Abstract
In addition to the provisional police units set up in the Soviet
occupation zone in the summer of 1945 – later officially called the
German People’s Police [Deutsche
Volkspolizei or DVP] – the German Border Police
[Deutsche Grenzpolizei or DGP] was
set up as a paramilitary group in November 1946 and the DVP’s Barracked
Security Police was established in July 1948. Both of these bodies were
created by order of the Soviet Military Administration (SMAD). After the
Federal Republic signed the European Defense Community (EDC) Treaty in
May 1952, thereby making a West German armed forces foreseeable, the GDR
transformed its existing paramilitary units into the Barracked People’s
Police [Kasernierte Volkspolizei or
KVP] on July 1, 1952. By the end of the year, the KVP was already 90,000
men strong. In May 1955, the Soviet Union responded to the signing and
ratification of the Bonn-Paris Conventions – and the Federal Republic’s
resulting incorporation into NATO – by forging the Warsaw Pact with its
“allies” Albania, Bulgaria, the GDR, Poland, Romania, Czechoslovakia,
and Hungary. After making a few amendments to the constitution to allow
for the formation of armed forces, the People’s Parliament
[Volkskammer] passed a law
establishing the National People’s Army
[Nationale Volksarmee or NVA] and the
Ministry of National Defense on January 18, 1956. The first unit in the
new NVA was the First Mechanized Division (Potsdam), which was sworn in
on April 30, 1956 (below), and officially deployed when Willy Stoph,
Minister of National Defense, handed over the divisional flag.