Hans Krebs (SS general)


Hans Krebs was an Ethnic German Nazi Party member and SS-Brigadeführer from Czechoslovakia. Krebs was executed for war crimes by the Czechoslovak government in Prague in 1947.

Career

Krebs was born in the ancient town of Iglau in Moravia when it was part of the Habsburg Empire. He was involved with German nationalism from his youth. In 1911 he became the manager of the German Workers' Party in Vienna.
During World War I Krebs volunteered to serve in the Austro-Hungarian Army. He served in the South Tyrol, received several awards and was promoted to the rank of lieutenant. After the war, Krebs became involved with the German National Socialist Workers' Party in the new Czechoslovakia and became the editor of the Iglauer Volkswehr newspaper. Iglau had become the second largest German-speaking enclave inside Czechoslovakia and there was great political dissatisfaction among the Germans in Czechoslovakia.
Krebs was apparently in communication with Adolf Hitler, and was also a member of the Czech Parliament several times. In 1933 he was stripped of his parliamentary immunity and imprisoned. Krebs then fled to Nazi Germany, where he became a member of the Schutzstaffel. He was soon promoted to the rank of SS-Brigadeführer. In the mid-1930s he wrote two books arguing the Sudeten German case: Kampf in Böhmen ; Wir Sudetendeutsche.
Having become a nationalist early, he along with Rudolf Jung and Hans Knirsch, was one of the few original Moravian National Socialists to remain in the party after 1933. During the Sudeten Crisis, Heinrich Himmler and the SS favoured Krebs over Konrad Henlein, and tried to play them off against one another to some degree. Krebs returned to Moravia in 1939 and participated in persecuting political opponents of the Nazi regime. He was appointed Oberregierungsrat im Reichsinnenministerium and apparently had this job during World War II.
After the war Krebs was convicted of high treason, and executed by the Czechoslovak government in Prague in 1947.