- Adolf Heusinger
Infobox Military Person
name=Adolf Heusinger
born= birth date|1897|8|4
died= death date and age|1982|11|30|1897|8|8|4
placeofbirth=Holzminden
placeofdeath=Cologne
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=Greater German Reich ,Federal Republic of Germany
serviceyears=1915-1918{Empire}
1919-1933 {Republic}
1933 — 1945 (Reich) 1945 — 1964 (Republic)
rank=General
commands=
unit=
battles=
awards=Iron Cross (1914) 1st and 2nd ClassIron Cross (1939) 1st and 2nd Class
Honor Cross for Combatants (World War I service medal)
Wound Badge of 20 July 1944 in silverWound Badge 1918 in BlackWar Merit Cross 1st and 2nd Class with Swords
United States Legion of Merit in the Grade of Commander
Large Merit Cross of the Merit Order of the Federal Republic of Germany with Star and Sash Princely Reuss Honor Cross 3rd Class with Swords Princely Reuss Silver Merit Medal with Swords War Merit Cross 2nd Class (Brunswick) Order of the Crown of Italy, Commander's Cross (Italy) Order of Merit, Commander's Cross (Hungary) Order of the Cross of Liberty 1st Class with Swords (Finland)
laterwork=Adolf Heusinger (
August 4 ,1897 –November 30 ,1982 ) was a German General duringWorld War II and served as the firstInspector General of the Bundeswehr , the West German armed forces, after the war. He then served as Chairman of theNATO Military Committee before retiring in 1964.Biography
Early years
Heusinger was born in
Holzminden , in theDuchy of Brunswick ,German Empire . He entered the Imperial German Army onJune 17 ,1915 , and was assigned to "7. Thüringisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr. 96", an infantry regiment raised in theThuringia region of Germany (including theReuss principalities ). He was promoted toFähnrich onMarch 31 ,1916 , and was commissioned a lieutenant onJuly 4 ,1916 . He was wounded several times in combat at Verdun and inFlanders , and was taken prisoner by the British onJuly 31 ,1917 . DuringWorld War I he was decorated with thePrussia nIron Cross 2nd Class and Iron Cross 1st Class, Brunswick's War Merit Cross 2nd Class, the Reuss Silver Merit Medal with Swords, the Reuss Honor Cross 3rd Class with Swords and the Wound Badge in Black.After World War I, and upon being freed from British captivity, Heusinger returned to Germany and entered the "
Reichswehr ", the small 100,000-man army Germany was permitted to keep under theTreaty of Versailles . He served in a variety of infantry and staff assignments until October 1931, when he was assigned to the operations staff of the Troop Office ("Truppenamt ") in the Reichswehr Ministry("Reichswehrministerium"). The Troop Office acted as the German Army's General Staff during the Weimar Republic era, as the Treaty of Versailles also forbade that institution. Promotions were slow in the small "Reichswehr"; Heusinger was made a senior lieutenant ("Oberleutnant") in April 1925 and a captain ("Hauptmann") in October 1932.Heusinger served in Berlin with the Troop Office until August 1934, and then returned to troop assignments. He was made chief operations officer of the 11th Division in October 1935, where he served until August 1937. In the meantime he was promoted to major in March 1936. With rise of the Nazis in Germany and Adolf Hitler's assumption of power, the restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles were ended and the German General Staff officially reestablished. In August 1937, Heusinger was assigned to the Operations Staff ("Operationsabteilung") of the Army General Staff as a general staff officer. He would serve there, being promoted to lieutenant colonel in April 1939, until
October 15 ,1940 , when he became its chief.World War II
With the outbreak of the
Second World War , the German Army High Command ("Oberkommando des Heeres ", or OKH) assumed its wartime organization. Heusinger accompanied the field staff and assisted in the planning of operations in Poland, Denmark, Norway, and France and the Low Countries. He was promoted to colonel on August 1, 1940 and, as noted above, became chief of the "Operationsabteilung" in October 1940, making him number three in the Army planning hierarchy, after the Chief of the General Staff, GeneralFranz Halder , and the Deputy Chief of the General Staff/Chief Quartermaster ("Oberquartiermeister I"), GeneralFriedrich Paulus .After the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, the OKH became primarily responsible for planning operations in that theater, while the Armed Forces High Command (
OKW ) was responsible for other theaters. Halder was replaced as Chief of the General Staff in September 1942 by GeneralKurt Zeitzler . Paulus left the OKH in December 1941 and was succeeded in January 1942 by General Günther Blumentritt, who held the "Oberquartiermeister I" position until September 1942 when it was abolished.Heusinger remained chief of the "Operationsabteilung" and was promoted to
Generalmajor on January 1, 1942 andGeneralleutnant on January 1, 1943. In June 1944, General Zeitzler became ill, and on June 10, Heusinger temporary assumed his office as Chief of the General Staff of the Army. In this capacity, he attended the planning meeting at Adolf Hitler's "Wolf's Lair " onJuly 20 ,1944 and was standing next to Hitler when the bomb planted by ColonelClaus von Stauffenberg exploded.Heusinger was hospitalized for his injuries in the explosion, and was arrested and interrogated by the
Gestapo to determine his role, if any, in the July Plot. Although there was evidence that Heusinger had contact with many of the conspirators, there was insufficient evidence to directly connect him to the plot, and he was freed in October 1944. However, he was placed into the "Führer-Reserve" and was not assigned to another position untilMarch 25 ,1945 , when he was made chief of armed forces mapping matters ("Chef Wehrmacht-Kartenwesen"). He was taken prisoner by the Western Allies in May 1945.Post-World War II
A prisoner of war from 1945 to 1947, Heusinger testified during the
Nuremberg Trials . In 1950, he became an advisor on military matters toKonrad Adenauer , the Chancellor of West Germany. He served in "Amt Blank", the office headed byTheodor Blank which would become the West German Ministry of Defense in 1955.With the establishment of the "
Bundeswehr " in 1955, Heusinger returned to military service. He became a "Generalleutnant" [Although "Generalleutnant" was the last rank he held in the "Wehrmacht", this was actually a promotion, as a "Generalleutnant" in the Imperial German Army and the "Wehrmacht" was equivalent to a major general in the British and American armies. The "Bundeswehr" uses a NATO-standardized rank structure, with the rank of "Brigadegeneral" added and "Generalleutnant" now equivalent to lieutenant general in the British and American armies.] in the "Bundeswehr" and chairman of the Military Leadership Council ("Militärischer Führungsrat").In March 1957, he succeeded
Hans Speidel as chief of the "Bundeswehr's" all-armed forces department {"Chef der Abteilung Gesamtstreitkräfte").Shortly thereafter, in June 1957, Heusinger was promoted to full general and named the first
Inspector General of the Bundeswehr ("Generalinspekteur der Bundeswehr"), and served in that capacity until March 1961. In April 1961, he was appointedChairman of the NATO Military Committee in Washington, D.C., where he served until 1964, when he retired.Heusinger died in
Cologne .References
* http://www.bmvg.de/portal/a/bmvg/ministerium/geschichte_bmvg/generalinspekteure_bw?yw_contentURL=/C1256F1200608B1B/W26FBCU8233INFODE/content.jsp
* http://www.geocities.com/~orion47/WEHRMACHT/HEER/Generalleutnant/HEUSINGER_ADOLF.html
* http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/biografien/HeusingerAdolf/
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