On the morning of May 27, 1942, an open-top Mercedes Benz sedan drove down the streets of Prague, the capital of Czechoslovakia, with a handsome Nazi officer on board. The weather was clear that day, and the male officer had a proud smile on his face. The vehicle slowed down slightly at a bend in the street, when suddenly 2 mysterious Assassins rushed out with submachine guns, followed by a huge explosion, an anti-tank grenade instantly blew a large hole in the chassis of the car, and the Nazi officer was injured in many places, and immediately took up his pistol and fired at the Assassin.
Heydrich
The officer who was assassinated was Reinhard Heydrich, one of the most ferocious Nazi eagle dogs in Nazi Germany, known as the "blonde beast", who, as deputy commander-in-chief of the SS, was frantically pursuing genocidal policies in Germany, and he signed documents that sent tens of thousands of Jews to concentration camps. Heydrich was deeply appreciated by Hitler for his ruthless character and cruel methods among the Nazi elite, and was appointed by Hitler as the supreme head of the Czech region. But it was such a terrifying blonde beast that had been assassinated in his own territory, and who had risked assassinating Heydrich?
Himmler
Heydrich was born on March 7, 1904 in Halle-sur-Saale, Germany, the father of the head of the local Academy of Opera, and his grandfather was of Jewish descent. Heydrich grew up in a reclusive and disobedient manner. After the end of world war I, the German economy collapsed, the political situation was turbulent, and the German Communist Party and anarchists organized riots everywhere, heydrich was involved, and was keen on social movements. In 1922, at the age of 18, Heydrich joined the German Navy and rose rapidly in the military, but was soon expelled from the army for having an illicit relationship with the daughter of a shipyard director.
Jew
The wandering Heydrich met the infamous SS leader Himmler in 1931, and the two hit it off, and Heydrich joined the SS and soon gained the trust of Himmler, who put Heydrich in charge of the SS intelligence work. Heydrich was highly capable of intelligence work, collecting intelligence for the Nazi Party and attacking political opponents through a series of measures such as secret arrests and protective detentions. After the Nazi Party came to power in 1932, Heydrich followed Himmler to gain more power step by step through various means, and soon established a terrorist network in Germany with the secret police (Gestapo) as the main body to maintain the Nazi so-called "black order".
Munich Agreement
The Gestapo was the most feared secret police organization in Nazi Germany. In 1936, Heydrich followed Himmler as Superintendent of the Imperial Security Police and began to take full control of the state secret police, and from then on the Gestapo began to impose fascist rule on the German people throughout the country, and the Gestapo could monitor, arrest, and even throw themselves into concentration camps without the law. The Gestapo worked closely with the SS to establish concentration camps in Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and other regions, and frantically persecuted the Jews. At the time, the Gestapo was synonymous with death for the Jews.
Czechoslovakia
Heydrich was a demon with an obsessive obsession with power, but mastering the Gestapo did not satisfy him, and he was anxious to present himself in front of Hitler. In keeping with Hitler's genocidal policies, on January 20, 1942, Heydrich and Himmler presided over a meeting of senior Nazi Officials of The Wanse. At the meeting, Heydrich proposed the evil "final solution," a plan to prepare for a frenzied plan to massacre 11 million Jews in Europe in the name of dealing with Jews who were sick or otherwise unable to work.
Czech Army
Heydrich's final solution was approved by Hitler and put into practice. Beginning in February 1941, Heydrich began to implement the "Final Solution". He ordered the arrest of millions of Jews as laborers, leaving them to die of exhaustion during their labor, and the few who survived were simply shot. That summer, in order to expedite this "last resort," he instructed the Einsatzgruppen to shoot and kill 750,000 Polish and Soviet Jews at once. Tens of thousands of Jews were taken into concentration camps, and Nazi Germany directly built government killing centers to process and kill large numbers of Jews in batches. Throughout World War II, Hitler's minions killed more than 10 million people, 6 million of whom were Jews, in a vicious and brutal manner.
Nazi Wehrmacht