Arthur Nebe rose from a Berlin detective to head
of Nazi Germany’s criminal police, a man trusted by Himmler and feared by his subordinates, yet in
1944, he turned up on the list of conspirators who tried to overthrow Adolf Hitler.

How does
a man go from architect of the Nazi police state to traitor within it? This is the story of
Arthur Nebe, the Nazi cop who betrayed Hitler.

Arthur Nebe was born on 13 November 1894 in Berlin, the son of a schoolteacher from
a middle-class Prussian family.

Like many young men of his generation, he grew up in an atmosphere
of rigid discipline and patriotism.

When the First World War began in August 1914, Nebe volunteered
for service and joined the 17th Pioneer Battalion of the Imperial German Army.

He served on the
Western Front, where he was twice wounded by poison gas.

The experience left both physical
and psychological scars but also reinforced his admiration for order, obedience, and hierarchy,
values that would later shape his policing career.

After the Armistice in November 1918, Nebe
returned to a defeated and chaotic Germany.

The Weimar Republic faced uprisings from both
the left and right, and the police were often caught between politics and public unrest.

In
1920, Nebe joined the Berlin Kriminalpolizei, or criminal investigation department.

Within
four years he had become police commissioner, recognized for his efficiency and intellect.

Colleagues described him as ambitious and somewhat aloof, a bureaucrat more comfortable
with statistics and reports than street work.

During the 1920s, Nebe’s career advanced rapidly.

The criminal police underwent professional modernization, embracing fingerprinting,
forensics, and centralized record-keeping.

Nebe fit perfectly into this world of analytical
policing.

Yet the economic crises of the decade, hyperinflation, mass unemployment, and political
extremism, drew many civil servants toward nationalist and authoritarian views.

By the early
1930s Nebe had drifted into far-right circles within the Berlin police, where resentment toward
the Republic and fear of communism ran deep.

On 1 July 1931, Nebe joined the Nazi
Party and soon after the SS.

At that time, the Nazis were not yet in power, but Nebe sensed
opportunity.

He became a liaison between Berlin’s police and the growing Nazi movement, providing
information about investigations and helping coordinate with party activists.

His decision
reflected both conviction and calculation: aligning with a movement that promised stability
and order also offered career security.

When Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor on 30
January 1933, Nebe was already well positioned inside the system.

He immediately supported
the purge of political opponents within the police and assisted in reorganizing departments
under Nazi control.

By the end of that year, Nebe had become a trusted figure to Heinrich Himmler’s
expanding security network.

The once-independent detective from Berlin was now helping construct
a new kind of policing, one that blurred the line between law enforcement and ideology.

In the span of less than two decades, Arthur Nebe had transformed from a wounded
front-line soldier into a rising star of the Nazi police state.

The traits that defined him early,
discipline, ambition, and loyalty to authority, would soon propel him into positions of immense
power, and ultimately, moral catastrophe.

After the Nazis consolidated power in 1933, Nebe became one of the most influential policemen in
Germany.

His reputation for administrative skill, and his early loyalty to the Party, paid off
quickly.

In 1935, he was appointed head of the Prussian Landeskriminalamt, the central criminal
police office in Germany’s largest state.

Only a year later, in July 1936, Himmler and Reinhard
Heydrich reorganized the entire security apparatus.

The Gestapo, the Sicherheitsdienst,
and the criminal police were all merged under the newly formed Reichssicherheitshauptamt.

Nebe was placed at the top of the Kripo, heading the Reichskriminalpolizeiamt, effectively
the national detective service of the Third Reich.

From that position, Nebe helped integrate
traditional criminal investigation into the machinery of Nazi state repression.

Under
his supervision, the Kripo expanded its definition of “crime” to include social
and racial categories.

Homeless people, sex workers, and those labeled “asocial” were
now subject to police detention.

Jews, Roma, and Sinti were placed under Kripo surveillance
and registered as “habitual criminals.

” These shifts blurred the distinction between
public security and ideological policing.

Nebe’s office compiled extensive data that
later facilitated deportations and mass arrests.

By 1939, Nebe’s power reached beyond Germany’s
borders.

He oversaw the Kripo’s involvement in identifying and deporting Roma families from
Berlin and coordinating investigations into perceived racial and political enemies.

That
same year, he was promoted to SS-Gruppenführer and Generalleutnant of Police, reflecting
his status within Himmler’s elite circle.

Yet Nebe remained different from the more
fanatical SS officers around him: he was methodical, bureaucratic, and outwardly reserved.

One of his highest-profile assignments came after the 8 November 1939 bombing attempt on Hitler at
Munich’s Bürgerbräukeller.

Nebe personally led the investigation into the would-be assassin, Georg
Elser, a Swabian carpenter who acted alone.

Nebe’s interrogation concluded that Elser had no links
to British intelligence or organized resistance, a finding that infuriated Himmler, who had wanted
a wider conspiracy.

It was an early sign of the precarious balance Nebe maintained between
professional policing and political obedience.

Throughout the late 1930s, Nebe built a
vast network of subordinates, but he also grew increasingly enmeshed in SS politics.

Within
the RSHA, he answered directly to Heydrich, whose ruthless efficiency set the tone for the security
services.

Nebe’s Kripo became indispensable to the regime’s control of everyday life, tracking
criminals, enforcing racial laws, and feeding information into Gestapo and SD databases.

Historians still debate how much of Nebe’s work was driven by ideology versus ambition.

Some suggest he viewed the Nazi police system as a way to professionalize law enforcement, even
as it descended into state terror.

Others see no such ambiguity, describing him as an opportunist
who used his expertise to serve a brutal regime.

Either way, by the time Germany invaded the
Soviet Union in June 1941, Nebe was no longer just a policeman.

He was an integral part of the
SS’s command structure, ready to take on a new and deadly assignment in the East.

When Operation Barbarossa began on 22 June 1941,
Arthur Nebe was among several senior SS officers who volunteered for front-line duty.

He was
placed in command of Einsatzgruppe B, one of four mobile security units that advanced behind the
Wehrmacht into Soviet territory.

These formations operated under the Reich Main Security Office,
reporting directly to Reinhard Heydrich.

Their stated mission was to “secure” the rear areas,
but in practice, they carried out systematic operations against Jewish communities, political
officials, and others targeted by the Nazi regime.

By early July 1941, Nebe’s headquarters were
established in Minsk, operating behind Army Group Centre.

He commanded roughly 655 men,
divided among four subordinate Einsatzkommandos, supported by local auxiliaries and police
battalions.

Their movements extended from Vilna to Mogilev, Smolensk, and beyond.

Reports
sent to Berlin were strikingly bureaucratic, tables of figures treated as if they were
routine statistics.

A dispatch dated 13 July 1941 recorded large-scale “security actions” in
Minsk and Vilna, bearing Nebe’s own signature.

Under Nebe’s direction, Einsatzgruppe B carried
out increasingly systematic “security operations” in the occupied territories.

By August 1941,
these missions had become part of a grim routine.

In Mogilev, Nebe oversaw experiments designed to
make these operations more “efficient,” including the early use of sealed vehicles powered by
engine exhaust.

This method later evolved into the mobile gas vans deployed elsewhere in
occupied Europe.

Historians identify Nebe as one of the early figures involved in developing
these mechanisms of large-scale actions.

By 14 November 1941, the unit reported
approximately 45,000 recorded fatalities, figures whose accuracy remains debated.

The
documents illustrate the methodical precision of Nazi bureaucracy.

After the war, Nebe
claimed through intermediaries that he had exaggerated numbers to end operations sooner or
protect subordinates.

Modern scholars generally reject these explanations; surviving records
portray a commander who implemented orders efficiently and without documented objection.

In October 1941, Nebe returned to Berlin, citing illness and administrative needs at the Kripo.

He resumed his previous post and maintained his rank as SS-Gruppenführer.

For the rest of the
war, he remained within the upper echelons of the Nazi police system.

Historians still argue
whether his departure from the East reflected moral discomfort or simply a routine reassignment.

The truth likely lies somewhere between ambition and self-preservation.

Nebe had seen what
the SS was capable of, and what it rewarded.

After returning from the Soviet Union, Nebe resumed his role as head of the Reich Criminal
Police Office.

From his Berlin headquarters, he managed investigations, data systems, and
coordination with other branches of the RSHA.

In June 1942, he was appointed President
of the International Criminal Police Commission, the forerunner of Interpol, where he represented
Nazi Germany in international policing circles.

To most observers, Nebe looked every bit the
loyal SS general.

Yet privately, his relationship with the regime had begun to fracture.

By 1943, disillusionment was spreading among segments of the German elite as the war
turned against the Reich.

Nebe’s connections with conservative officers and bureaucrats
brought him into contact with circles that would later form the July 20 Plot against
Hitler.

Among his acquaintances were Hans Oster, and members of the Beck–Goerdeler group.

Some
conspirators saw him as a valuable ally because of his control over the police apparatus.

Others
distrusted him, recalling his record in the East.

Still, Nebe’s inclusion in resistance plans
suggests at least a degree of willingness to act.

One episode that remains especially controversial
occurred after the “Great Escape” from Stalag Luft III in March 1944.

Hitler demanded
revenge after 76 Allied prisoners escaped; when 73 were recaptured, 50 were executed on
direct orders.

Nebe’s office helped select the victims, though how much personal involvement
he had remains debated.

Some historians argue that this participation undermines any claim
of moral opposition to the regime.

Others see it as an example of the contradictory position
of men who tried to balance conscience against survival inside a totalitarian system.

When the 20 July 1944 attempt on Hitler’s life failed, Nebe’s situation became
perilous.

He had been assigned to lead a special police unit that would arrest
high-ranking Nazis if the coup succeeded.

The order never came.

In the chaotic aftermath,
the Gestapo began rounding up suspects across Berlin.

Nebe initially escaped detection
and went into hiding, reportedly aided by sympathetic police colleagues.

For months, he
lived under assumed names in rural safe houses, moving frequently as the net closed around him.

In January 1945, his luck ran out.

One of his former mistresses revealed his location to the
Gestapo.

Nebe was arrested on 16 January 1945, imprisoned at Lehrter Strasse in Berlin,
and later brought before Roland Freisler’s People’s Court.

The trial on 2 March 1945
lasted only minutes.

Freisler denounced Nebe as a “traitor to the Führer and the
German people,” sentencing him to death.

On 21 March 1945, the sentence was carried
out at Plötzensee Prison in Berlin.

Nebe was fifty years old.

His remains were
never formally recorded, and his name quickly disappeared from official documents.

After the war, some surviving conspirators portrayed Nebe as a man who had turned against
the regime out of moral conviction.

Postwar historians, however, painted a far darker picture:
a career policeman who had risen through the Nazi system, participated in large scale atrocities,
and only joined the resistance when Germany’s defeat was inevitable.

Whether his final act was
redemption or desperation remains unresolved.

If you found this video insightful, watch
“What Happened to the Gestapo After WW2” next — a look at how another pillar of Nazi
power faced its reckoning.

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