Otto Günsche

Officer

Birthday September 24, 1917

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Jena, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, German Empire

DEATH DATE 2003-10-2, Lohmar, Germany (86 years old)

Nationality Germany

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1917

Otto Günsche (24 September 1917 – 2 October 2003) was a mid-ranking officer in the Waffen-SS of Nazi Germany during World War II.

He was a member of the SS Division Leibstandarte before he became Adolf Hitler's personal adjutant.

1934

After leaving secondary school at 16 he volunteered for the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler and joined the Nazi Party on 1 July 1934.

1936

He first met Adolf Hitler in 1936.

1940

He was Hitler's SS adjutant from 1940 to 1941.

1941

From 1 January 1941 to 30 April 1942, he attended the SS officer's academy.

He then had front-line combat service as a Panzer Grenadier company commander with the LSSAH.

1943

On 12 January 1943, Günsche became a personal adjutant for Hitler.

1944

From August 1943 to 5 February 1944, Günsche served on the Eastern Front and in France.

In March 1944 he was again appointed a personal adjutant for Hitler.

As a personal SS adjutant (Persönlicher Adjutant) to Hitler, Günsche was also a member of the Führerbegleitkommando which provided security protection for Hitler.

During the war, one or two were always present with Hitler during the military situation conferences.

He was present at the 20 July 1944 attempt to kill Hitler at the Wolf's Lair in Rastenburg.

The bomb explosion burst Günsche's eardrums and caused him to receive a number of contusions.

1945

Günsche was taken prisoner by soldiers of the Red Army in Berlin on 2 May 1945.

With the end of Nazi Germany imminent, Günsche was tasked by Hitler on 30 April 1945 with ensuring the cremation of his body after his death.

That afternoon, he stood guard outside the room in the Führerbunker where Hitler and Eva Braun committed suicide.

After waiting a short time, Hitler's valet, Heinz Linge, opened the study door with Martin Bormann at his side.

The two men entered the study with Günsche right behind them.

Günsche then left the study and announced that Hitler was dead to a group in the briefing room, which included Joseph Goebbels, General Hans Krebs, and General Wilhelm Burgdorf.

Günsche had the table and chairs in the study moved out of the way and blankets were laid out on the floor.

Hitler and Braun's lifeless bodies were then wrapped in blankets.

In accordance with Hitler's prior written and verbal instructions, his and Braun's bodies were carried up the stairs and through the bunker's emergency exit to the garden behind the Reich Chancellery to be burned.

Having ensured that the corpses were burnt using petrol supplied by Hitler's chauffeur Erich Kempka, Günsche later left the Führerbunker after midnight on 1 May.

On 2 May 1945, Günsche was taken prisoner by Soviet Red Army troops that were encircling the city and flown to Moscow for sharp interrogation by the NKVD.

Before sentencing he was held in the NKVD special camp No. 48 for high-ranked POW.

1949

The report was received by Stalin on 30 December 1949.

1954

The dossier was edited by officers of the Soviet NKVD (later superseded by the MVD, separate from the agency of the KGB, formed in 1954).

1956

After being held in various prisons and labour camps in the Soviet Union, he was released from Bautzen Penitentiary on 2 May 1956.

Otto Günsche was born in Jena in Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach.

He served his sentence in Sverdlovsk, transferred to Bautzen in East Germany in 1955, and released on 2 May 1956.

During imprisonment, Günsche and Linge were primary sources for Operation Myth, the biography of Hitler which was prepared for Joseph Stalin.

2003

Günsche died of heart failure at his home in Lohmar, North Rhine-Westphalia in 2003.

He had three children.

Günsche's body was cremated.

Citations

Bibliography

2005

The report was published in book form in 2005 under the title: The Hitler Book: The Secret Dossier Prepared for Stalin from the Interrogations of Hitler's Personal Aides.