Description:

WALTER WARLIMONT
(1894 - 1976) German officer, Senior Operations Staff Officer to Keitel, a member of Hitler''s inner circle, tried at Nuremberg. T.L.S. "Warlimont", 2pp. 4to., Gmund, Oct. 26, 1971, to Dr. Charles B. Burdick. Warlimont describes in detail his time spent in the United States in 1929-30, during which he was attached to the U.S. Army to study industrial mobilization theory. Warlimont was selected for this role due to his language skills and previous studies of industrial mobilization. Warlimont states that Minister of Defense Wilhelm Groener wanted to make it clear that sending German military missions aboard was not forbidden under the Treaty of Versailles, a goal agreed upon by the American military attaché in Berlin. Upon Warlimont''s departure, Groener told him: "What else you see or learn is not important to me". Warlimont participated in military exercises with the Army Air Force in Ohio for several before weeks, before being allowed to conduct research on his own. With the permission of the War Department, he visited army ordnance offices and other industrial operations. he also traveled to other parts of the country that were culturally or aesthetically appealing to him, including New England, Utah, Montana, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, New Orleans and Seattle. Following this tour of the country, he returned to Washington, where he was allowed to visit the office of the Assistant secretary of War in charge of industrial mobilization. He also spent time at the War Departments Industrial College as an instructor, at the advice of a friend who suggested: "...if you are not allowed to come to us as a student ... then come to us as an instructor and let us learn from the German Army''s rich experiences during World War I that had to do with industrial mobilization..." At the Nuremberg trials at the end of World War II, these experiences were presented as acts of espionage, which Warlimont was able to refute with the testimonies of American officers he befriended during his stay. He transmitted a few reports to the German Ministry of Defense during his stay in the U.S., but doubts that they still exist in any format. Signed at the conclusion in blue ink with an ink post-script, and several ink emendations are present within the text. Very good.

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February 18, 2017 10:00 AM EST
Elkton, MD, US

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