Friedrich Gempp


Friedrich Gempp was a German army officer, who ultimately attained the rank of Major-General. He is credited as the founder and 1st Chief of the Intelligence Service of the Reichswehr in the Weimar Republic.

Biography

Career in the Imperial Army and the Reichswehr

Gempp joined the Army in 1893 as a one-year volunteer enlistee in the 1st Lower Alsatian Infantry Regiment, No. 132. After acquiring his appointment to the officer corps, he served as a Battalion adjutant. From 1903 to 1906, he attended the Prussian Military Academy. He then served in the General Staff and as company commander in the 2nd Upper-Alsace Infantry Regiment No. 171. In 1913 he was assigned as an intelligence officer to the I Army Corps.
After the mobilization for World War I, he had the same function in the General Staff of the Eighth Army and the Ober Ost. In 1915 he was promoted to Major, and later in 1917 he was appointed to the Oberste Heeresleitung under Colonel Walter Nicolai, where he remained until its termination in October 1919.
In the Spring of 1920, he was appointed Lieutenant Colonel in the reconstruction of a new military intelligence service in the new Reichswehr. He served in its statistical office until his retirement with the nominal grade of Major General in June 1927.

The Gempp report and service in the Second World War

From 1928 to 1944 he wrote a monumental report on Geheimer Nachrichtendienst und Spionageabwehr des Heeres, the so-called Gempp report.
With the mobilization in 1939 for the Invasion of Poland, he was recalled to active service in the Intelligence Service of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht. He was assumed to be captured by the Soviet Army in 1945, and officially declared dead on 11 August 1946.

Arrest, death and rehabilitation

Gempp was arrested by the Soviet Military Intelligence service on 10 April 1946, transferred to imprisonment in Moscow, and died on 3 January 1947 in the prison hospital of heart failure. On 10 September 2001, the Chief Military Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation declared the arrest to have been politically motivated, and he was "rehabilitated".