The Kama tank school (German: Panzerschule Kama) was a secret training school for tank commanders operated by the German Reichswehr at Kazan, Soviet Union. It operated from 1929 to 1933.[1][2][3]
Germany, prohibited by the Treaty of Versailles to operate tanks or an air force, was able to find alternative means to continue training and development for its future Panzerwaffe and the Luftwaffe. Apart from Kama, Germany also operated the Lipetsk fighter-pilot school (1926–33) and a gas warfare school, the Gas-Testgelände Tomka (1928–31) in the Soviet Union.[2]
Contents |
The Treaty of Versailles, signed on 28 June 1919, prohibited Germany from operating any form of tank or air force after the country had lost the First World War.[2] Germany had normalised its relations with the Soviet Union in 1922, with the signing of the Treaty of Rapallo. At the time, both countries were outcasts in the world community.[4]
Initially, Germany was unwilling to break the Treaty of Versailles. This attitude changed however in 1923, when French and Belgian troops occupied the Ruhr area after Germany defaulted on its reparations. In December 1926, Germany and the Soviet Union signed a contract to establish a tank school on Soviet territory. The school was eventually opened in 1929 and served to train approximately 30 German tanks specialists.[2]
After its opening, the school accommodated up to a dozen German officers at a time, training there for up to two years.[5] As its equipment, the school had six heavy and three light tanks brought in and a number of light British tanks supplied by the Soviets.[3]
Apart from training officers, the school also served German companies like Krupp, Daimler and Rheinmetall as a development ground for new tank designs. Technicians worked on the designs that would later become the Panzerkampfwagen I and II.[6]
Many of the officers training, instructing or visiting Kama would later become high ranking commanders in the Wehrmacht or its Panzerwaffe, among them Ernst Volckheim, Werner von Blomberg, Walter Model, Wilhelm Ritter von Thoma and Heinz Guderian.[6] While at Kama, the German military personal was not allowed to wear German uniforms, usually civilian cloth were worn, occasionally also borrowed Soviet uniforms.[3]
In the early 1930s, the political situation for the tank school began to change. The Soviet Union opened itself to the West while Germany attempted a closer approach to France.[2]
In December 1932, Germany achieved being viewed as an equal at the Geneva Conference, making the secret schools somewhat unnecessary. With the rise of the Nazis to power in January 1933, the ideological gap between fascist Germany and the communist Soviet Union became too large and the tank school at Kazan was closed in late 1933.[2]