Helmut Harff
{{Short description|German Army brigadier general (1939–2018)}}
{{Infobox military person
|honorific_prefix=Brigadier General
|name=Helmut Harff
|image=
|birth_date={{Birth date|1939|6|5|df=y}}
|death_date={{Death date and age|2018|9|8|1939|6|5|df=y}}
|birth_place=Mönchengladbach, Free State of Prussia, German Reich
|death_place=
|allegiance={{ubl|{{flag|West Germany}} (to 1990)|{{flag|Germany}}}}
|branch={{army|Germany}}
|serviceyears=1959–1999
|rank=Brigadegeneral
|commands={{ubl|26th Airborne Brigade|German military contingents in Somalia and Kosovo}}
|unit={{Ill|Paratrooper Battalion 262|de|Luftlandeunterstützungsbataillon 262}}
|battles={{tree list}}
{{tree list end}}
|awards=
|laterwork=
|alma_mater={{ubl|Bundeswehr Command and Staff College|NATO Defense College}}
}}
Helmut Harff (5 June 1939 – 8 September 2018) was a German Army brigadier general who served as commander of German military contingents taking part in peacekeeping operations in Somalia and Kosovo, and was chief of staff of the French-led Multi-National Division Southeast in Bosnia-Herzegovina. He was described as one of the most experienced Bundeswehr officers when it began undertaking foreign missions in the 1990s.
Harff was known for commanding the first Bundeswehr operation outside of NATO territory, which was in support of the United Nations in Somalia, and during the Kosovo War became the first German general to take prisoners of war since World War II. He also received international attention after the media recorded a confrontation he had with a Serbian army colonel in Kosovo, successfully threatening him into removing his troops from a border post they were occupying.
Early life and education
Harff was born on 5 June 1939{{cite news |title=Traueranzeigen von Helmut Harff |trans-title=Obituaries of Helmut Harff |date=15 September 2018 |lang=de |newspaper=Frankfurter Allgemeine |url=https://lebenswege.faz.net/traueranzeige/helmut-harff |access-date=19 December 2024}} in Mönchengladbach, Germany.{{Cite web |title=Brigadegeneral a.D. Helmut Harff ist tot |trans-title=Brigadier General (ret.) Helmut Harff is dead |date=18 September 2018 |publisher=German Bundeswehr Association |lang=de |url=https://www.dbwv.de/aktuelle-themen/blickpunkt/beitrag/brigadegeneral-a-d-helmut-harff-ist-tot |access-date=19 December 2024 }}
His military education included the Bundeswehr Command and Staff College in Hamburg{{Cite web |title=Erzwungener Friede: 25 Jahre Einsatz im Kosovo |trans-title=Forced Peace: 25 Years of Operation in Kosovo |date=8 January 2024 |lang=de |publisher=Bundeswehr |url=https://zms.bundeswehr.de/de/publikationen-ueberblick/zmg-publikationen-25-jahre-einsatz-kosovo-5712960 |access-date=19 December 2024}}{{Cite web |title=Gedenken an Brigadegeneral a.D. Helmut Harff |trans-title=In memory of Brigadier General (ret.) Helmut Harff |lang=de |publisher=German Paratroopers' Association |url=https://www.fschjgbund.de/gedenken-an-brigadegeneral-a-d-helmut-harff |access-date=19 December 2024 }} and the NATO Defense College in Rome. He also obtained a college degree in business administration.
Military career
Harff joined the German Army as a paratrooper officer candidate on 6 April 1959. He was assigned to {{Ill|Paratrooper Battalion 262|de|Luftlandeunterstützungsbataillon 262}}, where after his training was complete he held positions on the battalion staff and as a platoon and company commander. Harff later studied for a business administration degree and served as a staff officer at the {{Ill|25th Airborne Brigade (Bduneswehr)|de|Luftlandebrigade 25|lt=25th Airborne Brigade}} before attending the Bundeswehr Command and Staff College. After graduating from the general staff officer course, he worked at the German Army personnel department before becoming a staff officer at the {{Ill|1st Airborne Division (Bundeswehr)|de|1. Luftlandedivision (Bundeswehr)|lt=1st Airborne Division}}.
From 1980 to 1981 Harff commanded Battalion 262, then became an instructor at the Command and Staff College until 1986, when he was sent to study at the NATO Defense College in Rome. Following his return to Germany, Harff was the head of the staff that founded the Federal Academy for Security Policy, and was later the head of the department of policy for army personnel planning at the Federal Ministry of Defence.
=Peacekeeping=
In March 1990 Colonel Harff became commander of the 26th Airborne Brigade. In this capacity, in July 1993 he led the first German contingent deployed for the United Nations Operation in Somalia II (UNOSOM II). Harff oversaw the first Bundeswehr operation outside of NATO territory, commanding about 1,700 soldiers. Although the UN mission was a failure at bringing about peace in Somalia, it represented a new achievement for the Bundeswehr at the time, being able to assist in an operation abroad without existing regulations. Germany's involvement was seen as a success because of Harff's leadership, as he was able to coordinate different units in difficult conditions. For the Somalia operation he was awarded the United Nations Medal, the Badge of Honour of the Bundeswehr in Gold, and the 1st class cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Harff was transferred to the Army Office in April 1994 as the General for Central Army Affairs and the head of Department I. In 1997 he was deployed as the chief of staff of the French-led Multi-National Division Southeast in Mostar, Bosnia-Herzegovina, as part of the NATO-led Stabilization Force (SFOR).{{Cite web |title=SFOR Organization |date=1 June 2004 |publisher=NATO |url=https://www.nato.int/sfor/organisation/sfororg.htm |access-date=19 December 2024 }} He was described as one of the most experienced Bundeswehr officers in the early years of its foreign missions.
In 1998 he was appointed as deputy commander of Airmobile Forces Command/4th Division in preparation for an expanded Bundeswehr mission in the Balkans, beginning in modern-day North Macedonia (then the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia). Brigadier General Harff was then the German national commander of the Bundeswehr contingent in North Macedonia, during Operation Allied Force, the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, and the subsequent entry of NATO peacekeeping forces into Kosovo. His force assisted with supporting Albanian refugees that crossed the border from Kosovo into North Macedonia as a result of the Kosovo War, and some Serbian military deserters also crossed the border and surrendered, asking for asylum in Germany. They were treated as prisoners of war in accordance with international law, which made Harff the first German general to take prisoners of war since World War II.{{Cite news |last1=Follath |first1=Erich |last2=Koebl |first2=Susanne |last3=Szandar |first3=Alexander |title=»Gerade noch davongekommen« |trans-title="Just got away with it" |newspaper=Der Spiegel |date=23 January 2000 |lang=de |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/gerade-noch-davongekommen-a-6efd1cf0-0002-0001-0000-000015502599 |access-date=19 December 2024 }}
After the UN Security Council authorized a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo, and it was also approved in Germany by a vote of the Bundestag, the German unit in North Macedonia entered Kosovo on 11 June 1999, becoming the first German contingent of the NATO-led Kosovo Force. They entered while the Serbian Army was still in the process of withdrawing from the region. During that process Harff became involved in an incident that was recorded by television media teams. At a border crossing between Kosovo and Albania, near Morina on the Albanian side, a group of Serbian soldiers still remained there despite Serbia's agreement to withdraw. Harff arrived at the border post on 13 June and met with the commanding Serbian colonel and his officers. He asked how much time they needed to leave, and one of them answered that it would be six hours. Harff told them they had thirty minutes. They tried to argue to stall for time, to which the general responded that they now have twenty-eight minutes and that it was the "end of discussion." The Serbian troops then left the area right away.{{Cite news |last=Hooper |first=John |date=13 June 1999 |title=Showdown in the streets |newspaper=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/1999/jun/14/balkans6 |access-date=19 December 2024}}{{Cite news |last=Davison |first=Phil |title=Liberation Of Kosovo: 50 years on, the Germans confront the Serbs again |newspaper=The Independent |date=13 June 1999 |url=https://www.the-independent.com/news/liberation-of-kosovo-50-years-on-the-germans-confront-the-serbs-again-1100023.html |access-date=19 December 2024 }}
Later life
Harff retired from the military in 1999.
After leaving the Bundeswehr he was the director of the Defense Committee at the Federation of German Industries. In 2006, he and several other officers criticized Karlheinz Viereck, the head of the European Union Force in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for leaving his post to go on vacation to Sweden, which is where he was when political violence broke out in the DRC.{{Cite news |last=Teevs |first=Christian |title=Kongo-Kommandeur Viereck: Scharfer Rüffel von den Kameraden |trans-title=Congo Commander Vierick: Sharp reprimand from his comrades |lang=de |date=30 August 2006 |newspaper=Der Spiegel |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/kongo-kommandeur-viereck-scharfer-rueffel-von-den-kameraden-a-434284.html |access-date=19 December 2024 }}
Awards and decorations
- Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 1st class Cross
- Badge of Honour of the Bundeswehr in Gold
- United Nations Medal
References
{{reflist}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-mil}}
{{succession box
|title=Commander of the 26th Airborne Brigade
|before=Fritz Eckert
|after=Hans-Heinrich Dieter
|years=1990–1994
}}
{{succession box
|title=Commander of the German military contingent in Somalia
|before=Position established
|after=Holger Kammerhoff
|years=1993
}}
{{succession box
|title=Commander of the German military contingent in Kosovo
|before=Position established
|after=Friedrich Riechmann
|years=1999
}}
{{s-end}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harff, Helmut}}
Category:Brigadier generals of the German Army
Category:Recipients of the Badge of Honour of the Bundeswehr
Category:Recipients of the Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
Category:Military personnel from Mönchengladbach