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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life and Nazi activist  





2 State Secretary in the Nazi government in Vienna  





3 Governor of Kraków, Poland  





4 Governor of Galicia, General Government  





5 Involvement in Final Solution  





6 Wächter and the Waffen-SS Galizien  





7 End of the war  





8 Post-war life and death  





9 Dealing of the Wächter family with the history  





10 See also  





11 Notes  





12 Bibliography  





13 External links  














Otto Wächter






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Baron
Otto Gustav von Wächter
SS-Gruppenführer Otto Wächter
Governor of the Kraków District
In office
26 October 1939 – 22 January 1942
Governor GeneralHans Frank
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byRichard Wendler
Governor of the District of Galicia
In office
22 January 1942 – 1944
Governor GeneralHans Frank
Preceded byKarl Lasch
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Personal details
Born(1901-07-08)8 July 1901
Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Died14 July 1949(1949-07-14) (aged 48)
Rome, Italy
Spouse

Charlotte Bleckmann

(m. 1932)
Military service
Allegiance
  •  Nazi Germany (1932–1945)
  • Branch/service Waffen-SS (1932–1945)
    Years of service1923–1945
    RankSS-Gruppenführer

    Baron Otto Gustav von Wächter (8 July 1901 – 14 July 1949)[1] was an Austrian lawyer, Nazi politician and a high-ranking member of the SS, a paramilitary organisation of the Nazi Party. He participated in the Final Solution extermination of Jews in Europe, and was instrumental in creating an SS division consisting of Ukrainians.

    During the occupation of PolandinWorld War II, he was the governor of the district of Kraków in the General Government and then of the District of Galicia (now mainly in Ukraine). Later, in 1944, he was appointed as head of the German Military Administration in the puppet Italian Social Republic. During the last two months of the war, he was responsible for the non-German forces at the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) in Berlin.

    In 1940, he ordered the expulsion of 68,000 Polish Jews from Kraków and in 1941 the Kraków Ghetto was created for the remaining 15,000 Jews by his decrees. After the war, wanted by the Polish People's Republic, von Wächter managed to evade the Allied authorities for four years. In 1949, he was given refuge by anti-communist Austrian bishop Alois Hudal in the Vatican where he died the same year, aged 48, reportedly from kidney disease.[2]

    Early life and Nazi activist[edit]

    Otto Gustav von Wächter was the third child and only son of Martha (née Pfob), daughter of the owner of the Graben Hotel in the centre of Vienna.[3] His father, Joseph Baron von Wächter, was born in northern Bohemia and served in the Austro-Hungarian Army. In the last year of the First World War, Joseph Freiherr von Wächter was decorated with the Knight's Cross of the Order of Maria Theresa, which earned him the title of Freiherr (Baron).[3] In 1922, after the First Austrian Republic was established, he was twice nominated two times as Minister of Defence in the Cabinets of Johann Schober (in the first replacing Carl Vaugoin).[4]

    Otto Wächter spent his first years in Vienna before the family moved to Trieste (then part of Austria-Hungary) in 1908.[3] For the duration of World War I, he lived in southern Bohemia, studying and taking his Matura school leaving examinations in 1919 in České Budějovice, then called by its German name, Budweis,[3] where everyday life was dominated by the national differences between Germans and Czechs.

    The family moved to Vienna, where Wächter studied law and joined national and sporting organizations. In April 1923, he joined the SA and became Austrian Champion in M8+ (eight-man rowing team).[5][6] He received his doctorate in 1924[3] and in 1929 began practicing as a lawyer. His clients included indicted members of the Nazi Party, which he joined on 24 October 1930 (party No: 301093). On 11 September 1932, Wächter married Charlotte Bleckmann (born 20 October 1908), daughter of a Styrian steel magnate.[7]

    Wächter continued to work for the Nazi Party in Vienna as organizer and defender of accused Nazis in court and played a leading role in the organization of the failed July Putsch of 25 July 1934, which eventually led to the assassination of Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss.[3] After the failed coup, Wächter fled to Nazi Germany.[3] He entered the SS on 1 January 1932, (SS No: 235368) and completed his German military service in Freising, Bavaria. In 1935, his Austrian citizenship was revoked and German citizenship conferred upon him while he completed his academic training and education as a lawyer in Germany. In 1937, he started working in the relief organization for Austrian National Socialists seeking refuge in Berlin.

    State Secretary in the Nazi government in Vienna[edit]

    The day after the Anschluss (annexation of Austria into Nazi Germany) on 12 March 1938, Wächter returned to Vienna, where he took on the post of state commissar in the "Liquidation Ministry" under the Nazi governor of Austria, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, from 24 May 1938 to 30 April 1939.[8] The government body he headed known as the "Wächter-Kommission", and responsible for the dismissal and/or compulsory retirement of all Austrian officials who did not conform with the Nazi regime. Because the former Austrian bureaucracy was strictly antisemitic, only a small fraction of the officials were actually dismissed.[9]

    Governor of Kraków, Poland[edit]

    Hans Frank with districts administrators in 1942 from left: Ernst Kundt, Ludwig Fischer, Hans Frank, Otto Wächter, Ernst Zörner, Richard Wendler.

    Following the Invasion of Poland in September 1939, the Germans established a state known as the General Government which was ruled over by Hans Frank. Until 1940, his deputy was Arthur Seyss-Inquart, who took Wächter with him to the General Government, where he was appointed as Governor of the administrative district of Kraków.[8] Wächter chose the two crowns of Galicia in the coat-of-arms issued for the nobility of his father.[10] As Governor of Kraków, he was under the direct and local supervision of Frank and had to face the fanatical actions of the local SS and police forces.

    The arrest on 6 November 1939 of the entire staff of professors and academics of the Jagiellonian University and other academic institutions and their subsequent deportation to Sachsenhausen concentration camp called Sonderaktion Krakau resulted in widespread condemnation worldwide. Wächter publicly criticised the action which took place without his knowledge and reportedly tried to free the academics.[11] Due to the "Special Action Kraków", he was indicted by exiled Poles in New York in 1942.[12][13]

    In his capacity as Governor, an execution warrant for 52 Poles in Bochnia was issued 18 December 1939 under Wächter's signature, as reprisal for killing two Viennese police officers.[14] Likewise in December 1940, a decree organizing the expulsion of the city's 68,000 Jews also appeared under his name as did a further decree ordering the remaining 15,000 Jews to move into the newly created Kraków Ghetto ("Jewish Residence Zone") issued on 3 March 1941.[15]

    Wächter, unlike his wife who was often in the company of the Franks, tried to keep his distance from them. The family lived in a pseudo-Romanesque villa in Przegorzaly on a steep slope above the Vistula outside Kraków, which belonged to Professor Szyszko-Bohusz, head of the restoration measures of the Royal Wawel.[16] The atmosphere of the confiscated building did not meet with the approval of Wächter's wife, so she built a house which she called "Wartenberg Castle".[17] Frustrated with the severe limitations of his role, Wächter was about to resign from his office in Kraków, when he received a new posting in Galicia.[18]

    Governor of Galicia, General Government[edit]

    Following Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the Soviet-occupied eastern part of the former Austrian province of Galicia was attached to the General Government as the District of Galicia. Its capital city, variously known as L'viv (Ukrainian), Lwów (Polish) and Lemberg (German), had been - after Vienna, Budapest and Prague - the largest in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, where Poles, Ukrainians and Jews had lived together for centuries. The first German governor was Karl Lasch [de], an intimate friend of Frank, who was later arrested and shot for extensive black market activities on orders of Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler. Wächter was chosen by Adolf Hitler "as the best man on the spot",[19] and installed as Governor on 22 January 1943.

    His first official visit was to the influential and respected Greek Catholic Metropolit Andrij Aleksander Szeptycki (Sheptytsky). With his assistance, Wächter endeavored to promote a greater degree of co-operation among the occupying Germans and the ethnic elements in the district of Galicia. Consequently, he immediately found himself in conflict with SS-Obergruppenführer Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger, the Reichsführer's representative in the General Government and executor of his planned large scale resettlement programs. At the government meeting in Kraków on 17 February, Wächter publicly opposed plans to "germanize" the city of Lemberg, which would have resulted in the expulsion of its entire population stating: "A German colonization of the East during the war would bring about the collapse of production."[20]

    Wächter's continued opposition to Krüger's policies led to a number of open confrontations. To avoid further altercations, Himmler offered Wächter the chance to relocate to Vienna, which he declined. As Governor of Galicia, he remained a firm believer in the principle "Germany first". He was frequently obliged to use his influence and connections by first circumventing General Governor Hans Frank and by exploiting the strained relations between Frank and Himmler to pursue his own policies. Wächter selected men with liberal views for the key posts in his administration, notably his department heads Otto Bauer and Ludwig Losacker [de], whom he consulted before deciding all important issues.[21]

    In late 1942, Wächter visited the "Reichskommissariat Ukraine" (eastern Ukraine) to witness first hand the effect of the implementation of the Nazi Untermensch (subhuman) philosophy by Gauleiter Erich Koch and his policies of repression and subjugation. On his return in December 1942, he sent a secret ten page letter to Martin Bormann in the Führer Headquarters in Berlin, criticizing the serious mistakes made in the handling of the Ukrainians.

    Whilst Governor of Galicia, he established a Waffen-SS Division recruited from the Ukrainian population of Galicia, under German supervision, to fight against the hated Bolsheviks. The formation of the unit was approved by Himmler after the disastrous German defeat at Stalingrad. Wächter submitted the proposal to Himmler on 1 March 1943, and, on 28 April, the SS Division Galicia was publicly inaugurated.[22]

    Involvement in Final Solution[edit]

    Nazi documents detail Wächter's involvement with the establishment of ghettos, and the Final Solution, the extermination of Europe's Jews. Wächter's name is seen on the order to establish the Kraków ghetto, where many inhabitants perished, and the rest would eventually be liquidated as a part of Operation Reinhard. Wächter also ran the transportation systems, which would carry trains of Jews to their death under his watch.[23] The U.S. Justice Department also holds documents indicting Wächter. One, signed on March 13, 1942, by Wächter, was an order to restrict the employment of Jews throughout Galicia. The Justice Department also maintains a document from Heinrich Himmler to Wilhelm Stuckart, the State Secretary to the Reich Minister of the Interior in Berlin, on Wächter's future, dated August 25, 1942.[24] It describes how Himmler was recently in Lemberg and asked Wächter if he would want to be transferred out to Vienna. Wächter replied to Himmler that he did not want to go to Vienna.[23] This document implies Wächter willingly wanted to stay in Lemberg for the implementation of Operation Reinhard and directly refutes Horst's claim that his father "had no chance to leave the system."[24]

    While Wächter was Governor of Galicia, he oversaw the implementation of the Final Solution. After 75,000 Jews died in the first month during Operation Reinhard, Hans Frank made a speech in the Parliament of Galicia praising Wächter's job for "making Lemberg a proud city."[23] Although these actions would almost certainly indict Wächter for command responsibility, Wächter was not directly responsible for Operation Reinhard, since he was a member of the civil government.[25] The dual German administration in the General Government meant that he did not control the SS or Police; these matters in Lemberg were under the control of SS-Brigadeführer Fritz Katzmann, the SS and Police Leader of the District of Galicia.[26] Although he likely would have worked closely with the SS to carry out the operations, he was not directly a part of the group that implemented them.[25]

    As far as direct responsibility, Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal claims in his book The Murderers Among Us, that Wächter personally oversaw the transportation of four thousand Jews to extermination camps and was responsible for killing at least 800,000 Jews.[27] Specifically, Wiesenthal also claims to have seen Wächter in Lemberg on August 15, 1942, while his mother and other Jews were being loaded on a train to their death. However, Horst owns a letter written by his father for his mother on that date, from a party meeting in Krakow. Horst believes Wiesenthal may have mistaken Fritz Katzmann for his father since, according to the letter, Wächter was not in Lemberg on August 15.[28]

    On September 28, 1946, the Polish government sent a document to the Military Governor of the American occupation zone in Germany requesting "that Wächter be delivered to Poland for trial for mass murder, shooting and executions. Under his command of District Galicia, more than one hundred thousand Polish citizens lost their lives."[23] Due to Wächter's death in Rome in 1949, he was never tried for charges in Poland. The extent of his criminal involvement in the final solution was never brought before a court.[29]

    Wächter and the Waffen-SS Galizien[edit]

    In 1943, Wächter conceived the idea of creating a Waffen-SS division made up of Ukrainians. The division was organized as a part of a program of creating foreign (e.g., Estonian, Latvian) formations of the Waffen-SS to fight with the Germans on the Soviet front.[30] Wachter first proposed his idea to SS Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler on March 1, 1943, and wanted to name them Division Ukraine.[31][32] Wächter succeeded in creating the division, but they were ultimately called Division Galizien. The creation of the Division Galizien was announced on April 28, 1943, at ceremonies throughout Galicia.[30] Wächter appointed the members of the Military Board of the Division Galizien and had good relations with them. In 1945, he was the commander in chief of all Waffen SS divisions made up of non-Germans.[32] In organizing Waffen-SS Galizien, Wächter worked closely with the head of the Ukrainian Central Committee in Cracow, Volodymyr Kubijovyč.[31]

    In March 1945, the German government announced the formation of the Ukrainian National Army. Wächter successfully secured the appointment of General Pavlo Shandruk, a former officer in the Polish Army, as commander of the Ukrainian National Army.[30] On April 25, 1945, the Waffen-SS Galizien was officially reorganized as the First Division of the Ukrainian National Army, and swear a new oath of loyalty to the Ukrainian people.[31]

    Modern Ukraine remains divided on the legacy of World War II, although nationalists, hardcore rightists and neo-Nazis continue to honor the Waffen-SS Galizien today through yearly celebrations.[33]

    End of the war[edit]

    With the loss of the entire District of Galicia on 26 July 1944 to the advancing Red Army, Wächter sought to be released from his administrative obligations in the General Government so that he could take up a position in the Waffen-SS.[34] In response, Himmler agreed to order his release on the basis that he assume a new commission as "Chief of the Military Administration to the Plenipotentiary General of the German Wehrmacht in Italy headed by SS-Obergruppenfuhrer Karl Wolff.[35] Himmler felt Wächter would be "of immense use in this equally interesting and difficult field."[36] On assuming his new post, Wächter relocated to Gardone on Lake Garda.[37]

    As the German situation at the front worsened day by day, in a vain attempt to regain the military initiative the Nazi authorities became increasingly desperate and sought to exploit the Eastern European Anti-Bolshevik movements. In so doing, on 30 January 1945, Himmler appointed Wächter as subsidiary head of the Group D of the Reich Security Main Office in Berlin,[38] which sought to utilize and combine the Russian Liberation Army of General Andrey Vlasov and the newly formed Ukrainian National Army which included the 1st Ukrainian Division (formerly the SS 14th Galician Division), the creation of which he had instigated.

    Vlasov's 'federalist' concept which required the subordination of all the other former Soviet nationalities to his overall command, proved to be an insurmountable obstacle for Wächter who was unable to bring about the unification of Vlasov and the separatist Ukrainians led by General Pavlo Shandruk. Nevertheless, Wächter redoubled his efforts with the Ukrainians whom he rejoined on 7 April 1945 in Carinthia.[39] On 8 May 1945, Wächter informed General Shandruk of the unconditional surrender of the German Reich with the following words: "Now, General, you are the central figure in the action of saving the Division, and possibly of all of us who are with you."[40]InZell am See, amidst the German collapse, his wife burned a crate full of documents he had methodically collected to justify his deeds, which should demonstrate "that he had done everything to help so many people".[41]

    Post-war life and death[edit]

    Following the defeat of Germany, Wächter remained with the staff of the 1st Division of the Ukrainian National Army until 10 May. He left them near Tamsweg in the Salzburg mountain district to avoid being taken prisoner and inevitable extradition to the Soviet Union. Together with a young member of the 24th Waffen-Gebirgs-(Karstjäger-) Division of the Waffen-SS, he successfully hid for four years, sustained by his wife who supplied both men with food and equipment from secret pick-up points. In the spring of 1949, Wächter crossed the border to South Tyrol in Italy where he met his wife and his elder children for the last time.

    On 24 April 1949, he arrived in Rome, where, through pro-Nazi Bishop Alois Hudal, rector of the Teutonic College of Santa Maria dell'Anima, he found rudimentary accommodation in the clerical institute "Vigna Pia" on the southern outskirts of Rome under the name of Alfredo Reinhardt. In June, he took part in an Italian film, playing the part of an actor and was in the process of collecting information about a flight to South America. As a result of his daily morning swim in the polluted Tiber, he appeared jaundiced on 3 July. On 9 July, he was taken to Santo Spirito Hospital near the Vatican where Wächter revealed his true identity. He received last rites from Hudal in the evening of 13 July and died the next morning.[42] He died, most likely, of Leptospirosis (Weil's disease), [43] although it has been alleged by Hudal that he was poisoned. [44]


    Dealing of the Wächter family with the history[edit]

    His son, Horst, has claimed that his father "was against the racial ideology of putting other races below Aryan Germans" and maintains he never made an anti-Semitic speech.[23] He has described him as "an unwilling cog in the Nazi killing machine," and "became doomed and murdered for something he never planned and executed himself."[45] His claims have been refuted by considerable evidence. This includes family photo albums held by Horst himself at his home, Schloss Hagenberg (near Mistelbach, Lower Austria;[46][47] the albums feature pictures of Otto Wächter with Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, Hans Frank and Joseph Goebbels, and a book with the inscription『With my best wishes on your birthday, —H. Himmler, 8 July 1944.』These personal mementos place Wächter among the inner circles of the Nazi party, and at the heart of its day-to-day operations.[24] Horst's daughter Magdalena Wächter-Stanfel is the only out of 23 grand children who admits publicly that her grandfather "was a mass murder". This had cost her the heritage from her father Horst, who sold the Hagenberg castle that they had bought with the money that had come to him over his late mother and wife of Otto Wächter, Charlotte, which is possibly also the money of sold looted pictures from Poland for a little money to mobile traders so that Magdalena would not get it after his death. The new owner of the castle continue to support Horst in letting him remain in the castle and try to present the castle as a romantic-esoteric place without mentioning its difficult connection to the Wächter story. [48] [49]

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Klee, Ernst (2011). Das Personen Lexikon zum Dritten Reich. Koblenz: Edition Kramer. p. 647. ISBN 978-398114834-3.
  • ^ Cymet, David (2011). History vs. Apologetics: The Holocaust, the Third Reich, and the Catholic Church. Lexington Books. p. 419. ISBN 978-073913294-4.
  • ^ a b c d e f g Bartrop, Paul R.; Grimm, Eve E. (January 11, 2019). Perpetrating the Holocaust: Leaders, Enablers, and Collaborators. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781440858970 – via Google Books.
  • ^ "Wächter, Josef Karl Frh. von (1866–1949), General und Politiker". Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon.
  • ^ Almeida, Roberto (19 September 2013). "From rowing champion to the Holocaust: Unpublished photos reveal Wächter's trail". Opera Mundi.
  • ^ "Letters to a Nazi". Al Jazeera. 2020.
  • ^ The couple eventually had six children, four daughters and two sons: Otto Richard (1933–1997) and Horst Arthur (born 1939).
  • ^ a b "My father, the good Nazi". Financial Times. 3 May 2013.
  • ^ This was particularly apparent in the public sector where the elimination of the Jews had already started in the First Austrian Republic. In 1933, among the 160,696 civil servants just 682 belonged to the mosaic religion: Maderegger p. 240 cit. after Irene Harand, So oder so? Die Wahrheit über den Antisemitismus (One way or another? The truth about Antisemitism), Vienna, 1933.
  • ^ Letter to his father, Kraków, 9 December 1939 – Archive Wächter
  • ^ The action was disparagingly referred to by him as "smut" in a letter to his wife, 17 December 1939 – Archive Wächter
  • ^ "Seeking the truth about a Nazi war criminal — with the help of the killer's son". The Times of Israel.
  • ^ Sands, Philippe (2017). East West Street: On the Origins of "genocide" and "crimes Against Humanity". Knopf Doubleday Publishing. ISBN 9780525433729.
  • ^ This is the only time Wächter is named in the Nuremberg Trial Proceedings: Vol. 12, 112th day (23 April 1946), p. 106. The circumstances of the execution naming Wächters intervention is described by General Glaise von Horstenau in Broucek, p. 445
  • ^ Longerich, Peter (2010). Holocaust - The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford University Press. p. 161 n75. ISBN 978-019280436-5.
  • ^ Schenk p. 60: "She interfered constantly in construction and plundered palaces in Warsaw and Krakow museums". The harsh judgement of Professor Szyszko-Bohusz on Baroness Wächter is to understand on (sic) the background of his employment in the Wawel during the whole period of the war.
  • ^ "FilmSpringOpen - Filmmakers social networking". Filmspringopen.eu. Archived from the original on 24 September 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  • ^ Wächter Archive, memories of Charlotte Wächter.
  • ^ Melitta Wiedemann [de], Wächter Archive sound recording of Charlotte Wächter.
  • ^ In a five page letter to Wächter, after emphasising that he was Wächter's senior in both age and rank, Krüger reminded him that his recent public pronouncements on this issue were a direct confrontation to the policies of the Reichsführer-SS: "Even though you wear the uniform of an SS Brigade Leader, in performing the tasks provided to you, you have never guided that you are members of the SS."[clarification needed]
  • ^ Losacker p. 127.
    Losacker was dismissed from all his functions on 10 October 1943 for defending Poles and put into an SS penal squad on the Italian front; Bauer was shot by a Soviet agent, Nikolai Iwanowitsch Kusnezow, on 9 February 1944 in place of Wächter after W. had been warned by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists underground organisation UPA, calling him "a very decent human" (written in italics in the original): letter 28 September 1943 in Archive Wächter.
  • ^ Despite mandatory enrolment requirements, on 30 October 1943 the Supplementary Office of the Waffen-SS produced the following breakdown for the registrations: Volunteered/Registered 80,000; called up for service 19,047; actually reported 13,245.
  • ^ a b c d e Evans, David; Wachter, Horst; Frank, Niklas; Sands, Philippe (November 6, 2015). "What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy". www.netflix.com. Retrieved 2018-05-03.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ a b c Sands, Philippe (May 5, 2013). "My Father, the Good Nazi: Stories". The Financial Times. ProQuest 1348307808.
  • ^ a b "Introduction to Aktion Reinhard". www.holocaustresearchproject.org. 2007. Retrieved 2018-05-03.
  • ^ Katzmann, Fritz (1943). The Solution of the Jewish Question in the District of Galicia (PDF). pp. 1–7.
  • ^ Almeida, Roberto (September 19, 2013). "From rowing champion to the Holocaust: unpublished photos reveal Wächter's trail". Opera Mundi. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  • ^ Almeida, Roberto (September 19, 2013). "My father thought he could convince Hitler against the extermination of jews, says Wächter's son". Opera Mundi. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  • ^ Hilberg, Raul (2003). The destruction of the European Jews (3rd ed.). New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. p. 1193. ISBN 0300095856. OCLC 49805909.
  • ^ a b c Kubijovyc, Volodymyr (1984). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 680–681. ISBN 0802033628. OCLC 12214912.
  • ^ a b c Rudling, Per Anders (July–September 2012). "'They Defended Ukraine': The 14. Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS (Galizische Nr. 1) Revisited". Journal of Slavic Military Studies. 25 (3): 339–359. doi:10.1080/13518046.2012.705633. S2CID 144432759.
  • ^ a b Struk, Danylo Husar (1984). Encyclopedia of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 677. ISBN 0802039952. OCLC 12214912.
  • ^ Danilova, Maria (August 1, 2013). "Ukraine divided over legacy of Nazi fighters". The Times of Israel. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
  • ^ Letter: 28 July 1944 dzt Kracow, Gouverneur des Distrikits Galizien, An den Reichsführer-SS und Chef der Deutschen Polizei Reichsinnenminister Heinrich Himmler, NA T175, roll 32.
  • ^ Wolff managed to shorten the war in Italy by six days through secret negotiations with Allan F. Dulles, head of the American secret services, in Switzerland.
  • ^ Telex Heinrich Himmler, 1 August 1944, Melnyk to Battle, p. 175
  • ^ He heavily criticised SS-Gruppenführer Odilo Globocnik, who was one of the most brutal SS-leaders in the General Government. After being also sent to Italy he continued his extermination programs at Trieste. "G. who variously rages around here too." Letter dated 9 September 1944: Archive Wächter.
  • ^ Germanic and Volunteer Central Office in the RSHA. He arrived in Berlin on 26 February 1945.
  • ^ Shandruk: 28. The 1st Ukrainian Division.
  • ^ Shandruk: 29. The Surrender
  • ^ Archive Wächter, memory files Charlotte Wächter. Provisional list of individual Poles and Jews saved by him; in Archive Wächter.
  • ^ Archive Wächter, bequest Otto Wächter.
  • ^ Sands, Philippe (2020). The Ratline: Love, Lies and Justice on the Trail of a Nazi Fugitive. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-1474608138.
  • ^ Philippe Sands (2018). "The Ratline" (Podcast). The BBC.
  • ^ Goñi, Uki (2017-02-26). "Son of Nazi governor returns art stolen from Poland during second world war". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-05-03.
  • ^ Not Schloss Hagenberg im Mühlkreis, Upper Austria. "Sagen, wie es ist" (in German). Retrieved 2018-09-30.
  • ^ "Suchergebnis - NÖ-Burgen online | IMAREAL". www.imareal.sbg.ac.at (in German). Retrieved 2018-09-30.
  • ^ "Choosing to speak out". The Tendril. Julie Lindahl. 19 November 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  • ^ "0:50 / 2:03:40 Lesung und Gespräch 'Die Rattenlinie' mit Philippe Sands". Youtube. Kulturkreis 'Das Zentrum' Radstadt. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


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