Nero Decree

By March, 1945, allied forces had penetrated deep within Germany and were poised to launch their final assault on the Third Reich. Adolf Hitler was determined that the allies should not make use of captured German infrastructure, and on 19 March 1945 he issued a decree entitled "Demolitions on Reich territory". It has subsequently become known as the Nero Decree, after the Roman Emperor Nero, who was supposed to have engineered the Great Fire of Rome in AD 64. Its most pertinent section reads as follows:
It is a mistake to think that transport and communication facilities, industrial establishments and supply depots, which have not been destroyed, or have only been temporarily put out of action, can be used again for our own ends when the lost territory has been recovered. The enemy will leave us nothing but scorched earth when he withdraws, without paying the slightest regard to the population. I therefore order:
1. All military transport and communication facilities, industrial establishments and supply depots, as well as anything else of value within Reich territory, which could in any way be used by the enemy immediately or within the foreseeable future for the prosecution of the war, will be destroyed.
The decree was in vain. The man most responsible for carrying it out was Albert Speer, Minister of Armaments and War Production. Appalled at the order, Speer deliberately failed to carry it out, shrewdly persuading Hitler that his planned - albeit imaginary - recovery of the 'lost territory' could be done without the destruction of its assets. Hitler committed suicide on April 30 1945, 32 days after issuing the order. Speer handed himself to the allied authorities on 7 May 1945, on which date Admiral Karl Dnitz, Hitler's successor, signed an unconditional surrender.

External links

* Demolitions on Reich territory "Nero Decree"

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
johann christoph friedrich bach
johann christian bach
michael andreas barclay de tolly
canadian federal election, 2000
divergent boundary
lilin
unix file system
punk in drublic
folklorama
mikhail illarionovich kutuzov
elizabeth moon
red river floodway
hyoid bone
squaliformes
tongue splitting
vibrissae
billy connolly
camara's flying relief column
centrophoridae
keith wright
battle of foochow
guaynabo, puerto rico
downtown (disambiguation)
naval battle
artemas ward
battle of yalu river (1894)
cauldron
chalice
maniac
energumen
blt
delusional disorder
charles pritchard
ruby murray
hagakure
george grove
george jackson mivart
piru
herbert cardinal vaughan
glass ceramic
william thomson (archbishop)
william connor magee
william rathbone greg
bill rodgers (politician)