Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Bibliographic Abbreviations; Part One: Origins and Implementation; 1. Security Warfare; 2. The New Order; 3. Hitler's Bandenbekampfung Directive; Part Two: Bandenbekampfung; 4. Bandenbekampfung Operational Concept; 5. Die Bandenkampfverbande; 6. Das Bandenkampfgebiet; 7. Die Bandenunternehmungen; Part Three: Climatic Decline; 8. Poland; 9. Western Europe; 10. Deniability; Conclusions; Diagrams; Appendix 1: Glossary of Bandenbekampfung and Related Terminology; Appendix 2: German Rank Structures; Appendix 3: The Perpetrators; Appendix 4: Former Bandenkampfverbande in 1965; Notes; Bibliography; Index; About the Author.
Philip W. Blood, formerly a senior lecturer at the University of Aachen, is now the general editor of the Wehrmacht in War series for the Association of the United States Army. A British citizen, he lives in Aachen, Germany.
"A novel and provocative interpretation of German 'antipartisan'
operations that offers a detailed examination of the theory and
practice of Nazi security warfare."--Edward B. Westermann, author
of Hitler's Police Battallions: Enforcing Racial War in the
East--Edward B. Westermann
"An in-depth and detailed examination of Bandenbekampfung...offers
far more insight and detail than a more casual examination, making
it a recommended pick for libraries seeking a scholarly
reference."--Midwest Book Review--Midwest Book Review
(04/24/2008)
"Blood breaks new, important ground in better enabling scholars to
discern the forest for the trees...[He] has rendered invaluable
service in illuminating these issues to a new and unsettling
degree."--American Historical Review-- (07/03/2008)
"This book does not make for comfortable reading. It is a
meticulous examination of Bandenbekampfung, a term which has
much broader and more pervasive meaning than simply 'antipartisan
warfare' and which characterized the German approach to security in
occupied areas during the Second World War. Philip Blood uses
abundant documentary and oral evidence to take us beyond the
verdict of Christopher Browning's ground-breaking Ordinary
Men, his study of Reserve Police Battalion 101 in Poland, by
examining the policy and structure that enabled ordinary men to do
such extraordinarily dreadful things."--From the foreword by
Richard Holmes--Richard Holmes
"An important book for those interested in World War II and the law
of war."--NYMAS Review--NYMAS Review (11/06/2008)
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