- Vincenz Müller
Infobox Military Person
name=Vincenz Müller
lived=5 November 1894 –15 May 1961
placeofbirth=Aichach
placeofdeath=Berlin
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=flagicon|German EmpireGerman Empire (to 1918)
flagicon|GermanyWeimar Republic (to 1933)
flagicon|Nazi GermanyNazi Germany (to 1944)
flagicon|German Empire NKFD (to 1945)
flagicon|East GermanyGerman Democratic Republic
branch=Heer
serviceyears=1908-1945; 1952-1958
rank=Generalleutnant
commands=56th Infantry Division, XII Corps
unit=
battles=World War I World War II
awards=Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross
laterwork=Vincenz Müller (
5 November 1894 -12 May 1961 ) was a German military officer andgeneral who served in the Imperial German army, the "Wehrmacht Heer ", and after the war in theNational People's Army of theGerman Democratic Republic , where he was also a politician.Early career
Müller was born in the
Kingdom of Bavaria into a non-military family, being the son of a tanner. As alieutenant he spent much ofWorld War I inTurkey with the German military mission to theOttoman Empire . He was wounded by a grenade fragment at Gallipoli, and was then transferred toBaghdad and the Persian Front, returning to Germany after contractingmalaria andtyphus . In 1917 he returned toTurkey as a tactics instructor for Turkish officers.After the war, he continued to serve with the "
Reichswehr " in a variety of staff roles and was promoted to captain.Nazi Germany
Now serving with the "
Wehrmacht Heer ", Müller was promoted tocolonel , and by 1938 had risen to the role of General Staff Officer ofArmy Group 2 . During this period, he is known to have had some contact with the conservative anti-Nazi resistance in the "Heer" throughErwin von Witzleben , but did not commit himself as an active plotter.If his political affiliations remained unclear, Müller showed complete willingness to serve the Nazis' military plans and advance his "Wehrmacht" career. As a staff officer he was involved in planning
Operation Tannenbaum , the aborted 1940 invasion ofSwitzerland , andOperation Barbarossa , the invasion of theSoviet Union . By 1943, Müller had become alieutenant-general and was given command of the 56th Infantry Division, part of Fourth Army ofArmy Group Centre . By 1944 Müller was commander of XII Corps.Müller found himself thrust into prominence during events in the
Belorussian SSR in late June 1944. Along with the rest of Fourth Army, XII Corps found itself encircled east ofMinsk by Soviet forces during the latter's strategic offensive,Operation Bagration . Müller's corps was probably the least-damaged of the trapped forces, and on3 July he was given overall command of the encircled units of Fourth Army, around 100,000 troops, which by5 July were as much as 100 km behind Soviet lines. Despite signalling by radio that he was confident that a breakout could be achieved, Müller, who had joined the breakout attempt of the18th Panzergrenadier Division , was captured by8 July and most of Fourth Army was destroyed.oviet captivity
Müller showed a willingness to cooperate with the Soviets from the time of his capture, issuing an order to troops of the Fourth Army to lay down their weapons. During his time as a POW Müller had an apparent change of views and professed to have become an anti-Nazi: within days of his capture he had joined the
National Committee for a Free Germany and the "Bund Deutscher Offiziere" led byWalther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach . He was one of a group of generals captured during Operation Bagration (includingEdmund Hoffmeister , the commander of XXXXI Panzer Corps, andRudolf Bamler of the 12th Infantry Division) who became especially prominent in NKFD activity. Unlike many of his colleagues, however, Müller claimed to have become a staunch Communist. Along with Bamler, Müller is known to have attended special training inKrasnogorsk late in 1944, and is believed to have been recruited by the Soviet secret services to spy on fellow NKFD members, such asFriedrich Paulus .The German Democratic Republic
Vincenz Müller was released relatively early from Soviet captivity, in 1948, and joined the National Democratic Party of Germany, the
NDPD . From 1949 - 1952 he was the party's deputy chairman and was Vice-President of the East German parliament, the "Volkskammer ". During this period he is believed to have continued to act as an informant for East German state security.After 1952 Vincenz Müller returned to a military career and was given the responsibility of reconstructing East Germany's armed forces; he was returned to the rank of Lieutenant-General. After heading the Ministry of the Interior, and successfully developing the "
Volkspolizei ", he was appointed the Chief of Staff of the newly-formedNational People's Army - effectively the second-in-command of the East German military behindWilli Stoph . Müller's later career is perhaps the most significant example of the East German regime's use of former Nazis and military officers, the so-called "Ehemaligen ", in reconstructing its state apparatus. He was, however, known to be in favour of the independence of the NVA from the Soviet military, and to have maintained some contacts in the West through military and Bavarian circles (Western intelligence services in fact attempted to persuade Müller to defect during this period). He is also known to have conducted secret discussions with the West German Finance Minister,Fritz Schäffer , on a possible "detente" between East and West Germany.After being gradually sidelined, Müller retired in 1958 amidst longstanding concerns over his political reliability to the East German administration, and came under increasing pressure from the "
Stasi ". He was said to be suffering fromschizophrenia , and was hospitalised for a period in 1960; allegations also resurfaced that he had been involved in the mass killing of Jews inArtemovsk and the shooting ofPOW s. He died in 1961, under somewhat controversial circumstances, in a fall from the balcony of his home on the day he was scheduled to return to hospital; it was rumoured that he had committed suicide when a police vehicle drew up outside.Müller was a recipient of the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross , theGerman Cross in Gold, and the "Vaterländischer Verdienstorden " of theGerman Democratic Republic . A posthumousautobiography , "Ich fand das wahre Vaterland" ( _en. I found the true fatherland), was published in 1963, edited by Klaus Mammach, a SED historian.References
*Lapp, Peter:
**"General bei Hitler und Ulbricht. Vincenz Müller - Eine deutsche Karriere", Christoph Links Verlag, 2003, ISBN 3861532867
**"Ulbrichts Helfer. Wehrmachtsoffiziere im Dienste der DDR", Bernard & Graefe Verlag, 2000, ISBN 3763762094
*Ehlert, Hans & Wagner, Armin: "Genosse General! Die Militärelite der DDR in biografischen Skizzen", Christoph Links Verlag, 2003, ISBN 386153312X
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