and Witzleben in France, March 1941 with
Curt Haase, commander of the
15th Army, May 1941 In September 1939, Witzleben, then a , took command of the
1st Army, stationed on the
Western Front. When
Germany attacked France on 10 May 1940, the First Army was part of
Army Group C. On 14 June it broke through the
Maginot Line and, within three days, had forced several French divisions to surrender. For this, Witzleben was decorated with the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross and, on 19 July, was promoted to () during the
1940 Field Marshal Ceremony. On 1 May 1941 he was appointed Commander-in-Chief
OB West, succeeding Rundstedt, who was to command the
Army Group South on the
Eastern Front. Witzleben criticized the
Nazi regime for beginning its invasion of the Soviet Union (
Operation Barbarossa, which started the German-Soviet War on 22 June 1941). In February 1942 he had
surgery. On 15 March 1942 his wife died of cancer, and he took leave from the position of OB West for health reasons.
20 July 1944 In 1944, the conspirators around
Claus von Stauffenberg saw Witzleben as the key man in their plans. Beck was seen as a prospective provisional
head of state, and Hoepner was in line to command the inner () forces. Witzleben was to become commander-in-chief of the , the ranking officer of the new regime. However, on 20 July 1944, the day of Stauffenberg's attempt on Hitler's life at the
Wolf's Lair in
East Prussia, Witzleben did not arrive at the
Bendlerblock in Berlin from the OKH-HQ ( headquarters) at
Zossen to assume command of the coup forces until 8pm, when it was already clear that the coup had failed. He then protested angrily that it had been bungled and left after 45 minutes to return to Zossen, where he reported the situation to
Eduard Wagner and then drove back to his country estate, away, where he was arrested the next day by
Viktor Linnarz of the OKH personnel office. He was then cast out of the by the (), a conclave of officers set up after the attempted assassination to remove officers who had been involved in the plot, mainly so they would no longer be subject to
German military law and could be arraigned in a show trial before the headed by
Roland Freisler.
Trial and death On 7 August 1944, Witzleben was in the first group of accused conspirators to be brought before the . Ravaged by the conditions of his
Gestapo arrest, he surprisingly approached the bench giving the
Nazi salute, for which he was rebuked by the presiding judge,
Roland Freisler. Witzleben was sentenced to death on the same day. Witzleben gave these closing words in court, addressed to Freisler: Much of the court proceedings, including scenes of Witzleben's trial, were filmed for the German weekly newsreel ; however, Propaganda Minister
Joseph Goebbels decided against releasing the footage, firstly because Freisler's abusive ranting in the courtroom might draw sympathy for the accused, and secondly because the regime wanted to quell public discussion of the event. The material was classified as secret (). Witzleben was put to death the same day at
Plötzensee Prison in Berlin. By Hitler's direct orders he was hanged from a
meat hook with a thin hemp rope, often mistakenly reported as a
piano wire, and the execution was filmed, though the footage has since been lost. Following his execution for treason, his family was stripped of pension claims and subsequently lived in poverty well into the post-war years. ==Decorations==