Waldemar Pabst

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Waldemar Pabst
Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2005-0413-500, Waldemar Pabst.jpg
Pabst c. 1930
Born(1880-12-24)24 December 1880
Died29 May 1970(1970-05-29) (aged 89)
Other namesWaldemar der Grosse ("Waldemar the Great")
OccupationArmy officer, weapons manufacturer
Known forFreikorps leader
TitleHauptmann (self-declared Major)

Ernst Julius Waldemar Pabst (24 December 1880 – 29 May 1970) was a German soldier and political activist, involved in right-wing and anti-communist activity in both his homeland and Austria. As a serving officer Pabst gained notoriety for ordering the executions of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg in 1919 as well as for his leading role in the coterie of right-wing conspirators around Wolfgang Kapp. In Austria he played a central part in organising rightist militia groups before being deported due to his activities. Pabst subsequently faded from public life in Nazi Germany as he was never more than loosely associated with the Nazis.

Early life[]

Born in Berlin, Pabst was the son of a museum director.[1] He attended the Preußische Hauptkadettenanstalt, the training academy for officers in the Prussian Army, as a contemporary of Franz von Papen at the institution and was commissioned as an officer in 1899.[2]

Pabst saw active service in the First World War, mainly on the Western Front in Belgium and most notably at the Battle of Verdun.[2] In 1916 he was withdrawn from the front and redeployed as a member of the German General Staff.[2]

Anti-communism[]

Under the order of General Erich Ludendorff, Pabst joined the  [de] in March 1918, late in the war. As chief of general staff, Pabst converted the regiment from cavalry to infantry. The regiment would become noted as the fiercest counter-revolutionary force in Germany at the time.[3]

Pabst first came to prominence during the Communist and left-wing uprisings that immediately followed the war. As commander of the rifle guard, Captain Pabst was instrumental in such actions as the recapture of the Vorwärts building on 11–12 January 1919.[4] His actions saw him promoted to the role of Chief of Staff, and as such, effectively commander, of the Horse Guards Division, an important Freikorps unit.[5] Pabst's energetic commitment to the unit, his strong anti-communist feelings, his general distrust of the commanding officers of the army and the fact that de jure commander General  [de] had grown exhausted due to a heart condition meant that Pabst became the focus of the Division and effective leader.[6] He saw Bolshevism as a world danger and took part in anti-revolutionary activities across Germany.[7] He was also active with Russian émigrés, founding the Russian National Political Committee under the presidency of General Vasily Biskupsky.[8]

It was Pabst who gave the order that the captured Communist leaders Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht should be killed, and he would later boast that "I had them executed".[9] At the time however, his official report claimed that he had taken them into protective custody, but that they had been lost to an angry mob, a story which was quickly dismissed as fabrication.[10] However Pabst would later claim that his initial intention had been for Liebknecht to be executed by firing squad as a German but for Luxemburg to be beaten to death by an angry mob as he felt her status as a Jew meant she deserved to die in a pogrom. Ultimately however both victims were shot.[11]

Some of Pabst's lieutenants, including Horst von Pflugk-Harttung and Kurt Vogel, faced court martial for the killings although Pabst managed to ensure that his ally Wilhelm Canaris was in charge of proceedings and as a result the stiffest penalty handed down was the dismissal from service and two years imprisonment given to Vogel (whom witnesses had seen disposing of Luxemburg's body). Research by  [de] on the trial of Luxemburg's murder has used the previously restricted papers of Pabst, held by the Federal Military Archives,[12] and concluded he had been central to the plotting and cover-up of this execution. Pabst himself was not brought to court martial.[13]

Kapp Putsch[]

Pabst briefly left Germany to take on a role advising Major Alfred Fletcher, the commander of the Baltische Landeswehr in Latvia.[14] However he was soon back in Germany, and became involved in the Nationale Vereinigung (National Union), a right-wing think tank formed by Wolfgang Kapp, Erich Ludendorff and others, and was central to the group's conspiracy to establish a rightist dictatorship.[15] He served this group as secretary and supervisor of administrative affairs.[7] In July 1919, Pabst attempted to organise a coup, when he convinced his superior General  [de], the official commander of the Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division, to march on Berlin in order to crush an alleged Communist uprising. However, with the troops already in the city's suburbs, General Maercker got wind of the plot and convinced General von Hofmann that it was a bad idea. With this plan thwarted, Pabst and the conspirators shifted their attention away from the Reichswehr and on to the disillusioned veterans of the Freikorps.[16]

Pabst played a leading role in the failed Kapp Putsch and, along with Wolfgang Kapp and the Marinebrigade Ehrhardt of Hermann Ehrhardt, was named by Gustav Noske as having the main responsibility for the action, even though it actually had support from higher up in the Reichswehr.[17] In the immediate aftermath of the putsch, Pabst took refuge in Miklós Horthy's Hungary where he was soon joined by co-conspirator Walther von Lüttwitz.[18] Despite the failure of the putsch, Pabst would often speak proudly of his involvement in the episode.[19]

Austria[]

Pabst (carrying bouquet) entering Austria from Italy with Richard Steidle (bearded), c. 1930

Pabst eventually went to Austria, settling in the city of Innsbruck.[20] In Austria he linked up with the Heimwehr in Tyrol and played a central role in ensuring that the sometimes shaky dual leadership of Richard Steidle and Walter Pfrimer remained united.[21] In Austria Pabst proved vital in organising and disciplining the followers of the Heimwehr.[22] Such was his organisational skill that Pabst, who declared himself a Major after fleeing to Austria, became known as Waldemar der Grosse to his Heimwehr units.[23] He was appointed Chief of Staff of the Tyrolean Heimwehr on 1 May 1922.[23] In this role Pabst was able to organise several disparate right-wing militia groups under the single Heimwehr banner, although he was ultimately unsuccessful in fully removing local differences from what remained an eclectic movement.[24] Nonetheless Pabst was able to make contact with Benito Mussolini and was able to secure funding for the Heimwehr from him.[25]

Pabst was initially close to Johann Schober, and won his support in 1929, when he suggested repositioning the Heimwehr as a pro-government political party.[26] However Schober's attempts to convert the Heimwehr into a force for pro-government moderation soon floundered, and he ordered the deportation of Pabst, by then recognised as the main organisational force behind the Heimwehr, to Germany the following year. With Pabst removed, Schober was able to ensure the removal of Steidle and his replacement as leader by the more compliant Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg.[27] A last desperate attempt by Pabst to induce Mussolini to withhold funding unless Schober embraced Pabst's policies failed and he was duly deported.[28]

Later life[]

Returning to Germany, Pabst became a member of the Society for the Study of Fascism along with others such as Friedrich Minoux.[29] In 1931 he wrote a pamphlet in which he set out a manifesto for a "White International"; in this he called for the replacement of the values of liberté, égalité, fraternité with a new European-wide order based on "a new Trinity: authority, order, justice".[30] He was vaguely linked to the Nazi Party, without ever joining or becoming particularly active on the party's behalf, but he did seek to forge three-way links between the Heimwehr, the Wehrmacht and his friend Walther Funk. Such efforts however, were hamstrung, by the fact that the Heimwehr had gone into steep decline following Pabst's deportation.[1] Pabst had discussed the Austrian situation with Adolf Hitler during the latter's rise to power and Hitler had assured Pabst that once he took control of Germany he would concentrate much of his efforts on disseminating the Nazi message in Austria.[31]

Settling into civilian life, he became an industrialist and eventually Director of Rheinmetall Borsig in Berlin.[32] Pabst's non-involvement in Nazism, given his history in the far right, raised some suspicions and rumours circulated that he had been in contact with Wilhelm Canaris and similar figures on the right of the German resistance. Such rumours were never proven, but Pabst did leave Germany not long before the 20 July plot, and it has been suggested that he may have been aware that the attempt on Adolf Hitler's life was about to take place.[1]

Having left Germany, Pabst settled in Switzerland, where he took a post with the arms manufacturer Oerlikon. After the Second World War, Pabst was involved to some extent in the activities of the neo-Nazi Bruderschaften, small groups that existed across Europe and which attempted to co-ordinate their political activism.[1] He returned to Germany in 1955, settling in Düsseldorf, and there became involved with the far right Deutsche Gemeinschaft, a minor group that was later absorbed into the Deutsche Reichspartei.[1] He died in Düsseldorf in 1970 at the age of 89.

Portrayals[]

In film the role of Pabst was played by Horst Drinda in the 1968 East German film Der Mord, der nie verjährt[33] and by Hans-Michael Rehberg in the 1986 film Rosa Luxemburg.[34]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Philip Rees, Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890, 1990, p. 286
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Freda Gräfin zu Solms (ed.), Max Graf zu Solms. Ein Lebensgang, Marburg: N. G. Elwert 1982
  3. ^ Michael Mueller & Geoffrey Brooks, Canaris: The Life and Death of Hitler's Spymaster, 2007, p. 39
  4. ^ Hans Mommsen, Elborg Forster & Larry Eugene Jones, The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy, 1998, pp. 36-7
  5. ^ Nigel Jones, The Birth of the Nazis: How the Freikorps Blazed a Trail for Hitler, Constable & Robinson, 2004, p. 73
  6. ^ Donald S. Stephenson, Frontschweine and Revolution: The Role of Front-line Soldiers in the German Revolution of 1918, ProQuest, 2007, p. 276
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Michael Kellogg, The Russian Roots of Nazism: White Émigrés and the Making of National Socialism, 2005, p. 93
  8. ^ Kellogg, The Russian Roots of Nazism, p. 96
  9. ^ Wolfram Wette, The Wehrmacht: History, Myth, Reality, 2006, p. 44
  10. ^ Jones, The Birth of the Nazis, pp. 77-8
  11. ^ Robert S. Wistrich, From Ambivalence to Betrayal: The Left, the Jews, and Israel, University of Nebraska Press, 2012, p. 371
  12. ^ Gietinger, Klaus (2019). The murder of Rosa Luxemburg. Verso.
  13. ^ Jones, The Birth of the Nazis, pp. 79-81
  14. ^ Jones, The Birth of the Nazis, p. 127
  15. ^ Mommsen et al, The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy, p. 78
  16. ^ Jones, The Birth of the Nazis, pp. 167-9
  17. ^ Heinrich August Winkler & Alexander Sager, Germany: The Long Road West, Volume 1, 2006, p. 366
  18. ^ Jones, The Birth of the Nazis, p. 189
  19. ^ Charles Adams Gulick, Austria from Habsburg to Hitler, University of California Press, 1980, p. 781
  20. ^ F.L. Carsten, The Rise of Fascism, London: Methuen & Co, 1974, p. 224
  21. ^ John T. Lauridsen, Nazism and the Radical Right in Austria, 1918-1934, 2007, p. 176
  22. ^ G. E. R. Geyde, Fallen Bastions. the Central European Tragedy, 2006, p. 51
  23. ^ Jump up to: a b Marcel Roubiçek, Special Corps of Austria and Czechoslovakia, 1918-1945, 2002, p. 6
  24. ^ Hans Rogger, Eugen Joseph Weber, The European Right: A Historical Profile, University of California Press, 1965, p. 330
  25. ^ Gulick, Austria from Habsburg to Hitler, p. 892
  26. ^ Lauridsen, Nazism and the Radical Right in Austria, p. 196
  27. ^ Lauridsen, Nazism and the Radical Right in Austria, p. 206
  28. ^ Gulick, Austria from Habsburg to Hitler, p. 893
  29. ^ Steven Lehrer, Wannsee House and the Holocaust, 2000, p. 34
  30. ^ Elizabeth Heineman, Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones: From the Ancient World to the Era of Human Rights, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011, p. 131
  31. ^ Gerhard L. Weinberg, Hitler's Foreign Policy 1933-1939: The Road to World War II, Enigma Books, 2013, p. 71
  32. ^ Transactions, American Philosophical Society (vol. 70, Part 2, 1980), p. 48
  33. ^ Der Mord, der nie verjährt
  34. ^ Die Geduld der Rosa Luxemburg (1986)

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