Talk:Werwolf

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Old talk[edit]

I deleted the section "similair organizations": - The Jagdverbände were no "stay-behind" but the commandos of the Waffen-SS (like the Special Air Services of the British or the Brandenburger of the Wehrmacht). Simply check Wikipedia or Google. They had nothing in common with the werewolf. - The Bundschuh was a locally hatched plan that never got over paper-ware status and had no effect whatsoever. I can't see any reasons for mentioning it. 141.13.240.31 07:57, 29 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The original Bundschuh was a revoulutionary movement in Germany from 1493-1517. 141.13.8.14 13:36, 29 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Some facts in the article were simply wrong and were corrected. 141.13.240.31 09:17, 29 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

(copied from Talk:Werewolf):


What is the justification for:

  1. Redirecting Talk:Wehrwolf to here, when the topics are barely related; and/or
  2. The claim "some doubt that [the Nazi Wehrwolf movement] was ever really active at all"?

Point 2) sounds like historical revisionism, and point 1) like a trick to disguise point b. There is immense evidence of not merely the existence of Wehrwolf, but of its organisation, internal politics, and many of its operations, e.g. the assassination of the anti-Nazi mayor of Aachen. It was certainly smaller than its creators hoped, but largely because Wilhelm Keitel spent the last few weeks of the war trying to shut it down. I will change both in a couple of days unless I hear a reason not to do so. Securiger 01:24, 22 Dec 2003 (UTC)

Wehrwolf Freikorps[edit]

Although it is a somewhat different phenomena, this article does not discuss the post WWI Wehrwolf units operating in areas occupied by the French. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.147.10.107 (talk) 05:03, 26 February 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Point 2 is not entirely historical revisionism. Just about all credible reports about "Werwolf" activity in the west are older than the surrender of Germany; i.e. technically happened in wartime. Poland is another story, but as far as western Germany is concerned, there are few to none reports post 1945. (The Bremen bombing is not attributd to "Werwolfs", according to most sources.) The bigger issue is the neo-Nazi structure still existing in present time. --HBS 14:37, 8 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Redirect now removed. Securiger 15:00, 27 Dec 2003 (UTC)


Historifictive text:

Hello, anonym. Sorry I missed your comments when you posted them, and they have been left so long without a reply. We don't delete legitimate criticism. I will respond to your criticisms in a couple of days, as I have to go to the library to get the reference that I used, but I include a few quick comments straight away. Securiger 08:56, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Typical Werwolf tactics included sniping attacks, arson, sabotage, and assassination although in Poland they also carried out massacres of civilians, and a few substantial attacks against Soviet troops.

I know there were Estonian, Lithuanian and Ukrainian (Stepan Bandera) fighters, which were active until 1950, but I have never heard about German military attacks after May 9th 1945 except two towns in Soviet Occupation Zone: Altenberg and Demmin. These towns were destroyed by Soviet troops as a reaction for SINGLE sniping attacks against them.
Please let me know if you know other examples.
I don't know much about that, as that text was from another user, who, however, appears to be an expert on Polish history. The reference I hope to find in the library does include an account of a fixed battle between a company of Werwolf and a Soviet battalion (the Werwolves were slaughtered). If I recall correctly, it was near the main Werwolf training camp. My only other comment is to wonder why you restrict it to after 9th of May when the writer did not?Securiger

Their most costly single attack in the western zones of occupation was a bombing which killed 44 persons.

Please inform about place and time.
Bremen police headquarters, June 1945. Source: Perry Biddiscombe, Minutemen of the Third Reich, accessed here.Securiger
There do not seem to be any sources regarding the incident except for that one article.

Their most prominent victims were Dr. Franz Oppenhoff (the new anti-Nazi mayor of Aachen and most prominent democratic politician left in Germany),

That's true.
It was prior to the German surrender, though.

Major John Poston (Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery's liaison officer)

He died in battle
I'll need to check the details, but—if I recall correctly—whilst conducting a reconnaissance in his jeep he was ambushed by youths in civilian clothing, armed with submachineguns, some distance from the front. He died in battle certainly, but probably not battle with regular forces. Securiger

and (possibly) General Berzarin (Soviet commandant of Berlin).

General Bersarin had a motorbike accident. However, it may be possible to cause a motorbike accident, but there is no proof for a planned accident.
Werwolf propaganda radio claimed it was an assassination, the Soviets claimed it was a motorbike accident. If the Soviets had said nothing, probably no-one would have believed Werwolf; but some do, because the Soviet story contains a number of errors and inconsistencies; what type of accident it was, and the location where it happened, changed over time. And you'll notice that the article says possibly. Securiger

One often overlooked aspect of Werwolf is that the Hitler Youth component was also responsible for developing a new political youth movement which was intended to outlast the war, and which was called "neo-Nazism". Some current German neo-Nazi groups refer to themselves as Werwolf, although the association is probably fanciful.

On 25th August 2003, Condoleeza Rice and Donald Rumsfeld compared the problems faced by US troops then in Iraq, to those faced by US troops in post-World War II Germany. In particular, they mentioned Wehrwolf.

Like in Iraq, Germany was threatened after World War II by CRIMINAL gangs who were just interested in robbery, stealing and black market supply. However, the political background of these attacks was marginal in Germany after WW2.
Your point is? Securiger 08:56, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

The more conventional view is that while Werwolf was too disorganised to provide any significant military impediment to the occupiers, it delayed economic reconstruction and democratisation by three or four years.

Reconstruction was delayed by Allied bureaucracy (there was a cartoon "How your request will be handled by military government"). CRIMINAL activities had some negative impact on the economy.
Sorry, you're completely wrong here. There was a deliberate policy to reconstruct Germany last, and it was partly motivated by ongoing resistance. I'll have to hunt around for the references. Securiger 08:56, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

If you want to publish facts, you may write that former Werwolf members started a criminal career after World War II.

I am not angry, I do not demand correction because I like phantasy. You may delete my comment and continue your historifiction. However, it would be honest to rename Wikipedia from Encyclopedia to Fairytale.

Utter Nonsense[edit]

Werewolf = wolf man bcz in English "were" once meant "man" (whence - see at least any Merriam-Webster dict that includes etymology --also world, from "were" and "alt", meaning "man's age" or "human realm".)

Wehr is unrelated, with its senses clustering around "force" and "protection".

The implausible name should be enuf to show this is a hoax, IMO.
--Jerzy(t) 18:14, 2004 Sep 10 (UTC)

It is not a hoax, but the etymology was indeed inaccurate. I tried to fix it.


--Greg Kuperberg 15:18, 22 Nov 2004 (UTC)


Hello Greg, I'm going to have to hunt around for my references, but ISTR that the two names were due to the discovery that some pre-war communist group had called itself "Werwolf", so there was a half-hearted attempt to change the name. Or something like that. Securiger 08:56, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Werwolf and Iraq[edit]

I didn't like the way that this article supported the Rice-Rumsfeld comparison between chaos in Iraq and Werwolf, so I rewrote it. I could not find evidence that Rice's remark is the "more conventional view" among historians. I would be happy to be proved wrong with the aid of credible references.

--Greg Kuperberg 23:49, 22 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I'm afraid I have several problems with your changes:
  1. The article did not support "the Rice-Rumsfeld comparison"; it merely mentioned it in passing, with complete neutrality. It did however attack one of Benjamin's various false statements—the most widely quoted and most widely repudiated one—which is not the same thing at all. You have changed it very much into an attack on Rice and Rumsfeld, or more particularly, an attack on what some hostile reviewers have claimed they meant to imply, but did not say. The sole reason I mentioned the issue at all (which I now see may have been a mistake) was because the previous version of the article consisted almost entirely of a paraphrase of Benjamin's "next to nothing" claim. I really would hope that we can make this an article about the history of Werwolf, and keep the modern politics to a minimum.
  2. Your changes are supported by a pay-only reference, which makes it rather hard for others to examine. I would like to do so, because the statements which you make immediately after that link - giving the impression that they are criticisms of Rice and Rumsfeld by Biddiscombe - do not refer to anything Rice or Rumsfeld actually said. Thus I wonder if you are reading too much into Biddiscombe's statement, or paraphrasing it awkwardly? For example: "the Allied occupation of Germany was much larger than the Coalition Force in Iraq". Quite true, but totally unrelated to anything that Rice or Rumsfeld said.
  3. Benjamin's statements, some of which are quite false and others of which are greatly exagerrated, have been widely quoted and widely believed. You have completely removed all criticism of them, giving the impression that they are basically true.
I recommend you read Rice and Rumsfeld's speeches. In my opinion, the whole idea—that they are trying to claim that post-war Iraq and post-war Germany are/were very similar— is Benjamin's straw man. These speeches, given to a group of veterans of the occupation of Nazi Germany, are about the difficulties that those veterans endured. They barely mention Iraq. Rumsfeld's only apparent reference to Iraq was to say "Does that sound familiar?" after referring to looting of art treasures. Rice is a bit closer to a comparison, but still quite weak: "SS officers?called 'werewolves'?engaged in sabotage and attacked both coalition forces and those locals cooperating with them?much like today's Baathist and Fedayeen remnants." I suppose the extent to which you can call this a comparison depends on what nuance you want to give "much like", but it would be drawing a long bow to insist that this is a claim of parity. Securiger 08:56, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

First of all, I agree with you that the article has digressed too much into modern politics. And I still think that it can be edited to satisfy both of us, if maybe only by cutting out this tangent entirely.

I concur, and will attempt to avoid any reference to it. I'm pretty happy with your current edits, with just a couple of comments:
  • (1) Werwolf was a Nazi construct and not a durable insurgency. I'm a bit puzzled by what you mean by this one. You seem to be suggesting that Nazis necessarily could not establish a durable insurgency. If so, surely that's speculation?
What I meant was not that it necessarily couldn't, but that it decidedly didn't. I should rephrase this; what I had in mind is that whether by fate or by choice, German surrender severed the umibilical cord of Werwolf and that it withered by the month afterwards. - Greg
  • (2) Especially after German surrender, Werwolf had a mythological reputation, perhaps deliberately fostered by its name. And also fostered by deliberate propaganda. I already mentioned this in passing, but it should bear emphasis that they were actively claiming all sorts of things as Werwolf operations, many of which probably were not.
I agree with you almost completely, and I agree that it should be stated better. I would only say that in this case, Nazi propaganda was reinforced by an Allied tendency to see ghosts. - Greg
  • I'd like to add (5) and (6) (or put them before your (4), if you like, and feel free to tinker): "(5) Germans had just endured 5 years of total war, suffering 4.5 million dead, and for the most part just wanted peace" and "(6) By early March 1945, it had become clear that delaying the Western Allies would just give the Soviets a larger share of Germany." Securiger 16:57, 25 Nov 2004 (UTC)
Your point (5) is really part of what I had in mind for point (1). Your point (6) is well taken, although it should not come last since I would like this paragraph to follow chronological order. Confusion between wartime Werwolf and postwar Werwolf is related to the current "Iraq disease" in the United States. After Thanksgiving break I will think about revising this paragraph a bit more. - Greg

That said, I'm going to stick to my guns on the whole Rice, Rumsfeld, and Benjamin issue. I've read Benjamin's article three times now, and I have Rice's and Rumsfeld's speeches in front of me as well. I just don't see your point about Benjamin "attacking a straw man". At the end of the day, Rice and Rumsfeld couldn't care less about Werwolf; their jobs depended and still depend on the outcome in Iraq. They were clearly trying to influence public thinking about the war on terrorism in general and the invasion of Iraq in particular; otherwise they wouldn't waste people's time with history lessons. It wasn't fair pool to only worry about how widely quoted Daniel Benjamin was, moreover to drop that he once worked for Clinton. Rice and Rumsfeld were even more widely quoted, and of course they also have political appointments.

"to only worry about"? My one sentence summary was - I believe - critical of exagerrated impressions given by both parties. That is, it stated that Werwolf did not provide "any significant military impediment to the occupiers", but that it did not amount to next to nothing. I added that comment about Benjamin because he is completely unknown in my country, and at the time "Daniel Benjamin" was a redlink; by comparison Rice and Rumsfeld are household names, and also have extensive articles. Securiger 16:57, 25 Nov 2004 (UTC)
I believe you that the impression of your comments to an American like me is unintentional. I think that you just may not realize the extent to which the Bush administration has exploited the history of World War II to rationalize the situation in Iraq -- while denouncing any comparison to Vietnam as gross ignorance. If you want to start to really get it, read Rumsfeld's speech (linked just below) from beginning to end, and then imagine many more similar comments from Bush, Rice, Cheney, on Fox News, etc. I can see your point that in the abstract, Daniel Benjamin's comments were strange. But in context, they weren't so bad. What Benjamin meant was that if you take only the postwar existence of Werwolf, it was "next to nothing" compared to the current war in Iraq. And that's just true. --Greg Kuperberg 16:26, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)

"Does this sounds familiar?" was not Rumsfeld's "only apparent reference to Iraq" in his full speech. He referred to both Iraq and Germany all over the speech; see [1]. He explicitly used the "Nazi dead-enders" to argue that victory in Iraq is both righteous and inevitable. Moreover, this is against a background of frequent Bush administration references to World War II, starting with the "Axis of Evil", conveniently another trio of belligerent regimes. They want to inflate the war on terrorism to World War II because they want fiscal and diplomatic carte blanche, and they are equally eager to prove that the invasion of Iraq will have a happy ending.

For those more directly interested in Werwolf, I think that you're mostly right that none of this needs to be mentioned. Still, there is a danger in exaggerating Werwolf just by dwelling on it, even more so if you give a laundry list of tactics without a quantitative assessment. Your most quantitative statement was the concluding sentence, "The more conventional view is that while Werwolf was too disorganised to provide any significant military impediment to the occupiers, it delayed economic reconstruction and democritisation by three or four years." Conventional according to who? It took four years to restore German sovereignty. But how much of these four years were a "delay", how much delay could be attributed to anti-occupation violence, and how much of that violence could be attributed to Werwolf?

The problem of mental exaggeration of Werwolf is compounded further by the Bush administration's politicized historical references. I have been told several times that I just don't know postwar German history if I think that the invasion of Iraq is going badly. So I think that it definitely would be useful to point out that Werewolf was far smaller than many other anti-American insurgencies, e.g., the Phillipines, Vietnam, and Iraq. It would also be useful to say that Werwolf before surrender was much stronger than Werwolf after surrender,

Well, I already had "then largely dismantled by Heinrich Himmler and Wilhelm Keitel in the last few weeks of the war." Securiger

and that Werwolf after surrender was exaggerated by wild attributions and urban rumor. I cannot accept Rice's assertion that Werwolf was "much like" the Iraqi insurgency either quantitatively or qualitatively. Other than that they were both anti-American, anti-occupation insurgencies, they have almost nothing in common. (I also don't see what is so terrible about Daniel Benjamin's column, but we don't have to go there.)

On the other hand, I will grant you that my LA Times reference is also tangential and weak in that it is not freely accessible. You can read it in the Google Usenet Database [2].

--Greg Kuperberg 14:47, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I rewrote the last section again to at least make it better. My goal was to make the last section sufficiently neutral, factual, and germane to make it acceptable to all sides. I would prefer that to deleting it outright.

Generally quite acceptable to me. See above for comments. Securiger 16:57, 25 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Along the way I did notice that Rice recycled her werewolf lines for another speech, this one to a group of black journalists [3].

--Greg Kuperberg 15:32, 23 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Factual accuracy[edit]

I think that the factual accuracy problem has been addressed, and the Iraq distraction has also been handled better. So I am removing the accuracy warning. --Greg Kuperberg 14:33, 3 Dec 2004 (UTC)

The entry states that "no effort was ever made by the Nazi leadership to develop an insurgency to continue fighting in the event of defeat". Yet the subsequent references make it clear that the Werwolf was developed - though to fight in the rear as the allies advanced, not just in the event of defeat. I suggest that the fallacy that the organization did not exist - because Nazi leaders could not envisage defeat - be deleted.203.184.41.226 (talk) 06:34, 15 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Operations[edit]

The mayor of Aachen was killed by an SS-Commando as a result of an order given by Heinrich Himmler. This was not a spontaneous action by locals. Nikolai Berzarin did die in a traffic accident – driving a motorbike is still unsafe today, imagine how it must have been in 45- or he was assassinated by Stalin if you prefer a conspiracy theory. The part about Major John Poston seaks for itself.

Bottom line this whole section is full of unknowns, unprovens and speculation, not information. Markus Becker02 18:14, 20 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Please don't delete or revert anything that displeases you without providing support for your opinion. The author you are deleting is a known author and academic, and we know nothing about you that would indicate that you're more knowledgeable about this topic. Explain your position here, as described in WP:XFD before deleting anything Hoserjoe 06:12, 29 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Did you bother to read the US Army´s official history of the occupation of Germany? One get´s a somewhat different picture of the so-called german insugency. Furtheremore none, but one historian makes the claim a german insugency existed in the first place and last but not least all the politicians started to talk about it only after the shit hit the fan in Iraq. So what about you providing some facts to back up your claims?Markus Becker02 09:21, 29 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The Penzberg massacre can hardly count as a werwolf operation, because it was conducted before the war ended in german held territory. The local city council wanted to surrender, the Nazis found out and the Army executed eight people. That some loacal Nazis led by an SA official killed anoher eight. No insurgents here.Markus Becker02 09:36, 29 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I have reverted your disrespectful deletions. Please don't abuse the Wikipedia forum in this manner. You are being destructive assuming that your opinion is correct. Please read the welcome page to learn more about editing etiquette. Hoserjoe 06:06, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, as long as there are no facts to back up something, it does not belong here. So give us facts, like dates, names, units and places. So far these newspaper articles are just making some unspecific claims. Disprove the US Army´s official history and dozen of historians!Markus Becker02 10:20, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Werwolf exagerated[edit]

In a pervious history I have read that Werwolf was a "fiasco". This stands to reason. Hitler and Goebbels were often victims of their own propaganda. Naziism had a lot less staying power than they wanted to believe. They may have thought that they could duplicate the effectiveness of the partisans efforts against the Nazis on the eastern front in reverse. While in some parts of the Soviet Union the Nazis were initially greated as liberators, e.g. some part of the Ukraine, the populous would have soon been disabused of their mistake. The vast majority of citizens in countries under Nazi domination wanted them out, and many risked and/or gave-up their lives fighting the occupation as partisans and irregulars. At that late stage of the war (1945) Hitler was grasping at straws, his thinking more and more fantastic (which he was prone to all along). If Hitler, Goebbels, and other prominent Nazis thought that their own people would rise up behind enemy lines in the same way, they were sadly mistaken. Werwolf was little more than a fanciful gimmick borne of desperation. Once the Nazis were gone people were relieved. There was even a party in the Füher bunker after Hitler's suicide, and an air of euphoria. Comparsons are odius, but are not Bush & Rice victims of their own propaganda. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 4.178.105.81 (talk) 19:40, 18 March 2007 (UTC).[reply]


Contradiction warnings[edit]

Mostly the article acknowledges that there is next to no evidence of actual resistance to the allied occupation in post war Germany, but recently some users have been warning up the " insurgency in Germany"-theory, providing sources like newspaper articles that give either false or only vague information. Except for one historian none has so far considered the Werewolf much more that a propaganda ploy. As a result parts of the article contradict itself, hence the warning.Markus Becker02 08:30, 3 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

You should have worked on making clear that there are two conflicting positions, rather that trying to remove information that does not conform to your pet position on the matter. Especially removing sourced information [4] is considered vandalism in Wikipedia. Please do not do so again.
Beevor and Ziemke seem to argue that the werwolf was nothing, while Biddiscombe argues they were more influential and long lived.
Biddiscombe wrote a book on the topic of the werewolves, so he should be regarded as the pre-eminent expert on the subject.
Now, Beevor wrote a book focusing the Battle for Berlin, not really something that indicates he devoted much attention to the post-surrender resistance movement. Ziemke on the other hand wrote a story of the U.S. army in the occupation of Germany. The customer who paid him for writing that book is as far as I know the same army. From what I've read in it I'm doubtful about its accuracy.
What exactly has Ziemke written about the Werewolves? If he has written little, is that "fact" really of any value?
From Reading books such as Vladimir Petrov, "Money and conquest; allied occupation currencies in World War II" I know that the U.S. troops behaved atrociously, with plunder and black market activities. They sent home twice as much money each month than they were receiving in wages. A picture corroborated by sources such as this [5].
Does Ziemke mention any of this, or does he perform a whitewash by pretending everything was just fine? Reading Várdy, Steven Béla and Tooly, T. Hunt: "Ethnic Cleansing in Twentieth-Century Europe" ). Columbia University Press, (2003) ISBN 0-88033-995-0 bSection: by Richard Dominic Wiggers, "The United States and the Refusal to Feed German Civilians after World War II" I learned about the deliberate policy of starvation for the German population. Does Ziemke mention any of that?
Since Beevor and Biddiscombe seem to be the real sources of information for this article, we should try to make sure we clearly state what each of them has said on the topic. Sourcing everything. E.g. according to Biddiscombe this was a werewolf assassination, while Beevor claims it was a traffic accident.
As to the articles providing "false or vague information", what is your expertise to be able to judge that? It seems to me the articles depend on the two aforementioned authors, sometimes without knowing that there are two positions on th subject. For example the fire breathing author of this link that you added [6] seems blissfully unaware of Biddiscombes work, relying instead on Beevor and Ziemke too "prove" that National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rices description of the werewolves was completelyy wrong. My impression is that either Rice had read Biddiscombe, or had access to other unpublished information. If we're going to clean out "false" articles, this one's gotta go as well.--Stor stark7 Talk 01:09, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
What sourced information are you talking about? The one of one author taking a completely different position than dozens of others during the previous five decades? They either say it was a PR ploy or don´t consider it worth mentioning. One book and the words of some politicians spoken after the insurgency in Iraq began is poor prove. And as far as the US troops are concerned, they bought cigaretts for a low price in a PX and sold them at market prices to Germans. Can´t they the Germans were unhappy about this.Markus Becker02 04:21, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Markus Becker, you appear to be playing the part of a nazi sympathizer and intent on deleting anything contrary to your opinion that the German people were merely innocent shop-keepers and victims, and that the brutal American terror-mongers were the real villains. The logical conclusion is that it's all GW Bush's fault, and the Werwolf were just a small theatrical group working for Steven Spielberg?! Am I reading your position correctly? Correct me if I'm wrong, please. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 154.20.134.124 (talkcontribs).
Usually I don´t feed trolls, but I noticed you still can not back up your claims with any hard facts. So where are the dates, names, units and places of Werwolf attacks I asked for days ago? And I expect a bit more than a newspaper article that can or does not want to distinguish between wartime and post-war era, the Volkssturm and the so-called Werwolf. The names fo the 180 unfortunate GIs to die of poisoned booze would be a nice start.Markus Becker02 15:14, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

First, its obvious that this article has been crap, and will remain as crap, until someone actually goes and reads what Beevor (presumably not very much of relevance) and Biddiscombe wrote and inserts those facts into the article together with proper citations. It would also be good if the editors of this article learned that you don't put links to external sites inline, you make it very clear to the reader when you are directing him to an external source instead of another wikipedia page. Reading up on NPOV and "no original research" would also come in handy. And also no vandalism of sourced material, unless you're itching for a block! By the way, Markus Becker02, care to name those dozens of historians, and exactly what they wrote to contradict the source? if not then I'm sorry but they don't count.

If Biddiscombe had been anywhere close to being wrong then someone would have written a book to challenge him by now, its been what, 10 years already. No such book, ergo...

I strongly recommend that you read these two articles, Markus:

I have the feeling that you read this article:

And then for some reason decided that it was some sort of gospel, not to be challenged. Well it has been, decisively. I'll come back and clean out this article once I have Biddiscombes book.

And about cigaretes and unhappy Germans, I expect I cant tell you to read a book on the subject and expect it to hapen, but there are a handful of contemporary sources on the German situation available for reading online.

I'll be back.--Stor stark7 Talk 18:53, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I´ll start with Mathias Färber(ISBN 3 8122 3001 1) . Under "Werwolf and Alpenfestung" he states that the Werwolf was supposed to be made up of HJ-Members, failed to materialize but cause great worries among the Allies, just like the myth of the Alpenfestung. And thanks for confirming what I said all along. Your first links says the death of about 40 GIs was attributed to insurgents. IIRC the time frame was six month, which means a laughable 6.6 death per month. I fully agree with the conclusion that “If the Nazis had been better organized, the Werwolf might well have given World War II GIs as much trouble as the thugs in Iraq are generating now.” Problems is they weren´t and they didn´t. The book review falsely attributes the Oppenhoff-killing to the Werwolf, again. And I found one, you might be interested in: http://www.amazon.com/Werwolf-National-Socialist-Guerrilla-1944-1946/dp/0802008623/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_b/102-4901583-0780928 Markus Becker02 20:40, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Zweiter Weltkrieg in Bildern", Are you asking me to read a German picture book? I'm sure the pictures will be nice, but does the author have any scholarly degree? Has he done any actual research besides selecting stunning pictures, or is he just regurgitating what someone else may have said in connection to the pretty pictures he assembled?
I have never claimed that werewolf managed to kill many people, all I've claimed is that it was relatively long-lived. Besides, psychological impact can be far greater that actual physical damage done.
I don't know anything about Oppenhoff, but I do know that the text in this article attributing it to Himlers SS commandos is unsourced. I also noticed in the reviews you pointed me to, although written by anonymous laymen, that werewolf was first established as part of Himmler's SS, so attributing the death to the werewolf may not be a stretch, if indeed it was the SS that did it.
I don't understand this constant comparison with Iraq by the way. If you want to kill the insurgency in Iraq then do it the way you did in Germany, cut the civilian food rations down to the level where people don't even have the strength to work, much less the strength to make trouble.
I may be off-line for a while, but I'll get back to the werewolf topic.--Stor stark7 Talk 21:15, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Färber happened to be right on hand, could check the library, but he sums up the others, if they cared to mention that pathetic movement. And the "psychological impact can be far greater that actual physical damage done" - no one agrees more than I, this whole article is living prove of it. They killed like 40 GIs at beast and get this much attention. Anyway, you have disproved claims the Werwolf was a serious threat and that´s all I ever intended to do. Case closed I say.Markus Becker02 21:38, 4 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

In "Armageddon" Max Hastings writes a few sentences about the Werwolf, too. He states Brits and Americans encountered negliable resistance, the Russians faced juvenile snipes more often, but he attributes that to the bad treatment of civilians by the latter. How much of the russians reports can be attributed to communist paranoia is not known, but said paranoia was quite huge. I also have (typo) read Bevoors book and I can´t even remember him having written anything about the Werwolf. I´ll check that later. Markus Becker02 04:50, 5 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree that the comparison between the 'werwolf' and the Iraqi insurgency is completely incorrect, the Soviets faced some low level insurgencies in eastern europe, the US or other western allies did not. It is however true that attacks on US troops were ruthlessly supressed and US intelligence officers had unlimited powers to arrest and detain anyone after the war, read this interesting article [7] on how the US captured Standartenfuhrer Wilhelm Zander, Martin Bormans associate, which included arresting his mother and sister. Bleh999 10:11, 7 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Warewolf is also referred to in "Kommando" by James Lucas (2003). The chapter on it is very brief and I dont really get the idea that there was a widespread organized "french resistance" type movement. Lucas writes that there *were* instances of German civilizans (even young boys) who took pot shots at the occupying allies and there was more determined resistance, at least against the Russians. But such recountings by Lucas really seem to me to be isolated insidents by a few ex-soldiers or individuals who decided to attack the allies for whatever reason. Warewolf seems to be up there with the "Bravarian Redoubt." Yes, some patriotic or crazed Germans did snipe at allied soldiers from time to time but whether they were acting as part of some German Underground, it doesn't seem likely. Lucas' book includes photographs of two young boys who were supposedly imprisoned "for life" for Warewolf activities. He gives no followup (and no names) but I have a feeling these boys were released after a period of imprisonment, probably in 1952 when West Germany released en masse a great number of Germans imprisoned at the end of World War II. Yanqui9 (talk) 23:55, 16 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Werwolf vs. Wehrwolf[edit]

I was wondering which was the correct name. I vaguely remember reading somewhere that it was "Wehrwolf", which was a pun. The "Wehr" part means something along the lines of "struggle" or "defense". —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.98.26.175 (talk) 15:27, 3 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Wolverine[edit]

Wolverine is in German Vielfraß. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.176.236.140 (talk) 23:25, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Edelweißpiraten[edit]

I have deleted the following from the text:

Similar organizations[edit]

From 1946 onward the Edelweiss Piraten (Edelweiss Pirates) were regarded as a more serious menace to order than the Werwolf by US officials. Mainly made up of former members and officers of Hitler Youth units, ex-soldiers and drifters, the loosely organized Edelweiss Piraten was described by an intelligence report as "a sentimental, adventurous, and romantically anti-social [movement]". A raid in March 1946 captured 80 former German officers who were members, and who possessed a list of 400 persons to be liquidated, including Wilhelm Hoegner, the prime minister of Bavaria. Further members of the group were seized with caches of ammunition and even anti-tank rockets.[1]

Please see Edelweiss Pirates and, if you speak German, de:Edelweißpiraten. The Edelweißpiraten were a youth group fighting against the Nazis, they were hunted by the Gestapo and several were murdered by them. I can't understand who it is possible, that the part I removed came in this article (in this form), I only could understand it as the result of a (really bad) missunderstanding by the US Army. If there is any trouth in it, please rewrite the text before adding it again. Writing: "Mainly made up of former members and officers of Hitler Youth units, ex-soldiers and drifters [...]" is a seriouse insult to this young boys and girls.

References

  1. ^ Fritz, Stephen G. (2004). Endkampf: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Death of the Third Reich. University Press of Kentucky. pp. pp. 218 – 219. ISBN 0813123259. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)

Simply not true[edit]

I have deleted this, because it's false: Also worth mentioning in this regard are the so-called Forest Brothers of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, an anti-Soviet guerrilla movement largely consisting of ex-Waffen SS unit soldiers. Forest Brothers movement consisted largely of local patriots, and not of former SS members. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.56.29.148 (talk) 13:22, 6 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"War Crimes" section[edit]

There are a number of factoids in there that simply can't be true. For example, a supposed "destruction of Bruchsal for SS activities" is cited - Bruchsal was bombarded by the USAF, true, but there can't be any connection with any orders drawn up "in April 1945" : the bombardment was on March 1st (aimed at the main railway node in the region), followed by French troops capturing the city on April 2nd. US forces didn't enter the town until early April either, and there was simply nothing left to "destroy". The section also indiscriminately mixes supposed COIN actions by US, Soviet, British, Canadian and French forces. Considering the above on Bruchsal, i'd suggest a second source being found for every single factoid in that section (all only sourced on Biddiscombe), or the entire section summarily removed. 89.56.147.190 (talk) 00:05, 20 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]

There's clearly a POV bias in this section also... I just removed text "Due to harsh repression such as that" and cleaned up the sentence it was from so it was grammatically correct following the text removal. I'd thus agree that unless cross-referencing confirms these assertations within a reasonable time frame, they should be deleted. 124.169.203.4 (talk) 06:28, 11 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Reprisal section[edit]

I have added text explaining the connection to the basis for the reprisals and how they were connected to the Werwolf. This latest revert by Yopie (talk · contribs) shows that the user is acting out of reflex. How is it that information taken from a book that solely deals with the topic of Werwolf, the biggest and pretty much unique modern book on the topic, from a chapter entitled Western Allied and Soviet Reactions to the Werwolf, information that had been complemented with background information on Allied fears and how these affected actions from that same chapter, is deleted without even an explanation at talk? This latest deletion where the user also deleted requests for citations and a "further reading" list shows that the editor can not be in earnest. I will expect a good explanation or I will seek administrator intervention.--Stor stark7 Speak 19:55, 2 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Simply, "reprisals" are not in direct connection with Werwolf activity. In article is clearly stated, that "A number of instances of post-war violence have been attributed to Werwolf activity, but none have been proven. If there was not Werfolf activity, there wasn't "reaction" against them, understand? Again, none of cited "reprisals" were in direct connection with Werwolf organisation. Please, move your text in another article, as "Postwar reprisals in Germany".--Yopie (talk) 23:17, 2 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
May I remind you that the sentence you site comes from a wikipedia article, is unsourced, and it might even be you who wrote it? the sentence you quote is actually worse than useless. The sourced text I inserted on the other hand, that you deleted, comes from the authoritative work on the topic, and relates to the topic. Maybe the reprisals were not always for werwolf activity, it does not matter, since I've shown that the reprisal policy was planned before the occupation since the allies expected werwolf activity, and also relevant since the allies when conducting reprisals believed they were reprising against werwolf. It is therefore very relevant to this article.--Stor stark7 Speak 10:36, 3 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Article is about Werwolf, not about unconnected replisals. A you explicitly says "the reprisals were not always for werwolf activity", so, please, find what actions of Allied military were connecdet with werwolfs.--Yopie (talk) 22:13, 9 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
You are promoting a very rigid way of writing articles, I would dare to say narrow-minded. The events are more than sufficiently connected to werewolf in that the soldiers followed orders developed for dealing with werewolf, and the orders were carried out in belief they were dealing with werewolf, which in some cases they probably were. That makes them very relevant as context for an article on werwolf. You have absolutely no support in Wiki policy for your deletion, please desist in your disruptive behavior.--Stor stark7 Speak 23:25, 9 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Response to Third Opinion Request:
Disclaimers: I am responding to a third opinion request made at WP:3O. I have made no previous edits on Werwolf and have no known association with the editors involved in this discussion. The third opinion process (FAQ) is informal and I have no special powers or authority apart from being a fresh pair of eyes. Third opinions are not tiebreakers and should not be "counted" in determining whether or not consensus has been reached. My personal standards for issuing third opinions can be viewed here.

Opinion: I cannot agree that the disputed section has no place in this article. It would appear that Biddiscombe — which appears to be, prima facie, a reliable source — supports the suggestion that the greatest effect of Werwolf was not its real military actions but the effect that the fear of it had upon the Allies. That connection is asserted in the first two paragraphs of the disputed section, but the remainder of the section fails to provide any evidence between the specific reprisals cited in those following paragrames and Werwolf, except that (a) Biddiscombe's book is primarily about Werwolf and (b) that the material comes from that book. While that is pretty tenuous, WP:AGF requires us to presume that Biddiscombe does, in fact, somehow connect the specific reprisals with Werwolf since the editor who is asserting the disputed edit is clearly suggesting, at least by implication, that Biddiscombe does connect them. If someone checks Biddiscombe and discovers that he fails to specifically link Werwolf and the specific reprisals, then that can be raised as an objection to them here at that time, but that will not justify removal of the section as a whole, just the removal of the specific reprisals if consensus can be obtained to remove them. Warning to both editors: There have been at least three out-and-out reversions of the disputed section since this dispute began a few days ago. The edit war policy makes it quite clear that an edit war can exist even if the three revert rule has not been violated. This is an edit war and must stop right now. If it does not, you may be blocked from editing or the article protected against further editing, or both.

What's next: Once you've considered this opinion click here to see what happens next.—TRANSPORTERMAN (TALK) 20:10, 10 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

  • I agree with TransporterMan opinion. We need check every Allied action, if was in connection with Werwolfs. --Yopie (talk) 10:44, 11 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • I have not edited this article either and wish to state, on the surface, what appears to be happening is mass deletions of apparently sourced material based on personal feelings of users. The most recent reversion stated "per talk" [8] when nowhere was it agreed upon to blank the entire disputed section, leading to a very clear misrepresentation in the edit summary. If there are specifics about the material that are disputed, they should be listed here and/or appropriate tags placed in the article. However, I do not think this section should simply be blanked without cause. -OberRanks (talk) 16:57, 15 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Concur with Stor stark7 and OberRanks here and here. I expanded the section with the respective Soviet actions. Skäpperöd (talk) 08:11, 16 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Text does not sound objective[edit]

The text sounds whiny, constantly reminding us the subject was of no consequence and blaming the Werwolf for subsequent actions taken by the Allies. I thought Wikipedia strove for neutrality; readers can make their own biases. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.83.186.248 (talk) 00:14, 11 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Actually you are right. Although I am no right wing sympathiser (I'm a mason so probably would have been disposed of during the war) it does seem that French/Norwegian/Polish resistance movement = good and showed spirit of freedom, whereas Werwolf = pointless and made for greater hardship for German people. Such a claim can be applied to ALL resistance and insurgent movements. However this is just the bias of modern history, in time, passions will die down and will be analysed in a strictly impartial manner as ancient history is.
Absolutely. They would have come for you under something like Nacht und Nebel like they tried to do to my great-grandfather in Bremen, who was also a mason. Ive got something to add though, and I dont exactly have the source text, though I know it was in there. One of the first Operator's Training Course instructors for the US Army's Combat Applications Group, or Delta Force as they're commonly known, had been a Werwolf by his own admission (he was a child at the time) and was caught trying to steal weapons from an American depot in 1945 after the surrender. I believe his name was Major Altmann. Its anecdotal, and second-hand but it is in CSM Eric Haney's "Inside Delta Force", though Colonel Charles A. Beckwith also mentions him in his book "Delta Force" as "Herman the German" because he was still in the Army at the time of its publication in 1983. I believe Major Logan Fitch may have also mentioned him in one of his many interviews whining about Colonel Beckwith and LTCOL James Kyle during the 80's. But this is super murky stuff and you'd probably have to get someone from CAG who was in back then to talk to you about it, which would probably take some doing. CSM Haney's the best bet really. Major Fitch (if he's still alive) may also prove enlightening. Neither of them really care anymore about protecting CAG's secrets from back then from what I gather. I just dont know if it would be considered verifiable, which is a shame considering its probably as close as you'd get to confirming that Werwolf existed. Im kind of a guerilla here at WP so I dont really play the game or care about the rules, but I can tell you its something at least sort of notable.

97.102.50.208 (talk) 04:20, 30 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

RE: Werewolf "I.D. Badges"? Real or just a hype?[edit]

Have seen have one! So called Werewolf I.D. Badge Skull on Black shiled with a "W" at bottom! In copper color is this for real or just a hype to make money? Pin is about an inch long.Thanks! WEREWOLFID (talk) 03:51, 13 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Dubious claims of Allied reprisals[edit]

Although Biddiscombe (1998) claims that the towns of Sögel, Jarmin (Jarmen) and Bruchsal were "demolished" by Allied troops in reprisal for SS or Werwolf activities, a search of the histories of these towns in both English and German does not confirm this. Bruchsal was bombed on March 1, 1945 and much of the town was destroyed at that time. However, film footage from May 20 1945 shows a German war criminal being hanged there, and one wonders if "U.S. combat troops" would still have destroyed the town at that late date, after the war. Anyone have any evidence for this besides Biddiscombe? Cmacauley (talk) 15:42, 11 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Furthermore, it seems unclear whether any of these were actual reprisals resulting from Werwolf activities, although Biddiscombe obviously thinks there was some connection. Delete this section entirely? Cmacauley (talk) 20:01, 11 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]

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A mess[edit]

This article is a mess. Werwolf was partly a propaganda label, and partly a plan for commando operations. It was never a mass underground movement leading all Germans fighting a rearguard action against the Allies. The name meant different things at different times. The article needs to be more logically arranged.

The statement that "as it became clear that the reputedly impregnable Alpine Fortress, from which operations were to be directed by the Nazi leadership in the event that the rest of Germany was occupied, was yet another delusion. Werwolf was converted into a terrorist organisation in the last few weeks of the war" is confused and wrong. The Alpine Fortress had nothing to do with Werwolf. Werwolf was no converted into a terrorist organization, it was always a military formation.Royalcourtier (talk) 04:41, 7 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

In popular culture section[edit]

Preserving here by proving this link; pls see edit summary for rationale. Please let me know if there are any concerns. K.e.coffman (talk) 22:08, 11 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Hülchrath[edit]

Distance to Grevenbroich is 11 Kilometers; to Erkelenz about 30 Kilometers. Ergo: Hülchrath-Castle is near Grevenbroich. Grevenbroich was town of district. Fibe101 (talk) 20:58, 19 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Unhistorical rewriting[edit]

At some point this article was rewritten to give supreme importance to a single American post-war historian that claims that Radio Werwolf was not even connected to the Werwolf units. Seeing that Radio Werwolf announded Werwolf actions even before the surrender of Germany, this seems unhistorical and unlikely. There is no documentation to show that "it was an independent station operated by Goebbels", this is pure speculation or rather invention. Other historians don't follow this view, yet why are they ignored in favor of the single one? A good article would discuss this as a "controversy" and not put it as an established, known or agreed-upon fact. 190.16.115.133 (talk) 05:38, 9 June 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Other resistance to the Allied occupiers[edit]

This article omits mention of a more serious threat (well, relatively speaking) to the Allies in Germany, the presence of fanatical SS members & small groups of soldiers who either were left behind to sabotage Allied supply lines, or refused to surrender, or simply were separated from their units & preyed upon farmers for their food. (Biddiscombe, used in this article, documents their activities which were at their apex in April/May 1945, & gradually in the following months.) The existence of these small groups, most of which disintegrated before the end of winter 1945/6, were never a serious threat to the occupying armies, but made it dangerous for soldiers to travel thru parts of the countryside alone or in small groups. Supposedly these continued in their activities as late as 1947, increasingly motivated to survive & avoid justice than to promote Fascism.

Perhaps this would be better discussed in a separate article, but the German army -- especially the SS units -- did not uniformly & obediently acquiesce to defeat, surrender, & possible punishment for their war crimes. -- llywrch (talk) 00:57, 24 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]