Like the Spanish Blue Division and the Spanish Blue Legion, the Spanische-Freiwillegen
Kompnie der SS was made up entirely of volunteers in the true sense of the
word. As Franco wanted to withdraw all support for Germany in case the Allies
saw fit to invade Spain, he decided to disband the Spanish Blue Division
and shortly after, the Spanish Blue Legion. However, despite this there
were still a number of Spaniards who were willing to fight alongside the
Germans in their battle against the Soviets. With the disbandment of their
unit in March 1944 they faced the option of either returning to Spain or
volunteering for a new Spanish unit. Recruitment for this unit was to be
as secretive as possible in order to prevent Franco from intervening and ordering
a stop to it. How could they do this? Well much of the recruitment took place
in Spain at Falange meetings and among Blue Division veterans.
Two Belgian
légionnaires serving in the Wallonie, Alphonse Van Horembeke and
Paul Kehren, both veterans of the Franquist armies during the Spanish civil
war, were entrusted with the recruitment campaign among the Spaniards residing
in the Reich.
After the Division
Azul and the subsequent Spanish Legion had been disbanded , a number of
Spaniards, for different reasons, did not to return to Spain. Some of them
worked for the Sauckel or Speer organizations, others had joined the Wehrmacht, some had been imprisoned on grounds of unauthorized and illegal stay in
Germany.
Some Spaniards refused to be repatriated at all, though their numbers
alone were too few to make a significant contribution to Germany's forces.
By the end
of March 1944 Alphonse Van Horembeke, - at that moment a clerk in the Provincial
Delegation of the Falange Youth Front at Vizcaya, Spain, - was asked to take
care of the Spaniards scattered all over the Reich. The plan consisted in
sending two confidential agents to Germany with the mission to contact as
many Spaniards as possible with a view to enrolling them into the Waffen-SS,
more particularly the Flemish 27.SS-Frw.Gr.Div. Langemarck. The Flemish
formation had been chosen above any other unit because the Azul and the Langemarck
had been engaged side by side on the Leningrad front from 1941 to 1943. Together
with his companion, Juan Beltrán de Guevera, Van Horembeke arrived
at Versailles/Paris where his comrade left him to join a group of
Germans and Rumanians, leaving Van Horembeke in the lurch. Nevertheless
the latter continued the mission on his own and reported at the Langemarck
enlistment office in Lichterfelde West/Berlin. As he spoke neither German
nor Flemish he was advised to enroll in the Wallonie.
The Spanish border was closely guarded and the potential recruits for
this new SS unit had first to "escape" over the border to France. Border
guards were under strict orders to shoot on sight any absconders and although
many of these guards were sympathetic to their cause their duty came first
for fear of their careers and families. Many recruits were shot as they attempted
to cross the border into France. Those that made it were sent to a recruiting
stations which had been specially set up for this task.
This new recruiting unit (Sonderstab "F") was set up with offices in
Andorra, Puigcerdá, Port Bou, Hendaye and the Staff headquarters
were situated at the holy town of Lourdes. From there they were translated
to Stablack in Oriental Prusia, Truppenburgplatz in the south of Köenigsberg,
and Hall Tirol, near Innsbruck.
This recruiting unit was headed by Dr. Edwin Haxel who had previously
held a liaison position in the old Spanish Blue Division.
In one week in January 1944, over 100 Spaniards presented themselves at
the German embassy in Madrid, attempting to volunteer for military service.
As they dribbled across the border, alone or in small groups, these Spanish
recruits were taken by train to a holding camp near Versailles, until they
reached 300 in number by May 1944
.
The Foreign Ministry was also well aware that recruitment of Spaniards
occurred in Spain as well as in occupied Europe.
The Deutsche Arbeitsfront-DAF (German Labor Front) office in Madrid, which
formerly had contracted workers openly, was responsible for much of this
recruitment, providing papers, funds, and directions to Spaniards wishing
to enlist in the Nazi cause. The Spanish Foreign Ministry also suspected
that elements of the Falange were aiding Nazi recruitment efforts. In August
1944 one of the foreign minister's deputies sent a letter to Falangist secretary-general
Jose Luis Arrese, asking if the party knew anything about a group of 400
young falangistas allegedly preparing to leave Spain for France to join German
occupation forces there .
From
April 1944 on, other Spanish clandestine volunteers crossing the
Pyrenees gathered at Lourdes or St-Jean-de-Luz. A special unit was operating
along the French-Spanish border. At La Reine barracks in Versailles, the
volunteers were welcomed by Louis Garcia Valdajos, an Azul and Spanish
Legion veteran, detached from Stablack training centre to coordinate and
escort the first contingent to Stablack barracks.
Other source of volunteers came from Spanish workers already in Germany.
At the beginning of the war, Franco had organized the travel for 25,000 volunteer workers to
Germany. Others volunteers, still committed to the Nazi cause, joined
the Organisation Todt, a militarized labor force, one of several units of
the Waffen-SS, or a Spanish Legion within the Wehrmacht.
Valdajos took
an administrative role in the military instruction of the recruits from
April 20th to June 6 th 1944, Ezquerra being in charge
of the drill and tactics. Valdajos then went back to Paris again to attend
an SD course after which he was sent to the Normandy front
with an officer's rank. Before retreating with the German troops from France
he also participated in anti-partisan operations against Spanish republican
maquis along the Pyrenees. In September 1944 Valdajos joined Dr Faupel's
office to take care of Spanish affairs.
Those who
managed to make it to Germany from Spain
, along with dozens of other Spanish recruits from elsewhere in the III
Reich teritories, were then sent to the training base of Stablack-Sud Steinlager
in Eastern Prussia. By D-Day, just over 400 had been assembled at this center.
At Stablack, the Spaniards were divided into two battalions and deployed
to the outskirts of Vienna for eight weeks of training, led by officers who
had been liaisons between the Blue Division and the German military. From
8 June to 20 July, another 150 Spaniards joined the Batallon Fantasma (Ghost
Battalion), as the unit was called by its soldiers. The name signified two
things: first, the unit's shadowy existence in defiance of official agreements
between the German and Spanish government; and second, that knowledge of the
unit spread throughout the Spanish communities of Europe through rumor and
word of mouth rather than through official declarations.
According to the Spanish police attache in Rome, who sent back a detailed
report on the unit, the Spanish volunteers insisted to the Germans that they
did not want Spanish officers over them; this would reflect unfavorably on
the Franco regime, they feared, because Franco had promised the Allies that
no Spanish nationals would continue to fight for the Axis. As the unit developed,
it had a mix of Spanish and German junior officers, but even those who had
held commissions in the Blue Division entered the 'Ghost Battalion' as mere
enlisted soldiers, having to earn their rank through merit. The commander
of the unit was a former German army artillery officer, SS Captain Wolfgang
Graefe, who had been attached to the Blue Division .
Once the training finished, the soldiers were at first attached to Wehrmacht
units such as the 357th Mountain Division and 3rd Gebirgs Division. The
two training companies that were set up at Stablack Training camp were assigned
to anti-partisan duties in Yugoslavia in August 1944, establishing their
headquarters in Zalec. They were attached to 8th Company, 2nd Battalion 3rd
Regiment Brandenburg Division which at the time was on anti-partisan duties
in Italy. They took part in operations in Rome, Carsoli, Turni, Bevagna and
at Cita da Castello before being withdrawn to France. A small contingent was
left behind and was attached to 24th Waffen Gebirgs Division "Karstjäger".
In September 1944, one of these companies was sent to the Oriental Carpathian
Mountains, in the Bukovina region and were used as replacements for 3rd Gebirgsjäger
Division, commanded by Leutenant Panther.
While these troops underwent weeks of training to prepare them for
the front, other Spaniards were quickly committed to battle. Serving in the
Sicherheitsdienst (SD), the security service of the SS, these soldiers, some
of whom had been recruited by the Germans from among Spanish Republican exiles,
fought and spied against Spaniards in the French Resistance and against
the Allies in Normandy. The Spanish embassy in Berlin estimated that in
summer 1944 there were as many as 1,500 Spaniards working for German security
services in France.
By D-Day the Reich had recruited 450 Spaniards to serve in the
Waffen-SS. Spanish diplomats in Germany warned Madrid about this recruitment
effort repeatedly during the summer of 1944, but despite Spanish protests,
German officials in Madrid claimed ignorance of the matter or an inability
to do anything about it. While most recruits were Spaniards already living
in occupied Europe, to these must be added the 150 Spaniards who crossed into
France in June and July 1944.
About 50 Spaniards were attached to a special unit that operated around
the Pyrenees mountains against the French resistance who were active in
them until they were transferred to Otto Skorzeny's Jagdverbande 500 where
it is thought they were used against the U.S 7th Army in the Black Forest.
Near the end of the war in April, with the Reich collapsing they were earmarked
for the defense of the Alpine Redoubt which was to be Hitler's headquarters
in the mountains of Bavaria. This audacious plan never took place and the
unit scattered and fled to the Austrian mountains.
The
other Spanish company was sent to Kangfurt training camp in Austria and
later to another training camp in Vienna. This unit eventually evolved in
the Spanische-Freiwillegen Kompnie der SS 101 which was made up of
four rifle platoons and one staff platoon. The entire company which
consisted of about 140 men were sent to the 1st Battalion, 70th Panzergrenadier
Regiment of the 28th Freiwilligen Panzergrenadier Division which at that
time (February 1945) was in Pomerania.
One of these units, the 101st Company of Spanish Volunteers, fought a
desperate rearguard action near Vatra-Dornei, Romania, defending the Carpathian
mountain passes against the Red Army. Led by a German officer, this unit
contained some 200 men, mostly veterans of the Blue Division and the Spanish
labor force in Germany. During the last half of August 1944, these Spaniards
fought doggedly until the defection of Romania on 27 August. Turning their
backs to the advancing Soviets, on 31 August what was left of the 101st began
a slow retreat northwest. Fighting against attacks from both Soviet forces
and Romanian guerrillas, deserted by the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS, the unit
was caught between Soviet armies in Hungary and Romania. At the end of October,
the few dozen survivors of the unit finally reached Austria. The 101st and
its parallel unit, the 102d, were quartered together in Stockerau and Hollabrunn,
north of Vienna. The 102d had fought Tito's Yugoslav Partisans in Slovenia
and Croatia during the summer of 1944, where it was as mangled as the 101st.
After
suffering serious losses against the Soviets the division was withdrawn
to the River Oder where it formed a defensive line north of Berlin near Stettin.
The Spanish 101st Company by some strange series of events ended up as part
of the 11th SS Freiwilligen-Panzergrenadier Division "Nordland" and saw it
last action fighting in the ruins of Berlin alongside the 15th Waffen Grenadier
Division der SS
Some of the spanish of the german-croatian brigade, commanded by Colonel
Klein, joined the SS forces of Leon Degrelle, the Valone Legion. They were
400 and were integrated in the 1st Battalion. of 70th Rgmt. under the command
of Cap. Deniè. The spanish that continued in the german-croatian brigade
pass to depend of the 357th Division, displayed in Eslovaquia at the East
of Bratislava. Those that fought with Degrelle
participated in the first combats of the division ( more particularly
at Krüssow on Febr; 12th 1945 ) and
took part in the battle of Stargard in Pomerania, in german territory
. Only 60 Spaniards escaped the encirclement of Stargard ( March 4
th 1945 ). The survivors were regrouped at Scheune ( South of
Stettin ).
The volunteers in the Otto Skorzeny's Jagdverbande 500 protected the SE
front, in the german-french frontier
The Spaniards, among them Van Horembeke,
were ordered to Berlin where they were to form an Einsatz Gruppe
.
Some other ones, dispersed, went to Berlin, joining the heterogeneous
'Ezquerra Unity' .
The 21 of april they went to Berlin centre using the underground, as
all the capital was full of rubbles, destroyed vehicles, smoky ruins...
In the "apocalyptic atmosphere" of this brutal battle, Spanish accents
could be heard from the small band of Iberians remaining in Germany
. Berlin was
a hell... Ezquerra conducted his Unity till the basement of Air Ministry
and fought in strategic points: Anhalter Banhof, Moritz Platz, Potsdammer
Platz, Ubhan Anhalter... The Lte. Ocaña was made prisoner in front
of the Hotel Excelsior. They fought bravery in the siege of the Propaganda
Ministry and in the Chancellor Office. Next to the Letonian of 15th Bon.
SS they shouted his "panzerfaust" against the heavy JS-II tanks. There are
testimonies of absolute credibility, as the one of the journalist Rodriguez
del Castillo, that confirm the existence and fights of the Sturmabteilung
"Ezquerra" in the last days of the III Reich.
On May 1st the remainder
of the Einsatz Gruppe defended the Steglitz underground station and desperately
tried to link up with the remainder of the Gross Deutschland Rgt holding
the Alexander Platz underground station. They could not achieve this as Soviet
infiltration blocked Friedrich Straße underground station.
Rodriguez del Castillo, the last representation of the Spanish Embassy
in Hitler's Berlin succeed that thousand of Spanish could escape from the
hell and soviets claws with false credentials of displaced workers. Other
testimonies talk about the presence of Spaniards in the combats near Trieste
and the Brennero, under the orders of Martínez Alberich.
These Spaniards were under the command of SS-Obersturmbannführer Miguel
Ezquerra who had seen much service with the German armed forces.
He served
on the Eastern Front as a part of the 250th Spanish 'Blue Division' in action
in the Leningrad Area. With the disbandment of all Spanish units Miguel
Ezquerra was one of the Spaniards who decided to stay on. As a soldier with
no army, he volunteered for the Waffen-SS and was given a similar rank
to that of his army service (SS-Obersturmbannführer).
Miguel Ezquerra led another small unit into the Battle of the Bulge. He
and his men previously had served German counterintelligence in France.
Later called the Einheit Ezquerra (Ezquerra Unit), this formation was closely
linked to General Wilhelm Faupel, former German Ambassador to Spain, and
his Ibero-American Institute, a research center in Berlin that promoted closer
Hispano-German and Nazi-Falangist ties. In January 1945, Ezquerra was commissioned
to enlist all the Spaniards he could find into one unit, which he would
command as a Waffen-SS major. These enlistments greatly troubled the Spanish
government, which viewed with alarm news of Spaniards serving in the SS
and other Nazi organizations. Apart from the dangers confronting these men,
the Franco regime was concerned that they were still wearing the emblem
of the Blue Division, a shield with the colors of the Spanish flag, and
the word word "España" on their uniforms, an obvious and visible compromise
of Spanish neutrality. Franco ordered his diplomats remaining in Germany
to dissuade Spanish workers from joining the Waffen-SS or German armed forces,
but despite the dramatic changes in the European situation, as late as October
1944 some volunteers were still petitioning to be sent to work in Germany.
Even the Ibero-American Institute, long a stalwart ally, had turned against
the Spanish party. Still under the direction of General Faupel, in early
1944 the Institute had taken over the publication of Enlace (Liaison), a newspaper
for Spanish workers in Germany published by the Spanish embassy in Berlin
from mid-1941 to late 1943.
In the last
days of the Third Reich, his unit known as Sturmabteilung "Ezquerra", fought
with great tenacity, Ezquerra himself claims to have destroyed 25 soviet
tanks. He also claimed that he had a conference with Hitler himself who
awarded him the Ritterkreutz although he never received it due to the war
ending. He escaped from Berlin under the disguise of a Spanish worker, went
to Paris and then to the Pirineos, in Spain.
We wrote a book called "A vida o muerte en Berlín" ( Fight to live
or dead in Berlin)
. Miguel Ezquerra survived, and became a schoolteacher after the war;
many did not. Like the millions of Germans and others who laid down their
lives to preserve the Third Reich, they did so in the hopes of building
a better Europe than the one they had inherited. Whether Falangists or convinced
Nazis, the Spaniards of the Ghost Battalion defied their own government to
fight for a regime even as it collapsed around them in 1944-45.
Apart form Miguel Ezquerra, other Spanish SS members to highlight are:
Lorenzo Ocañas, that was seriously wounded in Posad, in 1941. In
1944 we crossed the frontier and enlisted in the Waffen SS. He fought in
Normandy, in the Ardennes and in the defence of Berlin d
efending the neighbourhood of the Excelcior cinema-hall near Alexander
Platz till April 28th 1945
, were he was made prisoner by the soviet troops and stayed ten years
as prisoner in the communist concentration camps; Jose Trapaga Fernandez,
that fought in the 'Blue 'Division' and later he crossed the frontier to
enlist in the SS under the orders of Jose Ortiz, that commanded an anti-partisan
unity in Yugoslavia, and died fighting against the communist of Marshall
Tito;
One
Spaniard who established a clear and indisputable record within the SS was
Rufino Luis Garcia-Valdajos. Born in 1918, he enlisted in the Blue Division
in late 1942, remaining as a volunteer until March 1944, when he remained
in Germany rather than be repatriated to Spain. He gained a position with
the SD in Paris and worked against the French Resistance until the Nazi retreat
forced him to return to Germany in late 1944. There he joined Belgian collaborator
Leon Degrelle's SS-Freiwilligen-Grenadierdivision-Wallonie (SS Wallonian
Volunteer Grenadier Division) in November 1944,
were he got the charge of Lte., commanding officer of the 3th Company
of the 1st battalion of the SS Division "Wallonie" during the offensive
in the Ardennes
.
He also fought under the command of Otto Skorzeny.
In his service record Valdajos claims he participated
in the batlles for the defence of Spandau, Tempelhof-Potzdammerplatz area
. In February 1945, Garcia-Valdajos, now an SS first lieutenant, applied
to the SS Rasse- und Siedlungshauptamt (RuSHA, Central Office for Race and
Resettlement) for permission to marry a German woman living in Berlin, Ursula
Jutta-Maria Turcke. After determining that neither Garcia-Valdajos nor his
bride had any Jewish ancestry, this permission was granted.
He was made prisoner at the end of the war by the northamerican troops,
what made him survive to the assassinations that the russian communist
made to the foreign volunteers of the Waffen SS,
and reached Spain in December 1945 after crossing Germany, Holland,
Belgium and France
While the case of Garcia-Valdajos is better documented than others
because of his request to marry a German, he was not alone in his enlistment.
Many of those who left home to enlist in the German army and Waffen-SS were
very young, some still in their teens, who essentially ran away from home
to sign up with the Germans, much to the consternation of the Franco regime.
The Spanish government's attempts to lobby the German government for the return
of these men and boys were unsuccessful. As Franco's ambassador in Berlin
informed the Spanish Foreign Ministry, Berlin was unlikely to surrender precious
laborers and soldiers to an increasingly unfriendly Madrid, especially as
these were volunteers who in many cases did not want to return to Spain.
Van Horembeke first served
in the 4th Bandera and afterwards in the 67th Cie of the 17th Bandera and
took part in the Bielsa pocket fights. Before the war Kehren had been a
member of the right wing group Légion Nationale. He joined the Franquist
armies during the Spanish civil war and served within the 'Talavera de la
Reina'. End May 1940 he took a job in the German Reichsbahn ( railways ).
He came back to Belgium to enlist in the Légion Wallonie in August
1941. As a result of friction with his superiors in general and Degrelle
in particular, he was demobilized after the Caucasus campaign. He then took
service in the Sipo-Sd of Liège and Ghent. He rejoined the Sturmbrigade
at the beginning of the 1944. Van Horembeke
was taken prisoner after the fall of Berlin. Seeing what happened to the
Spanish volunteers (one of his comrades was shot for having declared he was
Spanish), he declared himself to be Belgian. On transit from camp to camp
he finally arrived at Kovno POW camp. After the visit of an Allied Commission
Van Horembeke was sent back to Begium. He was tried by the Military Court
of Brussels and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment. In prison he taught
his fellow prisoners Spanish. Liberated in the early fifties Van Horembeke
returned to Spain and obtained Spanish citizenship.
In resume Spaniards were found within the
Div. Wallonie (were they formed the whole 3 Co ,I Btl ,SS Rgt 70 ) ,the
24th SS Karstjaeger -where they formed the whole 5th Co of the II Btl ,SS
Rgt 59 -, also within Einsatzgruppe Ezquerra in Berlin some SD
antipartisans units, within the SS Polizei Freiwilligen Bataillon BOZEN
(31 spaniards at last ) six of them within the 1 Co of the Dirlewanger
Brigade, 20 of them within the 29.SS Italian division (under
Oberscharfuehrer Camargo).
Also spanish volksdeutschen were found in many germanic SS units ,at an
individual level (sons of mixed marriages) like for instance Federico Lux,
born in Barcelona, who served within the 11th SS Nordland and died at the
Narwa fron .
In
all, during the years of 1944 - 1945 there were around 1,000 Spaniards who
had served within the ranks of the German army but who officially did not
exist due to Franco's order to disband all Spanish formations. There collective
contribution during the last year of the war was minimal when compared
to their former achievements with the Blue Division.
* The main part of this article has been taken from
Elite Forces of the Third Reich
, the rest has been translated from several spanish websites
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