Convinced before the onset of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 of both the ease, with which the Red Army would be defeated and the likelihood that the Soviet Union would collapse, the Nazi regime envisaged a radical and far-reaching occupation policy which would result in the political, economic and racial reorganization of the occupied Soviet territories and bring about the deaths of x million people through a conscious policy of starvation. This study traces the step-by-step development of high-level planning for the occupation policy in the Soviet territories over a twelve-month period and establishes the extent to which the various political and economic plans were compatible.
AcknowledgementsList of Abbreviations
Chapter 1. IntroductionOrganized Chaos: the German Occupation, 1941-1944The State of Existing ScholarshipAims of the StudyThe Importance of Economic ConsiderationsSt