Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment
The Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment was the paramilitary wing of the Ministry for State Security, the security service of the German Democratic Republic.
The Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment was called a regiment, however the elite formation gradually grew to the size of a motorized infantry division with its constituent Kommandos made up of battalions. Its role in the Stasi was the protection of buildings and high-ranking officials of the GDR government and the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. It was composed of experienced and ideologically reliable men separate from the National People's Army that could be deployed to suppress rebellion and unrest.
History
The Guards Battalion A at the MfS was founded in early 1951 as an armed force to complement the Ministry for State Security, the security service of the German Democratic Republic, the de facto communist state established on 7 October 1949 from the Soviet Zone of Occupation. The GDR was ruled by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany under significant Soviet influence, but despite authoritarian measures to suppress the political opposition, threats of instability remained. The SED followed the Soviet model of creating a dedicated elite and politically allegiant armed force to protect itself. The Guards Battalion A participated in the suppression of the Uprising of 1953 against the SED's Stalinization policies. In November 1954, the Guards Battalion A was set up as the official paramilitary wing of the Stasi and its staff headquartered in Adlershof, East Berlin. In August 1961, units of the Guards Battalion A participated in the construction of the Berlin Wall. In 1967, the Guards Battalion A was officially renamed the Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment in honor of Felix Dzerzhinsky, founder of the Cheka.The Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment's major task was the protection of the SED, especially its buildings in the capital of East Berlin, and from 1960 providing security for the party leaders' private residential compound, Waldsiedlung, located north of Berlin near Wandlitz.
The Stasi was dissolved on 13 January 1990 and its facilities and responsibilities taken over by the GDR's Ministry of the Interior but the regiment continued to exist. The Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment was formally dissolved on 2 October 1990, the day before the GDR was dissolved in the German reunification.
Organization
- Personnel: At full strength, the regiment consisted of over 11,200 personnel, including 2,500 officers, 8,735 NCOs and enlisted men, and nine civil staff. Its commander was a Major General after 1956.
- Subunits: It comprised the following:
- *Three combat groups with six motorized rifle battalions and three training battalions,
- *an artillery battalion and
- *engineer, medical, support and reconnaissance companies.
- Kommando 1 – Standort Adlershof, Standorte in den Bezirken Command 1 - Location Adlershof, locations in the districts
- Kommando 2 – Standort Erkner - Erkner
- Kommando 3 – Standort Teupitz - Teupitz
- Kommando 4 – Standort in Eberswalde-Finow later in Erkner, Prenden and Biesenthal
- Kommando 5 – Standort Berlin until 1982, then Freienbrink Ahrensfelde
Personnel Strength
The personnel strength of the regiment:- 1955: 1.475
- 1960: 4.372
- 1965: 5,121
- 1970: 7,924
- 1975: 9,245
- 1980: 10,082
- 1985: 10,192
- 1989: 11,426
Senior Management
- 1962 to 1972: Major-General Heinz Gronau
- 1972 to 1987: Colonel Bernhard Elsner
- 1987 to 1990: Major-General Manfred Döring
Recruitment and training
Recruits were selected from particularly politically reliable families and the express wishes of the conscripts only played a role in some cases.
Many conscripts in Adlershof traditionally decorated the fence of the building next door to them with the padlocks from their lockers when they were dismissed. These locks were removed every year.
Equipment
It received the same training and equipment as the Volkspolizei-Bereitschaft and some of its personnel were paratroopers. It was also equipped with modern armored fighting vehicles and armored personnel carriers, anti-tank guns, anti-aircraft weapons and mortars.The guard regiment was equipped with small arms to light armored personnel carriers.
Stationed in the command 3, there was also a battalion of special weapons. It consisted of a company, which was armed with heavy anti-tank recoilless gun SPG-9, a company which is an essential weapon, the heavy machine gun and had the 70mm - anti-aircraft missile armed "Strela-2 'Company. Until 1982 there was also an artillery detachment armed with 122mm D-30 howitzer. Previously they had 85-mm PaK D-44, and 82mm mortars and 120 mm in the stock.
Regulators company RSK was additionally can be equipped with the AKS74 around the shoulder stock to collapse. At least in the 1970s, the former intelligence battalion, the mortar batteries and the I-battalion with Kalashnikovs in the S version were equipped. Specialized units such as the honor companies were fitted in addition to the above-mentioned weapons, rifles and sabers.
The paratrooper company, located in the reconnaissance battalion also used the small Skorpion machine pistol from Czechoslovakia.
For large events, there were as accessories batons, down from 1989 shields and helmets and chains.
Transportation
Personnel transport were mainly prepared by W50 and the Ural trucks. In line with this design the vehicles of the army, however, bore the registration plates of the People's Police, with the letters stacked VP. When events were Ikarus buses used.Uniforms
Its uniforms were nearly identical to those of the National People's Army and were distinguished primarily by the dark red MfS service color of its insignia and by a cuff title on the left sleeve bearing the regiment's name. Other Stasi officers wore a similar uniform, but without the cuffband. Members were selected from among the most reliable volunteer recruits and had to perform a three-year minimum service tour.The service or dress uniform of the regiment was an army uniform made of high quality with claret fabric collar and brown leather belt. The left sleeve was fitted with a cuffband and the words "wachregiment F. Dzerzhinsky".
Soldiers of the MOS units typically had the following personal uniforms:
- 1x service uniform
- 1x semi-dress uniform
- 1x summer field service uniform Steel Helmet
- 1x Field Service Uniform Winter
- 1x special service uniform - tunic, parade trousers, gray shirt, tie, an officer in plain boots, belts, NCO Professional version
- 1x Drillich fatigues
- 1x Winter Service Uniform
- 1x sport suit "SV Dynamo" in burgundy, white sneakers
The UAZ wore the army uniform from the rough cloth.
Other guard units
The regiment was one of three guards regiments in the GDR. The other two were units of the regular army:- 1. Wachregiment "Friedrich Engels" guarded the Memorial to the Victims of Fascism and Militarism on Berlin's Unter den Linden and performed other honorary duties, including the welcoming ceremony for state visitors.
- 2. Wachregiment "Hugo Eberlein" guarded the Ministry for National Defense command center in Strausberg, near Berlin.