DIRECTIVE # 21
The Fuhrer and Supreme Commander of the Armed forces
OKW/WFSt./Abt.L(I)
Nr.33 408/40 g.Kdos. 18 December 1940
Top Secret.
Directive No. 21
Operation Barbarossa
The armed forces of Germany must be
prepared, even before the conclusion of the war with England, to defeat Soviet Russia in one rapid
campaign ('Operation Barbarossa.')
The Army must in this case be prepared
to commit all available formations, with the proviso that the occupied
territories must be secured against surprise attacks.
The Air Force will have to make
available for the support of the Army in the Eastern Campaign forces of
adequate strength to ensure a rapid termination of land action and to give the
East German territories maximum protection against enemy air raids. This making
of the main effort in the east must not be carried to a point at which we can
no longer adequately protect the totality of our battle and our armament zones
against enemy air attacks, nor must the offensive against England, and in
particular against England's supply routes, suffer in consequence.
For the Navy the point of main effort
will remain consistently against England, even while the Eastern Campaign is in
progress.
I shall give the order for the assembly
of troops, etc., for the proposed operation against Soviet Russia, should the
occasion arise, eight weeks before the operation is due to begin. Preparations
that require more time than this shall-so far as they have not already been
made-be begun at once and are to be completed by the 15th May 1941.
Great stress however, must be laid on
disguising any offensive intentions. Preparations by the high commands are to
be based on the following considerations.
1. General Intention
The mass of the Army stationed in Western
Russia is to be destroyed in bold operations involving deep penetrations by
armored spearheads, and the withdrawals of elements capable of combat into the
extensive Russian land spaces is to be prevented.
By means of a rapid pursuit a line is
then to be reached from beyond which the Russian air force will no longer be
capable of attacking German home territories. The final objective of the
operation is to be the attainment of a line sealing off Asiatic Russia and
running, in general, the Volga-Archangel. From such a line the one remaining
Russian industrial area in the Urals can be eliminated by the Air Force should
the need arise.
In the course of this operation the
Russian Baltic Fleet will rapidly be deprived of its bases and thus will no
longer be capable of combat.
Effective intervention by the Russian
air force is to be prevented from the very beginning of the operation by means
of powerful attacks against it.
2.Anticipated Allies and their Tasks
1.On the wings of our operations we can
count on active co-operation in the war against Soviet Russia by Rumania and
Finland. How exactly the combat forces of those two countries will be under
German control when they go into action is a matter that the Armed Forces High
Command will arrange and lay down at the proper time.
2. Rumania's task will be to pin down
the enemy's forces opposite that sector and to give assistance in rear areas.
3. Finland will cover the movement of
the Northern German Group coming from Norway (elements of Group XXI) and will then
operate in conjunction with this group. The elimination of Hango will also be
Finland's responsibility.
4. It may be anticipated that the
Swedish railways and roads will be made available for the movement of the
Northern German Group, at the latest when the operation has begun.
The Conduct of the Operations
(A) Army (in approbation of the
intentions submitted to me) :
The area of operations is divided into
southern and northern halves by the Pripet Marshes. The point of main effort
will be made in the northern half.
Here two army groups are to be committed.
The southern of these two army
groups-in the centre of the whole front-will have the task of breaking out the
area around and to the north of Warsaw with exceptionally strong armour and
motorized formations and of destroying the enemy forces in White Russia. This
will create a situation which will enable strong formations of mobile troops to
swing north; such formations will then co-operate with the northern army
group-advancing from East Prussia in the general direction of Leningrad-in
destroying the enemy forces in the area of the Baltic states. Only after the
accomplishment of these offensive operations, which must be followed by the
capture of Leningrad and Kronstadt, are further offensive operations to be
initiates with the objective of occupying the important centre of
communications and of armaments manufacture, Moscow.
Only a surprisingly rapid collapse of
the Russian ability to resist could justify an attempt to achieve both
objectives simultaneously.
The primary task of Group XXI, even
during the eastern operations, remains the protection of Norway. Forces
available other than those needed for this task (Mountain Corps) will first of
all be used to protect the Petsamo area and its mines together with the Artic
road, and will then advance, in conjunction with Finnish forces, against the
Murmansk railway and will cut the Murmansk area's land supply routes.
Whether an operation of this nature can
be carried out by stronger German
forces (two to three Divisions) coming from the area of Rovaniemi and to the
south is dependent on Sweden's willingness to make the Swedish railways
available for such a move.
The mass of the Finnish army will have
the task, in accordance with the advance made by the northern wing of the
German armies, of tying up maximum Russian strength by attacking to the west,
or on both sides, of Lake Ladoga. The Finns will also capture Hango.
The army group south of the Pripet Marshes will make its point of main effort from
the Lublin area in the general direction of Kiev, with the object of driving
into the deep flank and rear of the Russian forces with strong armored
formations and of then rolling up the enemy along the Dnieper. The German-
Rumanian group on the right flank will have the task of
(a) Protecting Rumanian territory and
thus of covering the southern flank of the whole operation;
(b) In co-ordination with the attack by
the northern of Army Group south of tying up the enemy forces on its sector of
the front; then, as the situation develops, of launching a second thrust and
thus, in conjunction with the air force, of preventing an orderly enemy
withdrawal beyond the Dniester.
Once the battle south or north of the
Pripet Marshes have been fought, the pursuit is to be undertaken with the
following objectives:
In
the south the rapid occupation of the
economically important Donetz Basin, in
the north the speedy capture of Moscow.
(B) Air
Force:
It will be the task of the air force,
so far as possible, to damage and destroy the effectiveness of the Russian air
force, and to support the operations by the army at the points of main effort,
that is to say in the sectors of the central army group and in the area where
the southern army group will be making its main effort. The Russian railways
will either be destroyed, or, in the case of more important objectives close to
hand (i.e. railway bridges) will be captured by the bold use of parachute and
air-borne troops. In order that maximum forces may be available for operations
against the enemy air force and for direct support of the army, the munitions
industry will not be attacked while the major operation is in progress. Only
after the conclusion of the mobile operations will such attacks, and in
particular attacks against the industrial area of the Urals, be considered.
(C) Navy
During the war with Soviet Russia it
will be the task of the navy to protect the German coastline and to prevent any
hostile naval force from breaking out of the Baltic. Since once Leningrad has been
reached the Russian Baltic fleet will have lost its last base and will thus be
in a hopeless position, major naval operations are to be previously avoided.
After the destruction of the Russian fleet it will be the responsibility of the
navy to make the Baltic fully available to carrying sea traffic, including
supplies by sea to the northern wing of the army. (The sweeping of minefields!)
4.
It is important that all
Commanders-in-Chiefs make it plain that the taking of necessary measures in
connection with this directive is being done as a precaution against the possibility of the Russians adopting an
attitude towards us other than what it has been up to now. The number of
officers engaged in the early stages on these preparations is to be kept as
small as possible, and each officer is only to be given such information as is
directly essential to him in the performance of his task. Otherwise the danger
will arise of our preparations becoming known, when a time for the carrying out
of the proposed operation has not even been decided upon. This would cause us
the gravest political and military disadvantages.
5.
I anticipate further conferences with
the Commanders-in-Chief concerning their intentions as based on this directive.
Reports on the progress made in the proposed preparations by all services of
the armed forces will be forwarded to me through the Armed Forces High Command.
Signed : Adolf Hitler