Talk:Hitler Youth: Difference between revisions

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Good start! I'd recommend making it clearer that the impact of Hitlerjugend, both within the Wehrmacht and SS, was far greater than the 12th  SS Panzer Division alone. The indoctrination affected overall military behavior.  
Good start! I'd recommend making it clearer that the impact of Hitlerjugend, both within the Wehrmacht and SS, was far greater than the 12th  SS Panzer Division alone. The indoctrination affected overall military behavior.  
When I say Wehrmacht, I refer to the non-SS military forces of the Third Reich, reporting to OKW. If you meant Army as such, that would be the Heer reporting to OKH, which was a part of the Wehrmacht. You'll find, I think, that there were HJ in the Air Force and Navy as well. It would be instructive, for example, to look at the HJ representation among the pilots of the suicide attack Leonidas Staffel.


While the Werewolf threat was indeed taken seriously, especially in terms of the Alpine Redoubt, Allied occupation records show very little guerilla activity, certainly not at a unit level. I wouldn't overemphasize this aspect, and really would want solid citations that it was other than a propaganda threat. Goebbels, I'm sure, wanted it to happen, probably more than Himmler, but it's instructive to compare the postwar German resistance to the French, Russian, or Danish. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 02:32, 2 February 2010 (UTC)
While the Werewolf threat was indeed taken seriously, especially in terms of the Alpine Redoubt, Allied occupation records show very little guerilla activity, certainly not at a unit level. I wouldn't overemphasize this aspect, and really would want solid citations that it was other than a propaganda threat. Goebbels, I'm sure, wanted it to happen, probably more than Himmler, but it's instructive to compare the postwar German resistance to the French, Russian, or Danish. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 02:32, 2 February 2010 (UTC)

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 Definition The male youth organisation of the German Nazi Party during the years of the Third Reich. [d] [e]
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Military aspects

Good start! I'd recommend making it clearer that the impact of Hitlerjugend, both within the Wehrmacht and SS, was far greater than the 12th SS Panzer Division alone. The indoctrination affected overall military behavior.

When I say Wehrmacht, I refer to the non-SS military forces of the Third Reich, reporting to OKW. If you meant Army as such, that would be the Heer reporting to OKH, which was a part of the Wehrmacht. You'll find, I think, that there were HJ in the Air Force and Navy as well. It would be instructive, for example, to look at the HJ representation among the pilots of the suicide attack Leonidas Staffel.

While the Werewolf threat was indeed taken seriously, especially in terms of the Alpine Redoubt, Allied occupation records show very little guerilla activity, certainly not at a unit level. I wouldn't overemphasize this aspect, and really would want solid citations that it was other than a propaganda threat. Goebbels, I'm sure, wanted it to happen, probably more than Himmler, but it's instructive to compare the postwar German resistance to the French, Russian, or Danish. Howard C. Berkowitz 02:32, 2 February 2010 (UTC)