'Hans Oster' (
August 9,
1887 –
April 9,
1945) was deputy head of the
Abwehr, under
Wilhelm Canaris, and a dedicated opponent of
Adolf Hitler and
Nazism.
He was a central
resistance figure; as early as 1937 he was plotting a coup against Hitler, whereby Count
Hans-Jürgen von Blumenthal and other officers would march into the
Reich Chancellery and arrest him. The plan was aborted when the
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain adopted the policy of
appeasement.
After the outbreak of the
Second World War, Oster informed his friend
Bert Sas, the Netherlands military attaché in Berlin, of the exact date of
invasion of the Netherlands. In 1943, growing mistrust and accusations of aiding
Jews led to his dismissal. In 1944, he was arrested the day after the failed
July 20 Plot to assassinate Hitler; and on April 8, 1945, days before the end of the
Third Reich, he,
Dietrich Bonhoeffer and
Wilhelm Canaris were given a
show trial that resulted in their conviction and sentencing to death.
The following day Oster, Bonhoeffer and Canaris were
hanged in
Flossenbürg concentration camp. Oster was forced to strip naked before being taken to the
gallows. The camp was liberated a few days later by
American forces.
Fabian von Schlabrendorff, one of the few major coordinators of anti-Nazi activities to survive the war, described him as "a man such as God meant men to be, lucid and serene in mind, imperturbable in danger."
[1]
See also
★
List of members of the July 20 Plot
Footnotes
1. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, , , William L. Shirer, , 1960,