Career
He was enlisted for service to the Wehrmacht, and, upon completing his training as a commissioned officer, he was initially sent to the Finnish Front. Kloß requested to be transferred to the Eastern Front, as he felt he was obliged to serve his country by fighting on a more decisive front than that of Finland. In early 1944, with the rank of Hauptmann, he took command of the second battalion of the 144th Gebirgsjäger Regiment (part of 3 Gebirgs-Division) in Ukraine.
Allerberger, who became a de facto adjutant to Kloß, noted in his memoirs that he always wore a Hitlerjugend badge, as a sign of devotion to the Nazi regime.
In early April 1944, Kloß, in an outburst of anger, executed with his pistol a soldier who had shot a rifleman from his battalion after a mere misunderstanding, but was never tried for this, as witnesses of the scene found this execution - in a way - fair. With the tide of war now turning against Germany and the 3rd Gebirgs-Division fighting in northeastern Hungary, Kloß was promoted to Major in the late autumn.
On 26 November 1944, he was awarded the Knight"s Cross of the Iron Cross, the second highest military decoration of Nazi Germany. Death
On 10 November 1944, Kloß held a conference with other battalion commanders in a villa owned by an industrialist in Miskolc.
Soviet artillery was present in the area and enemy observers were trying to spot and destroy any means of German communication.
A shell scored a direct impact on the communications vehicle near the group of officers. Kloß was hit by a large piece of shrapnel which struck his head right below the right ear. Having been killed instantly, he was buried in the villa"s yard.
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