Siegfried Müller
Kongo Müller during his time in the Congo (1964)
Nickname(s)Kongo Müller
Born26 October 1920 (1920-10-26)
Crossen an der Oder, Germany
Died17 April 1983(1983-04-17) (aged 62)
Johannesburg, South Africa
Allegiance Germany
Congo-Léopoldville
Service/branchGerman Army
5 Commando
RankOberleutnant (Germany)
Major (Congo)
Battles/warsWorld War II
Simba rebellion

Siegfried Friedrich Heinrich Müller (26 October 1920 – 17 April 1983), referred to as "Congo Müller" (Kongo-Müller), was a German-born mercenary who served as an officer with 5 Commando during the Congo Crisis. A former officer-candidate in Nazi Germany's Wehrmacht who continued to wear his Iron Cross, Müller acquired particular notoriety in West and East Germany in the mid-1960s amid extensive press coverage of his involvement in war crimes in the Congo and overt nostalgia for the Nazi era.

Early life and military career

Siegfried Friedrich Heinrich Müller was born in Crossen an der Oder, Germany (modern Krosno Odrzańskie, Poland) in 1920 to a conservative Prussian family. His father served in World War I and later served in the Wehrmacht as a lieutenant-colonel. Siegfried was enrolled at a boarding school in Freiburg and was in the Jungvolk, reaching the rank of Fähnleinführer. He later served in the Reich Labour Service, and joined the Wehrmacht in 1939. He first experienced action during the German invasion of Poland, where he says he saw very little combat. After this, he claimed he would sometimes dress as a Polish peasant and walk along the lines of the Soviet-occupied Poland in order to scout them out. He also fought in Operation Barbarossa and spent the rest of the war fighting against the Soviets. He claimed to have been promoted to the rank of first lieutenant on April 20, 1945, Hitler's birthday. After being seriously wounded from being shot in the back, he was evacuated from East Prussia to Frankfurt, where he was captured by the Americans.

Released in 1947, he enlisted in the US Army Civilian Labor Group (CLG), an American Labor Service Unit of Germans; then became a lieutenant in a CLG security unit. He also worked as an Industrial Police watchman and trained NATO troops in Paris. He was denied entry to the Bundeswehr in 1956, but found employment with British Petroleum, clearing mines planted by the Afrika Korps in the Sahara Desert during World War II.

Congo Crisis

Müller emigrated to South Africa in 1962 and was recruited as a mercenary with the rank of lieutenant in 5 Commando in 1964 as part of the repression of the Simba rebellion in the Congo Crisis. At 44, Müller was the oldest of Mike Hoare's soldiers.[1] He was promoted to captain after a successful operation to seize Albertville (now Kalemie) and led 52 Commando, a small sub-unit of 5 Commando comprising approximately 53 soldiers, from July 1964. He was later promoted to major. In this period, the units participated in widespread arbitrary violence, killings, and other war crimes.[2] Pictures show Müller wearing his Iron Cross in the Congo.

As news of atrocities committed by mercenaries in the Congo spread, Müller became a hate figure among socialists and student activists in West Germany. He was first brought to public attention by a feature entitled "Congo Atrocity" in the December 1964 issue of the left-leaning magazine Konkret. Another lengthy interview included Müller speaking nostalgically of his wartime service in German-occupied Poland and France and "concluded with him laughing as he spoke about how he was now compelled to follow the 'barbaric customs' of the Congo by not taking wounded opponents prisoner but simply shooting them dead."[3] The historian Quinn Slobodian states "Müller provided a link between Nazi Germany and postcolonial conflict beyond polemical analogy".[4] Also profiled as a hate figure in East German state media, some instead responded by seeing him as a counterculture icon like the Rolling Stones.[5]

He died in the Boksburg, Gauteng suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa of stomach cancer in April 1983.[6]

Major Müller wore his World War II Iron Cross First Class on his operations in the Congo, which attracted the attention of journalists from Time magazine.[7]

He was interviewed for, and is the subject of, the 1966 East German documentary The Laughing Man-Confessions of a Murderer.[8]

The character Capt. Henlein from the 1968 film Dark of the Sun was based on Müller.[9]

References

  1. "Der "Kongo-Müller" und das "Kommando 52"". Kriegsreisende.de. Retrieved 2012-07-05.
  2. Bunnenberg, C. (2006): Der "Kongo-Müller": Eine deutsche Söldnerkarriere. Münster: Lit Verlag.
  3. Slobodian, Quinn (2012). Foreign Front: Third World Politics in Sixties West Germany. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. p. 64. ISBN 9780822351849.
  4. Slobodian, Quinn (2012). Foreign Front: Third World Politics in Sixties West Germany. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. p. 143. ISBN 9780822351849.
  5. Vinen, Richard (2018). The Long '68: Radical Protest and its Enemies. London: Allen Lane. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-241-34342-5.
  6. p.23 Chiari, Bernhard & Kollner, Dieter H A Concise Guide to the History of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Military History Research Institute
  7. "The Congo: Moise's Black Magic". Time. 1965-02-19. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2021-05-23.
  8. Heynowski, Walter; Scheumann, Gerhard (1966-03-18), Der lachende Mann – Bekenntnisse eines Mörders (Documentary, War), Siegfried Müller, DEFA-Studio für Dokumentarfilme, Deutscher Fernsehfunk (DFF), retrieved 2021-05-22
  9. Tickler, Peter (1987). The Modern Mercenary: Dog of War, Or Soldier of Honour?. P. Stephens. pp. 23–24. ISBN 9780850598124.

Further reading

  • Bunnenberg, Christian (2013). "Die Roten haben mich als Zielscheibe ausgewählt! Der (west-)deutsche Söldner „Kongo-Müller" im DDR-Dokumentarfilm". In Wedel, Michael; et al. (eds.). DEFA International: Grenzüberschreitende Filmbeziehungen vor und nach dem Mauerbau [The Reds picked me as a target! The (West) German mercenary "Kongo-Müller" in the GDR documentary] (in German). Wiesbaden: Springer VS. pp. 165–182. ISBN 978-3531184937.
  • Bunnenberg, Christian (2007). Der "Kongo-Müller" : eine deutsche Söldnerkarriere. Berlin: Lit. ISBN 9783825899004.
  • Brown, Timothy Scott (2013). West Germany and the Global Sixties The Anti-Authoritarian Revolt, 1962–1978. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107470347.
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