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Editor's Note: This article is part of a larger project detailing the death toll inflicted by Nazi Germany outside the realm of combat. To see the full body count by country click here.
Body Count: 12,250,000
Occupation Death Rate: 18.85%
Deaths caused between 1941-1945
The non-battle deaths of USSR citizens caused by Nazi Germany is by far the highest of any nation that Germany attacked in the Second World War. With a mid-estimate of 12,250,000 killed, this is more than twice that of Poland's body count. This is more than the entire population of most countries today such as Greece, Belgium, or the Czech Republic. In the overall count, the people of the USSR make up over half the death toll.

To understand how this devastation came about, the evolution of Adolf Hitler's mindset and aims toward Russia must be examined.
Hitler's Statements in Mein Kampf, 1925
Hitler's designs for Russian territory were made public before he was ever in power. In Mein Kampf, he referred to Russia as the "Persian empire ripe for collapse." The goal of the Nazis was to
. . . bring our own people to such political insight that they will not see their goal for the future in the breath-taking sensation of a new Alexander's conquest, but in the industrious work of the German plow, to which the sword need only give soil.
The reason for such a conquest was to accomplish what Hitler saw as the highest aim of his foreign policy: "to secure for the German people the land and soil to which they are entitled on this earth." As Hitler saw it, Germany was not a world power until it had the adequate land mass to make it such a power. Land expansion was also necessary for survival. He believed that "only an adequately large space on this earth assures a nation of freedom of existence." Hitler was not content with the pre-World War I territory and he wanted to move away from the concept of colonization. Instead, he wanted to expand the size of the "mother country." The land would come from the east. "If we speak of soil in Europe today, we can primary have in mind only Russia and her vassal border states." To Hitler, Russia was comprised of an "inferior race" and ruled by the Jew. The combination of Jews and communism was too much for Hitler: "In Russian Bolshevism we must see the attempt undertaken by the Jews in the twentieth century to achieve world domination."
As early as 1925, Hitler saw Russia as a land of subhumans that was ripe for conquest.
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
However, this objective appeared to fall to wayside when Germany and the USSR signed a non-aggression pact. In August 1939, the two countries determined to settle any disputes "exclusively through friendly exchange of opinion or, if necessary, through the establishment of arbitration commissions." Ten days prior to signing the pact, the German Foreign Minister told the Soviet Union's Ambassador that there existed "no real conflicts of interest between Germany and the U.S.S.R. The living spaces of Germany and the U.S.S.R. touch each other, but in their natural requirements they do not conflict."
The pact was broken less than two years later.
Hitler Attacks Stalin
On July 21, 1941, the day before Germany attacked Russia, Hitler sent a letter to his principal ally, Benito Mussolini, explaining that England was defeated, but held onto the hope that the Soviet Union would eventually join the war. He reasoned that eliminating Russia would force England to give up, relieve pressure off of Japan who could then intervene in American activities, and it would also "secure a common food-supply base in the Ukraine for some time to come." Mussolini provided 62,000 troops for the invasion.
On June 22, Hitler gave his proclamation to the German people concerning the invasion. He listed a host of reasons for attacking Russia. Ultimately, he fell back on his anti-Jewish and anti-Bolshevik views that he listed in Mein Kampf. He concluded that "the hour has come in which it has become necessary to oppose this conspiracy of the Jewish-Anglo-Saxon warmongers and likewise the Jewish ruling powers in the Bolshevik control station at Moscow." He went on to say that the mission of the eastern front was "no longer protection of individual countries, but the securing of Europe and, hence, salvation of all."
The result was a four-year struggle that generated death tolls never seen in war. Outside of the confines of battle deaths and civilians caught in the cross-fire, Nazi Germany inflicted the following deaths.
- 6,500,000 people died through imposed famine and resulting diseases.
- 3,000,000 POWs were killed.
- 1,224,000 people were killed through executions, massacres, or bombing of civilian populations.
- 876,000 Jews were targeted and killed.
- 650,000 people died through forced labor.
Hitler's Justification
To grasp how so many people could be killed in such horrendous ways, one must remember that Hitler viewed the people of Russia as an "inferior race" ruled by Jews who were bent on world domination. By 1941, Hitler no longer saw them as humans, but as "beasts." After the war, one general told of an order Hitler gave to his commanders.
Before the attack on Russia, the Fuhrer summoned all commanders in chief and all persons connected to the high command to a conference on the pending attack on Russia. In this conference, he said that weapons different from those used against the west were to be employed against the Russians. He said that the war between Russia and Germany was a war between races. He said that the Russians were not a party to the Geneva Convention and hence Russian prisoners of war need not be treated in accordance with the stipulations of the Geneva Convention.
This rationalization gave Hitler his justification to bomb civilians, kill POWs, impose famine, and force labor on the people of Russia.

A captured Soviet soldier being searched by German soldiers early in the conflict.
Sieges, Starvation, and Bombing of Civilian Populations
Hitler's armies surrounded cities, starved them, and bombed them. One such besieged city was Leningrad. Here was a city that Hitler believed must "disappear utterly from the earth's surface." After the first few months of the siege, Hitler professed to have a policy of encircling and starving the city instead of moving in troops so as not to "sacrifice one more [German] than is absolutely necessary." As the war raged on, so did the death toll. Leningrad was sieged from 1941 through 1944. From starvation alone, an estimated 641,803 civilians died in the city. At the height of the bombing, an estimated 4,000 civilians were dying a day.

Citizens of Leningrad killed from German bombing in October, 1941.
Forced Labor
Captured prisoners of war as well as civilians in the east were often used by Nazi Germany to perform labor. When a railway was needed in 1941, Hitler ordered that it should be built "by the ruthless employment of Russian prisoners of war." Later that year when the Russian winter set in, Hitler began making defensive plans. Instead of putting German laborers through the harsh conditions, he ordered that "Young workers classified as essential will be released from their employment on a large scale and will be replaced by prisoners and Russian civilian workers, employed in groups." German workers were replaced by those of the "inferior race" or the "beasts."
Throughout the war, forced labor would be employed. The laborers endured rough weather, lack of food, and dehydration. People were literally worked to death.
Exterminations, Massacres, and Jews
Traveling behind the German army's advance were the Einsatzgruppen, mobile units tasked with eliminating various groups such as communists, political leaders, and Jews. These men carried out executions themselves, but also helped the German army in executions. Germany adopted a policy of killing 50-100 hostages for every German soldier killed.
One such act of vengeance occurred after the German headquarters in Soviet Kiev was bombed. A notice was put out that all Jews were to be relocated from the city. Nearly 34,000 Jews showed up. They were taken outside the city, stripped naked, and shot. The official report from the Einsatzgruppen said they killed 33,771 Jews over a two-day period in September, 1941. Before the end of the year, these men would officially report killing half a million people.
After 1941, the Einsatzgruppen were replaced with concentration camps designed for mass extermination on a cheaper scale.

German soldiers performing executions.

Hanging of Soviets in the Moscow region.
The people of the Soviet Union by far suffered in greater numbers than any other population that was attacked by Nazi Germany. In less than four years, 12,500,000 civilians died at the hands of Germany. This does not include the estimated 7,500,000 to 13,600,000 civilians and troops that were killed by Germans in combat.