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 and was also a highly trained Motorized Infantry and public security force.[2][3]
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.[4][5]
The Guards Battalion A participated in the suppression of the Uprising of 1953 against the SED's Stalinist 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 (Wachregiment "Feliks E. Dzierzynski")[6] in honor of Felix Dzerzhinsky, founder of the Cheka.[5]
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,[5] located 24 kilometres (15 mi) 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 (Ministerium des Innern), 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.
Duties
While the FDGR's main duties were to ensure the safety of SED official and party members, it could also be mobilized to conduct some commando operations when required.[7][8]
Scholarly research into the regiment after the end of the Cold War mentions that FDGR soldiers had trained PLO and other Middle Eastern and South American-based terrorists at a classified military base known as Objekt 74 at Briesen.[9]
Organization
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.
Structure
Three combat groups with six motorized rifle battalions and three training battalions
Kommando 4 – Standort Eberswalde-Finow (Command 4 - Location Eberswalde-Finow) - later (mid 1980s) in Erkner, Prenden and Biesenthal
Kommando 5 – Standort Berlin (Command 5 - Location Berlin) - until 1982, then Freienbrink and Ahrensfelde
The sites were inherited by the Ahrensfelde guard regiment in mid-January 1989. Until then they had formed accommodation facilities for UAV units of the Ministry for State Security (e.g., backup units of VRD, BDL, HA VI, AGMS). These units were the uniformed as well as the guard and security units of the units of the Stasi (BV), not a subdivision of the guards regiment.
Part of these units were merged in January 1989 into the guard regiment, which is why the site was taken over by the Ahrensfelde guard regiment.
Until 1989, the guard regiment had no locations in the districts. The service objects there were guarded by the WSE, which were placed under the respective BV.
Senior Management
Commanders of the guards regiment were:
1962 to 1972: Major General Heinz Gronau (provisional)
1972 to 1987: Colonel (Major General since 1976) Bernhard Elsner
Military service in the Guard regiment was completed as WED (abbr. Wehrersatzdienst, alternative military service). In contrast to the National People's Army, recruits were inducted in April and September / October, a month earlier.
Recruits were selected from soldiers and NCOs who served in the NVA as volunteers for three years.[6] Sometimes, service with the FDGR could potentially lead to a career in the Stasi.[10] Most soldiers in the regiment are known to be parachute-qualified.[8] Several players of BFC Dynamo and SG Dynamo Dresden made their military service with the regiment, such as Lutz Eigendorf and Matthias Sammer.[11][12] The head of the Stasi Erich Mielke was also the president of SV Dynamo.[12]
It became publicly known in 2011 that also the incumbent president of football club 1. FC Union Berlin Dirk Zingler was a member of the Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment for three years during his military service. Dirk Zingler has explained that he had sought to spend his military service in Berlin and that he was unaware beforehand that the regiment belonged to the Stasi.[13][14] It was, however, not possible to apply for the Felix Dzerzhinsky Guards Regiment. The Stasi selected who it thought fit to serve with the regiment.[13]
Stationed in the command 3 (on military Teupitz - cones), there was also a battalion of special weapons. It consisted of a company, which was armed with heavy anti-tank recoilless gun SPG-9 (in 1987, was reorganized into a rifle company), a company which is an essential weapon, the heavy machine gun (HMG-company) 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 AKS-74 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 (28. and 29 MSK of the 10th MSB) 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 (flexible), down from 1989 shields and helmets and chains.
Vehicles
The FDGR had access to light armored personnel carriers such as the BTR-60PB and the PSzH-IV.[8]
The six Mi-2s and Mi-8s and Mi-24s were used for personnel transport.[8]
Uniforms
Its uniforms were nearly identical to those of the National People's Army (NVA) 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.
The service or dress uniform of the regiment was an army uniform made of high quality (of officers) with claret fabric collar and brown (officer) 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 Field Service Uniform (Fielddienstuniform) cap, tunic, trousers Parade (breeches), gray shirt, tie, boots grained, brown belt, cuff title
1x Semi-dress Uniform (Halbausgehuniform) - cap, tunic, output pants, gray shirt, tie, shoes, brown belt
1x summer field service uniform (Sommerdienstuniform), "Ein Strich - Kein Strich" ("one dash - no dash"), M56 Steel Helmet ( "eggshell") / cap, gray Gurtkoppel, boots grained)
1x Field Service Uniform Winter (Fielddienstuniform Winter), "Ein Strich - Kein Strich"
1x special service uniform (Sonderdienstuniform)– tunic, parade trousers (breeches), gray shirt, tie, an officer in plain boots, belts, NCO Professional version (with at least Corporal epaulets, even if the soldier in question was only temporary soldiers and rank only a soldier) (not in the personal cabinet)
1x sport suit "SV Dynamo" in burgundy, white sneakers
In command 4 - Eberswalde-Finow in Bernau contributed UAZ, professional officers and professional officers uniforms of the regular army with weapons Color black (pioneers) and (white Motorized Rifle) to camouflage the Wachregimentseinsatzes.
^MacDougall, Alan (2014). The People's Game: Football, State and Society in East Germany (1st ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 123. ISBN978-1-107-05203-1.
Hagen Koch, Peter Joachim Lapp: Die Garde des Erich Mielke - Der militärisch-operative Arm des MfS - Das Berliner Wachregiment "Feliks Dzierzynski", Helios-Verlag Aachen 2008, ISBN978-3-938208-72-4
Hope, Ralph (2021). The Grey Men: Pursuing the Stasi into the Present. UK: Oneworld Publications. ISBN978-1786078278.
Koehler, John O. (2000). Stasi: the untold story of the East German secret police. Westview Press. ISBN978-0-8133-3744-9.