Mario Cacciottolo (18. januar 2013). «The Nazi prisoners bugged by Germans». BBC. Besøkt 21. desember 2020. «One group of German generals captured during World War II thought they had hit the jackpot. Held in a stately home, they were allowed to keep personal servants, drink wine and eat good food. As a result they boasted of how stupid the British were, and one even wrote to his family to wish that they could join him at his prison, as he rated it so highly. But what the prisoners did not know was that British intelligence had bugged every part of their accommodation, from lampshades and plant pots right down to the billiards table around which they relaxed on lazy days. They were gleaning information about the psyche of the Nazi military from the idle gossip flowing between the prisoners.»
Kay, Alex J.; Stahel, David (2018). «Reconceiving Criminality in the German Army on the Eastern Front, 1941–1942». Mass Violence in Nazi-Occupied Europe. Indiana University Press. s. 173–194. JSTORj.ctv3znw3v.11. doi:10.2307/j.ctv3znw3v.11.
Bartov 1997, s. 165. Bartov, Omer (1997). «German Soldiers and the Holocaust: Historiography, Research and Implications». History and Memory. 9 (1/2): 162–188. doi:10.2979/HIS.1997.9.1-2.162.
Bartov 1997, s. 166. Bartov, Omer (1997). «German Soldiers and the Holocaust: Historiography, Research and Implications». History and Memory. 9 (1/2): 162–188. doi:10.2979/HIS.1997.9.1-2.162.
Bartov 1997, s. 171. Bartov, Omer (1997). «German Soldiers and the Holocaust: Historiography, Research and Implications». History and Memory. 9 (1/2): 162–188. doi:10.2979/HIS.1997.9.1-2.162.
Bartov 1997, s. 167-168. Bartov, Omer (1997). «German Soldiers and the Holocaust: Historiography, Research and Implications». History and Memory. 9 (1/2): 162–188. doi:10.2979/HIS.1997.9.1-2.162.
Bartov 1997, s. 168. Bartov, Omer (1997). «German Soldiers and the Holocaust: Historiography, Research and Implications». History and Memory. 9 (1/2): 162–188. doi:10.2979/HIS.1997.9.1-2.162.
Tymkiw 2007, s. 485–492. Tymkiw, Michael (2007). «Debunking the myth of the saubere Wehrmacht». Word & Image: A Journal of Verbal/Visual Enquiry. 23 (4): 485–492. doi:10.1080/02666286.2007.10435801.
Anderson 2000, s. 325. Anderson, Truman (juli 2000). «Germans, Ukrainians and Jews: Ethnic Politics in Heeresgebiet Sud, June– December 1941». War in History. 7 (3): 325–351. doi:10.1177/096834450000700304.
Ben Knight (7. april 2017). «WWII deserters upset as exhibition focuses on East Germany». Deutsche Welle. Besøkt 1. februar 2021. «A military justice exhibition in Torgau has attracted outrage for devoting more space to victims of the communist dictatorship than the Nazi regime. German WWII deserters have often been the Nazis' forgotten victims.»
Kay-Alexander Scholz (28. mars 2018). «German army instills new traditions to move away from troubled history». Deutsche Welle. Besøkt 1. februar 2021. «A quick glance into the past may shed light on why such items are collected in the first place. It was, after all, former Wehrmacht officers who organized the Bundeswehr in the 1950s. Military historian Wolfram Wette says those "traditionalists" had no desire to deal critically with the past. He says it was they who created the myth of the "clean Wehrmacht" – that is, they claimed chain of command and innocence when it came to war crimes, deflecting all of the blame to Hitler and his henchmen.»
Oliver Pieper (7. mai 2020). «The Wehrmacht and the Holocaust on the battlefield». Deutsche Welle. Besøkt 2. februar 2021. «Seventy-five years after the end of World War II, the legend of the innocent Wehrmacht is no more, says historian Hannes Heer. For decades, some Germans considered the SS to be the only war criminals.»
Förster 1988, s. 21. Förster, Jürgen (1988). «Barbarossa Revisited: Strategy and Ideology in the East». Jewish Social Studies. 50 (1/2): 21–36. JSTOR4467404.
Kay, Alex J.; Stahel, David (2018). «Reconceiving Criminality in the German Army on the Eastern Front, 1941–1942». Mass Violence in Nazi-Occupied Europe. Indiana University Press. s. 173–194. JSTORj.ctv3znw3v.11. doi:10.2307/j.ctv3znw3v.11.
Alex Henry. «Who were the German Generals?». Trent Park House. Besøkt 21. desember 2020. «By the end of the war, over 80 senior German officers had passed through Trent Park, over two-thirds were generals and above. Who were these men? They were certainly a diverse group, but some trends do emerge. For example, the majority were born at the end of the nineteenth century, and consequently many were veterans of the First World War. Most were Prussian, and Protestants outnumbered Catholics by 4:1. As a group, their wartime experiences were extensive – from the unstoppable victories of 1940 in Poland, Scandinavia and France, to crushing defeats in Russia and the Western Desert in 1942-1943, and the storm of steel that came with the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944. Although, their specific roles within these campaigns differed widely between military administrators and fire-breathing frontline leaders.»
ushmm.org
encyclopedia.ushmm.org
«THE GERMAN MILITARY AND THE HOLOCAUST». United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Besøkt 15. desember 2020. «During World War II, the German military helped fulfill Nazism's racial, political, and territorial ambitions. Long after the war, a myth persisted claiming the German military (or Wehrmacht) was not involved in the Holocaust and other crimes associated with Nazi genocidal policy. This belief is untrue. The German military participated in many aspects of the Holocaust: in supporting Hitler, in the use of forced labor, and in the mass murder of Jews and other groups targeted by the Nazis.»
«Hamburger Institut für Sozialforschung». web.archive.org. 27. september 2007. Archived from the original on 27. september 2007. Besøkt 21. desember 2020.CS1-vedlikehold: Uheldig URL (link)
Lenṭin, Ronit. (2000). Israel and the daughters of the Shoah : reoccupying the territories of silence. New York: Berghahn Books. s. 33–34. ISBN1-57181-774-3. OCLC44720589.