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1 Oppositon The Red Orchestra (Information Sheet)
1 Oppositon The Red Orchestra (Information Sheet)
The ‘Red Orchestra’ was an umbrella term adopted by the Nazi secret police when
describing those who were plotting against the Third Reich. The term ‘Red Orchestra’ was
used because each person in the plot was given a musical term – so that some were known
as pianists, leaders were known as conductors. The ‘Red Orchestra’ was not a unified front
but rather a collection of different resistance movements united by the sole desire to rid
Nazi Germany of Adolf Hitler. The ‘Red’ part of the tile came from the movement’s links to
communism and theUSSR. It is probable that there were no more than 100 people in the
units involved.
The ‘Red Orchestra’ was made up of three different units: the Trepper unit, the ‘Red Three’
and the Schulze-Boysen/Harnack group. The Trepper unit was based in Germany, France
and Belgium , the ‘Red Three’ was based in Switzerland while the Schulze-Boysen/Harnack
group was based in Berlin.
German security forces were so concerned about the ‘Red Orchestra’ that they on this rare
occasion grouped their resources so that the SD, the Gestapo and the Abwehr worked
together.
The purpose of the Trepper unit was to gather intelligence about the Nazi’s military power
in Western Europe. Led by Leopold Trepper, the units – there were seven parts to it –
proved very successful at infiltrating the Nazis and found out about troop deployment and
even new tank designs. Some Trepper agents were given passes that allowed them free
movement through Nazi occupied Western Europe. Trepper was arrested on December
5th 1942 but managed to survive the war- which most of his comrades did not.
With such a large and eclectic group it was only a matter of time before German intelligence
broke into it. Before the Schulze-Boysen/Harnack group was broken up it gave intelligence
findings to the US embassy in Berlin. It also posted anti-Nazi posters in railway stations and
helped people flee Germany. Schulze-Boysen himself was arrested on August 30 th 1942 and
the movement broke up.
Red Three was outside of the jurisdiction of the German intelligence service as it was based
in Switzerland. It was headed by a communist called Alexander Rado and provided the Allies
with much useful intelligence material. After the war, Rado was recalled to the USSR and
imprisoned after being found guilty of spying for the UK. He was released on the death of
Stalin.