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・ National Commission on Libraries and Information Science
・ National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse
・ National Commission on Muslim Filipinos
・ National Commission on Police Reform
・ National Commission on Population (India)
・ National Commission on Resources for Youth
・ National Commission on Small Farms
・ National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling
・ National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons
・ National Commission on the Status of Women
・ National Commission to review the working of the Constitution
・ National Commissioners Invitational Tournament
・ National Commissions for UNESCO
・ National Committee
・ National Committee for a Free Europe
National Committee for a Free Germany
・ National Committee for an Effective Congress
・ National Committee for Modification of the Volstead Act
・ National Committee for Quality Assurance
・ National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy
・ National Committee for Space Research
・ National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners
・ National Committee for the Furtherance of Jewish Education
・ National Committee for the History of Art
・ National Committee for the Liberation of Yugoslavia
・ National Committee for West Papua
・ National Committee of Americans of Polish Extraction
・ National Committee of Defense Against Communism
・ National Committee of the Chinese Agricultural, Forestry and Water Conservancy Workers' Union
・ National Committee of the Chinese Aviation Workers' Union


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National Committee for a Free Germany : ウィキペディア英語版
National Committee for a Free Germany

The National Committee for a Free Germany ((ドイツ語:Nationalkomitee Freies Deutschland), or ''NKFD'') was a German anti-Nazi organization that operated in the Soviet Union during World War II.〔Political Affairs By Earl Browder, Trade Union Unity League (U.S.), Herbert Aptheker, Communist Party of the United States of America, Gus Hall Published 1927
New Century Publishers Communism Original from the University of California Digitized Feb 7, 2007〕〔The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation,
By Norman M. Naimark Published 1995 Harvard University Press Communism and culture/ Germany (East) 586 pages ISBN 0674784057〕
== History ==
The rise of the Nazi Party to power in Germany in 1933 led to the outlawing of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and persecutions of its members, many of whom fled to the Soviet Union.
With the German invasion of the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa, German prisoners of war began to fall into Soviet hands. Several attempts to establish an anti-Nazi organization from those POWs were made with little success since most of them still believed in the final victory of the Wehrmacht.
With the German defeat at the Battle of Stalingrad, the number of German POWs rose and their belief in a victorious Germany was damaged, hence they were more open to the idea of a membership in an anti-Nazi organization.
At the beginning of June, 1943, Alfred Kunella and Rudolf Herrnstadt started to write the manifesto of the Committee,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Deutsches Historisches Museum: Fehler2 | The manifesto in German )〕 in which historical Prussian figures who allied with Imperial Russia against Napoleon, were depicted as exemplary Germans, e.g. vom Stein, Arndt, Clausewitz and Yorck. The National Committee for a Free Germany (NKFD) was founded in Krasnogorsk, near Moscow on 12 July 1943; its president was the exiled German communist writer Erich Weinert with his deputies Lieutenant Heinrich Graf von Einsiedel and Major Karl Hetz. Its leadership consisted of 38 members, including 28 Wehrmacht POWs and 10 exiled communists.

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