Some members of the
Ostlegionen units were conscripted or coerced into serving; others volunteered. Many were former
Soviet personnel, recruited from prisoner of war camps.
Osttruppen were frequently stationed away from front lines and used for coastal defence or rear-area activities, such as
security operations, thus freeing up regular German forces for front-line service. They belonged to two distinct types of units: •
Ost-Bataillone were composed of various nationalities, raised mostly amongst
prisoners of war (POW) captured in
Eastern Europe, who had been formed into
battalion-sized units, which were integrated individually into German combat formations, and; •
Ostlegionen were larger
foreign legion-type units raised amongst members of a specific ethnic minority or minorities, and comprising multiple battalions. Members of
Osteinheiten usually faced execution or harsh terms of imprisonment if they were captured by Soviet forces or repatriated to the USSR by the western Allies. Frequently, emigres in the service of the Wehrmacht had the upper hand in those units or otherwise worked with former Red Army soldiers. ==
Ost-Bataillone==