Stroop joined the
Nazi Party and SS in 1932. In 1933, he was appointed leader of the state
auxiliary police. One year later, he was promoted from the rank of SS-
Oberscharführer to SS-
Hauptsturmführer. Subsequently, he worked for the SS administration in
Münster and
Hamburg. , Count
Clemens von Galen In 1934, Bishop
Clemens von Galen of Münster attacked the racist ideologies of the new regime, partly poking fun at it, partly critiquing its ideological basis as published by
Alfred Rosenberg. He declared it unacceptable to refuse the
Old Testament because of its Jewish authorship, and to limit morality and virtue to the perceived usefulness of a particular race. In retaliation, Stroop and a von Galen family member of the SS made an official visit to the Bishop. Both were instructed to pressure the Bishop into approving Rosenberg's doctrines. If he refused, they were ordered to threaten him with the confiscation of Church property and an anti-Catholic propaganda campaign. The visit began well, with the bishop commending Stroop's mother for her devout Catholicism and charitable work in Detmold. However, the Bishop turned the tables on his two visitors. He categorically refused to accept or praise Rosenberg's doctrines of
euthanizing or
forcibly sterilizing disabled people. To Stroop's further shock, the Bishop denounced the Nazis for trying to introduce Germanic neo-paganism into his diocese. He scoffed at marriage ceremonies and funerals conducted before altars dedicated to
Wotan. Stroop, who attended such a ceremony only days before, was stunned that the bishop had learned of it so quickly. At the end of the meeting, von Galen stated the Church would remain loyal to the State in all lawful matters. He expressed his deep love for Germany and reminded them he was the first Catholic Bishop to publicly acknowledge the new regime. In September 1938, Stroop was promoted again, this time to the rank of SS-
Standartenführer (
colonel), and served near Reichenberg (
Liberec), in the
Sudetenland. In conversation with Moczarski, Stroop happily reminisced about his many visits to the hot springs at Karlsbad (
Karlovy Vary). For this reason, their cellmate, Gustav Schielke, expressed disgust: instead of serving in combat, "
Herr General did battle in spas."
Early World War II After the German
invasion of Poland, Stroop served as commander of the SS section in Gnesen (
Gniezno). During the occupation of Poland, Stroop was transferred to
Poznań as head of
Selbstschutz, the notorious "self-defense" formation of the local
ethnic Germans. In May 1941, Stroop changed his forename from Josef to Jürgen for ideological reasons and in honor of his dead infant son. From 7 July to 15 September 1941, Stroop served in combat on the
Eastern Front in the
SS Division Totenkopf. He was awarded a Clasp to the
Iron Cross 2nd Class and an
Infantry Assault Badge in Bronze. On 16 September 1942, he was promoted to SS-
Brigadeführer and assigned as an Inspector of the
SiPo and
SD of the Higher
SS and Police Leader for
Russia South until October 1942, when he took command of an SS garrison in
Kherson before becoming the SS and Police Leader (SSPF) for Lemberg (
Lviv) in February 1943. Stroop was SS inspector of
Durchgangsstrasse IV, a large forced labor project to build a road from Lemberg to Stalino (now
Donetsk).
Suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Jürgen Stroop (center, in a field cap) with his men in the burning of
Warsaw Ghetto, 1943 Stroop was involved in the month-long suppression of the
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, an action which cost the lives of just over 57,000 people. He was sent to Warsaw on 17 April 1943 by SS leader
Heinrich Himmler, as a replacement for SS-
Oberführer Ferdinand von Sammern-Frankenegg, who was relieved of duty. Stroop took over as
SS and Police Leader of Warsaw from Sammern-Frankenegg on 19 April 1943 following the latter's failure to suppress the uprising. He commented to war crimes investigators: Stroop ordered the entire Ghetto to be systematically burned down and blown up, building by building. 57,065 of the survivors, including men, women, and children were either killed on the spot or
deported for extermination. In conversation with Moczarski, Stroop described the destruction of the Ghetto in great detail. Stroop also disclosed that, unlike the men under his command, he always left the Ghetto at mealtimes and overnight. showing the clearing of the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943 In his daily report 1 May 1943 Stroop reported: "Progress of large scale operation on 1 May 1943. Start 0900 hours. 10 searching parties were detailed, moreover a larger battle group was detailed to comb out a certain block of buildings, with the added instruction to burn that block down. Within this block of buildings there existed a so-called armament factory which had not yet been entirely evacuated, although it had had enough time to do so. It was not exempted from the operation. Today's operation a total of 1,026 Jews were caught, of whom 245 were killed, either in battle or while resisting. Moreover, a considerable number of bandits and ringleaders were also caught. In one case a Jew who had already been made ready for transport fired three shots against a 1st Lieutenant of Police, but missed his mark...". Nearly 6 years later Stroop recalled this shooting episode (quoted in the book
Conversations with an Executioner by Kazimierz Moczarski): Stroop expressed confusion that the Ghetto's Jewish combatants, whom he viewed as
Untermenschen, fought effectively against his men.
SS and Police Leader of Warsaw , c. 1910 markings in
Poland After the suppression, Stroop ordered the destruction of Warsaw's
Great Synagogue on May 16, 1943. Stroop's description was quoted in
Conversations with an Executioner: Stroop continued in his position as SS and Police Leader of Warsaw. Krüger presented an Iron Cross 1st Class to him on 18 June 1943 for the Warsaw Ghetto "action" at a gala reception in Warsaw's
Łazienki Park. Stroop's detailed
75-page report on the suppression of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was bound in black leather. Stroop detailed the capture/and or killing of 57,065 Warsaw Ghetto inmates while German forces had 110 casualties [17 dead/93 wounded]. It included copies of all
communiqués and many photographs; two separate copies were sent to SS Police Leader East
Friedrich-Wilhelm Krüger and Heinrich Himmler while Stroop kept a copy as well as an unbound file copy. Titled
The Jewish Quarter of Warsaw is no more!, it would later be used as evidence at the
Nuremberg Trials.
Occupied Greece In September 1943, Stroop was named the
Higher SS and Police Leader (HSSPF) in
Greece. On 16 October, the government of
Ioannis Rallis published a decree which put the
Security Battalions,
Hellenic Gendarmerie and
City Police under Stroop's orders. The local civilian administration found his methods and behavior unacceptable, and withdrew cooperation, forbidding the local Order Police from having anything to do with him, which made his position untenable. Consequently, he was removed and replaced by
Walter Schimana, and on 9 November, was appointed Commander of SS-
Oberabschnitt Rhein-Westmark (an SS administrative district named for the
Rhine and
Gau Westmark) in
Wiesbaden, serving there until the close of the war.
Plot of 20 July 1944 after
Claus von Stauffenberg's attempt on Hitler's life According to Moczarski, no subject enraged Stroop more than the
20 July plot against Adolf Hitler. Whenever the subject came up, Stroop cursed those involved, "in unprintable terms," as a "murderous band of generals and Jew-ridden civilians." Stroop blamed Germany's defeat on Germans: "A few weaklings poisoned by enemy agents and infected with subversive ideologies were all it took to undermine us. The minute we suffered military defeats, the cancerous elements in our society swung into action, organizing Mafias and creating 'patriotic discussion groups.' In the end, they destroyed our nation." He also praised
Roland Freisler of the
Volksgerichtshof as "a fine judge." Stroop also boasted about his participation in dealing with Field Marshal
Günther von Kluge for his involvement in the plot. As General
Wilhelm Burgdorf did with Rommel, Stroop claimed to have offered the Field Marshal a choice between suicide and a
show trial before Judge Freisler. To Stroop's outrage, Kluge demanded his day in court. Stroop then claimed he shot Kluge in the head. Himmler announced the death of the Field Marshal was a suicide.
Murder of US prisoners of war Between October 1944 and March 1945, nine airmen of the
United States Army Air Forces were summarily executed after they were shot down and captured in Stroop's district. They were Sergeant Willard P. Perry, Sergeant Robert W. Garrison, Private Ray R. Herman, Second Lieutenant William A. Duke, Second Lieutenant Archibald B. Monroe, Private Jimmie R. Heathman, Lieutenant William H. Forman, and Private Robert T. McDonald. After Moczarski reminded him the killing of POWs was defined as criminal under the
Hague and
Geneva Conventions, Stroop responded, "It was common knowledge American flyers were terrorists and murderers who used methods contrary to civilized norms ... We were given a statement to that effect from the highest authorities. It was accompanied by an order from Heinrich Himmler." As a result, he explained, all nine POWs were taken to the forest and given "a ration of lead for their American necks."
End of the war In late March 1945, Stroop was forced to retreat from Wiesbaden as the advancing
U.S. Army crossed the Rhine bridgeheads. Upon his arrival in
Pottenstein, Bavaria, Stroop received word Himmler wished to meet him in Berlin. On 14 April, Stroop met Himmler in his private train near
Prenzlau. With a pass signed by Himmler, Stroop traveled to the
Alpine Redoubt with a group of teenaged
Hitler Youth members he was training for war. To obtain gasoline and other scarce supplies, Stroop showed Himmler's signed order and claimed to be transporting his
Werwolf unit to build an Alpine bastion for the salvation of the Reich. However, after a secret conference at
Taxenbach, Austria, Stroop and his fellow Werwolf commanders decided to change into Wehrmacht uniforms and surrender to the
Western Allies. Soon after, Stroop abandoned his Werwolf unit near
Kufstein and fled north. On 10 May 1945, Stroop surrendered to the American forces in the village of
Rottau, Bavaria. Stroop told Moczarski he was carrying a
cyanide tablet, which he intended to take if captured. After Moczarski asked him his reasons for not taking it, Stroop replied, "It's really quite simple. I was afraid." At the time he surrendered, Stroop carried forged discharge papers made out to a Wehrmacht Captain of Reserve Josef Straup. He kept to this story for nearly two months, before admitting his identity on 2 July 1945. ==Trial at Dachau==