Section 526 Polar bears are about to move
Heydrich brought about a seismic change for the Gestapo. Manipulative by Heydrich, the Prussian Administrative Tribunal ruled that the Gestapo was exempt from judicial investigation, and the court would not accept an appeal about the "protective detention" of the secret police. The following year the verdict became law. According to Dr. Best, a Gestapo legal expert, "The Gestapo's duty is to protect state power, and it must keep up with the changing situation of the enemy, so that it is not dragged down by the shackles of justice." The Gestapo had the same status as the army, and the judicial process would not allow interference in its actions against the enemy. ”
During Operation Night of the Long Knives, Heydrich's secret police came to prominence and quickly and decisively wiped out the SA leadership who were preparing to rebel, leaving Röhm and his henchmen with no chance to fight back. Although Röhm was the godfather of Heydrich's eldest son, Klaus, Heydrich understood that in those chaotic and turbulent times, if everyone did whatever they wanted, the consequences would be unimaginable. The SS Security Service, which he started, also grew rapidly, annexing the "Internal Intelligence Service" of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and becoming the only intelligence agency of the Workers' Party. At the end of the 14th century, the Security Service moved into Berlin at 102 Wilhelmstrasse, and was closely integrated with the various levels of the Gestapo, with the Security Service collecting intelligence and the secret police acting on it. Heydrich's police empire was beginning to take shape, and the next step was to integrate the entire Imperial police force into the SS system.
Home Minister Flick is about to lose control of the Imperial Police, and he regrets that he shouldn't have led the wolf into the house in the first place. In May of the 16th year of the First Century, Heydrich, then a major general of the SS, began consultations with Flick on behalf of Himmler to prepare for the further integration of the Reich security apparatus. Flick suggested that Himmler be appointed "Reich Police Chief", but that he would have to accept the leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. After two years of rapid development, Himmler's SS was no longer as strong as it used to be, so how could it be willing to be below Frick. In this power struggle, Heydrich played the role of a charge. On 9 June 1936, Heydrich put forward a package of proposals that Himmler should be titled "Reich SS Commander and Chief of Police", equivalent to the rank of Reich Minister, with the right to attend Reich Cabinet meetings. Frick could not accept this suggestion and asked Sitara to decide. In Sitara's mind, it was self-evident that Himmler and Frick were more important.
On 17 June, Sitara signed the "Order of the Reich Führer on the Appointment of the German Inspector General of Police", and Himmler formally took over the Reich police system. Himmler divided the police system into two parts: the ordinary police and the security police. At the age of 32, SS Admiral Darug became the Ordinary Police Chief, while Heydrich became the Security Police, presiding over the secret police (Gestapo) and the criminal police, mastering the most formidable state apparatus. Heydrich's security police laid a wide net in Germany, leaving hostile forces with no place to hide and moving abroad, while the SS security service followed closely and gradually extended its tentacles from within Germany to abroad, thus frequently setting foot on the traditional territory of the Wehrmacht Intelligence Bureau.
Since Weimar times, the Wehrmacht Intelligence Service has been Germany's only overseas espionage agency. At this time, the chief of the military intelligence was Conrad Patzig, who was born in the navy, a typical professional soldier, with a conservative and orthodox personality, and lacked a good opinion of the SS security service. In the autumn of that year, the conflict between Pazig and Heydrich intensified. The Military Intelligence Agency regularly sent spy planes to Poland for reconnaissance flights, which resulted in protests from the Polish government on the basis of the German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact signed a year earlier. It was supposed to be an ordinary diplomatic incident, but Heydrich seized the opportunity to send a message to Defense Minister Blomberg, saying that the MIA was discrediting Germany by doing so. In order to calm the situation, Blomborg had no choice but to change his generals.
Blomberg's final choice was Admiral Canaris, mainly because Canaris had been Heydrich's superior, and the two had worked together on the Berlin for two years and had a good personal relationship. After taking office, Canaris indicated to the senior management of the Wehrmacht that he would promote friendship and cooperation between the MIA and the SS Security Service. At the end of January, Canaris invited Heydrich to a dinner at the famous restaurant "Horcher" in Berlin, where the two exchanged words and reinvigorated their old relationship. Coincidentally, when the two settled in Berlin, they inadvertently lived on the same street. Canaris and Heydrich bought houses on Berlin's Augusta Strasse, and the two families became neighbors across the fence. Lina later recalled: "The good old days were restored, and the two families saw each other every day, often organising musical evenings, and the violin concerto played by Erika Canaris and Heydrich was often the finale.
Because of this relationship between Canaris and Heydrich, the relationship between the Military Intelligence Agency and the SS Security Service became increasingly harmonious. Soon, the two sides reached a series of agreements to divide each other's areas of responsibility, which were jokingly dubbed the "Ten Commandments." Under the agreement, the MIA was responsible for foreign espionage, while the SS Security Service was responsible for investigating domestic political cases and any acts involving treason. Since the MIA did not have its own operational structure, Heydrich promised the Gestapo to provide police assistance if necessary. However, this harmonious relationship is not destined to last, because the MIA and the SS Security Service are at odds with each other in terms of political beliefs, operating methods, and employment principles. The ambitious Heydrich was not at all constrained by these rules, and his intelligence network would extend wherever there were German enemies. From the sixteenth year onwards, the Ten Commandments were constantly revised, and each change gave the SS Security Service more powers.
During this year, Himmler and Heydrich took advantage of the extremely abnormal domestic political life of Red Russia, the expansion of the rebellion, and the purge of the so-called Zhulishvik opposition by the government and army, and took advantage of the fierce and suspicious nature of the Zhulishviks and their long-standing prejudice against Tukhachevsky, who was an old military officer, to plot the murder of Marshal Tukhachevsky of the Red Army. This dealt a devastating blow to the backbone of the Red Russian leadership. This is the famous "R" file. 5 out of 3 marshals, 15 out of 13 army group commanders, 85 out of 57 front armies, 195 out of 110 division commanders, 406 out of 220 brigade commanders, and all the commanders of military districts, were killed in this conspiracy.
All this came to naught in the winter of the nineteenth year of the Primordial Year. General Heydrich SS* was arrested and committed suicide for plotting to usurp state power, and since then this identity and 33G classmates have been completely buried in the documents of history. After using his stand-in Li Dai Taozhuang, he sneaked all the way to the Italian port of Empoli, from where he boarded a freighter bound for Peru as a missionary. All of this was carefully planned in advance by the Ministry of Social Investigation, and he would live in Argentina for a while and undergo facial microplastic surgery to partially restore his former face, and then wait until after the war to return to Siberia. His wife and children applied for political asylum at the Colombian Embassy in Germany, and then they would take refuge in Colombia under the arrangement of the Social Investigation Department, where they would not be picked up until ten years later to meet their relatives who had been dead for ten years. This thrilling history is destined to see the light of day, and may forever lie dormant in the secret archives of the Social Investigation Department.
Germany was still in the aftermath of the turmoil, and their eastern neighbors were determined to sprinkle cumin on their wounds. After the Finnish compromise, according to the Moscow Peace Agreement of March 12, the 18th year of the first century, Finland lost Karelia, including Vyborg, Finland's second largest city, 10% of Finland's arable land, 1/5 of its industrial output. Of the 222,000 inhabitants, or 12 per cent of Finland's total population, they were deported from their homes, and only a tiny fraction of the population chose to remain and become Russian citizens. Although the casualties were heavy, it did not touch much for the Red and Russian military, which had a sufficient supply of reserves. With the help of Britain and the United States, the bearded classmate finally looked beyond the newly occupied eastern part of Poland to Germany and the fertile Central European plain beneath him, which was still in chaos after the mustache was gone.
"Comrade Political Commissar, where are we going?" A Red Russian Army officer with a lieutenant colonel's epaulette asked about the blue hat ring next to him. The same sloppy-looking government official blew his nose, then wiped his hands on his trousers, rubbed his fingers that were itchy from the cold, and said angrily:
"Comrade Maxim, it's better not to ask. Don't say I don't know, in fact, even if I do, I can't tell you, it's party discipline. But we've passed Lviv Station, and if we keep going, we should probably get in..."
"Poland?" As a regimental commander, Maxim could still understand the map, but when he found Lviv, he found that it was very close to the Russian-occupied zone of Poland, and there was still half a day to go before entering Poland. However, look at the faces of the soldiers poking out of the stuffy tankers and the cannons and tanks that are obscured by the trolleys on the military trains that whizz past from time to time. Could it be that such a large-scale transfer is "are we going to talk to the Germans?" ”
"It's a special district of Poland." The commissar was always very insightful about this sensitive word: "Maybe it's just a defense against German provocations, but it doesn't hurt to be prepared." My regiment commander comrade" this big-nosed political commissar chicken thief smiled, a look that you understand, Maxim also looked like I knew it, but I was still secretly worried in my heart, I can't beat the Chinese, even Finland took a lot of effort to fight, so if the Germans called, then his own life is not ... Maxim has already begun to break his fingers to see if he can find a great god to transfer his position, even if he is transferred to the Tulun front in the east, it is safer than here. But in a few days, Maxim's eyes will fall out of the surprise of that command.