Albert Kesselring (born November 20, 1885, Marktstedt, Bavaria, Germany—died July 16, 1960, Bad Nauheim, West Germany) was a field marshal who, as German commander in chief, south, became one of Adolf Hitler’s top defensive strategists during World War II.
The son of a town education officer, Kesselring joined the army as a cadet in 1904. After serving in World War I and remaining in the army under the Weimar Republic, he transferred to the Luftwaffe (air force) in 1935 and a year later was promoted to lieutenant general and chief of the General Staff of the Luftwaffe. Early in World War II Kesselring commanded air fleets in Poland (September 1939) and France (May–June 1940) and during the Battle of Britain (1940–41). Having already had experience in the bombing of civilian population centres such as Warsaw and Rotterdam, he apparently concurred in Hermann Göring’s decision to redirect Luftwaffe bombing toward London. This proved to be a fateful decision because the resulting discontinuance of attacks on British airfields gave the Royal Air Force Fighter Command time to recover and eventually defeat the German air offensive against England.
After participating in the attack on the Soviet Union (summer 1941), Kesselring became commander in chief, south (late 1941), to bolster Italy’s efforts in North Africa and against Malta. Though unable to take Malta, he commanded Erwin Rommel and the Axis campaign in North Africa. After the Allied invasions of Sicily and Italy in the summer of 1943, Kesselring fought a brilliant defensive action that prevented an Allied victory in that theatre for more than a year. Injured in October 1944, he became commander in chief, west, in March 1945, replacing Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, but proved unable to stop the Anglo-American drive into Germany and surrendered the southern half of the German forces on May 7, 1945. He remained loyal to Hitler to the end.
In October 1945 Kesselring was called as a witness in the first war crimes trial to be held by the Allies after the war. Kesselring’s subordinate in Italy, Gen. Anton Dostler, was accused of having ordered the execution of 15 Office of Strategic Services (OSS) prisoners of war in March 1944. The commandos were in uniform and thus should have been afforded the protections of the Geneva Conventions. However, Dostler ordered their execution in keeping with Hitler’s “Commando Order” of October 1942, which decreed that all captured Allied commandos should be summarily shot. Dostler claimed that he simply had been following orders (a defense that would be invoked by many at the later Nürnberg trials), but Kesselring disavowed any involvement in the act, and Dostler was found guilty and executed in December 1945.
In 1947 a British military court in Venice tried and convicted Kesselring of war crimes—for ordering the shooting of 335 Italian civilian hostages in the so-called Ardeatine cave massacre of March 1944, an atrocity committed in reprisal for an attack by Italian partisans on German soldiers. Sentenced to death on May 6, 1947, Kesselring later won commutation to life imprisonment. In 1952 he was pardoned and freed, and he became active in veterans’ organizations. Decades after Kesselring’s death in 1960, evidence was uncovered that showed he had perjured himself at both Dostler’s trial and his own. There was incontrovertible proof that Kesselring had approved the execution of the OSS commandos and had subsequently concealed evidence of that act. By denying his role in the executions, Kesselring had violated a central tenet of the officer’s code—he had knowingly allowed a subordinate to suffer the consequences of his own actions. Kesselring wrote Soldat bis zum letzten Tag (1953; “Soldier up to the Last Day”; Eng. trans. The Memoirs of Field Marshal Kesselring).