Everything about Joachim Peiper totally explained
Joachim Peiper (
January 30,
1915 -
July 13,
1976) more often known as
Jochen Peiper from the common German nickname for Joachim, was a senior
Waffen-SS officer in
World War II and a convicted
war criminal. By the end of his military career in 1945, Peiper was the youngest regimental colonel in the Waffen-SS, holding the rank of SS-
Standartenführer. He also served as personal adjutant to
Heinrich Himmler, the head of the
SS, in the period April 1938 to August 1941.
Early life
Peiper was born in
Berlin. His father was a career Army officer who fought in
East Africa during
World War I. Peiper had two brothers, Hans-Hasso and Horst.
World War II
Peiper was recruited into the
SS-Verfügungstruppe in 1933.
Sepp Dietrich reviewed his application and admitted him into the
Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler (LSSAH) honour guard regiment. In 1935 Peiper attended the SS officer's training school (Junkerschule) at
Braunschweig and was commissioned the following year. Peiper was appointed adjutant to
Heinrich Himmler in April 1938 and held this position until August 1941, save for a period during the
Battle of France in which he was detached for combat service. After returning to frontline duty in late 1941 he moved on to command various infantry and panzer units within the
Leibstandarte, by now expanded to a full
division.
While on Himmler's staff, Peiper met and married his wife, Sigurd, with whom he'd three children: Heinrich, Elke, and Silke. Himmler was particularly fond of Peiper and took a keen interest in his ascension towards command. By age 29, Peiper was a full colonel of the Waffen-SS, well respected and a holder of one of wartime Germany's highest decorations, the
Knight's Cross with
Oak Leaves and Swords personally awarded to him by
Adolf Hitler.
Peiper was a skilled combat leader and took part in several major battles of the war. On the
Eastern Front, he fought in the
battles for Kharkov and the
Kursk offensive of 1943, earning particular distinction in the former. In 1944, he commanded
Kampfgruppe Peiper of the
Leibstandarte division (assigned to the
Sixth SS Panzer Army under Sepp Dietrich) during the
Battle of the Bulge. Peiper advanced to the town of
La Gleize,
Belgium, before running out of fuel and coming under heavy fire from American artillery and tanks. He was forced to abandon over a hundred vehicles in the town, including six
Tiger II tanks, and made his way back to German lines with 800 men on foot.
During its move from
Lanzerath, Belgium to La Gleize, the kampfgruppe had murdered about 300 American
POWs, most notably in the neighbourhood of
Malmedy. Moreover, in the area of
Stavelot, over 100 Belgian civilians (including women and children) were killed by units under Peiper’s command.
After the war
After the end of
World War II, Peiper and other members of the Waffen-SS were tried for
war crimes in the
Malmedy massacre trial. Peiper volunteered to take all the blame if the court would set his men free; the court refused. Peiper as commanding officer was found guilty and sentenced to death by
hanging, as were many of his men. He then requested that his men be executed by firing squad; this request was also denied.
The sentences generated significant controversy in some German circles, including the church, leading the commander of the
US Army in Germany to commute some of the death sentences to
life imprisonment. In addition, the Germans' defense attorney, U.S. military attorney Lt. Col.
Willis M. Everett, appealed to the
U.S. Supreme Court claiming that the defendants had been found guilty by means of "illegal and fraudulently procured confessions" and were subjects of a mock trial. His claims touched off a major scandal, eventually leading the
Senate to become involved.
In its investigation of the trial, the
Senate Committee on Armed Services came to the conclusion that improper pre-trial procedures (including a mock trial, but not torture as sometime stated) had harmed the process and, although in some cases there was little or no doubt that the accused were indeed guilty of the massacre, the death sentences couldn't be applied.
Ultimately the sentences of the Malmedy defendants were commuted to life imprisonment and then to time served. Peiper himself was released from prison on parole at the end of December 1956, after serving 11 and a half years.
Peiper has also been accused of, but never prosecuted for, the
Boves massacre in
Italy on
September 8 1943. In 1968 the
German Minister of Justice declared that there was no reason to prosecute Peiper, and the case was dismissed on
December 23,
1968.
In 1972 Peiper went to live in
Traves,
Haute-Saône,
France, and supported himself as a translator of
English-language military books into
German. He sent his wife to safety in Germany following explicit death threats, but himself remained in France, arming himself with a shotgun and accompanied by his dog. He died on
July 14,
1976 in a
fire bomb attack on his house by an armed gang calling itself the "Avengers." The "Avengers" were never identified, but were suspected to be former
Résistants.
Assessment
Peiper remains a controversial figure. On the one hand, he was a highly competent soldier, and he was highly respected among his peers. His men were fiercely loyal to him, and he was considered by many to be a "charismatic leader." After the end of the war he continued to be held in high regard by his surviving comrades, many of whom talked of
Der Peiper with admiration and respect.
Indeed, from a purely military point of view Peiper was an excellent example of a dedicated and honorable officer, who never wavered in the line of fire.While he may have been guilty of excesses, historians have noted the fact that the
Eastern Front was a uniquely savage environment, where both sides routinely committed atrocities on each other. For example, in one incident outside Kharkov, 23 captured troops from Peiper's command were savagely tortured by a Soviet Siberian division, some soldiers being castrated and all having their eyes cut out with knives.
Nevertheless, Peiper garnered for himself and his men a unique reputation for callousness, even among the ranks of the Waffen-SS, an organization itself noted for its brutality. In the east his unit had gained the nickname "the Blowtorch Battalion", after burning several Russian villages and killing their inhabitants (although Peiper claimed it was unrelated to these events, and that the blowtorch epithet came from its use as a tool to unfreeze vehicles in the Russian winter). Furthermore, his troops continued to commit such acts even after being transferred to the
west, where such incidents were far less common. It wasn't the only Waffen-SS unit to do so; Peiper may also have been aware that captured Waffen-SS troops had previously been shot out of hand by British, Canadian and American soldiers. In any case, this would eventually culminate in incidents such as the Malmedy massacre and related crimes against Belgian civilians.
As Himmler's adjutant until late 1941, Peiper would also have been well-acquainted with the planning and staffwork behind
Operation Barbarossa; in particular, he couldn't have been unaware of the anticipated operations the SS would undertake, for example the
einsatzgruppen. Indeed, in a conversation with comrade, Otto Dinse, in 1943, Peiper acknowledged awareness of the elimination camps. "
Wenn wir den Krieg verlieren, wird es uns wegen dieser Dinge ganz schön dreckig gehen ("
We had better win this war or else we're going to be in deep shit because of these things"). Peiper himself remained unrepentant about his
Nazi past to the end of his life, saying,
"I was a Nazi and I remain one...The Germany of today is no longer a great nation, it has become a province of Europe." |
Quotations
- "I recognize that after the battles of Normandy my unit was composed mainly of young, fanatical soldiers. A good deal of them had lost their parents, their sisters and brothers during the bombing. They had seen for themselves in Köln thousands of mangled corpses after a terror raid had passed. Their hatred for the enemy was such; I swear it and I couldn't always keep it under control."
- "Imagine yourself acclaimed, a decorated national hero, an idol to millions of desperate people, then within six months, condemned to death by hanging."
- "It's so long ago now. Even I don't know the truth. If I'd ever known it, I've long forgotten it. All I know is that I took the blame as a good CO should have been and was punished accordingly." - Jochen Peiper on the Malmedy massacre, excerpted from A Traveler's Guide to the Battle for the German Frontier by Charles Whiting
- "My men are the products of total war, grown up in the streets of scattered towns without any education. The only thing they knew was to handle weapons for the Reich. They were young people with a hot heart and the desire to win or die: right or wrong – my country. When seeing today the defendants in the dock, don't believe them to be the old Kampfgruppe Peiper. All of my old friends and comrades have gone before. The real outfit is waiting for me in Valhalla."
- "History is always written by the victor, and the histories of the losing parties belong to the shrinking circle of those who were there."
Summary of SS career
Dates of rank
SS-Anwärter: October 16, 1933
SS-Mann: January 23, 1934
SS-Sturmmann: September 7, 1934
SS-Rottenführer: October 10, 1934
SS-Unterscharführer: March 1, 1935
SS-Standartenjunker: September 11, 1935
SS-Standartenoberjunker: March 5, 1936
SS-Untersturmführer: April 20, 1936
SS-Obersturmführer: January 30, 1939
SS-Hauptsturmführer: June 6, 1940
SS-Sturmbannführer: January 30, 1943
SS-Obersturmbannführer: November 11, 1943
SS-Standartenführer: April 20, 1945
Notable decorations
Horseman's badge in Bronze (?)
Iron Cross Second (1940) and First (1940) Classes
SS-Honour Ring (?)
Knight's Cross (1943)
Oak Leaves (1944)
Swords (1945)
German Cross in Gold (1943)
Infantry Assault Badge in Bronze (1940)
Eastern Front Medal (1942)
Sudetenland Medal (1938)
Prague clasp (1938)
Anschluss Medal (1938)
Close Combat Clasp in Bronze (1943)
Close Combat Clasp in Silver (1943)
Tank Destruction Badge (1943)
SA-Sports Badge in Bronze (?)
SS Service awards in 4 and 8 years (?)
Dress Formal dinning award (?)
Life Saving Award in Gold (?)Further Information
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