Anti-Partisan Guerrilla Warfare Badge

Anti-Partisan Badge
Bandenkampfabzeichen

Bronze grade version
Awarded by Nazi Germany
Type Badge
Eligibility Wehrmacht, Ordnungspolizei and Waffen-SS personnel
Awarded for Bandenkampf (literally: "bandit fighting") against "partisans", "bandits", "'plunderers", and any other persons assumed to present danger to the Nazi rule or Wehrmacht's security in the occupied territories.[1]
Campaign World War II
Status Obsolete
Statistics
Established 30 January 1944[2]
Last awarded 1945

Anti-Partisan Guerrilla Warfare Badge (German Bandenkampfabzeichen; literally: "Bandit-fight badge") was a World War II decoration of Nazi Germany awarded to members of the Heer, Luftwaffe, Ordnungspolizei (Order Police), and Waffen-SS for participating in rear-area security operations. The badge was instituted on 30 January 1944 by Adolf Hitler after authorization/recommendation by Heinrich Himmler.[2]

Especially on the Eastern Front, the terms "partisan" and "bandit" were applied by the Nazi security apparatus to Jews, communists, Soviet state officials, Red Army stragglers, and any other persons deemed to pose a security risk. Rear-area security operations against armed irregular fighters ("pacification actions") were often indistinguishable from massacres of civilians, accompanied by burning down villages, destroying crops, stealing livestock, deporting able-bodied population for slave labour to Germany and leaving parent-less children on their own.[1]

Description

All versions of the badge feature a skull and crossed bones at the base, with a laurel wreath of oak leaves around the sides and a sword in the center. The sword's handle has the "sun-wheel" swastika, with the blade plunged into the "Hydra", whose five heads represent the "partisans". The second version of the badge had larger oak leaves in the wreath and a larger "sun-wheel" swastika.[3] Historian Phillip W. Blood notes the similarities between the symbol of the occultist Thule Society, with a sword and a swastika, and the design of the badge. He suggests that Himmler and Erich von dem Bach-Zalewski "had sealed [...] Germanic mythology into a medal for Lebensraum".[4]

The badge existed in three grades:[5]

Criteria were slightly different for the Luftwaffe, being based on 30, 75, and 150 operational flights/sorties flown in support of "anti-partisan" operations.[5]

Known recipients

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 Blood 2006, p. 20, 310.
  2. 1 2 Angolia 1987, p. 106.
  3. Angolia 1987, pp. 106, 107.
  4. Blood 2006, p. 310.
  5. 1 2 Angolia 1987, p. 107.

Sources

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