Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

286th Security Division (Wehrmacht)

286th Security Division
286. Sicherungs-Division
ActiveMarch 1941 - April 1945
Country Nazi Germany
BranchArmy (Wehrmacht)
TypeInfantry
RoleSecurity
SizeDivision
Part ofArmy Group Centre Rear Area
Army Group Centre
EngagementsEastern Front
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Johann-Georg Richert

The 286th Security Division (286. Sicherungs-Division) was a rear-security division in the Wehrmacht during World War II. The unit was deployed in German-occupied areas of the Soviet Union, in the Army Group Centre Rear Area. It was responsible for large-scale war crimes and atrocities including the deaths of thousands of Soviet civilians.

Operational history

The 286th Security Division was formed on 15 March 1941 around elements of the 213th Infantry Division, initially with one infantry regiment (354th). By 1942 another two Security Regiments, 61 (upgraded from the Landesschützen-Regiment staff 61) and 122, were attached. A variety of units were subordinated to the division during its existence, including battalions of Russian troops and from February 1944 Grenadier Regiment 638, consisting of French volunteers, the LVF.

During this period the division was assigned to Fourth Army, where it carried out occupation, economic exploitation and security duties in rear areas. It was involved in punitive operations against the local populace: these actions were carried out with extreme brutality (in total, Belarus lost up to a quarter of its population during the German occupation). A defendant at the post-war Minsk Trial, Paul Eick, stated that he had set out to create and then liquidate a ghetto in the town of Orsha under the division's command.[1]

In June 1944, the Fourth Army was encircled by Soviet forces during the liberation of the Belorussian SSR, Operation Bagration. The 286th Security Division was overrun and destroyed in the vicinity of Orsha. Its remnants were reorganised late that year at Memel as the 286th Infantry Division, assigned to the Third Panzer Army; it was again destroyed at Neukuhren during the battles in Samland towards the end of the war.

Commanders

286th Infantry Division

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Prusin, p14

References

  • Prusin, A V. Fascist Criminals to the Gallows! The Holocaust and Soviet War Crimes Trials, Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17.1 (2003) 1-30

Further reading