorities bribed Emir Habibullah, starting to pay him an annual subsidy of up to 2.4 million rupees and paid him up to 60 million rupees after the war. The British gold forced Habibullah to decide to expel Niedermeier.

In May 1916, the Germans were forced to leave Afghanistan. A small detachment of Niedermeier crossed the whole of Persia, flooded with Russian and Persian troops, and reached Turkey.

In March 1917, Niedermeier was received by Emperor Wilhelm II, who awarded him the order for his operations in Afghanistan and Persia.

Wilhelm II personally awarded Niedermeier for merit

But the First World War ended with the shameful Treaty of Versailles for Germany and Russia.

He himself recalled:

“At the beginning of 1917, I returned from an expedition to Germany, and arrived only with some officers, since almost the entire composition of the regiment was put out of action in battles with the British.

Despite the fact that nothing was gained by the operations in Persia and Afghanistan, however, the German command needed to withdraw troops, and the command attached great importance to this.

For operations in India, I personally was appointed by the Kaiser to serve in the General Staff, received the rank of captain and from the General Staff was sent to the headquarters of General von Falkenheim *, this general was the commander-in-chief of the Turkish front in Palestine.

With this general, I participated in an expedition against the Arabs, at that time I had the position of chief of staff, from 1918 until the end of the war I was on the French front as an officer of the general staff.

When the imperialist war ended, the officers in Germany had nothing to do, and I went to study at the University of Munich and studied for some time in the faculties of philosophy and geography.

I must say that I did not have to study for a long time, because as the revival in Germany, the officers began to be used again for their intended purpose. Soon I was again taken from the university to the army, and I was appointed adjutant of the German War Ministry in Berlin. "

Looking ahead, we note that during interrogation in Moscow on August 28, 1945, Niedermeier stated that,

"While in Iran, I had extensive communication with representatives of the Russian ... diplomatic and military missions. In conversations with them, I found out the issues on which I informed Sanders" (General von Sanders - head of the German military mission in Turkey).

At the beginning of 1919, Niedermeier again entered the geographical faculty of the University of Munich. But it didn't take long to learn. At the beginning of 1921, the commander-in-chief of the Reichswehr, General Hans Seeckt, took Niedermeier as his adjutant.

IN USSR

And in June 1921, Niedermeier, as an employee of the German embassy "comrade Zilbert", arrives in Moscow. It is worth noting that this camouflage was not for the OGPU. On the contrary, it was this office that provided Oscar's "roof". According to the draconian articles of the Treaty of Versailles, the German military was forbidden to travel abroad on any missions.

Hans von Seeckt opened for Germany new Russia

Niedermeier arrived in the USSR accompanied by the Soviet charge d'affaires in Germany, Vitor Kopp. In Moscow, Niedermeier negotiated with People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin and Chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council Trotsky. Trotsky accepted the offer of Germany to assist the Soviet Union in restoring the military industry on concession terms.

He told Niedermeier that

"The USSR is interested primarily in the development of those branches of the military industry that did not exist in the USSR, namely: aviation, automatic weapons, chemistry and the submarine fleet."

On this trip, Kopp introduced Niedermeier to his friend Karl Radek.

The German intelligence officer Niedermeier established the closest contacts with Karl Radek, who later recruited military dissatisfied with the authorities

At the beginning of 1922 Seeckt sent Major Niedermeier to Moscow for the second time.

Paul, one of the directors of the Krupp company, is traveling with him. Niedermeier and Paul spend four weeks in the Soviet Union. Together with representatives of the Supreme Economic Council, they toured the Dynamo Moscow plant and the aircraft plant in Fili, the Leningrad Putilov plant and shipyards, the Rybinsk engine building plant, and so on.

He himself remembered.

Protocol of interrogation of Major General O. von Niedermeier. May 16, 1945 [N/O, Army in the field]

Niedermeier Oskar, born in 1885,

mountain native. Freising, Bavaria. From employees.

The father was an architect. German by nationality,

German subject. Formerly a member

National Socialist Party from 1933 to 1935.

Education is higher. Family, wife lived in

Germany in the mountains Munich. in military service in

was in the German army since 1905. He has the rank of major general.

Question: What was the purpose of your visit to Russia and how long were you in Moscow?

Answer: I must say that I arrived in Russia as a personal representative of the German War Ministry with the task of identifying opportunities for the development of heavy industry and the military industry in Russia.

I was in Moscow for the first time for 2-3 weeks, and for the above [reasons] I had conversations with Trotsky, Rykov and Chicherin. Having identified the possibilities for the development of heavy and military industry, an agreement was established between me and representatives of various People's Commissariats of Industry of Russia that Germany would provide technical assistance in reviving Russia's heavy and military industry.

The second time I arrived in the mountains. Moscow at the end of 1921, together with the ambassador from Russia, a certain Kop **. The purpose of my second visit to Russia was the same, except, additionally, I had an assignment from the German Ministry of Military Industry to identify in Russia where it would be most profitable to build an aviation, tank and chemical industry.

In addition, I was in Russia at various times in 1922 and 1923, also on the creation of heavy and military industries in Russia.

All this was done by the German authorities in order to create a powerful military industry in Russia, since in Germany itself it was impossible to do this under the Treaty of Versailles. Germany did not mean that after the creation of the military industry in Russia [it would] purchase military products for Germany.

Question: Why were you authorized to negotiate on the restoration of Russia's heavy and military industry?

.............

* So in the document, we are talking about infantry general E. von Falkenhayn.

** So in the document, we are talking about the Soviet diplomat V.L. Koppe.

Answer: I was a member of the commission of the Ministry of War and was in the sector for the restoration of industry. I personally was the first to initiate the initiative to assist in the restoration of Russian industry, in order to then export the necessary military products for arming the German army, I repeat, this was all caused by the Treaty of Versailles. In addition, by that time I was almost perfect in Russian, which is why I was sent from Germany to Russia on the above issues.

Question: In addition to the above periods of stay in the mountains. Moscow, have you ever been to the USSR?

Answer: In addition to the above periods of stay in the Soviet Union and in the mountains. Moscow, I also lived continuously in the Soviet Union from June 1924 to December 1931. During this period, I also worked from the German Ministry for the creation of heavy and military industry in Russia, and also worked in general together with Soviet specialists on the creation of an aircraft plant in Fili, Moscow region, and also dealt with the organization of pilot schools and the equipment of air bases.

Question: While in the USSR, in what connection did you have with the German attaché located in the mountains. Moscow

Answer: I must say that during the period of my stay in the Soviet Union I had nothing to do with the German attache, and besides, he was not there during the period when I was in Russia. This was stipulated by the Treaty of Versailles.

Question: Have you ever been in the Soviet Union after 1931?

Answer: Yes, in January-February 1941, from the General Staff, I was sent on a business trip to Japan and was in the Soviet Union on my way there. I had to go through the USSR. I went to Japan to give lectures on the military policy of that time and on the economy of the Soviet Union.

I still have the text of these lectures. I must say that [during] a business trip to Japan, the General Staff gave me the task on the way there to find out what kind of railways and their carrying capacity are in the USSR and, mainly, in Siberia. But I did not have to study anything on this issue.

Written down correctly, read aloud to me.

Niedermeier

Polunin

CA FSB of Russia. R-47474. L.13-14rev. Script. Manuscript. Autograph. First published: Generals and officers of the Wehrmacht tell

After the third trip to Moscow, Seeckt and Niedermeier created the German industrial society "GEFU" - "The Society for the Conduct of Economic Enterprises".

Under the guise of a concession, there was a trade in weapons and military technologies. So, in 1924, the Reichswehr ordered 400,000 76.2-mm (3-inch) cartridges for field guns through the Metachem company.

It is necessary to point out why the Germans needed Russian 76.2 mm shells when they had their own constructively different 75 mm shell for field guns.

The fact is that the Treaty of Versailles left a small number of 75-mm and 105-mm field guns for the Reichswehr, and the Allies demanded to surrender the rest.

The exact number of guns of the Kaiser's army was known, but the Germans managed to hide several hundred Russian 76.2 mm field guns of the 1902 model, which, for various reasons, the Allies did not take into account.

German 75-mm shells did not fit them, and therefore the Reichswehr turned to the USSR. Note that not only the Soviet Union supplied military equipment to Germany in circumvention of the Versailles agreements, but, for example, the Czechs and Swedes.

And in June 1924, Mr. Neumann (aka Major Niedermeier) arrives on his sixth business trip to Soviet Russia, which will last right up to December 1931. The Treaty of Versailles forbade Germany from having military attachés at embassies.

And then von Seeckt suggested creating a representative office of the German General Staff in Moscow, which, by the way, was also banned and therefore was called the "military department".

The representative office of the General Staff was named "C-MO" - "Center-Moscow".

In Berlin, at the General Staff, there was a special department "Ts-B" (Bureau for the management of work in Russia), to which the "Ts-MO" was subordinate. Formally, the "C-MO" was listed as the economic service of the German Embassy and was located in two buildings - on Vorovskogo street, house 48, and in Khlebny lane, house 28.

At first, the formal head of the "C-MO" was Colonel Lit-Thomsen, and the actual head was his deputy Niedermayer. In 1927, Lit-Thomsen was recalled - and Niedermeier became the head of the "C-MO".

As Niedermeier would later state:

"Upon arrival in Moscow, I first of all set about organizing schools for the training of German officers. In Lipetsk, in 1924, a school for German pilots was organized. In 1926, in Kazan, a school for tankers; in 1927, near the city of Volsk, a chemical school. In addition, In 1924, by agreement with Baranov, special teams of German test pilots were created at the headquarters of the USSR Air Force to carry out experimental and test work on the instructions of the Air Force.

In 1926, Niedermeier was on the verge of failure.

In 1925, under the surname Strauss, he took part in the maneuvers of the Western Military District, where he attracted the commander of the Red Army Gottfried, a German by nationality, to cooperate. Gottfried supplied Niedermeier with very valuable information about the mood, political course and intrigues in the leadership of the Red Army.

In September 1926 Gottfried was arrested by the OGPU, and the following year he was shot. Niedermeier got off with a reprimand from von Seeckt, who categorically forbade him to engage in such undercover work. Indeed, for von Niedermeier (at the direction of the leaders of the OGPU, the Red Army and Soviet military intelligence), the doors of almost all the defense enterprises of Soviet Russia were already open. Almost every year he visited the factories of Gorky, Kazan, Stalingrad, Rostov and other cities.

Niedermeier regularly met with Tukhachevsky, Uborevich, Yakir, Kork, Blucher, Radek, Rykov, Karakhan, Krestinsky and the leadership of the Air Force - Baranov and Alksnis, the head of the military chemical department Fishman, the head of the tank forces Khalepsky.

According to one version, since 1924, Oskar von Niedermeier supplied the head of the 4th (intelligence) department of the headquarters of the Red Army, Yan Karlovich Berzin, with strategic information about the military-economic potential, political plans of Great Britain, France and other countries directed against the USSR, including their anti-Soviet activities in the Middle East.

It should be specially noted that without exception, all of the above-mentioned Soviet figures were shot in 1937-1938. Is this connected with their active contacts with von Niedermeier? Maybe they were liquidated also because they knew too much? As they say, "no man - no problem." To clarify this riddle is the task of independent researchers.

The scout himself recalled:

Protocol of interrogation of Major General O. von Niedermeier. May 17, 1945 [N/O, Army in the field]

Niedermeier Oskar, born 1885

Question. While working in the Soviet Union to restore industry, which German organization did you act for?

Answer: On the restoration of industry in Russia, I worked directly on behalf of the German General Staff, I was always directly connected personally on this matter with the Chief of the General Staff, General Hasse.

Question: In the Soviet Union, with whom were you directly connected on questions of restoring the military industry in the USSR?

Answer: On questions of restoring the military industry in the USSR, I was directly connected with the General Staff of the Red Army. I personally dealt on the above issues with the head of the air forces, Baranov, the head of the armored forces, I don’t remember his last name now *, and with the head of the Chemical Department, Fishman. I had to resolve certain issues with Shaposhnikov and Voroshilov.

Question: How did you provide practical assistance to the Soviet Union in restoring industry?

Answer: Through me came the entire agreement on questions of rendering assistance to the military industry of Russia by providing technical personnel to Russia; in addition, through me was the provision of newly built enterprises with drawings, projects, plans.

I was also in charge of the delivery to Russia of new types of army weapons, both from Germany and from other countries, which the Soviet Union needed for samples. I was also in charge of contracts for the supply of various kinds of military materials, which by that time were not yet in Russia.

Question: While in the Soviet Union, did the German General Staff give you tasks in parallel with the main task of revealing military and economic data on the Soviet Union?

Answer: No, I did not receive such assignments from my General Staff. On the contrary, when sending me to Russia for the above purposes, my General Staff strictly warned me that, in order not to compromise myself, in no case should I collect any information about the Soviet Union, both military and political. I must say that in all my life I have never done any kind of espionage work in any country.

* We are talking about commander I.A. Khalepsky.

Question: While in the Soviet Union, who did you know of the persons who were entrusted by the German authorities with intelligence work in the USSR?

Answer: While still at the General Staff in Germany, I knew that the headquarters for intelligence issues also had the Eastern Branch of Ab-Vera. I personally do not know any of the employees of this department, since I was not associated with it, all the more so, no one is known from the people who worked [on] intelligence issues in Russia at the time when I myself lived in the USSR.

For example, I know that in those years when I was in Russia, the Eastern Branch almost did not function, since at that time the destroyed Russia was of no interest to Germany.

In addition, we usually requested all the necessary data about the Soviet Union through official channels, on the basis of which we developed the necessary plans for the restoration of Russia's industry. Written down correctly, read aloud to me.

Niedermeier

Interrogated: deputy [deputy] chief [head]

4 departments ROC "Smersh" 13 a [army] captain

Polunin"

The head of the ABTU commander A. Khalepsky was in close contact with the German intelligence officer Niedermeier

In December 1931, Niedermeier was recalled to Berlin. Perhaps this was due to the fact that Germany sent a military attache, General Holm, to the USSR, and the functions of the "C-MO" began to decline.

According to a number of German sources, at the end of 1934, Hitler considered two candidates for the post of head of the Abwehr (military intelligence) - Wilhelm Canaris and Oscar Niedermeier. As you know, the choice was made in favor of the first.

Nibelung?

It is known that in 1936, Soviet military intelligence instructed Alexander Girshfeld, adviser to the USSR embassy in Germany, to re-establish contacts with von Niedermeier, which had been interrupted after the Nazis came to power in 1933.

The recruitment went remarkably smoothly. Niedermeier agreed to inform Moscow and even contemptuously refused the 20,000 marks offered to him.

He received the pseudonym "Nibelung" and subsequently, as a member of the "Black Chapel", regularly supplied Soviet intelligence with strategic information about Hitler's plans for the USSR and the mood in the German leadership.

Here is one testimony from the archives of the NKVD, cited by Sergei Kondrashin in the material "Greetings to Marshal Voroshilov":

"Niedermeier said that he recently had a long conversation with Hitler about the Soviet Union. However, he could not come to an agreement with him, as Hitler showed stubborn misunderstanding ... As for the position of the Reichswehrministry towards the Soviet Union, Niedermeier said that "we are firm" Niedermeier also intends to make sure that no stupid things happen."

In 1936, Soviet intelligence learned that Niedermeier was accused of high treason. But he was supported by well-known "Easterners" - supporters of the union of Germany with the USSR - Field Marshal Blomberg and General von Seeckt.

Oskar Niedermeier worked closely with Soviet agents since 1936, receiving the code name "Nibelung"

And on this he almost got burned in 1936, he was accused of working for the Bolshevik enemy

Charges of treason against von Niedermeier were never removed, but they were given the rank of colonel and dismissed. Remarkably, after these scandalous events, von Seeckt suddenly died on December 27, 1936 in Berlin. According to one version, he was liquidated (poisoned) by order of Hitler.

On November 3, 1939, the German General Staff received from Niedermeier a memorandum "Politics and Warfare in the Middle East." According to the author's plan, in 1941 Germany and the USSR should together "organize an attack on the British Empire through the Caucasus."

From the rear in Afghanistan, they should be supported by an uprising by "robber Pashtun tribes" in order to tie down British troops in India and prevent their transfer to the metropolis. From the declassified documents of the Soviet foreign intelligence it is known that Niedermeier's plan was called "Amanullah".

Operation Amanullah included three phases. The first stage of the plan was implemented in the fall of 1939, when a group of Abwehr officers with a large sum of money was thrown into Tibet through Afghanistan to carry out subversive work.

The second stage was planned to be carried out in the spring of 1941.

The Germans, with the assistance of Moscow, were to organize a "scientific expedition" to Tibet of 200 Abwehr and SS officers, who would have a "base in one of the Soviet Central Asian republics." This expedition was supposed to deliver a large consignment of weapons to the tribes of Tibet and the inhabitants of the so-called "independent strip" of British India.

The third stage provided for the restoration of Amanullah Khan to the throne. To fully guarantee success, Berlin was preparing to use the Wehrmacht mountain division in Operation Amanullah, which could support the offensive of Siddiq Khan's detachment from the territory of Soviet Turkestan.

In the first half of December 1940, the details of Operation Amanullah were discussed in Moscow with P. Kleist, a German specialist in the East who arrived. He, as it turns out, worked for Soviet intelligence.

On March 21, 1941, German intelligence managed to establish that London had become aware of the impending operation "Amanullah". This was reported to Moscow, after which both sides began to actively calculate the sources of information leakage. Moreover, the British sources were surrounded by Hitler and Stalin.

He himself spoke of it this way:

Protocol of interrogation of Major General O. von Niedermeier. May 26, 1945 [N/O, Army in the field]

"INTERROGATION PROTOCOL

I, senior investigator of the Investigative Department of the UKR "Smersh" of the 1st Ukrainian] Front, senior [senior] lieutenant Panov, through an interpreter junior [junior] lieutenant Petropavlovsky, interrogated the detainee

Niedermeier Oskar (setting data in the file)

The interrogation began at 9.45 p.m.

The interrogation ended at 01:40.

The translator junior [junior] lieutenant Petropavlovsky was warned about liability for a false translation under Art. 95 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR.

[Peter and Paul]

Question: What did you do during Germany's war against the Soviet Union?

Answer: About the impending war of Germany against the Soviet Union [I learned] from the German ambassador in Moscow, Count Schulenburg, when I stopped with him on my way from Japan to Germany. Upon my arrival in Berlin, I met a number of General Staff officers I knew, and from conversations with them I clearly understood that the war against the Soviet Union should begin soon.

After the outbreak of the German war against the Soviet Union, I was repeatedly asked to take command of one or another division. I refused.

At the beginning of 1942, I was asked by the personnel department of the headquarters of the ground forces to take over the leadership of the training of the "volunteer forces." I rejected it. Three months later, I received an order to take command of the 162nd Infantry Division 177. When I learned that "volunteers" would be trained in this division, I asked that the order be cancelled.

My request was refused, and I was told in Berlin that this was a categorical order from Keitel and that I should take charge of the training of the "volunteers", as I speak oriental languages, and the "volunteers" consist of Azerbaijanis and Turkestanis. I had to obey this order."

The protocol was read to me and translated into German. The testimony from my words is recorded correctly.

Niedermeier

Interrogated by: senior investigator of the Investigative Department of the UKR

"Smersh" 1 Ukrainian] front [on] senior [senior] lieutenant] t

Panov

Translator: [junior lieutenant]

Petropavlovsk

Niedermeier returned to the USSR only at the beginning of 1941. By Transsib he went to Japan, where he stayed for two weeks. The official purpose of the trip is to give lectures to the Japanese military.

In Tokyo, Niedermeier met with Richard Sorge, who was informed about Hitler's impending attack on the USSR and the direction of possible Wehrmacht strikes, and also handed over to him the extracted notes of part of the Barbarossa plan. Sorge hurried to transfer the information to Moscow.


Richard Sorge personally met Niedermeier and is believed to have given him important information.

On the way back, Niedermeier spent several days at the German embassy in Moscow, ostensibly to talk with Ambassador von Schulenburg.

Since the early 1990s, a number of articles have appeared in our media claiming that Niedermeier was recruited by Soviet intelligence back in the 1920s. It is curious that the authors of the articles are former KGB officers who refer to documents that are not available to independent researchers.

It is alleged that the NKVD gave Niedermeier the pseudonym "Nibelung". In any case, Niedermeier provided Soviet intelligence with a large amount of information about the state of the armed forces of England, France and other states, and also revealed many of their political secrets.

So, according to Niedermeier, he personally handed over to the representatives of the Red Army a plan for the fortifications of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, drawn up by German engineers who built coastal batteries there in 1914-1917. By the way, even now this plan has a great historical value. With its help, you can answer the question of whether the Russian fleet could have captured the Bosphorus in 1917.

All these materials are in our archives, but classified as "top secret".

In 1935, Niedermeier joined the Wehrmacht, and from October 1939 he was a colonel in the headquarters of the OKW. The outbreak of war with the USSR made Niedermeier an even stranger figure. Here is what is written in the book of A.I. Kolpakidi "Double conspiracy. Stalin and Hitler: failed coups":

"For starters, he was offered to accept a division. He refused. In 1942, a new offer followed - to train "volunteers" from among Russian prisoners of war, mostly natives of the Caucasus and Central Asia. Again refusal. Then he was offered another post, which upon closer examination turned out to be the same - all the same "volunteers". This time the colonel agreed. "

In December 1941, the German 162nd Infantry Division was destroyed near Rzhev. And at the beginning of 1942, on the basis of the division's command, the creation of the Muslim (Turkic) division of the Wehrmacht began, formed from among prisoners of war and volunteers - former citizens of the USSR - natives of the Caucasus and Central Asia. Officially, it is called the 162nd Infantry Division.

In May 1943, Major General Oskar von Niedermeier, a specialist in the Middle East, career intelligence officer, a member of the anti-Hitler organization "Black Capella", who maintains secret contacts with Soviet intelligence, takes command of the Turkic division.

He himself recalled:

"From the autumn of 1942 to January 1943, I organized a training division in Ukraine from Turkestans and Caucasians. My headquarters was in the city of Mirgorod. The division was divided into separate legions.

The entire command staff was German. The progress in my work was so insignificant that I flew twice to the Main Apartment*, where I asked to be used for another job.

I said in the main apartment that the “volunteers” were in a bad mood due to the military situation at the front and the activities of the German civil authorities in Ukraine.

These statements of mine led to the fact that it was ordered to redeploy the division from Ukraine to Silesia, in the city of Neuhammer. After long conversations at the General Staff, the division was turned from a training division into a field division.

I must say that together with Colonel Staufenberg, Generals Stief and Wagner **, a secret plan was drawn up to prepare the division for use in the event of an armed uprising against Hitler to help the rebels on July 20, 1943 *** Staufenberg was shot, Stief was hanged as instigators of the uprising against Hitler. Wagner committed suicide.

In 1943, the division was relocated to Neuhammer and received reinforcements from the Germans, and a larger percentage of them were volunteers. As the military situation became more and more dangerous for Germany at the end of 1943, the division was transferred, despite my request not to do so, to eastern Italy, in the region of Udine-Trieste.

The division was in this area from November 1943 to March 1944 without significant operations.

In April 1944, the division was redeployed to the Mediterranean coast in Livorno for defensive work, and I was relieved of my duties.

I was appointed adviser to the Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Western Front, Marshal Rundstedt, on matters of "volunteer" formations. In connection with the Anglo-American offensive, I found the situation on the Western Front completely hopeless, which I frankly told my predecessor about.

I also expressed to him my dissatisfaction with the order of the command of the "volunteer" formations and Hitler's Eastern policy. On October 14, 1944, in connection with this, I was arrested by the German authorities and handed over to the court-martial in the city of Torgau.

I was in Torgau (in the city's prison) until the moment the city was evacuated, and when the city was taken by parts of the Russian, American and English armies, I ended up with the Russians.

In total, the division had 17 thousand people. Of these, 8 thousand Germans and 9 thousand Muslims from among the former Soviet citizens. Since November 1943, the 162nd Turkic division was stationed in Italy in the Udine-Trieste region. Then she carried coastal defense in the Fiume-Pola-Trieste-Hertz-Tsdine sector, and was engaged in the construction of coastal fortifications on the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea.

In 1944, the 162nd division fought against the Anglo-American troops in the Rimini region, and in 1945 - battles in the Bologna and Padua regions. In May 1945 - after the surrender of Germany - the division surrendered to British troops.

On May 21, 1944, with the assistance of the Black Chapel, Oskar von Niedermeier received the post of adviser for the Eastern Legions to the commander of the troops in the West and left for France.

Actually, there were no Eastern Legions in the West, but there were over 60 battalions manned by former Soviet prisoners of war from among the volunteers.

Most of them were involved in the defense system of the Atlantic Wall. That is, in fact, von Niedermeier ("Nibelung") became the curator of all the Eastern ("Vlasov") battalions that were transferred from the Eastern Front to France to defend the Atlantic Wall, including the English Channel coast, from a possible landing of the Anglo-Americans.

This appointment was not accidental.

Oscar von Niedermeier, Klaus von Stauffenberg, Henning von Tresckow, Baron Vladimir von Kaulbars are one of the main key figures among the participants in the anti-Hitler conspiracy and the underground organization Black Chapel.

Oskar von Niedermeier established direct contacts with the leader of the ROA, General A.A. Vlasov, a Soviet agent of strategic influence in the III Reich, and also drew up a detailed plan for using the Eastern Battalions in the action to overthrow the Nazi regime in Germany and the occupied countries.


Andrey Vlasov was quite close to Niedermeier, indirect facts say that Vlasov could lead the intelligence network of Soviet agents

Read about Vlasov's subversive activities against the lll Reich and his ideological sabotage in the book "General Vlasov is an intelligence agent of the Kremlin", written with the participation of a group of veterans of the Soviet special services - Internet LINK.

In the event of the success of Operation Valkyrie (the assassination attempt on Hitler), von Niedermeier planned to personally lead the Eastern Battalions in France to neutralize SS units loyal to the Nazi regime.

The "Black Chapel" had two wings. The first is the "Westerners", who were oriented towards an alliance with the Anglo-Americans against the USSR.

The second was the "Easterners", who staked on the conclusion of a continental alliance between Germany and the USSR against the Anglo-American "Atlantists".

The ideas of the "Easterners" were shared by Klaus von Stauffenberg - the main organizer of the assassination attempt on Hitler, Baron Vladimir von Kaulbars - a former white officer, Abwehr officer and adjutant of Wilhelm Canaris, Georg von Bezelager - commander of the Cossack squadron and cavalry reserve unit in Army Group Center, Helmut von Pannwitz - commander of the Cossack division, as well as many other officers and generals of the Wehrmacht and Abwehr.

The head of the Abwehr, Admiral Canaris, was arrested for spying for Western countries, and military intelligence officer Niedermeier was soon arrested.

Then unexplained events occur. Major General von Niedermeier was arrested by the Gestapo and imprisoned in the city of Torgau for especially dangerous state criminals. According to some sources, his arrest was made in August 1944, according to others - in January 1945.

One of the formal accusations - "for expressing defeatist sentiments."

It should be especially noted that persons of this rank in the lll Reich were not arrested for idle chatter. But for some reason, Niedermeier was not only not executed, but not even tried. At the end of April 1945, von Niedermeier managed to escape by deceiving the guards, taking advantage of the turmoil and panic that arose in connection with the approach of the Anglo-American troops.

Niedermeier voluntarily leaves the American zone for the Soviet occupation zone. There he voluntarily surrenders to SMERSH. He is arrested and sent to Moscow. Major General von Niedermeier has been dragged around prisons for three years and intensively interrogated by MGB investigators.

Last years

The fate of Oscar von Niedermeier is in many ways similar to the fate of his colleague General Helmut von Pannwitz. According to one version, Niedermeier had known Pannwitz since at least 1928.

At that time, von Pannwitz worked in Poland as the manager of the estate of Princess Radziwill. There he met Oscar von Niedermeier and Prince Janos Radziwill.

The latter also actively cooperated with the Foreign Department of the NKVD and the intelligence department of the Red Army Headquarters.

Apparently, Helmut von Pannwitz also actively collaborated with Soviet military intelligence. It is known that on the instructions of Niedermeier von Pannwitz made several trips to the USSR, under the pretext of establishing commercial trade relations. There he (like Niedermeier) met with a number of fairly well-known military leaders of the country: Mikhail Tukhachevsky, Jan Berzin, and others.

During the Second World War - in 1943 - von Pannwitz formed in Poland from volunteers from the Don and Kuban and white emigrants the Cossack division, which fought until 1945 on the territory of Catholic Croatia (Yugoslavia).

Von Pannwitz was a member of the "Black Chapel" and after an unsuccessful assassination attempt on Hitler in July 1944, he hid a group of officers - participants in the anti-Hitler conspiracy in his Cossack division, refusing to hand them over to the Gestapo.

After the surrender of Germany, the same story happens to Pannwitz as to Niedermeier. Helmut von Pannwitz falls into the British occupation zone in Austria. There he seeks from the British to be sent to the USSR. In fact, voluntarily and of his own free will, von Pannwitz is given into the hands of SMERSH. He is sent to Moscow.

In January 1947, von Pannwitz was sentenced to death and executed (hanged) in the courtyard of the Lubyanka inner prison, along with Krasnov, Shkuro, and other Cossack chieftains. Details are published in the materials "Who are you Helmut von Pannwitz? Secrets of the Kremlin's Strategic Intelligence" - Internet LINK.

Oskar von Niedermeier will survive von Pannwitz, his colleague in the Black Chapel, by only one year.

By decision of the Special Meeting at the Ministry of State Security of the USSR on July 10, 1948, Niedermeier was sentenced to 25 years in labor camps. On September 25, 1948, von Niedermeier dies under very mysterious circumstances (he was actually liquidated) in the Vladimir Central of the MGB.

According to the official conclusion of the then Soviet experts, he allegedly died "of tuberculosis."

Individual investigators read some of Niedermeier's interrogation protocols. It seems that either he was interrogated by complete idiots, or some of the interrogation protocols were subsequently withdrawn from the case, and some were falsified.

He was not asked about Tukhachevsky or about his other Soviet "contacts" in 1928-1937.

Apparently, details about his visit to Japan, his participation in the Valkyrie operation, cooperation with Soviet intelligence, and much, much more will remain secret for a long time.

No less curious is the fact that on February 28, 1998, Niedermeier was rehabilitated by the Chief Military Prosecutor's Office.

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 the American Revolutionary War. 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. The spy spent the last years of his life in poverty in a 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 World War II. 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 the top-secret British atomic bomb project, and later on the American Manhattan project. He was arrested and imprisoned after it became clear that he was passing information to the USSR.

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 outbreak 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 components, which played the main role in 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.

The general purpose of the Abwehr was to pave the way for armed aggression by covert 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 military espionage system 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 the 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, Hertzner 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 Hertzner 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 head of the Gestapo Muller, 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 in Polish and firing up to a dozen random shots from pistols, the participants of 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." After all, 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 2,500 tanks and 2,000 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 section of the Gestapo in the newly created Reich 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 supposed 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 do not think that 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.”

Collection by Germany of reconnaissance against the USSR

In order to implement the strategic plans for an armed attack on neighboring countries, Hitler told his entourage about them as early as November 5, 1937 - fascist Germany, naturally, needed extensive and reliable information that would reveal all aspects of the life of future victims of aggression, and especially information on the basis of which it would be to draw a conclusion about their defense potential. By supplying government bodies and the high command of the Wehrmacht with such information, the "total espionage" services actively contributed to the preparation of the country for war. Intelligence information was obtained in different ways, using a variety of methods and means.

The Second World War, unleashed by Nazi Germany on September 1, 1939, began with the invasion of German troops into Poland. But Hitler considered the defeat of the Soviet Union, the conquest of a new "living space" in the East up to the Urals, to the achievement of which all state bodies of the country, and primarily the Wehrmacht and intelligence, were oriented. The Soviet-German non-aggression treaty signed on August 23, 1939, as well as the Friendship and Border Treaty concluded on September 28 of the same year, were supposed to serve as camouflage. Moreover, the opportunities opened up as a result of this were used to increase activity in the intelligence work against the USSR that was carried out throughout the entire pre-war period. Hitler constantly demanded from Canaris and Heydrich new information about the measures taken by the Soviet authorities to organize a rebuff to armed aggression.

As already noted, in the first years after the establishment of the fascist dictatorship in Germany, the Soviet Union was viewed primarily as a political enemy. Therefore, everything that related to him was within the competence of the security service. But this arrangement did not last long. Soon, in accordance with the criminal plans of the Nazi elite and the German military command, all the services of "total espionage" were involved in a secret war against the world's first country of socialism. Speaking about the direction of the espionage and sabotage activities of Nazi Germany at that time, Schellenberg wrote in his memoirs: “The decisive and decisive action of all secret services against Russia was considered the first and most important task.”

The intensity of these actions increased markedly from the autumn of 1939, especially after the victory over France, when the Abwehr and SD were able to release their significant forces occupied in this region and use them in the eastern direction. The secret services, as is clear from archival documents, were then given a specific task: to clarify and supplement the available information about the economic and political situation of the Soviet Union, to ensure the regular flow of information about its defense capability and future theaters of military operations. They were also instructed to develop a detailed plan for organizing sabotage and terrorist actions on the territory of the USSR, timed to coincide with the time of the first offensive operations of the Nazi troops. In addition, they were called upon, as already discussed in detail, to guarantee the secrecy of the invasion and to launch a widespread campaign to disinform the world public opinion. This was how the program of actions of Hitler's intelligence against the USSR was determined, in which the leading place, for obvious reasons, was given to espionage.

Archival materials and other quite reliable sources contain a lot of evidence that an intense secret war against the Soviet Union began long before June 1941.

Zally Headquarters

By the time of the attack on the USSR, the activity of the Abwehr - this leader among the Nazi secret services in the field of espionage and sabotage - had reached its climax. In June 1941, the "Zalli Headquarters" was created, designed to provide leadership in all types of espionage and sabotage directed against the Soviet Union. The Valley Headquarters directly coordinated the actions of teams and groups assigned to army groups to conduct reconnaissance and sabotage operations. It was then located near Warsaw, in the town of Sulejuwek, and was led by an experienced scout Schmalschleger.

Here is some evidence of how events unfolded.

One of the prominent employees of German military intelligence, Stolze, during interrogation on December 25, 1945, testified that the head of the Abwehr II, Colonel Lahousen, having informed him in April 1941 of the date of the German attack on the USSR, demanded to urgently study all the materials at the disposal of the Abwehr regarding Soviet Union. It was necessary to find out the possibility of inflicting a powerful blow on the most important Soviet military-industrial facilities in order to completely or partially disable them. At the same time, a top-secret division was created within the framework of the Abwehr II, headed by Stolze. For reasons of secrecy, it had the running name "Group A". His duties included the planning and preparation of large-scale sabotage operations. They were undertaken, as Lahousen emphasized, in the hope that they would be able to disorganize the rear of the Red Army, sow panic among the local population, and thereby facilitate the advance of the Nazi troops.

Lahousen acquainted Stolze with the order of the headquarters of the operational leadership, signed by Field Marshal Keitel, which outlined in general terms the directive of the Wehrmacht Supreme High Command to deploy sabotage activities on Soviet territory after the start of the Barbarossa plan. The Abwehr was supposed to start carrying out actions aimed at inciting national hatred between the peoples of the USSR, to which the Nazi elite attached particular importance. Guided by the directive of the supreme command, Stolze conspired with the leaders of the Ukrainian nationalists Melnik and Bendera that they would immediately begin organizing in Ukraine the actions of nationalist elements hostile to Soviet power, timing them to coincide with the moment of the invasion of the Nazi troops. At the same time, the Abwehr II began to send its agents from among the Ukrainian nationalists to the territory of Ukraine, some of whom had the task of compiling or clarifying lists of local party and Soviet assets to be destroyed. Subversive actions involving nationalists of all stripes were also carried out in other regions of the USSR.

Actions of ABWER against the USSR

Abwehr II, according to Stolze's testimony, formed and armed "special detachments" for operations (in violation of international rules of warfare) in the Soviet Baltic states, tested back in the initial period of World War II. One of these detachments, whose soldiers and officers were dressed in Soviet military uniforms, had the task of seizing the railway tunnel and bridges near Vilnius. Until May 1941, 75 Abwehr and SD intelligence groups were neutralized on the territory of Lithuania, which, as documented, launched active espionage and sabotage activities here on the eve of Nazi Germany's attack on the USSR.

How great was the attention of the high command of the Wehrmacht to the deployment of sabotage operations in the rear of the Soviet troops, shows the fact that the "special detachments" and "special teams" of the Abwehr were in all army groups and armies concentrated on the eastern borders of Germany.

According to Stolze's testimony, the Abwehr branches in Koenigsberg, Warsaw and Krakow had a directive from Canaris in connection with the preparation of an attack on the USSR to intensify espionage and sabotage activities to the maximum. The task was to provide the Supreme High Command of the Wehrmacht with detailed and most accurate data on the system of targets on the territory of the USSR, primarily on roads and railways, bridges, power plants and other objects, the destruction of which could lead to a serious disorganization of the Soviet rear and in in the end would have paralyzed his forces and broken the resistance of the Red Army. The Abwehr was supposed to extend its tentacles to the most important communications, military-industrial facilities, as well as large administrative and political centers of the USSR - in any case, it was planned.

Summing up some of the work carried out by the Abwehr by the time the German invasion of the USSR began, Canaris wrote in a memorandum that numerous groups of agents from the indigenous population, that is, from Russians, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Poles, Balts, Finns, etc., were sent to the headquarters of the German armies. n. Each group consisted of 25 (or more) people. These groups were led by German officers. They were supposed to penetrate into the Soviet rear to a depth of 50,300 kilometers behind the front line in order to report by radio the results of their observations, paying special attention to collecting information about Soviet reserves, the state of railways and other roads, as well as about all activities carried out by the enemy. .

In the prewar years, the German embassy in Moscow and the German consulates in Leningrad, Kharkov, Tbilisi, Kiev, Odessa, Novosibirsk and Vladivostok served as the center for organizing espionage, the main base for the strongholds of Hitler's intelligence. In those years, a large group of career German intelligence officers, the most experienced professionals, representing all parts of the Nazi “total espionage” system, and especially the Abwehr and the SD, worked in the diplomatic field in the USSR in those years. Despite the obstacles put up by the Chekist authorities, they, shamelessly using their diplomatic immunity, developed a high activity here, striving, first of all, as archival materials of those years indicate, to test the defense power of our country.

Erich Köstring

The Abwehr residency in Moscow at that time was headed by General Erich Köstring, who until 1941 was known in German intelligence circles as "the most knowledgeable specialist on the Soviet Union." He was born and lived for some time in Moscow, so he was fluent in Russian and was familiar with the way of life in Russia. During the First World War, he fought against the tsarist army, then in the 1920s he worked in a special center that studied the Red Army. From 1931 to 1933, in the final period of Soviet-German military cooperation, he acted as an observer from the Reichswehr in the USSR. He ended up in Moscow again in October 1935 as a military and aviation attache in Germany and stayed until 1941. He had a wide circle of acquaintances in the Soviet Union, whom he sought to use to obtain information of interest to him.

However, of the numerous questions that Köstring received from Germany six months after his arrival in Moscow, he was able to answer only a few. In his letter to the head of the intelligence department for the armies of the East, he explained this as follows: “The experience of several months of work here has shown that there can be no question of the possibility of obtaining military intelligence information, even remotely related to the military industry, even on the most harmless issues. . Visits to military units have been suspended. One gets the impression that the Russians are supplying all attachés with a set of false information.” The letter ended with an assurance that he nevertheless hoped that he would be able to draw up "a mosaic picture reflecting the further development and organizational structure of the Red Army."

After the German consulates were closed in 1938, the military attaches of other countries were deprived of the opportunity to attend military parades for two years, and, in addition, restrictions were placed on foreigners establishing contacts with Soviet citizens. Köstring, in his words, was forced to return to using three "meager sources of information": traveling around the territory of the USSR and traveling by car to various regions of the Moscow region, using the open Soviet press, and, finally, exchanging information with military attaches of other countries.

In one of his reports, he draws the following conclusion about the state of affairs in the Red Army: “As a result of the liquidation of the main part of the senior officers, who mastered the military art quite well in the process of ten years of practical training and theoretical training, the operational capabilities of the Red Army have decreased. The lack of military order and the lack of experienced commanders will have a negative effect for some time on the training and education of troops. The irresponsibility that is already manifesting itself in military affairs will lead to even more serious negative consequences in the future. The army is deprived of commanders of the highest qualification. Nevertheless, there are no grounds for concluding that the offensive capabilities of the mass of soldiers have declined to such an extent as not to recognize the Red Army as a very important factor in the event of a military conflict.

In a message to Berlin by Lieutenant Colonel Hans Krebs, who replaced the ill Köstring, dated April 22, 1941, it was said: “The Soviet ground forces, of course, have not yet reached the maximum number according to the combat schedule for wartime, determined by us at 200 infantry rifle divisions. This information was recently confirmed by the military attachés of Finland and Japan in a conversation with me.

A few weeks later, Köstring and Krebs made a special trip to Berlin to personally inform Hitler that there were no significant changes for the better in the Red Army.

The employees of the Abwehr and SD, who used diplomatic and other official cover in the USSR, were tasked, along with strictly oriented information, to collect information on a wide range of military-economic problems. This information had a very specific purpose - it was supposed to enable the strategic planning bodies of the Wehrmacht to get an idea of ​​​​the conditions in which the Nazi troops would have to operate on the territory of the USSR, and in particular when capturing Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev and other large cities. The coordinates of the objects of future bombardments were clarified. Even then, a network of underground radio stations was being created to transmit the collected information, caches were set up in public and other suitable places where instructions from Nazi intelligence centers and items of sabotage equipment could be stored so that agents sent and located on the territory of the USSR could use them at the right time.

Using trade relations between Germany and the USSR for intelligence

For the purpose of espionage, cadres, secret agents and proxies of the Abwehr and the SD were systematically sent to the Soviet Union, for the penetration of which into our country the intensively developing economic, trade, economic and cultural ties between the USSR and Germany in those years were used. With their help, such important tasks were solved as collecting information about the military and economic potential of the USSR, in particular about the defense industry (capacity, zoning, bottlenecks), about the industry as a whole, its individual large centers, energy systems, communication routes, sources of industrial raw materials, etc. Representatives of business circles were especially active, who often, along with the collection of intelligence information, carried out instructions to establish communications on Soviet territory with agents whom German intelligence managed to recruit during the period of active functioning of German concerns and firms in our country.

Attaching great importance to the use of legal possibilities in intelligence work against the USSR and in every possible way seeking to expand them, both the Abwehr and the SD, at the same time, proceeded from the fact that the information obtained in this way, in its predominant part, is not capable of serving as a sufficient basis for developing specific plans, adopting correct decisions in the military-political field. And besides, based only on such information, they believed, it is difficult to form a reliable and somewhat complete picture of tomorrow's military enemy, his forces and reserves. To fill the gap, the Abwehr and the SD, as confirmed by many documents, are making attempts to intensify work against our country by illegal means, seeking to acquire secret sources within the country or send secret agents from beyond the cordon, counting on their settling in the USSR. This, in particular, is evidenced by the following fact: the head of the Abwehr intelligence group in the United States, officer G. Rumrich, back in early 1938, had instructions from his center to obtain blank forms of American passports for agents thrown into Russia.

“Can you get at least fifty of them?” Rumrich was asked in a cipher telegram from Berlin. Abwehr was ready to pay a thousand dollars for each blank American passport - they were so necessary.

Long before the start of the war against the USSR, documentary specialists from the secret services of Nazi Germany scrupulously followed all the changes in the procedure for issuing and issuing personal documents of Soviet citizens. They showed an increased interest in clarifying the system for protecting military documents from forgery, trying to establish the procedure for the use of conventional secret signs.

In addition to agents illegally sent to the Soviet Union, the Abwehr and the SD used their official employees, embedded in the commission to determine the line of the German-Soviet border and the resettlement of Germans living in the western regions of Ukraine, Belarus, as well as the Baltic states, to obtain information of interest to them. territory of Germany.

Already at the end of 1939, Hitler's intelligence began to systematically send agents to the USSR from the territory of occupied Poland to conduct military espionage. They were usually professionals. It is known, for example, that one of these agents, who underwent 15 months of training in the Berlin Abwehr school in 1938-1939, managed to illegally enter the USSR three times in 1940. Having made several long one-and-a-half to two-month trips to the regions of the Central Urals, Moscow and the North Caucasus, the agent returned safely to Germany.

Beginning around April 1941, the Abwehr shifted mainly to dropping agents in groups led by experienced officers. All of them had the necessary espionage and sabotage equipment, including radio stations for receiving direct radio broadcasts from Berlin. They had to send response messages to a fictitious address in cryptography.

In the Minsk, Leningrad and Kiev directions, the depth of undercover intelligence reached 300-400 kilometers or more. Part of the agents, having reached certain points, had to settle there for some time and immediately begin to carry out the task received. Most of the agents (usually they did not have radio stations) had to return to the intelligence center no later than June 15-18, 1941, so that the information they obtained could be quickly used by the command.

What primarily interested the Abwehr and SD? The tasks for either group of agents, as a rule, differed little and boiled down to finding out the concentration of Soviet troops in the border areas, the deployment of headquarters, formations and units of the Red Army, points and areas where radio stations were located, the presence of ground and underground airfields, the number and types of aircraft based on them, the location of ammunition depots, explosives, fuel.

Some agents sent to the USSR were instructed by the intelligence center to refrain from specific practical actions until the start of the war. The goal is clear - the leaders of the Abwehr hoped in this way to keep their agent cells until the moment when the need for them would be especially great.

Sending German agents to the USSR in 1941

The activity of preparing agents for being sent to the Soviet Union is evidenced by such data gleaned from the archives of the Abwehr. In mid-May 1941, about 100 people destined for deportation to the USSR were trained in the intelligence school of the department of Admiral Kanarys near Koenigsberg (in the town of Grossmichel).

Who was betting on? They come from the families of Russian emigrants who settled in Berlin after the October Revolution, the sons of former officers of the tsarist army who fought against Soviet Russia, and after the defeat they fled abroad, members of the nationalist organizations of Western Ukraine, the Baltic states, Poland, the Balkan countries, as a rule, who spoke Russian language.

Among the means used by Hitler's intelligence in violation of the generally accepted norms of international law was also aerial espionage, which was put at the service of the latest technical achievements. In the system of the Ministry of the Air Force of Nazi Germany, there was even a special unit - a special-purpose squadron, which, together with the secret service of this department, carried out reconnaissance work against the countries of interest to the Abwehr. During the flights, all structures important for the conduct of the war were photographed: ports, bridges, airfields, military facilities, industrial enterprises, etc. Thus, the Wehrmacht military cartographic service received in advance from the Abwehr the information necessary to compile good maps. Everything related to these flights was kept in the strictest confidence, and only the direct executors and those from a very limited circle of employees of the Abwehr I air group, whose duties included processing and analyzing data obtained through aerial reconnaissance, knew about them. Aerial photography materials were presented in the form of photographs, as a rule, to Canaris himself, in rare cases - to one of his deputies, and then transferred to the destination. It is known that the command of the special squadron of the Rovel Air Force, stationed in Staaken, already in 1937 began reconnaissance of the territory of the USSR using Hein-Kel-111 disguised as transport aircraft.

Air reconnaissance of Germany before the start of the war

An idea of ​​the intensity of aerial reconnaissance is given by the following generalized data: from October 1939 to June 22, 1941, German aircraft invaded the airspace of the Soviet Union more than 500 times. Many cases are known when civil aviation aircraft flying along the Berlin-Moscow route on the basis of agreements between Aeroflot and Lufthansa often deliberately strayed off course and ended up over military installations. Two weeks before the start of the war, the Germans also flew around the areas where the Soviet troops were located. Every day they photographed the location of our divisions, corps, armies, pinpointed the location of military radio transmitters that were not camouflaged.

A few months before the attack of fascist Germany on the USSR, aerial photographs of the Soviet territory were carried out at full speed. According to information received by our intelligence through agents from the referent of the German aviation headquarters, German aircraft flew to the Soviet side from airfields in Bucharest, Koenigsberg and Kirkenes (Northern Norway) and photographed from a height of 6 thousand meters. In the period from April 1 to April 19, 1941 alone, German planes violated the state border 43 times, making reconnaissance flights over our territory to a depth of 200 kilometers.

As established by the Nuremberg trials of the main war criminals, the materials obtained with the help of aerial photographic reconnaissance, carried out in 1939, even before the start of the invasion of Nazi troops in Poland, were used as a guide in the subsequent planning of military and sabotage operations against the USSR. Reconnaissance flights, which were carried out first over the territory of Poland, then the Soviet Union (to Chernigov) and the countries of South-Eastern Europe, some time later were transferred to Leningrad, to which, as an object of air espionage, the main attention was riveted. It is known from archival documents that on February 13, 1940, Canaris' report “On new results of aerial reconnaissance against the SSSL received by the Rovel special squadron” was heard from General Jodl at the headquarters of the operational leadership of the Wehrmacht Supreme High Command. Since that time, the scale of air espionage has increased dramatically. His main task was to obtain information necessary for compiling geographical maps of the USSR. At the same time, special attention was paid to naval military bases and other strategically important objects (for example, the Shostka gunpowder plant) and, especially, oil production centers, oil refineries, and oil pipelines. Future objects for bombing were also determined.

An important channel for obtaining espionage information about the USSR and its armed forces was the regular exchange of information with the intelligence agencies of the allied countries of Nazi Germany - Japan, Italy, Finland, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. In addition, the Abwehr maintained working contacts with the military intelligence services of the countries neighboring the Soviet Union - Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Schellenberg even set himself the task of developing the secret services of countries friendly to Germany and rallying them into a kind of “intelligence community” that would work for one common center and supply the countries included in it with the necessary information (a goal that was generally achieved after war in NATO in the form of informal cooperation between various secret services under the auspices of the CIA).

Denmark, for example, in whose secret service Schellenberg, with the support of the leadership of the local National Socialist Party, managed to take a leading position and where there was already a good “operational reserve”, was “used as a“ base ”in intelligence work against England and Russia. According to Schellenberg, he managed to infiltrate the Soviet intelligence network. As a result, he writes, after some time a well-established connection with Russia was established, and we began to receive important information of a political nature.

The wider the preparations for the invasion of the USSR, the more vigorously Canaris tried to include his allies and satellites of Nazi Germany in intelligence activities, to put their agents into action. Through the Abwehr, the centers of Nazi military intelligence in the countries of South-Eastern Europe were ordered to intensify their work against the Soviet Union. The Abwehr has long maintained the closest contacts with the intelligence service of Horthy Hungary. According to P. Leverkün, the results of the actions of the Hungarian intelligence service in the Balkans were a valuable addition to the work of the Abwehr. An Abwehr liaison officer was constantly in Budapest, who exchanged information obtained. There was also a representative office of the SD, consisting of six people, headed by Hoettl. Their duty was to maintain contact with the Hungarian secret service and the German national minority, which served as a source of recruiting agents. The representative office had practically unlimited funds in stamps to pay for the services of agents. At first it was focused on solving political problems, but with the outbreak of war, its activities increasingly acquired a military orientation. In January 1940, Canaris set about organizing a powerful Abwehr center in Sofia in order to turn Bulgaria into one of the strongholds of his agent network. Contacts with Romanian intelligence were just as close. With the consent of the chief of Romanian intelligence, Morutsov, and with the assistance of oil firms that were dependent on German capital, Abwehr people were sent to the territory of Romania in the oil regions. The scouts acted under the guise of employees of firms - "mountain masters", and the soldiers of the sabotage regiment "Brandenburg" - local guards. Thus, the Abwehr managed to establish itself in the oil heart of Romania, and from here it began to spread its spy networks further to the east.

The Nazi services of "total espionage" in the struggle against the USSR even in the years preceding the war, had an ally in the face of the intelligence of militaristic Japan, whose ruling circles also made far-reaching plans for our country, the practical implementation of which they associated with the capture of Moscow by the Germans. And although there were never joint military plans between Germany and Japan, each of them pursued its own policy of aggression, sometimes trying to benefit at the expense of the other, nevertheless, both countries were interested in partnership and cooperation between themselves and therefore acted as a united front in the intelligence field . This, in particular, is eloquently evidenced by the activities in those years of the Japanese military attaché in Berlin, General Oshima. It is known that he coordinated the actions of Japanese intelligence residencies in European countries, where he established fairly close ties in political and business circles and maintained contacts with the leaders of the SD and the Abwehr. Through it, a regular exchange of intelligence data about the USSR was carried out. Oshima kept his ally informed about the concrete measures of Japanese intelligence in relation to our country and, in turn, was aware of the covert operations launched against it by fascist Germany. If necessary, he provided the undercover and other operational capabilities at his disposal and, on a mutual basis, willingly supplied intelligence information. Another key figure in Japanese intelligence in Europe was the Japanese envoy in Stockholm, Onodera.

In the plans of the Abwehr and the SD directed against the Soviet Union, an important place, for obvious reasons, was assigned to its neighboring states - the Baltic states, Finland, Poland.

The Nazis showed particular interest in Estonia, considering it as a purely “neutral” country, the territory of which could serve as a convenient springboard for deploying intelligence operations against the USSR. This was decisively facilitated by the fact that already in the second half of 1935, after a group of pro-fascist officers led by Colonel Maazing, head of the intelligence department of the General Staff, gained the upper hand at the headquarters of the Estonian army, there was a complete reorientation of the country's military command to Nazi Germany . In the spring of 1936, Maasing, and after him the chief of staff of the army, General Reek, willingly accepted the invitation of the leaders of the Wehrmacht to visit Berlin. During their time there, they struck up a business relationship with Canaris and his closest aides. An agreement was reached on mutual information on the intelligence line. The Germans undertook to equip Estonian intelligence with operational and technical means. As it turned out later, it was then that the Abwehr secured the official consent of Reek and Maazing to use the territory of Estonia to work against the USSR. At the disposal of Estonian intelligence were provided photographic equipment for the production of photographs of warships from the lighthouses of the Gulf of Finland, as well as radio interception devices, which were then installed along the entire Soviet-Estonian border. To provide technical assistance, specialists from the decryption department of the Wehrmacht high command were sent to Tallinn.

General Laidoner, commander-in-chief of the Estonian bourgeois army, assessed the results of these negotiations as follows: “We were mainly interested in information about the deployment of Soviet military forces in the region of our border and about the movements taking place there. All this information, insofar as they had it, the Germans willingly communicated to us. As for our intelligence department, it supplied the Germans with all the data we had on the Soviet rear and the internal situation in the SSSL.

General Pickenbrock, one of Canaris's closest aides, during interrogation on February 25, 1946, in particular, testified: “Estonian intelligence maintained very close ties with us. We constantly provided her with financial and technical support. Its activities were directed exclusively against the Soviet Union. The head of intelligence, Colonel Maazing, visited Berlin every year, and our representatives, as necessary, traveled to Estonia themselves. Captain Cellarius often visited there, who was entrusted with the task of monitoring the Red Banner Baltic Fleet, its position and maneuvers. An employee of Estonian intelligence, Captain Pigert, constantly cooperated with him. Before the Soviet troops entered Estonia, we left numerous agents there in advance, with whom we maintained regular contact and through which we received information of interest to us. When Soviet power arose there, our agents intensified their activities and, until the very moment of the occupation of the country, supplied us with the necessary information, thereby contributing to a significant extent to the success of the German troops. For some time, Estonia and Finland were the main sources of intelligence information about the Soviet armed forces.

In April 1939, General Reek was again invited to Germany, which was widely celebrating Hitler's birthday, whose visit, as expected in Berlin, was supposed to deepen interaction between the German and Estonian military intelligence services. With the assistance of the latter, the Abwehr managed to carry out in 1939 and 1940 the transfer of several groups of spies and saboteurs to the USSR. All this time, four radio stations were functioning along the Soviet-Estonian border, intercepting radiograms, and simultaneously monitoring the work of radio stations on the territory of the USSR was carried out from different points. The information obtained in this way was passed on to the Abwehr, from which the Estonian intelligence had no secrets, especially with regard to the Soviet Union.

The Baltic countries in intelligence against the USSR

Abwehr leaders regularly traveled to Estonia once a year to exchange information. The heads of the intelligence services of these countries, in turn, visited Berlin every year. Thus, the exchange of accumulated secret information took place every six months. In addition, special couriers were periodically sent from both sides when it was necessary to urgently deliver the necessary information to the center; sometimes military attachés at the Estonian and German embassies were authorized for this purpose. The information transmitted by Estonian intelligence mainly contained data on the state of the armed forces and the military-industrial potential of the Soviet Union.

The Abwehr archives contain materials about the stay of Canaris and Pikenbrock in Estonia in 1937, 1938 and June 1939. In all cases, these trips were caused by the need to improve the coordination of actions against the USSR and the exchange of intelligence information. Here is what General Laidoner, already mentioned above, writes: “The head of German intelligence, Kanaris, visited Estonia for the first time in 1936. After that, he visited here twice or thrice. I took it personally. Negotiations on issues of intelligence work were conducted with him by the head of the army headquarters and the head of the 2nd department. Then it was established more specifically what information was required for both countries and what we could give each other. The last time Canaris visited Estonia was in June 1939. It was mainly about intelligence activities. I spoke with Canaris at some length about our position in the event of a clash between Germany and England and between Germany and the USSR. He was interested in the question of how long it would take the Soviet Union to fully mobilize its armed forces and what was the condition of its means of transport (railway, road and road). On this visit, together with Canaris and Pikenbrock, there was the head of the Abwehr III department, Frans Bentivegni, whose trip was connected with checking the work of a group subordinate to him, which carried out extra-cordon counterintelligence activities in Tallinn. In order to avoid the “inept interference” of the Gestapo in the affairs of the counterintelligence of the Abwehr, at the insistence of Canaris, an agreement was reached between him and Heydrich that in all cases when the security police would carry out any activities on Estonian territory, the Abwehr must first be informed . For his part, Heydrich put forward a demand - the SD should have an independent residency in Estonia. Realizing that in the event of an open quarrel with the influential chief of the imperial security service, it would be difficult for the Abwehr to count on Hitler's support, Canaris agreed to "make room" and accepted Heydrich's demand. At the same time, they agreed that all the activities of the SD in the field of recruiting agents in Estonia and transferring them to the Soviet Union would be coordinated with the Abwehr. The Abwehr retained the right to concentrate in their hands and evaluate all intelligence information regarding the Red Army and Navy, which the Nazis received through Estonia, as, indeed, through other Baltic countries and Finland. Canaris strongly objected to the attempts of the SD employees to act together with the Estonian fascists, bypassing the Abwehr and sending unverified information to Berlin, which often came to Hitler through Himmler.

According to Laidoner's report to Estonian President Päts, the last time Canaris was in Tallinn was in the autumn of 1939 under a false name. In this regard, his meeting with Laidoner and Päts was arranged according to all the rules of conspiracy.

In the report of the Schellenberg department, preserved in the archives of the RSHA, it was reported that the operational situation for intelligence work through the SD in the pre-war period in both Estonia and Latvia was similar. At the head of the residency in each of these countries was an official employee of the SD, who was in an illegal position. All the information collected by the residency flowed to him, which he forwarded to the center by mail using cryptography, through couriers on German ships or through embassy channels. The practical activities of the SD intelligence residencies in the Baltic states were assessed positively by Berlin, especially in terms of acquiring sources of information in political circles. The SD was greatly assisted by immigrants from Germany who lived here. But, as noted in the above-mentioned report of the VI Department of the RSHA, “after the entry of the Russians, the operational capabilities of the SD underwent serious changes. The leading figures of the country left the political arena, and maintaining contact with them became more difficult. There was an urgent need to find new channels for transmitting intelligence information to the center. It became impossible to send it on ships, since the ships were carefully searched by the authorities, and the members of the crews who went ashore were constantly monitored. I also had to refuse to send information through the free port of Memel (now Klaipeda, Lithuanian SSR. - Ed.) via overland communication. It was also risky to use sympathetic ink. I had to resolutely take up the laying of new communication channels, as well as the search for fresh sources of information. The SD resident in Estonia, who spoke in official correspondence under the code number 6513, nevertheless managed to make contact with newly recruited agents and use old sources of information. Maintaining regular contact with his agents was a very dangerous business, requiring exceptional caution and dexterity. Resident 6513, however, was able to very quickly understand the situation and, despite all the difficulties, obtain the necessary information. In January 1940, he received a diplomatic passport and began working under the guise of an assistant at the German embassy in Tallinn.

As for Finland, according to the archival materials of the Wehrmacht, a “Military Organization” was actively operating on its territory, conditionally called the “Cellarius Bureau” (after its leader, the German military intelligence officer Cellarius). It was created by the Abwehr with the consent of the Finnish military authorities in mid-1939. Since 1936, Canaris and his closest assistants Pikenbrock and Bentivegni have repeatedly met in Finland and Germany with the head of Finnish intelligence, Colonel Swenson, and then with Colonel Melander, who replaced him. At these meetings, they exchanged intelligence information and worked out plans for joint action against the Soviet Union. The Cellarius Bureau constantly kept in view the Baltic Fleet, the troops of the Leningrad Military District, as well as units stationed in Estonia. His active assistants in Helsinki were Dobrovolsky, a former general of the tsarist army, and former tsarist officers Pushkarev, Alekseev, Sokolov, Batuev, Baltic Germans Meisner, Mansdorf, Estonian bourgeois nationalists Weller, Kurg, Horn, Kristyan and others. On the territory of Finland, Cellarius had a fairly wide network of agents among various segments of the country's population, recruited spies and saboteurs among the Russian White émigrés who had settled there, the nationalists who fled from Estonia, and the Baltic Germans.

Pickenbrock, during interrogation on February 25, 1946, gave detailed testimony about the activities of the Cellarius Bureau, saying that Captain First Rank Cellarius carried out intelligence work against the Soviet Union under the cover of the German embassy in Finland. “We have had close cooperation with Finnish intelligence for a long time, even before I joined the Abwehr in 1936. In order to exchange intelligence data, we systematically received information from the Finns about the deployment and strength of the Red Army.

As follows from Pickenbrock's testimony, he first visited Helsinki with Canaris and Major Stolz, head of the Abwehr department I of the Ost ground forces headquarters, in June 1937. Together with representatives of Finnish intelligence, they compared and exchanged intelligence information about the Soviet Union. At the same time, a questionnaire was handed over to the Finns, which they were to be guided in the future when collecting intelligence information. The Abwehr was primarily interested in the deployment of Red Army units, military industry facilities, especially in the Leningrad region. During this visit, they had business meetings and conversations with the German ambassador to Finland, von Blucher, and the military attache, Major General Rossing. In June 1938, Canaris and Pickenbrock again visited Finland. On this visit, they were received by the Finnish Minister of War, who expressed satisfaction with the way Canaris's cooperation with the head of Finnish intelligence, Colonel Swenson, was developing. The third time they were in Finland was in June 1939. The head of Finnish intelligence at that time was Melander. The negotiations proceeded within the same framework as the previous ones. Informed in advance by the leaders of the Abwehr about the upcoming attack on the Soviet Union, Finnish military intelligence in early June 1941 put at their disposal the information it had in relation to the Soviet Union. At the same time, with the knowledge of the local authorities, the Abwehr began to carry out Operation Erna, which involved the transfer of Estonian counter-revolutionaries from Finland to the Baltic region as spies, radio agents and saboteurs.

The last time Canaris and Pickenbrock visited Finland was in the winter of 1941/42. Together with them was the chief of counterintelligence (Abwehr III) Bentivegni, who traveled to inspect and provide practical assistance to the "military organization", as well as to resolve issues of cooperation between this organization and Finnish intelligence. Together with Melander, they determined the boundaries of Cellarius' activities: he received the right to independently recruit agents on Finnish territory and transfer them across the front line. After the negotiations, Canaris and Pikenbrock, accompanied by Melander, went to the city of Mikkeli, to the headquarters of Marshal Mannerheim, who expressed a desire to personally meet with the chief of the German Abwehr. They were joined by the head of the German military mission in Finland, General Erfurt.

Cooperation with the intelligence services of the allied and occupied countries in the fight against the USSR undoubtedly brought certain results, but the Nazis expected more from him.

The results of the activities of German intelligence on the eve of the Great Patriotic War

“On the eve of the war, the Abwehr,” writes O. Reile, “was unable to cover the Soviet Union with a well-functioning intelligence network from well-located secret strongholds in other countries - Turkey, Afghanistan, Japan or Finland.” Established in peacetime strongholds in neutral countries - "military organizations" were either disguised as economic firms or included in German missions abroad. When the war began, Germany was cut off from many sources of information, and the importance of "military organizations" greatly increased. Until the middle of 1941, the Abwehr carried out systematic work on the border with the USSR in order to create its own strongholds and plant agents. Along the German-Soviet border, a wide network of technical reconnaissance equipment was deployed, with the help of which interception of radio communications was carried out.

In connection with Hitler's installation on the all-out deployment of the activities of all German secret services against the Soviet Union, the question of coordination became acute, especially after an agreement was concluded between the RSHA and the General Staff of the German Ground Forces to assign to each army special detachments of the SD, called "Einsatzgruppen" and "Einsatzkommando".

In the first half of June 1941, Heydrich and Canaris convened a meeting of Abwehr officers and commanders of police and SD units (Einsatzgruppen and Einsatzkommando). In addition to separate special reports, reports were made at it that covered in general terms the operational plans for the upcoming invasion of the USSR. The ground forces were represented at this meeting by the quartermaster general, who, regarding the technical side of cooperation between the secret services, relied on a draft order worked out in agreement with the chief of the SD. Canaris and Heydrich, in their speeches, touched upon the issues of interaction, "feeling of the elbow" between parts of the security police, the SD and the Abwehr. A few days after this meeting, both of them were received by the Reichsführer SS Himmler to discuss their proposed plan of action to counter Soviet intelligence.

Evidence of the scope that the activities of the "total espionage" services against the USSR on the eve of the war can serve as such generalizing data: only in 1940 and the first quarter of 1941 in the western regions of our country were discovered 66 residencies of Nazi intelligence and neutralized more than 1300 of its agents .

As a result of the activation of the “total espionage” services, the volume of information they collected about the Soviet Union, which required analysis and appropriate processing, constantly increased, and intelligence, as the Nazis wanted, became more and more comprehensive. There was a need to involve relevant research organizations in the process of studying and evaluating intelligence materials. One of these institutes, widely used by intelligence, located in Wanjie, was the largest collection of various Soviet literature, including reference books. The special value of this unique collection was that it contained an extensive selection of specialized literature on all branches of science and economics, published in the original language. The staff, which included well-known scientists from various universities, including immigrants from Russia, was headed by one professor-Sovietologist, Georgian by origin. The impersonal secret information obtained by intelligence was transferred to the Institute, which he had to subject to careful study and generalization using the available reference literature, and return to Schellenberg's apparatus with his own expert assessment and comments.

Another research organization that also worked closely with intelligence was the Institute of Geopolitics. He carefully analyzed the collected information and, together with the Abwehr and the Department of Economics and Armaments of the Headquarters of the Wehrmacht High Command, compiled various reviews and reference materials on their basis. The nature of his interests can be judged at least from such documents prepared by him before the attack on the Soviet Union: “Military-geographical data on the European part of Russia”, “Geographical and ethnographic information about Belarus”, “Industry of Soviet Russia”, “Railway transport of the SSSL, "Baltic countries (with city plans)".

In the Reich, in total, there were about 400 research organizations dealing with socio-political, economic, scientific, technical, geographical and other problems of foreign states; all of them, as a rule, were staffed by highly qualified specialists who knew all aspects of the relevant problems, and were subsidized by the state according to a free budget. There was a procedure according to which all requests from Hitler - when he, for example, demanded information on any particular issue - were sent to several different organizations for execution. However, the reports and certificates prepared by them often did not satisfy the Fuhrer due to their academic nature. In response to the task received, the institutions issued "a set of general provisions, perhaps correct, but untimely and not clear enough."

In order to eliminate fragmentation and inconsistency in the work of research organizations, to increase their competence, and most importantly, their return, and also to ensure proper control over the quality of their conclusions and expert assessments based on intelligence materials, Schellenberg would later come to the conclusion that it was necessary to create an autonomous groups of specialists with higher education. Based on the materials placed at their disposal, in particular on the Soviet Union, and with the involvement of relevant research organizations, this group will organize the study of complex problems and, on this basis, develop in-depth recommendations and forecasts for the political and military leadership of the country.

The "Department of Foreign Armies of the East" of the General Staff of the Ground Forces was engaged in similar work. He concentrated materials coming from all intelligence and other sources and periodically compiled “reviews” for the highest military authorities, in which special attention was paid to the strength of the Red Army, the morale of the troops, the level of command personnel, the nature of combat training, etc.

Such is the place of the Nazi secret services as a whole in the military machine of Nazi Germany and the scope of their participation in the preparation of aggression against the USSR, in intelligence support for future offensive operations.

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