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Reading Antony Beevor's "The Second World War" he makes the point several times that a peculiar obsession of Hitler's was the defence of Norway and that there were close to half a million German troops kept fairly idle in the region right up to the German surrender in May 1945. He also writes that partisan activity in Norway was minor compared to most of the other occupied territories.

Bearing in mind that - assuming you weren't a fanatical nazi - service elsewhere in the German army from 1942/3 onwards was grim, involving heavy losses, constant instructions to hold hopeless positions and fight to the last man, and with no prospect of anything but certain defeat, was Norway the perfect posting?

Was this generally (if quietly) acknowledged and is there any evidence that well connected families were able to have their sons posted to Norway?

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+1 Excellent question. I'm Norwegian and have never thought of this, but it certainly seems reasonable. Though there seems to be some stereotype about the joys of serving in France, as well, at least before D-Day. – Jørgen Sep 21 '12 at 8:14
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As to Hitler's preoccupation with Norway: Note that Norway was Germany's iron supplier. Hitler had a bit of a weakness for prioritizing stategic resources over political objectives. This also led him to go after the Ukraine (oil), doubling his front in Russia, rather than going straight for Moscow. – T.E.D. Sep 21 '12 at 14:20
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I believe that Norway was initially invaded by merely 30000 soldiers, so I am curious to get the half a million troops confirmed. – David Sep 22 '12 at 7:17
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Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_occupation_of_Norway) claims that Norway was garrisoned with 300,000 men, citing the Encyclopedia Britannica. As to the rationale, it adds the Norwegian ports and airfields, from which Germany could attack Britain and intercept US convoys to the Soviet Union passing through the Arctic. – Stephan Kolassa Oct 24 '12 at 20:11
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Excellent question. As a possible lead, Willy Brandt (social democratic German chancellor from 1969 to 1974) spent part of the war years in Norway, absolutely not on a perhaps-convenient post in the sense of the question, but his biographies, etc., may still provide further inside into the topic. – Drux Dec 8 '12 at 22:42
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