The sweeping initial victories of
Operation Barbarossa produced hundreds of thousands of
Soviet prisoners of war, many of whom were not
Russian. All of them were hungry; many were starving. In a mere eight months of 1941-1942, the invading German armies killed an estimated 2.8 million Soviet POWs through starvation, exposure, and
summary execution. Conditions in the prison camps were atrocious. There were no barracks or permanent housing. The camps were simply open areas fenced off with barbed wire. The prisoners had to lie in the sun, then in mud, and in the fall—with temperatures as low as minus 30 degrees Celsius—faced the possibility of freezing to death. The foreign Waffen beginnings were shrouded in great secrecy for fear of
Hitler's disapproval, who was categorically opposed to any form of participation of
Soviet citizens in the war against Russia. But the
German army's needs on the
Eastern Front induced German commanders to accept the services of volunteers to fight the
Soviet regime even against the clear orders of the
German High Command. Tens of thousands of them were
Muslims, where most of them came from the Soviet Union. In December 1941 a top-secret memorandum ordered that the OKW was to create two Muslim units: the
Turkestan Legion, consisting of
Central Asian Muslim volunteers; such as
Turkomans,
Uzbeks,
Kazakhs,
Kyrgyz,
Karakalpaks, and
Tajiks, and the
Kaukasisch-Mohammedanische Legion from
Caucasian Muslims volunteers; such as
Azerbaijanis,
Dagestanis,
Ingush, and
Lezgins. The German courting of the Muslims was part of Hitler's schemes for bringing
Turkey onto his side and to advance control of the oil fields in the
Middle East and
Baku. The most numerous ethnicity among the Muslims that served the Germans were the Turkestanis. The first Turkestani volunteers were integrated as a single
battalion of the
444th Security Division in November 1941 and became an auxiliary force to help the Germans fight the
Soviet partisans. Major Andreas Meyer-Mader was appointed as commander of the 444th Battalion. Meyer-Mader, an Austrian, had served on the staff of
Chiang Kai-shek's
National Revolutionary Army before
World War II. According to
Argumenty i Fakty newspaper, 40,000 Azerbaijanis fought for
Nazi Germany, while 700,000 Azerbaijanis were conscripted into
Soviet armies. ==450th Turkistanisches Battalion==