Heinz Kessler


Heinz Kessler or Heinz Keßler was a German communist politician and military officer in East Germany.
In East Germany, he held the rank of Armeegeneral in the National People's Army and was Minister of Defense of the GDR, a member of the Politbüro of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany, and a deputy of the GDR's Volkskammer.
Convicted for his role in the deaths of defectors along the Berlin wall, he was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison after German reunification, and served his sentence in Hakenfelde Prison. He was released from prison in 1998 after serving only two years.

Biography

Early life

Kessler was born into a communist family in Lauban, Lower Silesia and was raised in Chemnitz. He joined the Red Young Pioneers, the youth organization of the Communist Party of Germany, at age 6 and the Young Spartacus League at 10. He later apprenticed as a motor mechanic.

Military career

Drafted into the Wehrmacht in 1940, he deserted and defected to the Soviet Red Army three weeks after the German invasion of the USSR and fought for the Soviet Union until the end of the war. Upon his desertion, he was sentenced to death in absentia by a Military tribunal.
Upon returning to Germany in 1945, Kessler joined the KPD in the Soviet occupation zone, which merged with the Social Democratic Party in the Soviet zone in 1946 to form the SED. Also in 1946, Kessler became a member of the SED Central Committee.
He was appointed Chief of the Air Forces and Air Defense ' of the NVA in 1956, and as deputy minister of defense in 1957. He became Chief of the NVA Main Staff in 1967, with the rank of Generaloberst. Simultaneously, he also became a member of the Military Council of the United High Command of the Warsaw Pact.
Kessler was promoted from Chief of the Main Political Administration
' of the NVA to Defense Minister on 3 December 1985 after his predecessor, Armeegeneral Heinz Hoffmann, died of a heart attack.

Conviction and imprisonment

In 1991, after the Unification of Germany, Kessler was arrested after police received information that Kessler would attempt to flee the country disguised as a Soviet officer. German police blockaded the Sperenberg Airfield to prevent Kessler's escape, but later arrested him in Berlin after changing the lock on his home and informing him that he could retrieve his keys at a local police station.
He was tried in a German court for incitement to commit intentional homicide, for his role in the deaths of people who tried to flee the GDR between 1971 and 1989. On 16 September 1993, Kessler was found guilty of manslaughter and was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison.
Kessler filed an appeal to the European Court of Human Rights, claiming that his actions were in accordance with GDR law and meant to preserve the existence of the GDR. However, his appeal was denied largely on the basis that the GDR's policies violated international human rights.
Kessler served his sentence in Berlin-Hakenfelde prison from November 1996 to October 1998, and was released early.
Kessler was expelled from the Party of Democratic Socialism in 1990. In 2009, he joined the German Communist Party. He was an unsuccessful DKP candidate in the 2011 Berlin state election. Kessler died on 2 May 2017 at the age of 97.