Schmidt joined the
Prussian Army in 1906 and served during World War I. He was retained in the
Reichswehr where he served in staff roles. In October 1936 he was promoted to
Generalmajor and appointed commander of the
1st Panzer Division. In 1939 Schmidt led the division in the
invasion of Poland. On 1 February 1940 he was appointed commanding general of the
XXXIX Panzer Corps. He led the Corps in France and was awarded the
Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his role in
that campaign on 3 June 1940. He was promoted to
General der Panzertruppe and appointed acting commander of the
2nd Army which took part in the
Battle of Moscow. On 25 December 1941 he was appointed Commander of the
2nd Panzer Army (replacing the sacked
General Guderian). His brother
Hans-Thilo Schmidt sold details of the Germans'
Enigma machine and other sensitive military information to the French
Deuxième Bureau from 1931 until the German invasion of France in 1940. On 16 March with effect and rank seniority (RDA) from 1 January 1942 (order number 2), Schmidt was promoted to
Generaloberst, but on 10 April 1943, he was relieved of his command after the
Gestapo arrested his brother for spying for the French, and found letters that Schmidt had written in which he was highly critical of Hitler’s conduct of the war and the
Nazi Party. He appeared before a
court martial but was acquitted. According to the order of the Deputy General Command IX Army Corps, Schmidt was discharged from active service with the statutory pension on 6 October with effect from 30 September 1943 (he received transitional allowance and, from 1 January 1944, a pension). Generaloberst (Ret.) Schmidt was never re-activated.
POW On 16 December 1947 Schmidt was arrested by
Soviet soldiers on his way to his home in Weimar. Taken to Moscow, he was initially imprisoned at the
Vladimir Central Prison and
Butyrka prison. In 1952, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison for war crimes by a
military tribunal. In March 1953, dictator
Stalin died. In September 1955,
Chancellor of Germany Adenauer visited Moscow and negotiated with
Nikita Khrushchev. On 12 September 1955, he reached an agreement on the return of 10,000 prisoners of war and the establishment of
diplomatic relations. On 7 January 1956, Schmidt was released and repatriated to Germany. ==Promotions==