The  (; abbreviated OKH) was the high command of the Army of Nazi Germany.
It was founded in 1935 as part of Adolf Hitler's rearmament of Germany.
OKH was de facto the most important unit within the German war planning until the defeat at Moscow in December 1941.
During World War II, OKH had the responsibility of strategic planning of Armies and Army Groups.
The General Staff of the OKH managed operational matters.
Each German Army also had an Army High Command ( or AOK).
The Armed Forces High Command () then took over this function for theatres other than the Eastern front.
The OKH commander held the title of Commander-in-chief of the Army ().
After the Battle of Moscow, the OKH commander Field marshal Walther von Brauchitsch was removed from office, and Hitler appointed himself as Commander-in-Chief of the Army.
From 1938, OKH was, together with  () and  () formally subordinated to the Armed Forces High Command.
OKH vs OKW
Hitler had been the head of OKW since January 1938, using it to pass orders to the navy, air force, and army.
After a major crisis developed in the Battle of Moscow, Walther von Brauchitsch was dismissed (partly because of his failing health), and Hitler appointed himself as head of the OKH.
At the same time, he limited the OKH's authority to the Russian front, giving OKW direct authority over army units elsewhere.
This enabled Hitler to declare that only he had complete awareness of Germany's strategic situation, should any general request a transfer of resources between the Russian front and another theater of operations.
Although both OKW and OKH were headquartered in the Maybach complex during the Third Reich, the functional and operational independence of both establishments were not lost on the respective staff during their tenure.
Personnel at the compound remarked that even if Maybach 2 (the OKW complex) was completely destroyed, the OKH staff in Maybach 1 would scarcely notice.
These camouflaged facilities, separated physically by a fence, also maintained structurally different mindsets towards their objectives.
On 28 April 1945 (two days before his suicide), Hitler formally subordinated OKH to OKW, giving the latter command of forces on the Eastern Front.Grier, Howard D. Hitler, Dönitz, and the Baltic Sea, Naval Institute Press, 2007, .
p. 121 Organisation
In 1944, these elements were subordinate to the OKH:
C.-in-C.
Reserve Army and Chief of Equipment (): Friedrich Fromm
Chief of Army General Division (): Friedrich Olbricht
Chief of Army Ordnance (): Emil Leeb
Chief of Army Personnel Division (): Rudolf Schmundt
Chief of Army Administrative Division  (): Herbert Osterkamp
Army Propaganda and Public Relations Office: Hasso von Wedel – Albrecht Blau – Kurt Dittmar
Inspector General of Armoured Troops (): Heinz Guderian
General officer commanding for Engineers and Fortifications (): Alfred Jacob
Inspector General for Officer Cadets (): Karl-Wilhelm Specht
Leadership
Commander-in-Chief of the Army
The Commander-in-Chief of the Army () was the head of the OKH and the German Army during the years of the Nazi regime.
Chief of the OKH General Staff
thumb|Flag of Chief of the German Army General Staff The Chiefs of the OKH General Staff () were:
See also
German general staff
Glossary of World War II German military terms
Maybach I and II
Oberste Heeresleitung, the German Empire's highest army command during World War I
Notes
References
External links
"Not the Stuff of Legend: The German High Command in World War II" – lecture by Dr. Geoffrey Megargee, author of Inside Hitler's High Command, available at the official YouTube channel of the U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center
