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Hermann Hoth
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===Initial service under the Nazi regime=== In the 1920s, Hoth had little interest in the [[Nazi Party]], and even regarded its activities as disruptive for the ''Reichswehr''. His views changed with the [[1930 German federal election]] when the Nazi Party became the second-strongest political force. Hoth started to view Hitler's nationalist ambitions with approval, and admired the Nazis' attention to workers which he viewed as unusual for a right-wing party.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=124–125}} He was among the officers who were most favorably disposed toward [[Adolf Hitler's rise to power#Seizure of control (1931–1933)|Hitler's seizure of control]], regarding it as a chance to improve the military. Like several other Reichswehr officers such as [[Heinz Guderian]] and [[Georg-Hans Reinhardt]], Hoth hoped that a Nazi-led government would allow him to push through his ideas in regards to greater motorization and [[armoured warfare]].{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=129}} In the aftermath of the takeover, however, Hoth (by then promoted to ''[[Oberst]]'') clashed with Nazi Party officials when he criticised the murder of [[Communist Party of Germany|Communists]] and [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|Social Democrats]] in [[Braunschweig]], resulting in his transfer to [[Lübeck]].{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=133}} According to his own account, Hoth studied the [[ideology of the Nazi Party]] in some depth over the next years; historian [[Johannes Hürter]] regarded this as quite unusual for higher-ranking German officers, most of whom believed that they could remain apolitical.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=135}} Hoth generally approved of the aims and achievements of the Nazi Party, although he expressed some disquiet about the elimination of [[German Jews]]. In the end, however, he believed the fate of Jews to be less important than the elimination of Communism in Germany and the restoration of what he saw as Germany's status as an equal in world affairs.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=141}} In October 1932, he was appointed head of the 17th Infantry Regiment, and transferred to command the 6th Infantry Regiment in August 1933.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=635}} He was promoted to ''[[Generalmajor]]'' in 1934.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=635}} Following the reorganization of the German military into the [[Wehrmacht]] in 1935, Hoth was appointed to command the [[18th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)|18th Infantry Division]].{{sfn|Heiber|2004|p=938}} He was regarded as one of the most modern Wehrmacht officers at the time, advocating motorization and other modernization.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=145}} He was promoted to ''[[Generalleutnant]]'' in 1936, followed by ''[[General der Infanterie]]'' two years later.{{sfn|Hürter|2007|p=635}} In 1938, he led the 18th Infantry Division during the [[Occupation of Czechoslovakia (1938–1945)#First Vienna Award|occupation of]] [[Sudetenland]].{{sfn|NMT|1950|p=580}}
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