NSDAP Office of Colonial Policy
The NSDAP Office of Colonial Policy (German: Kolonialpolitisches Amt der NSDAP, K.P.A. or KPA) was a Nazi Party office formed in 1934. Its stated objective was to formulate plans for the re-taking of the former German colonies, including in Africa.[1] The office lost much of its meaning after the start of World War II, and was dissolved after the reversal of Nazi Germany's military victories in 1943.
History
There were several predecessor organization created in response to the German colonial problem in the Nazi Party. The last was the Colonial Section of the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, under the central command of the Sturmabteilung (SA) leadership. After the purge of the SA in the Night of the Long Knives, it was reformed as the Colonial Political Office in 1934, with Franz Ritter von Epp as its leader. From then on, its task was to provide clear directives and policy guidelines for the party and its press in regard to every colonial, political and economic problems. In addition, the office also formulated plans for the reacquisition of the former German colonies. As part of Gleichschaltung (Nazification), the office had to match the colonial policies of the central regime.[2]
Few sources exist about the early development of the office. Its headquarters was located at the party seat of the NSDAP in Munich, but the Planning Department was moved to Berlin in 1936, to improve co-operation with the Colonial Section of the Foreign Office. It did not then possess any budgetary resources of its own. To set up a proper budget, it was assigned several state administrators from the Nazi Party. Many of its leading experts took over such functions, and the rest was composed of some higher political officials.
Epp's request for his office to be assigned a role as the central state body for the formulation of colonial policy was denied by Adolf Hitler in 1938. Its assigned tasks were nevertheless extended. Hitler instructed Von Epp that the office should prepare for a new period of colonial conquest after which the takeover of the colonies itself would fall within the jurisdiction of the Foreign Office.
In 1940, all Reich departments were subordinated to the Colonial Political Office on overseas colonial matters. Its financial revenues also increased. In 1940 its reported expenditure was more than 870,000 ℛ︁ℳ︁, an increase of 555% in over previous years.
The internal structure also underwent some changes. The office transformed itself into both a party organization in Munich and as a state organization in Berlin. Its new leader was the former diplomat Rudolf Asmis. The Colonial Political Office of the NSDAP and the Reich had four different departments and around 260 employees. Of the bureaucrats, 36 were a part of the office's higher and 44 of the mid-level services.
Subsidiary offices were later established in Paris and Brussels.
Colonial planning
The office prepared plans for a vast colonial domain in Mittelafrika from Ghana to Namibia and from Chad to Tanzania. In conjunction with the SS a central staff was assembled for the hostile takeover of colonies from Germany's war enemies. It prepared blueprints for the establishment of colonial law as well as training courses for potential future colonial administrators. In particular, it also drew up plans for racial segregation under a "Colonial Blood Law" (Kolonialblutschutzgesetz).
Dissolution
With the coming end of the Second World War and the resulting victory of the Allies over Nazi Germany, the office swiftly lost any degree of importance it might have had. Already in the start of 1943 Hitler had ordered the closure of all Party offices and affiliations not directly connected with maintenance of the war. Together with the Reichskolonialbund, it was finally dissolved in February 1943.[3][4]
References
- ^ O'Sullivan, Rachel (18 September 2024). "Entangled Narratives of Colonialism: Promoting Overseas and Continental Expansion in Nazi Germany". Copernico. doi:10.25355/X0C3-EZ64.
- ^ Lawry, Ewan (2 January 2025). "An 'obligation which we are not entitled to get rid of': Competing Notions of Empire and the British Opposition to the Colonial Appeasement of Germany". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 53 (1): 51–81. doi:10.1080/03086534.2025.2459647. ISSN 0308-6534.
- ^ Sandler, Willeke (9 August 2018). "8: Africa or the East? Colonialists During the Second World War, 1939-1943". Empire in the Heimat: Colonialism and Public Culture in the Third Reich. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-069792-1.
- ^ Steinmetz, George (15 September 2008). The Devil's Handwriting: Precoloniality and the German Colonial State in Qingdao, Samoa, and Southwest Africa. University of Chicago Press. p. 509. ISBN 978-0-226-77244-8.