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Guidelines for the Conduct of the Troops in Russia

Criminal order that dictated the conduct of German troops in Operation Barbarossa From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Guidelines for the Conduct of the Troops in Russia was a criminal order issued on May 19, 1941, during World War II.[1][2] The guidelines detailed the expected behaviour of German troops during the invasion of the Soviet Union. Civilians were included as opposition groups. The order states "Bolshevism is the deadly enemy of the National Socialist German people. This corrosive Weltanschauung – and those who support it – are what Germany’s struggle is against. This struggle demands a ruthless and strenuous crackdown on Bolshevik agitators, irregulars, saboteurs and Jews, and the complete elimination of both active and passive resistance. The Asiatic soldiers, in particular, are inscrutable, unpredictable, underhand and unfeeling".[3]

The order described Nazi Germany's planned war against Russia as a "historic task to liberate the German people once forever from the Asiatic-Jewish danger".[4]

Wade Beorn writing in Marching into Darkness notes that the order targets Jews explicitly as "racial enemies to be eliminated by the military regardless of their behavior".[5]

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