The Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union codenamed
Operation Barbarossa, which commenced on 22 June 1941, set in motion a "
war of annihilation" which quickly opened the door to the systematic mass murder of European Jews. For Hitler,
Bolshevism was merely "the most recent and most nefarious manifestation of the eternal Jewish threat". On 3 March 1941,
Wehrmacht Joint Operations Staff Chief
Alfred Jodl repeated Hitler's declaration that the "
Jewish-Bolshevik intelligentsia would have to be eliminated" and that the forthcoming war would be a confrontation between two completely opposing cultures. In May 1941,
Gestapo leader
Heinrich Müller wrote a preamble to the new law limiting the jurisdiction of military courts in prosecuting troops for criminal actions because: "This time, the troops will encounter an especially dangerous element from the civilian population, and therefore, have the right and obligation to secure themselves." Himmler and Heydrich assembled a force of about 3,000 men from
Security Police,
Gestapo,
Kripo,
SD, and the
Waffen-SS, as the so-called "special commandos of the security forces" known as the
Einsatzgruppen, to eliminate both communists and Jews in occupied territories. These forces were supported by 21 battalions of
Orpo Reserve Police under
Kurt Daluege, adding up to 11,000 men. The explicit orders given to the Order Police varied between locations, but for
Police Battalion 309 participating in the first mass murder of 5,500 Polish Jews in the Soviet-controlled
Białystok (a Polish
provincial capital), Major Weiss explained to his officers that Barbarossa is a
war of annihilation against Bolshevism, and that his battalions would proceed ruthlessly against all Jews, regardless of age or sex. After crossing the
Soviet demarcation line in 1941, what had been regarded as exceptional in the Greater Germanic Reich became a normal way of operating in the east. The crucial taboo against the murder of women and children was breached not only in Białystok but also in
Gargždai in late June. By July, significant numbers of women and children were being murdered behind all front-lines not only by the Germans but also by the local
Ukrainian and
Lithuanian auxiliary forces. On 29 July 1941, at a meeting of SS officers in
Vileyka (Polish
Wilejka, now Belarus), the
Einsatzgruppen had been given a dressing-down for their
low execution figures. Heydrich himself issued an order to include the Jewish women and children in all subsequent shooting operations. Accordingly, by the end of July the entire Jewish population of Vileyka, men, women and children, were murdered. Entire regions were reported "
free of Jews" by the
Einsatzgruppen. Addressing his district governors in the
General Government on 16 December 1941, Governor-General
Hans Frank said: "But what will happen to the Jews? Do you believe they will be lodged in settlements in
Ostland? In Berlin, we were told: why all this trouble; we cannot use them in the Ostland or the Reichskommissariat either; liquidate them yourselves!" Two days later, Himmler recorded the outcome of his discussion with Hitler. The result was: "
als Partisanen auszurotten" ("exterminate them as partisans"). Israeli historian
Yehuda Bauer wrote that the remark is probably as close as historians will ever get to a definitive order from Hitler for the genocide carried out during the Holocaust. The German army
took over Białystok within days. On Friday, 27 June 1941, the
Reserve Police Battalion 309 arrived in the city and set the Great Synagogue on fire with hundreds of Jewish men locked inside. The burning of the synagogue was followed by a frenzy of murders both inside the homes around the Jewish neighbourhood of Chanajki, and in the city park, lasting until night time. The next day, some 30 wagons of dead bodies were taken to mass graves. As noted by Browning, the murders were led by a commander "who correctly intuited and anticipated the wishes of his
Führer" without direct orders. For reasons unknown, the number of victims in the official report by Major Weis was cut in half. not the
Einsatzgruppen. An Israeli historian
Dina Porat claimed that the Final Solution, i.e.: "the systematic overall physical extermination of Jewish communities one after the other—began in Lithuania" during the massive German chase after the Red Army across the
Reichskommissariat Ostland. The subject of
the Holocaust in Lithuania has been analysed by Konrad Kweit from
USHMM who wrote: "Lithuanian Jews were among the first victims of the Holocaust [beyond the eastern borders of occupied Poland]. The Germans carried out the mass executions [...] signaling the beginning of the 'Final Solution'." About 80,000 Jews were murdered in Lithuania by October (including in
formerly Polish Wilno) and about 175,000 by the end of 1941 according to
official reports. Formed officially on 20 August 1941, the
Reichskommissariat Ukraine—stretching from prewar east-central Poland to Crimea—had become operational theatre of the
Einsatzgruppe C. Within the Soviet Union proper, between 9 July 1941 and 19 September 1941 the city of
Zhytomyr was made
Judenfrei in three murder operations conducted by German and Ukrainian police in which 10,000 Jews perished. After an
incident in Bila Tserkva in which 90 small children left behind had to be shot separately,
Blobel requested that Jewish mothers hold them in their arms during mass shootings. Long before the conference at Wannsee, 28,000 Jews were shot by SS and Ukrainian military in
Vinnytsia on 22 September 1941, followed by the 29 September massacre of 33,771 Jews at
Babi Yar. In
Dnipropetrovsk, on 13 October 1941 some 10,000–15,000 Jews were shot. In the first days of January 1942 in
Kharkiv, 12,000 Jews were murdered, but smaller massacres continued in this period on daily basis in countless other locations. In August 1942 in the presence of only a few German SS men over 5,000 Jews were massacred in Polish
Zofjówka by the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police leading to the town's complete sweep from existence.
Distrikt Galizien Historians find it difficult to determine precisely when the first concerted effort at annihilation of all Jews began in the last weeks of June 1941 during Operation Barbarossa. The murders continued uninterrupted. On 12 October 1941,
in Stanisławów, some 10,000–12,000 Jewish men, women, and children were shot at the Jewish cemetery by the German uniformed SS-men and Ukrainian Auxiliary Police during the so-called ""
(de). The shooters began firing at 12 noon and continued without stopping by taking turns. There were picnic tables set up on the side with bottles of vodka and sandwiches for those who needed to rest from the deafening noise of gunfire. It was the single largest massacre of Polish Jews in
Generalgouvernement prior to mass gassings of
Aktion Reinhard, which commenced at
Bełżec in March 1942. Notably, the extermination operations in
Chełmno had begun on 8 December 1941, one-and-a-half months before Wannsee, but Chełmno—located in
Reichsgau Wartheland—was not a part of Reinhard, and neither was
Auschwitz-Birkenau functioning as an extermination center until November 1944 in
Polish lands annexed by Hitler and
added to Germany proper. The conference at Wannsee gave impetus to the so-called
second sweep of the Holocaust by the bullet in the east. Between April and July 1942 in
Volhynia, 30,000 Jews were murdered in death pits with the help of dozens of newly formed Ukrainian
Schutzmannschaft. Owing to good relations with the Ukrainian
Hilfsverwaltung, these auxiliary battalions were deployed by the SS also in Russia Center, Russia South, and in Byelorussia; each with about 500 soldiers divided into three companies. They participated in the extermination of 150,000 Volhynian Jews alone, or 98 percent of the Jewish inhabitants of the entire region. In July 1942 the Completion of the Final Solution in the General Government territory which included
Distrikt Galizien, was ordered personally by Himmler. He set the initial deadline for 31 December 1942. ==Phase two: deportations to extermination camps==