German Military Intelligence
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Paul Leverkuehn
PAUL LEVERKUEHN (July 31, 1893 - March 1, 1960) was a German lawyer and a member of the German political party CDU (Christian Democratic Union). Born in Lübeck, he studied law at the Universities of Edinburgh, Freiburg, Munich, Berlin, Königsberg and Göttingen. During World War I the Foreign Office assigned him as a member of the secret delegation Max Erwin von Scheubner-Richter in the Turkish-Persian border area. After the end of WWI, he completed his legal internship in his hometown of Lübeck and received his doctorate from the University of Göttingen in 1922. He spent the next eight years in various positions in the United States before settling back in Germany in 1930 as a lawyer. In 1939 he was briefly drafted into the Wehrmacht before the Foreign Office assigned him to act as consul in Persia. From 1941-1944 Leverkuehn was Head of the German Defense in Istanbul. Following the end of WWII, Leverkuehn worked as a lawyer in Hamburg, defending various German WWII officers. He was elected as President of the European Union Germany in May 1954; but had to resign from the position in September due to a serious car accident. He was president of the Institute for Asian Studies in Hamburg from 1957 until his death in 1960.
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German Military Intelligence - Paul Leverkuehn
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Text originally published in 1954 under the same title.
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Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
GERMAN MILITARY INTELLIGENCE
BY
PAUL LEVERKUEHN
Translated from the German by
R. H. Stevens and Constantine FitzGibbon
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 3
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 4
1 — A GERMAN INTELLIGENCE OFFICER IN ISTANBUL 5
2 — ESPIONAGE AND COUNTER-ESPIONAGE 23
3 — PROPAGANDA, SABOTAGE, FOREIGN RELATIONS AND EVALUATION 36
4 — POLAND, DENMARK, NORWAY 54
5 — THE WEST 63
6 — THE BALKANS 90
7 — SOVIET RUSSIA 103
8 — THE FAR EAST 120
9 — ADMIRAL CANARIS 126
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 137
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
‘The Big Three’ of the Abwehr: Canaris with his two chief subordinates, Lahousen and Piekenbrock, in Russia, 1942.
1. German and Japanese intelligence officers at an inspection of Caucasian volunteers on the Russian front, 1942.
2. German and Japanese intelligence chiefs in conference with Subhas Chandra Bose.
3. Canaris travelling incognito in Spain, January 1943.
4. Greetings cards from Raschid Ali el Gailani and the Mufti of Jerusalem.
Invitation card sent by Fauzi el Kaukji to Lahousen. 40
5. A party given by Fauzi el Kaukji, the Arab leader, on 11th December 1941 in honour of the Mufti of Jerusalem.
1 — A GERMAN INTELLIGENCE OFFICER IN ISTANBUL
THE German Military ‘Nachrichtendienst’ corresponds broadly to what, in the English-speaking world, is understood by ‘Intelligence Service’; while the term Abwehr (literally ‘Defence’) was originally applied to that particular branch of the Nachrichtendienst which had the task of combating the activities of foreign intelligence services; in other words, it meant the German Counter-Espionage Section.
When the hundred thousand-strong army permitted to Germany under the Versailles Treaty was formed on January 21st, 1921, an ‘Abwehr Section’ was set up in the German Ministry of Defence in Berlin. This Abwehr Section was under the command of Colonel Gempp, who had worked in the German Intelligence Service during the first war under Colonel Nicolai. The Section was a small one and consisted of two or three General Staff Officers with a round half-dozen officers and a small clerical establishment attached; it was divided into two Sub-Sections—East and West—but originally it possessed no technical facilities for such things as wireless, the preparation of passports, personal documents and the like, which are essential to the efficient working of a service of this nature. For out-station work it had at its disposal the Abwehr stations which had been set up in each of the seven military commands and which initially consisted of one General Staff Officer, one officer assistant and such clerical staff as was required. It was gradually expanded to include offensive as well as defensive intelligence work, both within Germany and abroad, but from that time the term Abwehr has remained in accepted use.
Individual undertakings of the Abwehr Service have been the subject of innumerable stories in the press. They are based partly on information given by those who took part in them. But this information has often been supplemented and embellished with fictitious dialogue and other ornaments until it is hard to see where truth ends and fiction begins. On the other hand, to those who urge that a proper history of the Abwehr Service ought to be written, the usual reply has so far been that the files of the Abwehr have been taken to Washington by the Americans and are therefore no longer available. But the importance of these files must not be exaggerated, any more than that of the Canaris Diaries, about which so much has recently been published. Much of the Abwehr’s most significant activity finds no place in the official files.
In the out-stations we burnt, with a certain measure of satisfaction, everything that had been committed to paper, and quite apart from the obligation to do so, we were only too glad to be rid of it. The contents of the captured files are only the dead bones of the story; the living spirit survives in the memories of those who served, and when they are dead, then the history of the Abwehr can no longer be written.
To set down some of the stories of the men who served in the Abwehr is the thought which gave impetus to the writing of this book. I have, of course, asked myself whether I can accept the responsibility for its publication, and I feel justified in giving myself an affirmative answer. In the first place, as Chief of the Istanbul Station and also of the branch of the intelligence service called the Near East War Organization (1941–44), I acquired practical experience of Abwehr activity; I knew Admiral Canaris, for many years head of the Abwehr, personally and had ample opportunity to observe both the work of Abwehr Headquarters and his direction of it. On the other hand, as a reserve officer, I was sufficiently detached from its activities to maintain an objective attitude. Furthermore, as defending counsel for the Supreme Headquarters Staff at Nuremberg and for Field-Marshal von Manstein at Hamburg, I later had to grapple with the problems that confronted the High Command and thus obtained an insight into the actions of German military leaders which was essential to a proper evaluation of the place of the Abwehr Service within the whole of Germany’s war organization.
It has not been possible, nor was it ever my intention, to write a complete history, to deal with every phase of the war in every land in which the Abwehr operated. Such a work would be altogether too comprehensive, and far too exhausting for the general reader. Rather I have tried to select the most important or typical episodes. What is here described is based on absolutely authentic information. That I have not been able to do full justice to the accomplishments of all my brother officers is a fact which I must record with regret.
I have, in most cases, omitted or changed the names of those men who kindly helped me in the production of this book, due primarily to the fact that every member of any intelligence service has a not unnatural aversion to finding his name in print, for all the world to see. Not a few of the members of the Abwehr, too, have had bitter experiences in the post-war period, and therefore prefer to remain anonymous. I have fully respected both the wishes of the former and my obligations towards the latter; but to all who gave me their invaluable support I wish to express my heartfelt thanks.
At the outbreak of war in 1939, the Near and Middle East were of no direct interest to the German High Command, and it was not for a moment considered likely that German troops would be called upon to operate in these parts of the world. They were, however, of indirect interest, because of the pact with Soviet Russia. Germany had been compelled to come to an agreement with the Russians on the division of Poland and to cede to them both Finland and the Baltic States as spheres of influence. This was, admittedly, regrettable, but it did not threaten to have any warlike repercussions which would affect Germany directly; and from the point of view of German war industry and economy, these countries were of no importance. There was but one spot which aroused apprehension—Rumania. A war in the Balkans would make things very uncomfortable, and if the Rumanian oilfields were lost or came under Russian control, then Germany would be entirely dependent for her natural oil supplies on Russia. It was known that the Russians intended to occupy and annex Bessarabia. In an attempt to distract them from this it was considered whether it would not be possible to persuade them to turn their activities to the Near or Middle East—or perhaps even further eastwards. An onslaught on Afghanistan and a threat to the North-West frontier of India would, from the German point of view, have been an excellent thing, for it would have tied down very large British forces which otherwise could be sent to a European theatre of war. This Afghan idea, however, was quickly abandoned as I shall show in a later chapter.
Attention was next turned to the possibilities open to Russian forces debouching from the Caucasus. Here, there appeared to be two possible fields of activity. They could either advance in to the plains of Mesopotamia and attack the Mosul oilfields, or they could thrust southwards through Persia and seize the oil-wells of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.
But these projects also proved, on examination, to be impracticable. An advance through Persia would have called for a far greater effort than that which would be required for the occupation of Bessarabia; and in examining the possibilities of an attack on Mesopotamia, the presence of the French Army in Syria under General Weygand obviously became a consideration of primary importance. Any action by the Russians would undoubtedly have led to immediate intervention by these French forces, and it was doubtful whether the Russians, far from feeling themselves capable of indulging in military adventures in this direction, did not regard Weygand’s army as constituting a dangerous threat to themselves. About this latter army very little was known. It was estimated to consist of between a hundred and a hundred and fifty thousand men, but information on its composition was as meagre as was that on its armament. At the turn of the year 1939–40, when the Russo-Finnish War almost led to hostilities between Russia and the Anglo-French Allies, the High Command was much pre-occupied with the possible future role of Weygand’s army. While it was thought that it would probably intervene in the Balkans, the possibility could not entirely be dismissed that it might be used for a forced march on Baku and the seizure of its oilfields. If the latter course were adopted, a very dangerous situation would arise, for at that time Baku was still Russia’s chief source of oil, a very large proportion of which was earmarked for export to Germany, and the German High Command was dependent on these supplies for the prosecution of the war.
Information was meagre, too, on the nature of the terrain which lay between Weygand’s army and Baku. The French, obviously, could move freely within their own mandated territory, which in the main consisted of desert and in the east stretched as far as the Tigris; and beyond the Tigris they had the North Persian road which the British had constructed after the first war. But then they would come face to face with the Kara Dagh mountains. This was the crucial point, and whether any roads existed through the Kara Dagh capable of taking military traffic could not be deduced from any of the maps available.
In the first war the Scheubner-Richter expedition had operated in this district during the winter of 1915-16. I was the last living survivor of this expedition and thus the only officer of the Wehrmacht who had ever seen field service in North Persia. The Chief of the Armed Forces Division at Supreme Headquarters, Colonel Warlimont, urgently requested Admiral Canaris to send me on a military reconnaissance of Azerbaijan, with instructions at the same time to find out as much as I could about the strength and combat effectiveness of the Weygand army. I was appointed Consul in Tabriz, and in March 1940 I set out to take up my appointment.
I very quickly established the fact that a road through the Kara Dagh mountains existed which was capable of carrying mountain troops, and I came to the conclusion that two mobile divisions, composed and armed for mountain warfare, would be able to reach Baku and remain there long enough to destroy it. Serious Russian resistance could not be counted upon; the Russians were suffering from the consequences of the war with Finland, and the Russian Army, thanks to the purges of the 1930s, in which the High Command had been well-nigh decimated, and from which it had never recovered, was still severely handicapped.
This North Persian reconnaissance was not, of course, confined merely to an examination of the road communications available between Baku and Tabriz, but also included a survey of all the possibilities for the movement of troops in this area. It became obvious that nobody, British or anybody else, had given the matter a thought. There were a few large-scale maps, but for the most part I had to base my travels on the 1:1,000,000 International Map of the World. On it numerous blanks represented vast areas which had never been explored, and what was shown on the map proved to be largely inaccurate.
The road from the Turkish frontier via Khoi Tabriz to Teheran was part of the ancient silk route which ran from Central Asia to the Black Sea near Trebizond—one of the classical thoroughfares of history; but even of this route no military reconnaissance had ever been made To the south-east of Tabriz is the Shibli pass, which is of considerable military importance. A little further south is the so-called Kaflankuh gorge, through which the road winds for many miles beside a rushing torrent. Both these features form obstacles of primary importance, but neither of them was shown on the map.
I found, too, that the ambitious plans of the old Shah, Reza Pahlevi, to construct a road parallel to the frontier from Tabriz through Kurdistan to the south had petered out while still in the initial preparatory stage. Such a road would have been of decisive military importance; it would further have been of use for the pacification of the Kurdish tribes in these mountainous districts; but this, as I found out on the spot, was very far from having been accomplished.
I had heard that on the orders of the Shah the Skoda Works had built a modern bridge near Sakkis, to the south of Lake Urmia, and that fifteen miles or so further south still there were two more new bridges. The road to Sakkis was fit for motor traffic, and the district therefore was approachable to motorized units.
In Sakkis there was indeed a magnificent concrete bridge, but it was never used, for the people preferred to cross by the neighbouring ford, as their fathers had done for centuries before them. I wanted to go on another fifteen miles to see the other two bridges; however I now met with determined resistance from my interpreter and chauffeur. During a pause for lunch at Mehshad they had done a little sightseeing and in an open place they had discovered a gallows, from which two Kurds were hanging, who had been executed for highway robbery. Now a motor-car was something of a rarity in these parts and could certainly be regarded most gratefully as an ideal object for attack. One shot in the tyres would suffice to bring it to a standstill, and it was the prospect or the premonition of such a possibility which led to the chauffeur’s firm refusal to go on any further. Nor was he altogether wrong; on that very day a car was attacked in the Shibli pass, one occupant was killed and the other two were wounded. And one of the perpetrators confessed afterwards that the attack had been intended for the German Consul!
German successes in the French campaign removed any danger which might have threatened from the Weygand army. Weygand himself was recalled to France, and his army in Syria was included in the general terms of the armistice. Of some interest is the question—was the whole undertaking superfluous, or did the Allies ever really consider the possibility of an onslaught on Baku? During the campaign in France the secret files of the French General Staff fell into German hands. From them it appears that just at the time when the General Staff of the Wehrmacht was voicing its anxiety about Baku to Admiral Canaris in January 1940, the French Premier, Daladier, directed General Gamelin, the Chief of the General Staff, and Admiral Darlan, the Chief of the Naval Staff, to examine the possibilities of carrying out an attack on Baku; and these two officers in their turn consulted the British. It is characteristic of the difference between the Allied and the German ways of thinking that while the former decided to plan for a combined sea and air operation, the Germans approached the problem as one purely for the land forces. It was quite obvious that the possibility of employing the army had never even been considered by the Allies; had they done so, some traces of the preliminary reconnaissance which they would have had to make would have come to light. Prerequisites to a combined sea and air operation, however, were, first, that the Dardanelles should be opened, and secondly, that the Turks would give permission for flying over Turkish territory, the granting of which would have been tantamount to an abandonment of Turkish neutrality. It is rather remarkable that a straightforward land operation, involving nothing more than a march through Iraq and Persia, should not even have been considered, and that instead an expedition should have been planned, which must encounter the gravest possible political obstacles.
Meanwhile the results of the reconnaissance which I had undertaken were not without some value to the Abwehr. When the German Armies reached the Caucasus and planted their flag on the Elbrus in 1942, the Mosul oilfield and the great Anglo-Iranian installations on the Karun river looked very close indeed. It was assumed that the German Armies would advance upon them. It was also assumed that the British would destroy their refineries and wells, in the same way that they had destroyed other important sources of military supplies when forced to retreat. Since this refinery and these wells were vital to the oil supply of Europe, the Abwehr was set the task of evolving a plan which would prevent such destruction.
The assumption was that before they retired the British would unseal the borings and render the refinery useless by demolition. Such measures, in the opinion of experts, would put the South Iran oilfields out of action for many years to come; new borings would have to be sunk in the vicinity of the old wells, while the refinery would have to be completely rebuilt. A technically completely novel plan was therefore evolved—the système d’ensablement—the ‘sanding-up technique’—whereby the refinery and the wells were to be put temporarily out of action while still in the possession of the British; in other words, an attempt was to be made to sabotage an act of sabotage This technique, in simple terms, envisaged the filling of borings, wells, derricks, conduit pipes, etc., with sand, which would go a long way towards counteracting the unsealing of the one and the demolition of the others. The project was at first condemned as quite fantastic in Berlin; but its authors persisted and succeeded in getting the plan submitted to a panel of experts who, after meticulous examination, pronounced it technically feasible.
On this, detailed planning was immediately started. It was decided that the enterprise should be carried out by a group of acknowledged experts, under the leadership of a man who was well acquainted, not only with the refinery and the oilfields, but also with the