by Philip W. Blood
Washington: Potomac Books, 2008. Pp. xxii, 400.
Illus., figs., append., notes, biblio., index. $19.95 paper. ISBN:159797157X
Prof. Blood, formerly of the
University
of
Aachen
, opens Hitler's Bandit Hunters by discussing the differences between "bandenbekämpfung -- anti-bandit warfare" and "partisanbekämpfung--anti-partisan warfare." This is not just academic hair-splitting. By adopting the former term, the Third Reich threw out both traditional and written rules of war regarding resistance movements, while pretending to continue to adhere to them, and at the same time wholly incorporated its genocidal objectives into its rear-area security policies.
Blood goes on to discuss the objectives, leadership, bureaucratic institutions, military and police organizations, and the activities undertaken on the pretext of "anti-bandit operations." There follows extensive, often detailed accounts, of German operations against "bandits" across
Europe
, often in grim detail.
Hitler's Bandit Hunters
demonstrates yet again that we can still be surprised by the depths of the brutality and the horror of the Nazi regime.
An important book for those interested in World War II and the law of war.