Hans von Salmuth (born November 11, 1888, Metz, Germany—died January 1, 1962, Heidelberg, West Germany) was a German army staff officer and field commander in World War II.
The son of a Prussian officer, Salmuth entered the German army in 1907 and rose to the rank of captain during World War I. He remained in the army after the war, becoming a brigadier general in 1937 and chief of staff of the Second Army in 1938. Salmuth was chief of staff to General Fedor von Bock, who commanded Army Group North in the invasion of Poland in September 1939. Salmuth continued as his chief of staff when Bock’s Army Group B invaded Belgium and the Netherlands in May 1940. Salmuth, by now a lieutenant general, commanded the XXX Corps in the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, fighting in Crimea. He became commander of the Second Army in July 1942 and was promoted to general in January 1943.
In August 1943 Salmuth was transferred to France to take command of the Fifteenth Army, whose 17 divisions were charged with defending the French coast from Le Havre northeastward to the Schelde River estuary against the impending Allied invasion of western Europe. Salmuth’s sector included the Pas-de-Calais, the likeliest site of an Allied landing, but the Allies invaded (on June 6, 1944) the less heavily defended Normandy coast, which adjoined Salmuth’s sector on the west. In the days and weeks after D-Day, Adolf Hitler clung to the mistaken belief that the Normandy landings were merely a diversion from the main Allied attack, which he thought was still to come at the Pas-de-Calais. Accordingly, Hitler refused until late July to allow Salmuth’s infantry and armoured divisions to move west to help the beleaguered Seventh Army defend Normandy against the Allied advance.
At war’s end Salmuth was taken prisoner by U.S. forces, and in 1948 he was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment. He was released in 1953.