SS-Gruppenführer (General)
Artur Nebe (13 November
1894–21 March
1945) was
Berlin Police Commissioner in the
1920s and an early member of both the
Sturmabteilung (SA) and the
Schutzstaffel (SS).
In
1936, he was appointed as the head of the
Kriminalpolizei (
Kripo), which would later become the Criminal Police of Department V in the
Reichssicherheitshauptamt). He also commanded
Einsatzgruppe B, which was one of four large murder squads sent out by
SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich (the head of the RSHA) to eliminate what the Nazis euphemistically termed 'undesirables' in the New Order.
In 1941, he was a commander of one of the SS task forces (
Einsatzgruppen) operating in Russian territory. The job of these units was to 'liquidate' influential civilians likely to oppose the Reich — in truth a euphemism for prominent Jews and Communists. Nebe himself claimed his own task force was responsible for more than 45,000 killings.
In March 1944, after the 'Great Escape' from Stalag Luft III POW camp, Nebe was ordered by Heinrich Müller, head of the Gestapo (Amt IV, or Department 4, of the Reichssicherheitshauptamt), to choose the names of 50 of the 73 captured prisoners, to be executed. It is reputed that this selection caused Nebe distress.
He was believed to have been involved in various plots including the July 20,
1944, bomb plot against Adolf Hitler and, after the failure of the assassination attempt, went into hiding on an island in the
Wannsee but was later arrested after a rejected mistress betrayed him. He was sentenced to death at the
Volksgerichtshof. He was executed by being hanged with piano wire, on March 21,
1945.
In the novel
Fatherland, set in an alternate history in which Germany has won the Second World War, Artur Nebe is depicted as an
SS-Oberstgruppenführer, still commanding the
Kriminalpolizei in the
1960s.
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur
Nebe, Arthur