SS Hunter Battalions
Conventional wisdom suggests that the Allies and the Soviets were the only side in the Second World War to support resistance
movements. However, based on recently-released archival sources, "The SS Hunter Battalions" shows that Hitler had
his own version of the SOE and the OSS, and that the Nazis too encouraged underground resistance against their enemies, especially as Europe was liberated in 1944-5.
The Nazis tried to exploit the misguided activism of ex-collaborators, ethnic nationalists and rabid anti-communists, but their efforts were clumsy and they were hamstrung by the sordid
reputation that they had gained as wartime occupiers. In addition, the German commandos and spy-masters in charge of the project hindered their own efforts through infighting, ill-discipline and
a misconceived appreciation of their ability to motivate violent dissent.
Nonetheless, the Germans supported as many as 700,000 anti-Soviet partisans during the last year of the war, and even in liberated France and Italy they bolstered small anti-Allied cells and
bands. As Perry Biddiscombe demonstrates, such efforts were not mere transitory occurrences, but touched upon the origin of the Cold War and the roots of postwar 'Eurofascism'.
Author : Perry Biddiscombe
ISBN-13 : 9780752439389
Publisher : Tempus Publishing, Limited
Publication date : 28/12/2006
Meet the Author
Perry Biddiscombe is Professor of History at the University of Victoria, he lives in Victoria in British Columbia, Canada. He is the acknowledged world expert on the guerilla forces of the Third
Reich. His other books include The Last Nazis: SS Werewolf Guerilla Resistance in Europe 1944-47 ('Throws fresh light on the Third Reich's last days' BBC History Magazine) and Werewolf: The
History of the Nationalist Socialist Guerilla Movement 1944-1946 ('The most complete history of the Nazi partisan movement' The Independent). He lives in Canada.