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The SS regiments "Deutschland" and " Leibstandarte" participated in the [[1935]] [[occupation of the Rhineland]], and parts of them were among the invading force in March [[1938]] during the [[Anschluss]] of [[Austria]]. Subsequently, the Austrian SS regiment "Der Führer" was formed. By the late 1938 the units of the SS-VT were in part subordinate to [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]] and on October 10 they were combined into the [[SS-Verfügungsdivision]] (short: V-Division) under the command of SS-Brigadeführer [[Paul Hausser]].
The SS regiments "Deutschland" and " Leibstandarte" participated in the [[1935]] [[occupation of the Rhineland]], and parts of them were among the invading force in March [[1938]] during the [[Anschluss]] of [[Austria]]. Subsequently, the Austrian SS regiment "Der Führer" was formed. By the late 1938 the units of the SS-VT were in part subordinate to [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]] and on October 10 they were combined into the [[SS-Verfügungsdivision]] (short: V-Division) under the command of SS-Brigadeführer [[Paul Hausser]].


Under Hausser, the V-Division was trained into an effective and skilled combat fighting force, it took part in the invasion of [[Sudetenland]] in 1938 and Poland in 1939. V-Division never fought as a single unit, but was instead divided into smaller regiments dispersed among the various regular Army units. In 1940, after the invasion of France, V-Division was given the name "Das Reich", at the same time, "Das Reich" and other SS-VT units along with [[Theodor Eicke]]'s Totenkopf-Standarten were subordinated to the new [[Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS]] and renamed as the [[Waffen-SS]]
Under Hausser, the V-Division was trained into an effective and skilled combat fighting force, it took part in the invasion of [[Sudetenland]] in 1938 and Poland in 1939. V-Division never fought as a single unit, but was instead divided into smaller regiments dispersed among the various regular Army units. In 1940, after the invasion of France, V-Division was given the name "Das Reich", at the same time, "Das Reich" and other SS-VT units along with [[Theodor Eicke]]'s Totenkopf-Standarten were subordinated to the new [[Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS]] and from then on called the [[Waffen-SS]].


[[de:SS-Verfügungstruppe]]
[[de:SS-Verfügungstruppe]]

Revision as of 02:51, 14 October 2004

The SS-Verfügungstruppe (combat support force) (short: SS-VT) was created in 1934 from the merger of various Nazi and right-wing paramilitary formations. Two regiments were formed, in the northern Germany the SS-Standarte "Germania", and in southern Germany SS-Standarte "Deutschland". In the Berlin-Brandenburg they were incorporated into the SS-Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler. SS-Verfügungstruppe was considered as an armed wing of the General-SS and as a part of the Nazi party, instead of the Wehrmacht.

The SS regiments "Deutschland" and " Leibstandarte" participated in the 1935 occupation of the Rhineland, and parts of them were among the invading force in March 1938 during the Anschluss of Austria. Subsequently, the Austrian SS regiment "Der Führer" was formed. By the late 1938 the units of the SS-VT were in part subordinate to Oberkommando der Wehrmacht and on October 10 they were combined into the SS-Verfügungsdivision (short: V-Division) under the command of SS-Brigadeführer Paul Hausser.

Under Hausser, the V-Division was trained into an effective and skilled combat fighting force, it took part in the invasion of Sudetenland in 1938 and Poland in 1939. V-Division never fought as a single unit, but was instead divided into smaller regiments dispersed among the various regular Army units. In 1940, after the invasion of France, V-Division was given the name "Das Reich", at the same time, "Das Reich" and other SS-VT units along with Theodor Eicke's Totenkopf-Standarten were subordinated to the new Kommandoamt der Waffen-SS and from then on called the Waffen-SS.