Commissar Order/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
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{{r|Adolf Hitler}} | {{r|Adolf Hitler}} | ||
{{r|Oberkommando der Wehrmacht||**}} | {{r|Oberkommando der Wehrmacht||**}} | ||
{{r| | {{r|Operation Barbarossa}} | ||
==Subtopics== | ==Subtopics== | ||
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Revision as of 15:28, 31 December 2010
- See also changes related to Commissar Order, or pages that link to Commissar Order or to this page or whose text contains "Commissar Order".
Parent topics
- Political officer [r]: Principally a Soviet term, also called commissar, a Party official attached to a military unit with authority to enforce political doctrine, sometimes overriding military orders [e]
- Adolf Hitler [r]: (1889–1945) Politician in Germany; became 1921 Nazi Party leader, 1933 Reichskanzler (Chancellor), then 1934 as der Führer dictator before and during World War II. [e]
- Operation Barbarossa [r]: The German invasion of the Soviet Union, beginning on June 22, 1941 [e]
Subtopics
- Barbarossa Jurisdiction Order [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Commando Order [r]: An order from Adolf Hitler, later the basis for a number of war crimes prosecution, which condemned uniformed special operations personnel operating behind enemy lines [e]
- Night and Fog Decree [r]: A 1941 Nazi order calling for the extrajudicial detention, either followed by summary capital punishment or secret imprisonent in Germany, of civilians judged to be resisting German military occupation [e]
- Trial of the Major War Criminals [r]: Conducted by the four major Allied powers in Europe, this proceeding tried the designated Major War Criminals of Nazi Germany, as well as determining whether certain Nazi organizations were to be considered as criminal conspiracies to which membership was a crime [e]
- High Command Case (NMT) [r]: A trial of senior professional military officers of Nazi Germany, for which some were convicted of war crimes, crimes against humanity, or both; none were judged at the policy-making level to have plotted aggressive war [e]