词条 | Gottfried Schapper |
释义 |
Personal lifeSchapper was the son of the protestant pastor Karl Schapper and grew up with seven siblings. His eldest brother (son from the father's first marriage) is the resistance fighter against national socialism and labour leader Karl Schapper, his youngest (like Gottfried from second marriage) the prophet Helmut Schapper. During 1919 he was married, and has a son in 1934. CareerGottfried Schapper was promoted to Fahnenjunker in 1910 and posted to a radio communications unit, and promoted to Lieutenant in the railroad regiment No. 2 in Hanau (German Army (German Empire)). By 1913 he was transferred to Signals. During World War I, he was deployed on both the West and the Eastern Front.[2] From 1916 to 1917, he was director of the cryptographic office in the Reichswehr signals intelligence office and in 1919 he was promoted to the civil service rank of director ({{lang-de|Ministerial Direktor}}) of the whole signals intelligence service.[2] During 1918, he was Divisional Signals Commander with various divisions in the west. In 1919, he was discharged with a military rank of captain ({{lang-de|Hauptmann}}) In 1920, he became secretary to the National Society of Berlin for Rescuing the Reich from the Revolution, Nationale Vereinigung (National Association) and was a participant in the Kapp Putsch. Schapper joined the Nazi Party in 1920 and a remained party member until 1923. From 1920, he worked as a kind of manager for national organizations, newspapers, clubs and clubs, until 1927.[2] From 1927, Schapper played a key role in centralizing the scattered interception and decryption departments of the Ministry of the Reichswehr ({{lang-de|Reichswehrministerium}}).[4] He became director of the cryptographic office ({{lang-de|chiffrierstelle}}) in the Reichswehrministerium and stepped back in 1933, because he was dissatisfied with the incompetent methods on site. A quote regarding Schapper at the time, that is attributed to the spy Hans-Thilo Schmidt who stated: He was always talking about the unease felt as much in the Abwehr as in the chiffrierstelle due to the chaotic organization of the research and analysis of the intelligence. Everyone gets involved, military and civilian, sailors, airmen, police, foreign affairs, postal, customs and so on.[5] He joined the Nazi Party again in 1931. ForschungsamtFrom 1933 to 1937 or 1938 he was a member of the SS and had the rank of SS-Hauptsturmführer.[6] He resigned, as they refused to recognize his Christian philosophy of life.[2] Gottfried Schapper's idea for a new central intelligence agency took form as early as 1927. As quote by Hans-Thilo Schmidt: Schapper's idea, in line with Patzig and many other specialists in the Abwehr, is to create a Central Intelligence Office. This organization would be directly dependent on the chancellor [Hitler, who was not yet in power], and would centralize and coordinate research and would oversee it's analysis In 1933 he turned to Hermann Göring, who was an acquaintance from the First World War, to create the new agency. Schmidt stated: The main aspects of the project were submitted by Schapper to Göring. If the Führer approves in turn, and if the Nazis take power, then it is likely this reform will happen. Schapper will then occupy an important place and will surely ask me to take a place next to him.Hans Schimpf, who was a close friend of Göring was selected, along with 8 key people, and Schapper to create the new agency, which started operation in March 1933.[7] He became head of a subsection, later head of a section of the Research Office of the Reich Air Ministry ({{lang-de|Forschungsamt}}). From October 12, 1943 to May 8, 1945, Schapper was the head of the Forschungsamt. During his leadership, he was initially active in Berlin and after numerous bombardments in Breslau and Kaufbeuren . He was arrested near Rosenheim in May 1945 and taken to Salzburg and Augsburg, where he was interrogated by TICOM, the project formed in World War II by the United States to find and seize German intelligence assets. References1. ^{{cite book|author=Jeffery T. Richelson|title=A Century of Spies: Intelligence in the Twentieth Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s2aN5ETA_GQC&pg=PA86|date=17 July 1997|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-976173-9|page=86}} {{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Schapper, Gottfried}}2. ^1 2 3 4 {{cite web |url=https://www.nsa.gov/news-features/declassified-documents/european-axis-sigint/assets/files/Volume_7_goerings_research_bureau.pdf |title=European axis signal intelligence in World War II as revealed by "TICOM" investigations and by other prisoner of war interrogations and captured material, principally German, Volume 7, Goering's "Research" Bureau - Appendix III|publisher=NSA|format=PDF | accessdate=21 May 2017}} 3. ^{{cite book|author=Wilhelm F. Flicke|title=War Secrets in the Ether|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rnfiAQAACAAJ|year=1994|publisher=Aegean Park Press|isbn=978-0-89412-233-0|pages=219–232}} 4. ^{{cite web|last1=Kompa|first1=Markus|title=Führer hört mit (In German) Leader is listening|url=https://www.heise.de/tp/features/Fuehrer-hoert-mit-3399287.html|website=TELEPOLIS|publisher=heise.de|accessdate=22 May 2017|date=14 June 2013}} 5. ^{{cite book|author=Paul Paillole|title=The Spy in Hitlers Inner Circle: Hans-Thilo Schmidt and the Allied Intelligence Network that Decoded Germanys Enigma|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pzhmDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA36|date=19 March 2016|publisher=Casemate|isbn=978-1-61200-372-6|page=36}} 6. ^{{cite web|title=Numery członków SS od 82 000 do 82 999. (In Polish)|url=http://www.dws-xip.pl/reich/biografie/numery/numer82.html|accessdate=22 May 2017}} 7. ^{{cite book|author=Wilhelm F. Flicke|title=War Secrets in the Ether|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rnfiAQAACAAJ|year=1994|publisher=Aegean Park Press|isbn=978-0-89412-233-0|pages=219–229}} 7 : 1888 births|Signals intelligence|Luftwaffe personnel of World War II|Nazi Party members|German military personnel of World War I|German cryptographers|Year of death missing |
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