: Despite its high-tech image, the army in Russia faced massive equipment losses and primitive conditions. This "demodernization" sapped the soldiers' humanity and made them more receptive to brutal Nazi rhetoric.
: The book uses personal letters and diaries to show that average soldiers, not just elite SS units, were deeply involved in war crimes . Hitler's Army: Soldiers, Nazis, and War in the ...
Bartov argues that the Wehrmacht was not merely a professional military but a fully politicized arm of the Nazi state. According to Bartov , the army became "Hitler's Army" through several reinforcing processes, especially during the war on the Eastern Front : : Despite its high-tech image, the army in
: Through propaganda and indoctrination, soldiers came to view the war as a crusade of "Western civilization" against "subhuman" Bolsheviks and Jews. Critical Takeaways for Readers Bartov argues that the Wehrmacht was not merely
: The Wehrmacht maintained order through draconian punishments, executing approximately 15,000 of its own soldiers for minor infractions. This internal brutality mirrored and encouraged the external atrocities committed against civilians.
: Traditional military cohesion usually relies on small groups of comrades. On the Eastern Front, high casualty rates constantly broke these groups , leaving Nazi ideology as the primary remaining bond for the soldiers.
: Bartov concludes that ideology was the primary force that kept the German army fighting effectively long after the war was clearly lost.