. The rise (and fall?) of Adidas | Ceasefire Magazine

The rise (and fall?) of Adidas Special Report

Multinational apparel company Adidas has turned itself into a global branding juggernaut whilst simultaneously avoiding any public scrutiny over the working conditions of its factory workers. Ashok Kumar explores the development of the global anti-sweatshop movement and shows how two decades of activism have culminated in a new multi-nation campaign against the company.

New in Ceasefire, Special Reports - Posted on Tuesday, July 17, 2012 0:00 - 25 Comments

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A grassroots movement of activists and workers is helping increasingly assertive workers get their due (photo: Mark leong)

In September of 2000, as activists laid siege to the IMF and World Bank summit in Prague, South African finance minister Trevor Manual pondered the relevance of protesting a system that felt so inevitable, “I know what they are against but have no sense of what they are for.”

Unlike the perceived ambiguity of much of the anti-capitalist movement at the time, the anti-sweatshop movement has always remained steadfast in its demands. Issues such as dignity at work, freedom of association and livable wages remained at the forefront. The problem wasn’t that workers and activists didn’t know what they were for – it was how to get it.

The rise of Adidas

One of the more pressing issues of subcontracted labour is the non-payment of a legally mandated terminal compensation (‘severance’). In 2011, the PT Kizone factory in Indonesia was forced to close and 2,700 workers were left immediately without jobs. The factory produced for Nike, Adidas and the Dallas Cowboys. As indicated in a report by the Workers Rights Consortium (WRC), Nike and the Cowboys immediately agreed to pay their share of what was owed, £1m and £33k respectively.

However, Adidas, which owes £1.2m, continues to refuse, claiming ‘no business relationship at the time of closure’, a fact that the WRC report states is “without any basis”, since Adidas continued orders a full two months after the violations began. Adidas recently offered a £20 food voucher to Alfamart, the retail price of an Adidas football, as a substitute for what is owed.  The workers flatly rejected the offer.  Adidas’ position is consistent with their well-documented record on workers’ rights abuse.

The company was formed in the shadow of Hitler’s Third Reich. Founder Adolph “Adi” Dassler, an active member of the Nazi party, transformed his shoe factory into a small arms factory during WWII. In the decades since, the Adidas Group has risen to become one of the largest and most profitable brands in the world. It towers above any other Olympic sponsor, enjoying a ‘big lead’ in public perception according to the YouGov 2012 BranIndex, and has successfully implanted itself into every section of the market and every genre of social and cultural life in a way unmatched by any other brand.

Adidas’ profits have climbed dramatically and it is now seen as a ‘recession-proof’ brand.  In 2005, the company acquired its rival, Reebok, as part of an aggressive new strategy to dominate the global sportswear apparel market. Adidas has witnessed an 18% spike in sales in the past twelve months alone, bringing its annual revenues to $13.3 billion in 2011 (£8.6b) and is expected to gain an additional 12-17% in 2012.

These profits come aloft an aggressive marketing strategy to carve out a major share in every major sporting event, from an 11-year $400m (£260m) deal as official clothing provider for the NBA to its $100m (£65m) sponsorship of the 2012 Olympics, Adidas’ profits are expected only to rise.

Despite this success, Adidas remains an industry leader in violations to its more than 1 million workers, labouring away in 1,236 supplier factories in 63 countries. Adidas retains a ‘zero tolerance’ policy towards workers organising or trade union activity in any of its subcontracted factories.

Indonesia remains a major supplier country, where Adidas full time workers bring home less than $2 (£1.3) a day, and some of whom have reported how, “everyday someone in the factory passes out because of exhaustion.” In 2005, dozens of union leaders at Indonesia’s PT Panarub factory were dismissed and blacklisted for participating in a legal strike. The factory is one of the world’s largest suppliers of footwear and cleats for Adidas. By 2006, Adidas had reduced its orders to the factory leading to 1,000 lay-offs.

Around the same time, El Salvador’s Hermosa factory was forced to close down after workers formed a union and Adidas abruptly halted its orders to the factory. 260 workers were laid off with £535,000 unpaid severance. To this day many of the workers continue to be blacklisted from employment.

In 2006, less than a year after Adidas purchased Reebok, two Reebok producing factories in Indonesia, PT Spotec and PT Dong Joe, closed down. As is standard operating procedure for Adidas producing factories – union leaders were blacklisted, and 10,500 workers were laid-off. A 2010 report found that 9,000 of those workers remained unemployed despite Adidas’ ‘commitment to rehiring’.

It was reported by the Indonesian Footwear Association that Adidas/Reebok had not increased payments to the suppliers for over 5 years preceding the closure, whilst at the same time Adidas executives could be found boasting of a 27% second quarter net profit as a result of the Reebok takeover.

Between the 24th and 29th of June 2011, 93,000 workers at a major Adidas supplying factory, Pou Yen in Vietnam, took strike action for better pay and conditions. Over twenty workers were arrested and three young labour activists were sentenced to prison for nearly a decade for their involvement in organising the strike.

Just this week the Daily Mail reported that the London Organizing Committee would be investigating Adidas after revelations emerged that ‘workers living in cramped squalid conditions said they earned $61 (£40) a month for working eight hours a day, six days a week’ to produce Olympic ‘fanwear’.

Unlike other cases, the recent case of PT Kizone has resulted in an eruption of protests in Indonesia and in the global North.  The tactics and strategies of global corporate campaigns employed today are the result of lessons learnt from two decades of anti-sweatshop campaigning.

Two decades of anti-sweatshop campaigns

During the industrial era, it was the regulation and effective control of most stocks and flows, particularly over commodities, money and capital across well-delimited territories that resulted in higher negotiating power for workers without risk of capital flight.

From the mid-1970s onwards, however, the global North underwent a ‘post-industrial revolution’ resulting in a closing of much of the manufacturing industry and with it an end to historic industrial union power. This manufacturing shifted to subcontracted factories in the global South, where worker resistance has been met with an end to product orders and the closing of the factory, rendering industrial trade unions powerless against liquid capital.

Neoliberal globalisation has radically empowered transnational corporations ( TNCs), injecting capital into landscapes that were once insulated from global capitalism. The garment sector, described as ‘the most globalized industry in the world’, has shifted from “production-driven” to “buyer-driven” commodity chains, meaning the geo-economy is now determined by brand-name merchandisers (read: buyers) who, through their ability to select suppliers from all around the world, concentrate enormous profits and power from those who produce the commodity to the brands who purchase them.  By exploiting geographic differentiation in costs, surplus labour, and the restructuring of state regulation, TNCs have been able to turn the screws tighter and tighter on complex supply chains.

Activists’ initial reactions to capital flight saw calls for protectionism from the increasingly ossified trade union movements of the North who tended to blame so-called “cheap” workers in the South with little effort to develop solidarity between the two spheres. The 1990s, however, witnessed a further expansion of global capital and with it an eruption of anti-sweatshop solidarity campaigns specifically targeting major clothing brands.

These campaigns proliferated as stories of cramped factory conditions and the overworked and underpaid female garment workers of the South began trickling up to the North. The early 2000s saw a wave of animated grassroots anti-capitalist protest on the heels of the historic convergence of ‘teamster and turtle’ against the WTO in Seattle. A consensus amongst trade union activists began to take shape in both spheres of the globe.

In the heady days of the 1990s, students and activists demanded that companies adopt “codes of conduct”, TNCs responded to the flurry of anti-sweatshop activity in the global North by introducing codes. The code of conduct model within a consumer choice regime continues to remain the strategy of many first-world ‘anti-sweatshop’ or ‘fair trade’ NGOs.

The voluntary nature of codes along with market-based ‘fair trade’ certification make enforceability near impossible, entrenching a colonial north-as-agent and south-as-victim power dynamic, and serving only as a convenient public relations tool for TNCs.

After the failure of a consumer choice-centred strategy, some NGOs shifted gears, lobbying to provide resources to state governments to enable them to enforce their own labour laws. Pushing for the regulatory power of nation-states to combat the hegemony of capital. This too, by all available accounts, has proven a failure. The primary reason is linked to the relationship between global capital and the state. Global capitalism has weakened states to the extent that many consciously undermine their own laws to create the optimum environment for capital accumulation.

Thus with the acceptance of increasing nation-state powerlessness and its position within global capitalist formation, activists proposed reverting the meta-national governance regimes (free trade and WTO agreements), that have accelerated the capacity of capital to globalise, to include a minimal standard of workers to organise and bargain collectively.

The demand for workers’ rights from capital’s supranational edifices, such as NAFTA, GATT and WTO as arbiters (commonly referred to as the ‘social clause debate’) has, with the exception of Europe’s Maastricht Treaty, few documented cases of any real application. Other international bodies, such as the UNs International Labour Organization (ILO) have honourable goals, but again, have few examples of enforceability at the base.

On the issue of these conflicting “rights”, Marx famously wrote that “between two rights” – that of owners to appropriate common goods; and those of the dispossessed –  “force decides”. This extends to the neoliberal context, as the rights of the dominant social process of capital accumulation through market exchange against the rights of workers for political democracy and collective action.

The anti-sweatshop models outlined thus far have done little to open up space for workers to organise. Especially in the most exploitative industries, like the garment sector, where there are almost no examples of large-scale factory unionisations that have not resulted in the ‘cutting and running’ of capital, invariably leading to the closure of the subcontracted factory. Methods that rely solely on the benevolence of consumers, NGOs, the State or the perceived benevolence of transnational capital prioritise the rights of capital over that of labour.

Peter Dickens sees global commodities as “derived more and more from an increasingly complex geography of production, distribution and consumption.” In other words, the point of consumption in the new international division of labour is a critical component to combat the asymmetrical relationship between capital and labour.

By the late 2000s, activists from both global spheres recognised the need for worker-driven campaigns that harnessed both worker and consumer power. Many of the corporate codes of conduct that had originally been pursued by activists were now being followed-up by consumer-driven corporate campaigns as a means of enforcement.

Modern labour corporate campaigns claim their roots in the United Farm Workers (UFW) of the 1960s and 70s that incorporated a worker-driven strategy of strikes in the field and secondary pickets of purchasing retailers. Targeting more than 200 different agribusiness item, the UFW was most notable for its highly visible strikes and boycotts, as well as securing victories against major grape growing corporations.

This strategy finally led to the 2008 SITRAJERZEESH Union and United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS)-initiated campaign against Fruit of the Loom subsidiary Russell Athletic. It serves as an instructive model of successful transnational solidarity given the historically insurmountable challenge of trade union organisation under the regime of global capital.

Through a two-pronged latitudinal strategy, workers in Honduras attacked the source of capitalist production whilst activists in the core responded through a comprehensive coordinated retail boycott, targeting at the consumer, retail, licensing and political levels in the US, Canada and the UK.  

The campaign led to 110 universities cutting contracts valued at over £33 million, becoming the largest collegiate boycott of an apparel brand in history and leading to an unprecedented reopening of a unionised garment factory, rehiring of over 1,200 employees, a multi-million dollar payout to workers and a commitment from Fruit of the Loom to extend union neutrality across its supply chain in Honduras.

With eight factories and 10,000 workers, Fruit of the Loom is the largest private sector employer in Honduras – making the agreement far-reaching. The campaign’s landmark success is a result of its incorporating a worker-led, solidarity-based strategy rather than the established model of consumer-led campaigns.

This brings us back to Adidas, which has established itself as a global juggernaut of corporate power and influence. With its well-oiled PR machine, glossy annual CSR report, army of spin-masters justifying abuses under a guise of the ‘complexity of wage-setting’, with board seats in Kafkaesque front groups like the ‘Fair Labor Organization’, alongside insidious campaigns like ‘Girls all in’ , and a history of claims of ‘rehiring’ fired workers (which has never materialised anywhere) Adidas has successfully ducked and dodged every attempt at accountability – ensuring the continued systematic abuse, humiliation and violent extraction from its sweated labour in the far corners of the globe.

Its messaging is crisp: winter or summer, young or old, fat, skinny or athletic – Adidas is everywhere and is for everyone. Whereas main competitor Nike is limited to athletic activity, Adidas has reached ubiquity.

Walk down an East London street and you will find thick-framed hipsters sporting the pastiche flavors of Adidas Originals, take a stroll down a housing estate and it becomes clear that the Adidas bag is a staple accessory for many working class youth, go to a swanky gym and you’ll find middle-aged yuppies sweating it out in a class or in the weight room in Adidas sports apparel. Switch on the TV – from musicians to athletes to cultural icons, from Katy Perry to Andy Murray to Missy Elliot; Adidas has come to define a kind of universal cool, a brand identity with few race, class or gender boundaries to box-it-in or out.

Adidas’ documentary-style, pulsating adverts allow it to traverse the full breadth of the public’s purchasing power, dialectically exploiting whilst also transcending the constructions of difference, reproducing otherwise fragmented social relations to expand its market share.

This strategy fits snugly into the cultural logic of late capitalism where real life is inseparable from advertisements and ‘identity’ is presented as fluid and transient, with its relevance underpinned only by niche consumption practices. Established notions of community are degraded and people are forced to seek identity exclusively through the products they purchase.

They not only tell you what to think (‘I need those sneakers’) but how to feel. The commodity dominates; ones perceived ‘free choice’ has largely already been made for them. Adidas, alongside other brands, facilitate communities of utilisation and compulsion within a culture that engenders the individual seemingly devoid of the collective. Thus, successfully confronting it from below through collective action is no simple task.

The case of PT Kizone has resulted in demonstrations by hundreds of workers and their families at the German Embassy in Jakarta, quickly escalating into a full-fledged USAS campaign and solidarity demonstrations in Spain, Denmark, Germany, Austria, with contracts threatened on campuses in the US. Here in the UK, groups War On Want, People and Planet, and Labour Behind the Label announced they will campaign to ensure Adidas pays what it owes to the workers of PT Kizone.

Today, workers and activists have the historical space to reflect, reassess and realise that the ends remain the same – the means, however, different. That it is ultimately through the collective struggle by labour-led organization at the point of production, coupled with international solidarity at the point of consumption, that workers and the oppressed can cripple the force of transnational capital.

Ashok Kumar

Ashok Kumar is a writer, activist and a PhD candidate of Economic Geography at Oxford University. He was a contributor to The Assault on Universities: A Manifesto for Resistance (Pluto 2011) and It Started in Wisconsin: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Labor Protest (Verso 2012). He tweets at @broseph_stalin.

25 Comments

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Chazzamble
Jul 16, 2012 15:21

Absolutely excellent piece – incredibly well researched, and intertwines hard, empirical fact relating to one of the most exploitative sports brands of our time with sound, labour market theory.

Will share with everyone I know!

AA
Jul 16, 2012 16:12

The question is whether workers and activists will have to always play catch up, always on the defensive. when we going to go on the offence?

Candyshop
Jul 16, 2012 18:19

Jen cooper
Jul 16, 2012 23:46

Brilliant article.

Ali
Jul 17, 2012 1:19

“Its messaging is crisp: winter or summer, young or old, fat, skinny or athletic – Adidas is everywhere and is for everyone. Whereas main competitor Nike is limited to athletic activity, Adidas has reached ubiquity.”

Very true.

Estelle
Jul 17, 2012 5:00

Excellent read. Though I would add that winning severance for a few thousand workers of a million pounds will hardly be the “fall” of adidas. Clearly the author is a Marxist of one sort or another so I find it sad that he goes for such low expectations and talks of the “ambiguity” of anti-capitalists. What happened to worker militancy? Aren’t we supposed to b fighting for worker control? While, this was an extremely well written and interesting read the goals look disappointingly liberal. Surprised the author chose to focus on campaigns led by historical liberal reformist organisations.

Jen
Jul 17, 2012 16:47

Interesting.

Joel Feingold
Jul 17, 2012 17:11

A stellar piece. I want to respond to Estelle’s comment, in particular her suggestion that the “goals look disappointingly liberal.”

In order for the fighting exploited and oppressed to really win — to rupture the fabric of capitalism, and to replace it with something new — the first requirement is victory on practical demands. A good reform — higher wages, shorter hours, above all recognition of militant and democratic unions — can mean the difference between survival and power or death and powerlessness for the union of the workers. But at the same time, many of these unions are explicitly anti-capitalist, many are avowedly socialist, and they are the laboratories of the new politics.

Survival comes before revolution. But these workers survive to make the revolution — and that’s why international solidarity in this vein is so important.

Teresa Cheng
Jul 17, 2012 21:23

This is a great piece that demonstrates why transnational international solidarity, not more token corporate social responsibility reforms by multinational corporations nor solely demanding reforms of third world nations, is how we build power for workers in their global economy that fight to take on their real bosses – multinational apparel brands

dressed & undressed clothed & stripped - in the news on-line, 18 july 2012
Jul 18, 2012 7:39

[…] Adidas’ position is consistent with their well-documented record on workers’ rights abuse. read more.  (edit.:Well worth a read & Recommended! […]

Tom Grady
Jul 18, 2012 14:21

The strategy is targeting economically at the points of production and consumption, not simply holding a demonstration. This is what can be understood from this stunningly researched thoughtful piece. As indicated here, the fruit of the loom case shows that it is not only where we target along the global supply chain but HOW we target. In the US there are universities with large and valuable contracts with these companies, so targeting them has an economic impact but here in the UK that is not the case. Simply running corporate branding campaigns against Adidas will go nowhere, competing against them on their own turf will only demoralize us. I’m curious what the author or anyone else could offer in terms of actually ‘crippling the force’ of Adidas here and across Europe. The US model cannot simply be transplanted into European activism. On the other hand, to the organisers of this campaign if Europe is only a symbolic secondary pressure point and not primary activist force against Adidas, well then I guess symbolism is all that is needed.

Orgwald R.
Jul 18, 2012 19:45

Sorry, this piece is facile and overstretched.

Let’s start with the facts — which the author gets laughably wrong. Adidas had €1b of profits in 2011 — not €13.3b. See the author’s own link. How on earth does the author proclaim himself a PhD candidate in “Economic Geography” if he can’t differentiate between revenues and operating profit? Moreover, this is a company with a profit margin of only 5%. (Ibid.) Hardly a firm making money hand-over-fist. In FY’2011, they had a net cash loss of €433m! They can’t even return a penny to their shareholders after paying their labor, rent, overhead, etc.

I won’t waste my time applying critical analysis to his post-Marxist mumbo-jumbo. Are you serious? “[C]olonial north-as-agent and south-as-victim power dynamic”? ” [A]ctivists proposed reverting the meta-national governance regimes”? “[D]ialectically exploiting whilst also transcending the constructions of difference”? Does anyone still talk like this? Stop hiding behind ambiguous words and vacuous concepts. This isn’t the 1960s. Your ship has sailed.

Oh wow, it’s one big conspiracy! An ex-Nazi creates a company that’s hellbent on world domination. The unwitting populace is too myopic to understand what it’s buying, and is thus a brainwashed cog! Woe unto the hipster/yuppie/street youth who cannot exert his/her own free will and resist the urge to buy Adidas. And woe unto the benighted factory workers who are too exploited to resist their malicious overlords! Far be it from the fact that consumers can make their own choices and apply their own meanings to brands. Far be it from the fact that international trade has lifted billions of people out of poverty in the last decade alone.

How to write an article like this? String together a few portentous but ultimately empty terms like “fetishism of commodities”; make a facile argument about how consumers have no agency; throw in some irrelevant “facts”; and serve it up warm to an echo chamber readership. Make sure to circulate this to all would-be college freshman revolutionaries!

Ceasefire Reader
Jul 19, 2012 2:43

Re: “Orgwald R” – chill out man this is a political leftwing magazine, id suggest you peruse some of the other exceptional articles on this website to get a better idea. Many take a explicitly marxist bent and cultural theory is intimately part of the mission (Read the “about” page – the tag reads ‘from Arthouse to Zizek” for a reason). I guess in that case, the ‘ship has sailed’ for most of us.

You indicate one word mistake that most people probably missed. The use of the word “profit” instead of “revenue” – that’s it. Out of the more than 100 facts listed in this in-depth article you found one misplaced word and beat to death. Its obvious that the article’s points and arguments weather the storm of this blistering critique of one word quite well.

Lastly, I think most decent people in this world would be hard pressed to openly support sweatshops – but your last paragraph clearly identifies your ideological and moral bearings.

Madhusudhan
Jul 19, 2012 7:50

The article reveals how wealth disparity across the globe is increasing at an alarming rate, leaving so many dispossessed while enriching a select few.

A timely & insightful piece on the tragedy of sweat-shops.

Keep the wheels of awareness churning!

Ali
Jul 19, 2012 23:08

Orgwald- lol you’re a joker mate. Yeah adidas is so poor and losing money (that’s why they’re the second most profitable brand in the world)

Michael Kenny
Jul 20, 2012 15:41

Small correction of fact from Wikipedia. Adi Dassler (not Dossler) and his brother Rudolf indeed joined the Nazi Party (in a dictatorship, what else can you do?) but only Rudolf was active in the party. Adi supplied Jesse Owens with the shoes with which he won Olympic gold (and drove Hitler to leave the stadium in rage!). Hardly a very loyal nazi! During the war, the factory produced army boots, not smallarms, as the author claims. Clearly, the author ia making a rather silly attempt to smear Adidas by associating it with Hitler but by twisting the facts to suit his arguments, he (wholly unnecesarily) undermines his own credibility and discredits his article. After all, if he has no scruples about distorting facts, we are entitled to ask what other facts he has distorted.

gerald brown
Jul 20, 2012 23:08

wow michael kenny nice try defending the nazis, you’re embarrassing yourself (just like your previous incarnation). read der spiegal (one of the most read newspapers in germany) that states this:

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/shoes-and-nazi-bazookas-the-prehistory-of-adidas-and-puma-a-611400.html

Hitler’s regime used many small and medium-sized companies to produce military equipment and armaments. “For the ‘total war’ proclaimed by Goebbels in early 1943, the Nazis needed a total war economy,” explains Lutz Budrass, a business historian at the University of Bochum.

Similar things were happening all across the country — and German industry increasingly resembled one big military machine. The Hugo Boss textile factory, for example, in the southern German town of Metzingen, was also a military supplier. Beginning in late 1944, instead of suits and leather jackets, workers on the production floors of the future fashion czar were making ball bearings. Germany’s flagship airline Lufthansa manufactured radar equipment for the Luftwaffe, Germany’s air force, and furniture companies made parts for fighter jets like the Heinkel He 162, one of the first military jets in the world. Given the scarcity of metal, the jet was primarily made of wood.

Four years into World War II, not much Olympic glory was left among the shoemakers of Herzogenaurach. The German army was on the retreat on virtually all fronts, bombs were raining down on German cities and resources were running short. December 1943 marked the final blow for the town’s shoe production. Hitler’s regime ordered a halt to all civilian business operations, and the shoe-making machines in the Dassler Brothers’ production hall were replaced with spot-welding equipment for making weapons. Before long, nearly everyone in Herzogenaurach was working for the military. The local lederhosen factory stopped making the traditional Bavarian leather shorts and, instead, started producing bread bags and rucksacks for soldiers. A nearby family business made torpedo parts for the navy.

A Completely Militarized Industrial Landscape

The German army fashioned the Dasslers’ Panzerschreck after the American bazooka: a shoulder-fired steel tube; weight 9.3 kilograms (20.5 lbs); length 164 centimeters (5.4 feet); with a range of up to 180 meters (590 feet). A rocket fired from the Panzerschreck could penetrate steel armor 20 centimeters (8 inches) thick.

Responsibility for actually producing the new weapon lay with the military contractor Schricker & Co., located in the nearby town of Vach. But given the increasingly devastating British and American air raids on German cities, Schricker decided to transfer assembly operations to Herzogenaurach. Freight cars filled with parts for the “Stove Pipe” — as the Panzerschreck was popularly called on account of its simple construction — came to Dassler by rail.

Inside the plant, shoe seamstresses — who had quickly been given makeshift training to work in the armaments industry — welded sights and blast shields onto the pipes. French forced laborers were also on the production line. “The construction of the Panzerschreck was so simple that, given a little practice, even unskilled workers had hardly any problems manufacturing it,” one former employee told local historian Manfred Welker. But even with the simple design, German army inspectors still found themselves discarding many of the weapons made by Herzogenaurach’s amateurs on account of their flaws. The complicated and dangerous production of the rockets, though, continued to be handled by the professionals in Vach.

An Answer to the Tank, Too Late

On the front, German soldiers eagerly awaited the Dassler weapon. Despite its exceedingly simple design, it was still remarkably effective. “The Panzerschreck represented a quantum leap for the infantry in terms of anti-tank defense,” explains Christian Hartmann, a military historian at the Munich-based Institute of Contemporary History (IfZ). “It was the first weapon that German infantrymen fighting on their own could use to destroy tanks from a distance.”

In view of the rapidly advancing Allied armies, which were vastly superior in terms of sheer numbers, the Nazis increasingly propagated the idea that anyone could knock out tanks using only the Panzerschreck or its little brother, the single-use “Panzerfaust” (“Tank Fist”). An illustrated field booklet entitled “Der Panzerknacker” (“The Tank Buster”), for example, included awkward rhythms meant to help German soldiers recognize and combat enemy tanks, such as: “Notice first the fine design / sloping armor and curving line / five road wheels, study it well / that’s the T-34, and that’s how you tell.”

Wherever the specially trained “tank-destroying detachments” made an appearance, there was a significant increase in the number of enemy tanks knocked out. In March 1945, there were some 92,000 Panzerschrecks being used on the crumbling fronts. But the weapons had arrived too late to have a major influence on the war’s outcome. It wasn’t until 1944 that Panzerschrecks and Panzerfausts could be deployed on a large scale, but by then the military’s initial good fortune had long since run out. “If large numbers of Panzerschrecks could have been deployed during the Russian campaign in 1941, Moscow would have probably fallen,” says Hartmann. As it turned out, the “stove pipe” was just one of many newly developed weapons that, at best, postponed the collapse of the fronts — and thereby only prolonged the horror of the war.

A Stroke of American Luck

The Dasslers’ brief career as weapons manufacturers nearly proved their undoing. In April 1945, when the Americans marched into Herzogenaurach, US tanks pulled up in front of the factory. The soldiers were still debating whether they should destroy the building when Adi’s wife, Käthe, walked out and charmingly convinced the GIs that the company and its employees were only interested in manufacturing sports shoes.

mary
Jul 21, 2012 1:54

michael kenny = orgwald r. = adidas pr idiots

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Janaki
Jul 24, 2012 18:20

What a well written, concise piece of work, Ashok. I’m always impressed with your knowledge of economics, capital, and global politics. You should write for COUNTERPUNCH. Seriously.

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