Adolf Hitler ( , 20 April
1889 – 30 April 1945) was an Austrian
-born
German
politician and the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party ( ,
abbreviated NSDAP), popularly known as the Nazi Party.
He was the
authoritarian leader of Germany
from 1933 to
1945, serving as chancellor
from 1933 to 1945 and as head of state
(Führer und Reichskanzler) from
1934 to 1945.
A decorated veteran of
World War I,
Hitler joined the Nazi Party (DAP) in 1919 and became leader of
NSDAP in 1921.
Following his imprisonment after a failed
coup
in Bavaria
in 1923, he
gained support by promoting German
nationalism, anti-semitism,
anti-capitalism, and anti-communism with charismatic oratory and propaganda. He was appointed
chancellor in 1933, and quickly transformed the Weimar Republic
into the Third Reich, a
single-party dictatorship based on the totalitarian and autocratic ideals of national
socialism.
Hitler ultimately wanted to establish a
New Order of absolute Nazi
German
hegemony in
Europe. To achieve this, he pursued a
foreign policy with the declared goal of
seizing
Lebensraum "living
space" for the
Aryan people;
directing the resources of the state towards this goal. This
included the rearmament of Germany, which culminated in 1939 when
the
Wehrmacht invaded Poland.
In response, the
United
Kingdom
and France
declared war
against Germany, leading to the outbreak of the Second World War in Europe.
Within
three years, Germany and the Axis powers
had occupied most of Europe, and most of
Northern Africa, East and Southeast
Asia and the Pacific
Ocean
. However, with the reversal of the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union
, the Allies
gained the upper hand from 1942 onwards. By 1945 Allied
armies had invaded German-held Europe from all sides. Nazi forces
committed numerous atrocities during the war, including the
systematic killing of as many as 17 million civilians, an estimated
six million of whom were
Jews targeted in a
genocide known as
the Holocaust.
In the final days of the war, at the
fall
of Berlin in 1945, Hitler married his long-time mistress
Eva Braun and, to avoid capture by Soviet
forces less than two days later, the two
committed suicide.
Early years
Ancestry
Hitler's father,
Alois Hitler, was an
illegitimate child and, for the first
39 years of his life, bore his mother's surname, Schicklgruber.
Alois’ paternity was not listed on his birth certificate, and has
been the subject of much controversy.
After receiving a
"blackmail letter" from Hitler's nephew William Patrick Hitler threatening to
reveal embarrassing information about Hitler's family tree, Nazi
Party lawyer Hans Frank investigated,
and, in his memoirs, claimed to have uncovered letters that
revealed Ms. Schicklgruber was employed as a housekeeper for a
Jewish family in Graz
and that the
family’s nineteen-year-old son, Leopold Frankenberger,
fathered Alois. No evidence has ever been produced to
support Frank's claim, and Frank himself said Hitler's full Aryan
blood was obvious. Frank's claims were widely believed in the
1950s, but by the 1990s, were generally doubted by historians.
Ian Kershaw dismisses the Frankenberger
story as a "smear" by Hitler's enemies, noting that all Jews had
been expelled from Graz in the 15th century and were not allowed to
return until well after Alois was born. (For more, see
Leopold
Frankenberger.)
In 1876, Alois took the surname of his stepfather,
Johann Georg Hiedler. The name was
spelled
Hiedler,
Hüttler,
Huettler and
Hitler, and was probably regularized to
Hitler by
a clerk. The origin of the name is either "one who lives in a hut"
(
Standard German Hütte),
"shepherd" (Standard German
hüten "to guard",
English heed), or is from the
Slavic word
Hidlar and
Hidlarcek. (Regarding the first two theories: some German
dialects make little or no distinction
between the
ü-sound and the
i-sound.)
Childhood
Adolf
Hitler was born at the Gasthof zum Pommer, an inn in Braunau am Inn
, Austria–Hungary, the fourth of
Alois and Klara
Hitler's six children.
the age of three, his family moved to Kapuzinerstrasse 5 in
Passau
, Germany
where the young Hitler would acquire Lower Bavarian rather than
Austrian as his lifelong native dialect.
In 1894 the family
moved to Leonding
near Linz
, then in
June 1895, Alois retired to a small landholding at Hafeld near
Lambach
, where he tried his hand at farming and
beekeeping. During this time, the young Hitler attended
school in nearby Fischlham. He was a happy, carefree child who
tirelessly played "
Cowboys and
Indians" and, by his own account, became fixated on war after
finding a picture book about the
Franco-Prussian War in his father's
things. He wrote in
Mein Kampf:
"It was not long before the great historic struggle had become my
greatest spiritual experience. From then on, I became more and more
enthusiastic about everything that was in any way connected with
war or, for that matter, with soldiering."
His father's efforts at Hafeld ended in failure and the family
moved to Lambach in 1897. There, Hitler attended a Catholic school
located in an 11th-century Benedictine cloister whose walls were
engraved in a number of places with crests containing the symbol of
the
swastika. In 1898, the family returned
permanently to Leonding.
His younger brother
Edmund died of
measles on 2 February 1900, causing permanent changes in Hitler. He
went from a confident, outgoing boy who found school easy, to a
morose, detached, sullen boy who constantly battled his father and
his teachers.
Hitler was close to his mother, but had a troubled relationship
with his tradition-minded authoritarian father, who frequently beat
him, especially in the years after Alois's retirement and
disappointed farming efforts. Alois wanted his son to follow in his
footsteps as an Austrian customs official, and this became a huge
source of conflict between them. Despite his son's pleas to go to
classical high school and become an artist, his father would not
budge and sent him to the technical high school in the city of Linz
in September 1900. Hitler rebelled, and, in
Mein Kampf confessed to failing his first
year in hopes that once his father saw "what little progress I was
making at the technical school he would let me devote myself to the
happiness I dreamed of." But Alois never relented and Hitler became
even more bitter and rebellious.
For young Hitler, German Nationalism quickly became an obsession,
and a way to rebel against his father, who proudly served the
Austrian government. Most
people that lived along the German-Austrian border considered
themselves German-Austrians, but Hitler expressed loyalty only to
Germany. In defiance of the Austrian Monarchy, and his father who
continually expressed loyalty to it, Hitler and his young friends
liked to use the German greeting, "Heil," and sing the German
anthem "
Deutschland Über
Alles," instead of the
Austrian Imperial
anthem.
After Alois' sudden death on 3 January 1903, Hitler's behavior at
the technical school became even more disruptive, and he was asked
to leave.
He enrolled at the Realschule in Steyr
in 1904, but
upon completing his second year, he and his friends went out for a
night of celebration and drinking, and an intoxicated Hitler tore
his school certificate into four pieces and used it as toilet
paper. When someone turned the stained certificate in to the
school's director, he “... gave him such a dressing-down that the
boy was reduced to shivering jelly. It was probably the most
painful and humiliating experience of his life.” Hitler was
expelled, and never to return to school again.
Hitler became a Christian at age 15. He was
confirmed on
Whitsunday, 22 May 1904 at the Linz Cathedral. His
sponsor was Emanuel Lugert, a friend of his late father.
Early adulthood in Vienna and Munich
From 1905
on, Hitler lived a bohemian life in
Vienna
on an
orphan's pension and support from his mother. He was rejected twice
by the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
(1907–1908), citing "unfitness for painting", and
was told his abilities lay instead in the field of architecture. His
memoirs reflect a fascination with the
subject:
The purpose of my trip was to study the picture gallery
in the Court Museum, but I had eyes for scarcely anything but the
Museum itself.
From morning until late at night, I ran from one object
of interest to another, but it was always the buildings which held
my primary interest.
Following the school rector's recommendation, he too became
convinced this was his path to pursue, yet he lacked the proper
academic preparation for architecture school:
In a few days I myself knew that I should some day
become an architect.
To be sure, it was an incredibly hard road; for the
studies I had neglected out of spite at the Realschule were sorely
needed.
One could not attend the Academy's architectural school
without having attended the building school at the Technic, and the
latter required a high-school degree.
I had none of all this.
The fulfilment of my artistic dream seemed physically
impossible.
On 21 December 1907, Hitler's mother died of
breast cancer at age 47. Ordered by a court in
Linz, Hitler gave his share of the
orphans'
benefits to his sister Paula. When he was 21, he inherited money
from an aunt. He struggled as a painter in Vienna, copying scenes
from postcards and selling his paintings to merchants and tourists.
After being rejected a second time by the Academy of Arts, Hitler
ran out of money. In 1909, he lived in a shelter for the homeless.
By 1910,
he had settled into a house for poor working men on
Meldemannstraße
.
Hitler
said he first became an anti-Semite in Vienna, which had a large
Jewish community, including Orthodox Jews who had fled the pogroms in Russia
.
According
to childhood friend August Kubizek,
however, Hitler was a "confirmed anti-Semite" before he left
Linz
. Vienna at that time was a hotbed of
traditional religious prejudice and 19th century
racism. Hitler may have been influenced by the
writings of the ideologist and anti-Semite
Lanz von Liebenfels and
polemics from politicians such as
Karl Lueger, founder of the
Christian Social Party and
Mayor of Vienna, the
composer
Richard Wagner, and
Georg Ritter von Schönerer,
leader of the
pan-Germanic Away
from Rome! movement. Hitler claims in
Mein Kampf that
his transition from opposing antisemitism on religious grounds to
supporting it on racial grounds came from having seen an Orthodox
Jew.
If this account is true, Hitler apparently did not act on his new
belief. He often was a guest for dinner in a noble Jewish house,
and he interacted well with Jewish merchants who tried to sell his
paintings.
Hitler may also have been influenced by
Martin Luther's
On the Jews and their Lies.
In
Mein Kampf, Hitler refers to Martin Luther as a great
warrior, a true statesman, and a great reformer, alongside
Wagner and
Frederick the Great.
Wilhelm Röpke, writing after the
Holocaust, concluded that "without any question,
Lutheranism influenced the political, spiritual
and social history of Germany in a way that, after careful
consideration of everything, can be described only as
fateful."
Hitler claimed that Jews were enemies of the
Aryan race. He held them responsible for
Austria's crisis. He also identified certain forms of
Socialism and
Bolshevism, which had many Jewish leaders, as
Jewish movements, merging his antisemitism with anti-
Marxism. Later, blaming Germany's military defeat in
World War I on the
1918 revolutions, he
considered Jews the culprits of Imperial Germany's downfall and
subsequent economic problems as well.
Generalising from tumultuous scenes in the parliament of the
multi-national Austrian monarchy, he decided that the democratic
parliamentary system was
unworkable. However, according to August Kubizek, his one-time
roommate, he was more interested in Wagner's operas than in his
politics.
Hitler
received the final part of his father's estate in May 1913 and
moved to Munich
. He
wrote in
Mein Kampf that he had always longed to live in a
"real" German city. In Munich, he became more interested in
architecture and, he says, the writings of
Houston Stewart Chamberlain.
Moving to Munich also helped him escape
military service in Austria for a time, but the
Munich police (acting in cooperation with the Austrian authorities)
eventually arrested him. After a physical exam and a contrite plea,
he was deemed unfit for service and allowed to return to Munich.
However,
when Germany entered World War I in August 1914, he petitioned King
Ludwig III of Bavaria for
permission to serve in a Bavarian
regiment. This request was granted, and
Adolf Hitler enlisted in the Bavarian army.
World War I
Hitler
served in France and Belgium
in the 16th Bavarian Reserve Regiment (called
Regiment List after its first commander), ending the war
as a Gefreiter (equivalent at the
time to a lance corporal in the
British and private first class
in the American armies). He was a runner, one of the most
dangerous jobs on the Western Front, and was often exposed to enemy
fire.
He
participated in a number of major battles on the Western Front, including the
First Battle
of Ypres
, the Battle of the
Somme, the Battle of Arras
and the Battle of Passchendaele
. The Battle of Ypres (October 1914), which
became known in Germany as the
Kindermord bei Ypern
(Massacre of the Innocents) saw approximately 40,000 men (between a
third and a half) of the nine infantry divisions present killed in
20 days, and Hitler's own company of 250 reduced to 42 by December.
Biographer
John Keegan has said that
this experience drove Hitler to become aloof and withdrawn for the
remaining years of war.
Hitler was twice decorated for bravery. He received the
Iron Cross, Second Class, in 1914 and Iron Cross,
First Class, in 1918, an honour rarely given to a
Gefreiter. However, because the regimental staff thought
Hitler lacked leadership skills, he was never promoted to
Unteroffizier (equivalent to
a British corporal). Other historians say that the reason he was
not promoted is that he was not a German citizen. His duties at
regimental headquarters, while often dangerous, gave Hitler time to
pursue his artwork. He drew cartoons and instructional drawings for
an army newspaper. In 1916, he was wounded in either the groin area
or the left thigh during the Battle of the Somme, but returned to
the front in March 1917. He received the
Wound Badge later that year. A noted German
historian and author,
Sebastian
Haffner, referring to Hitler's experience at the front,
suggests he did have at least some understanding of the
military.
On 15 October 1918, Hitler was admitted to a
field hospital, temporarily blinded by a
mustard gas attack. The English
psychologist
David Lewis
and Bernhard Horstmann suggest the blindness may have been the
result of a
conversion disorder
(then known as
hysteria). Hitler said it
was during this experience that he became convinced the purpose of
his life was to "save Germany." Some scholars, notably
Lucy Dawidowicz, argue that an intention to
exterminate Europe's Jews was fully formed in Hitler's mind at this
time, though he probably had not thought through how it could be
done. Most historians think the decision was made in 1941, and some
think it came as late as 1942.
Two passages in
Mein Kampf mention the use of
poison gas:
Hitler had long admired Germany, and during the war he had become a
passionate German patriot, although he did not become a German
citizen until 1932. Hitler found the war to be 'the greatest of all
experiences' and afterwards he was praised by a number of his
commanding officers for his bravery. He was shocked by Germany's
capitulation in November 1918 even
while the German army still held enemy territory. Like many other
German nationalists, Hitler believed in the
Dolchstoßlegende ("dagger-stab
legend") which claimed that the army, "undefeated in the field,"
had been "stabbed in the back" by civilian leaders and Marxists
back on the
home front. These politicians
were later dubbed the
November
Criminals.
The
Treaty of Versailles
deprived Germany of various territories,
demilitarised the
Rhineland and imposed other economically damaging
sanctions. The treaty re-created Poland, which even moderate
Germans regarded as an outrage. The treaty also blamed Germany for
all the horrors of the war, something which major historians such
as
John Keegan now consider at least in
part to be
victor's justice: most
European nations in the run-up to World War I had become
increasingly
militarised and were
eager to fight. The culpability of Germany was used as a basis to
impose
reparations on Germany (the amount
was repeatedly revised under the
Dawes
Plan, the
Young Plan, and the
Hoover Moratorium). Germany in
turn perceived the treaty and especially, Article 231 the paragraph
on the German responsibility for the war as a humiliation. For
example, there was a nearly total demilitarisation of the armed
forces, allowing Germany only six battleships, no submarines, no
air force, an army of 100,000 without conscription and no armoured
vehicles. The treaty was an important factor in both the social and
political conditions encountered by Hitler and his Nazis as they
sought power. Hitler and his party used the signing of the treaty
by the "November Criminals" as a reason to build up Germany so that
it could never happen again. He also used the "November Criminals"
as scapegoats, although at the
Paris peace conference, these
politicians had had very little choice in the matter.
Entry into politics
After World War I, Hitler remained in the army and returned to
Munich, where he—in contrast to his later declarations—attended the
funeral march for the murdered Bavarian prime minister
Kurt Eisner. After the suppression of the
Bavarian Soviet Republic,
he took part in "national thinking" courses organized by the
Education and Propaganda Department (Dept Ib/P) of the
Bavarian
Reichswehr Group,
Headquarters 4 under Captain
Karl Mayr.
Scapegoats were found in "international Jewry", communists, and
politicians across the party spectrum, especially the parties of
the
Weimar Coalition.
In July 1919, Hitler was appointed a
Verbindungsmann
(police spy) of an
Aufklärungskommando (
Intelligence Commando)
of the
Reichswehr, both to influence other soldiers and to
infiltrate a small party, the
German Workers' Party (DAP). During
his inspection of the party, Hitler was impressed with founder
Anton Drexler's
anti-semitic,
nationalist,
anti-capitalist and anti-
Marxist ideas, which favoured a strong active
government, a "non-Jewish" version of
socialism and mutual solidarity of all members of
society. Drexler was impressed with Hitler's oratory skills and
invited him to join the party. Hitler joined DAP on 12 September
1919 and became party's 55th member. He was also made the seventh
member of the executive committee. Years later, he claimed to be
the party's seventh overall member, but it has been established
that this claim is false.
Here Hitler met
Dietrich Eckart, one
of the early founders of the party and member of the occult
Thule Society. Eckart became Hitler's
mentor, exchanging ideas with him, teaching him how to dress and
speak, and introducing him to a wide range of people. Hitler
thanked Eckart by paying tribute to him in the second volume of
Mein Kampf. To increase the party's appeal, the party
changed its name to the
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche
Arbeiterpartei or
National Socialist
German Workers Party (abbreviated NSDAP).
Hitler was discharged from the army in March 1920 and with his
former superiors' continued encouragement began participating full
time in the party's activities. By early 1921, Hitler was becoming
highly effective at speaking in front of large crowds. In February,
Hitler spoke before a crowd of nearly six thousand in Munich. To
publicize the meeting, he sent out two truckloads of party
supporters to drive around with
swastikas,
cause a commotion and throw out leaflets, their first use of this
tactic. Hitler gained notoriety outside of the party for his rowdy,
polemic speeches against the Treaty of
Versailles, rival politicians (including
monarchists, nationalists and other non-
internationalist socialists) and
especially against Marxists and Jews.
The NSDAP was centered in Munich, a hotbed of German nationalists
who included Army officers determined to crush Marxism and
undermine the Weimar republic. Gradually they noticed Hitler and
his growing movement as a suitable vehicle for their goals. Hitler
traveled to Berlin to visit nationalist groups during the summer of
1921, and in his absence there was a revolt among the DAP
leadership in Munich.
The party was run by an executive committee whose original members
considered Hitler to be overbearing.
They formed an
alliance with a group of socialists
from Augsburg
. Hitler rushed back to Munich and countered
them by tendering his resignation from the party on 11 July 1921.
When they realized the loss of Hitler would effectively mean the
end of the party, he seized the moment and announced he would
return on the condition that he replace Drexler as party chairman,
with unlimited powers. Infuriated committee members (including
Drexler) held out at first. Meanwhile an anonymous pamphlet
appeared entitled
Adolf Hitler: Is he a traitor?,
attacking Hitler's lust for power and criticizing the violent men
around him. Hitler responded to its publication in a Munich
newspaper by suing for
libel and
later won a small settlement.
The executive committee of the NSDAP eventually backed down and
Hitler's demands were put to a vote of party members. Hitler
received 543 votes for and only one against. At the next gathering
on 29 July 1921, Adolf Hitler was introduced as Führer of the
National Socialist German Workers' Party, marking the first time
this title was publicly used.
Hitler's beer hall oratory, attacking Jews,
social democrats,
liberals, reactionary monarchists,
capitalists and communists, began attracting
adherents.
Early followers included Rudolf Hess, the former air force pilot Hermann Göring, and the army captain
Ernst Röhm, who eventually became
head of the Nazis' paramilitary organization, the SA
(Sturmabteilung
, or "Storm Division"), which protected
meetings and attacked political opponents. As well, Hitler
assimilated independent groups, such as the Nuremberg
-based Deutsche Werkgemeinschaft, led by
Julius Streicher, who became
Gauleiter of Franconia. Hitler attracted the attention
of local business interests, was accepted into influential circles
of Munich society, and became associated with wartime General
Erich Ludendorff during this time.

Drawing of Hitler, 1923
Beer Hall Putsch
Encouraged by this early support, Hitler
decided to use Ludendorff as a front in an attempted coup later
known as the Beer Hall
Putsch
(sometimes as the Hitler Putsch or
Munich Putsch). The Nazi Party had copied Italy
's fascists in appearance and had adopted some of their
policies, and in 1923, Hitler wanted to emulate Benito Mussolini's "March on Rome" by staging his own "Campaign in
Berlin". Hitler and Ludendorff obtained the clandestine
support of
Gustav von Kahr,
Bavaria's
de facto ruler, along
with leading figures in the Reichswehr and the police. As political
posters show, Ludendorff, Hitler and the heads of the Bavarian
police and military planned on forming a new government.
On 8 November 1923, Hitler and the SA stormed a public meeting
headed by Kahr in the
Bürgerbräukeller, a large beer
hall in Munich. He declared that he had set up a new government
with Ludendorff and demanded, at gunpoint, the support of Kahr and
the local military establishment for the destruction of the Berlin
government. Kahr withdrew his support and fled to join the
opposition to Hitler at the first opportunity.
The next day, when
Hitler and his followers marched from the beer hall to the Bavarian War
Ministry
to overthrow the Bavarian government as a start to
their "March on Berlin", the police dispersed them. Sixteen
NSDAP members were killed.
Hitler fled to the home of
Ernst
Hanfstaengl and contemplated suicide. He was soon arrested for
high treason.
Alfred Rosenberg became temporary leader of
the party. During Hitler's trial, he was given almost unlimited
time to speak, and his popularity soared as he voiced nationalistic
sentiments in his
defence speech. A Munich personality became a
nationally known figure.
On 1 April 1924, Hitler was sentenced to
five years' imprisonment at Landsberg Prison
. Hitler received favoured treatment from the
guards and had much fan mail from
admirers. He was pardoned and released from
jail on 20 December 1924, by order of the Bavarian Supreme Court on
19 December, which issued its final rejection of the state
prosecutor's objections to Hitler's early release. Including time
on remand, he had served little more than one year of his
sentence.
On 28
June 1925, Hitler wrote a letter from Uffing
to the
editor of The Nation in New York City
stating how long he had been in prison at "Sandberg
a. S." [sic] and how much his privileges had been
revoked.
Mein Kampf
While at Landsberg he dictated most of the first volume of
Mein
Kampf (
My Struggle, originally entitled
Four and
a Half Years of Struggle against Lies, Stupidity, and
Cowardice) to his deputy
Rudolf
Hess. The book, dedicated to Thule Society member
Dietrich Eckart, was an
autobiography and an exposition of his
ideology. It was published in two volumes in 1925 and 1926, selling
about 240,000 copies between 1925 and 1934. By the end of the war,
about 10 million copies had been sold or distributed
(newlyweds and soldiers received free copies).
Hitler spent years dodging taxes on the royalties of his book and
had accumulated a tax debt of about 405,500
Reichsmarks (€6 million in today's
money) by the time he became chancellor (at which time his debt was
waived).
The
copyright of
Mein Kampf in
Europe is claimed by the Free State of Bavaria and scheduled to end
on 31 December 2015. Reproductions in Germany are authorized only
for scholarly purposes and in heavily commented form. The situation
is, however, unclear. Historian Werner Maser, in an interview with
Bild am Sonntag has stated
that Peter Raubal, son of Hitler's nephew, Leo Raubal, would have a
strong legal case for winning the copyright from Bavaria if he
pursued it. Raubal has stated he wants no part of the rights to the
book, which could be worth millions of euros.
The uncertain status
has led to contested trials in Poland and Sweden
.
Mein
Kampf, however, is published in the U.S.
, as well as
in other countries such as Turkey
and
Israel
, by
publishers with various political positions.
Rebuilding of the party
At the time of Hitler's release, the political situation in Germany
had calmed and the economy had improved, which hampered Hitler's
opportunities for agitation. Though the
Hitler Putsch had
given Hitler some national prominence, his party's mainstay was
still Munich.
The NSDAP and its organs were banned in Bavaria after the collapse
of the putsch. Hitler convinced
Heinrich
Held, Prime Minister of Bavaria, to lift the ban, based on
representations that the party would now only seek political power
through legal means. Even though the ban on the NSDAP was removed
effective 16 February 1925, Hitler incurred a new ban on public
speaking as a result of an inflammatory speech. Since Hitler was
banned from public speeches, he appointed
Gregor Strasser, who in 1924 had been
elected to the
Reichstag, as
Reichsorganisationsleiter, authorizing him to organize the
party in northern Germany. Strasser, joined by his younger brother
Otto and
Joseph Goebbels, steered an increasingly
independent course, emphasizing the socialist element in the
party's programme. The
Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Gauleiter
Nord-West became an internal opposition, threatening Hitler's
authority, but this faction was defeated at the
Bamberg Conference in 1926, during which
Goebbels joined Hitler.
After this encounter, Hitler centralized the party even more and
asserted the
Führerprinzip ("Leader principle")
as the basic principle of party organization. Leaders were not
elected by their group but were rather appointed by their superior
and were answerable to them while demanding unquestioning obedience
from their inferiors. Consistent with Hitler's disdain for
democracy, all power and authority devolved from
the top down.
A key
element of Hitler's appeal was his ability to evoke a sense of
offended national pride caused by the Treaty of Versailles imposed
on the defeated German
Empire
by the Western Allies. Germany had lost
economically important territory in Europe along with its colonies
and in admitting to sole responsibility for the war had agreed to
pay a huge
reparations bill
totaling 132 billion
marks.
Most Germans bitterly resented these terms, but early Nazi attempts
to gain support by blaming these humiliations on "international
Jewry" were not particularly successful with the electorate. The
party learned quickly, and soon a more subtle propaganda emerged,
combining antisemitism with an attack on the failures of the
"Weimar system" and the parties supporting it.
Having failed in overthrowing the Republic by a coup, Hitler
pursued a "strategy of legality": this meant formally adhering to
the rules of the Weimar Republic until he had legally gained power.
He would then use the institutions of the Weimar Republic to
destroy it and establish himself as dictator. Some party members,
especially in the paramilitary SA, opposed this strategy; Röhm and
others ridiculed Hitler as "
Adolphe Legalité".
Rise to power
Nazi Party Election
Results
|
| Date |
Votes |
Percentage |
Seats in Reichstag |
Background |
| May
1924 |
1,918,300 |
6.5 |
32 |
Hitler in prison |
| December
1924 |
907,300 |
3.0 |
14 |
Hitler is released from prison |
| May 1928 |
810,100 |
2.6 |
12 |
|
| September
1930 |
6,409,600 |
18.3 |
107 |
After the financial crisis |
| July
1932 |
13,745,800 |
37.4 |
230 |
After Hitler was candidate for presidency |
| November
1932 |
11,737,000 |
33.1 |
196 |
|
| March
1933 |
17,277,000 |
43.9 |
288 |
During Hitler's term as Chancellor of Germany |
Brüning Administration

180px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_119-0289,_München,_Hitler_bei_Einweihung_"Braunes_Haus".jpg"
style='width:180px' alt="" />
The political turning point for Hitler came when the
Great Depression hit Germany in 1930. The
Weimar Republic had never been firmly rooted and was openly opposed
by right-wing
conservatives (including
monarchists), communists and the Nazis. As the parties loyal to the
democratic,
parliamentary
republic found themselves unable to agree on counter-measures,
their
grand coalition broke up and
was replaced by a minority cabinet. The new Chancellor,
Heinrich Brüning of the Roman Catholic
Centre Party, lacking a
majority in parliament, had to implement his measures through the
president's
emergency decrees.
Tolerated by the majority of parties, this rule by decree would
become the norm over a series of unworkable parliaments and paved
the way for
authoritarian forms of
government.
The
Reichstag s initial opposition to Brüning's measures
led to premature elections in September 1930. The republican
parties lost their majority and their ability to resume the grand
coalition, while the Nazis suddenly rose from relative obscurity to
win 18.3% of the vote along with 107 seats. In the process, they
jumped from the ninth-smallest party in the chamber to the second
largest.
In
September–October 1930, Hitler appeared as a major defence witness
at the trial in Leipzig
of two junior Reichswehr officers charged
with membership of the Nazi Party, which at that time was forbidden
to Reichswehr personnel. The two officers,
Leutnants Richard Scheringer and Hans Ludin admitted quite
openly to Nazi Party membership, and used as their defence that the
Nazi Party membership should not be forbidden to those serving in
the
Reichswehr. When the Prosecution argued that the Nazi
Party was a dangerous revolutionary force, one of the defence
lawyers,
Hans Frank had Hitler brought to
the stand to prove that the Nazi Party was a law-abiding party.
During his testimony, Hitler insisted that his party was determined
to come to power legally, that the phrase "National Revolution" was
only to be interpreted "politically", and that his Party was a
friend, not an enemy of the
Reichswehr. Hitler's testimony
of 25 September 1930 won him many admirers within the ranks of the
officer corps.
Brüning's measures of budget consolidation and financial
austerity brought little economic improvement and
were extremely unpopular. Under these circumstances, Hitler
appealed to the bulk of German farmers, war veterans and the middle
class, who had been hard-hit by both the inflation of the 1920s and
the unemployment of the Depression.In September 1931, Hitler's
niece
Geli Raubal was found dead in her
bedroom in his Munich apartment (his half-sister
Angela and her daughter Geli had been with him
in Munich since 1929), an apparent suicide. Geli, who was believed
to be in some sort of romantic relationship with Hitler, was 19
years younger than he was and had used his gun. His niece's death
is viewed as a source of deep, lasting pain for him.
In 1932, Hitler intended to run against the aging
President Paul von Hindenburg in the scheduled
presidential
elections.
His 27 January 1932 speech to the Industry
Club in Düsseldorf
won him, for the first time, support from a broad
swath of Germany's most powerful industrialists. Though
Hitler had left Austria in 1913, he still had not acquired German
citizenship and hence could not run for public office. In February,
however, the state government of
Brunswick, in which the Nazi Party
participated, appointed Hitler to a minor administrative post and
therby made him a citizen of Brunswick on 25 February 1932. In
those days, the states conferred citizenship, so this automatically
made Hitler a citizen of Germany and thus eligible to run for
president.
The new German citizen ran against Hindenburg, who was supported by
a broad range of nationalist, monarchist, Catholic,
republican and even social democratic parties.
Another candidate was a
Communist and member of a fringe
right-wing party. Hitler's campaign was called "
Hitler über
Deutschland" (Hitler over Germany). The name had a double
meaning; besides a reference to his dictatorial ambitions, it
referred to the fact that he campaigned by aircraft. Hitler came in
second on both rounds, attaining more than 35% of the vote during
the second one in April. Although he lost to Hindenburg, the
election established Hitler as a realistic alternative in German
politics.
Cabinets of Papen and Schleicher
Hindenburg, influenced by the
Camarilla,
became increasingly estranged from Brüning and pushed his
Chancellor to move the government in a decidedly authoritarian and
right-wing direction. This culminated, in May 1932, with the
resignation of the Brüning cabinet.
Hindenburg appointed the nobleman
Franz
von Papen as Chancellor, heading a "
Cabinet of Barons". Papen was bent on
authoritarian rule and, since in the
Reichstag only the
conservative
German
National People's Party (DNVP) supported his administration, he
immediately called for new elections in July. In these elections,
the Nazis achieved their biggest success yet and won 230 seats,
becoming the largest party in the
Reichstag.
Knowing that it was not possible to form a stable government
without Nazi support, Papen tried to persuade Hitler to become
Vice-Chancellor and enter a new government with a parliamentary
basis. Hitler, however, would settle for nothing less than the
chancellorship. He put further pressure on Papen by entertaining
parallel negotiations with the Centre Party, Papen's former party,
which was bent on bringing down the renegade Papen. In both
negotiations, Hitler demanded that he, as leader of the strongest
party, must be Chancellor, but Hindenburg consistently refused to
appoint the "Bohemian lance corporal" to the chancellorship.
After a
vote of
no-confidence in the Papen government, supported by 84% of the
deputies, the new Reichstag was dissolved, and
new elections were called in
November. This time, the Nazis lost some seats but still remained
the largest party in the Reichstag, with 33.1% of the vote.
After Papen failed to secure a majority, he proposed to dissolve
the parliament again along with an indefinite postponement of
elections. Hindenburg at first accepted this, but after General
Kurt von Schleicher and the
military withdrew their support, Hindenburg instead dismissed Papen
and appointed Schleicher, who promised he could secure a majority
government by negotiations with the Social Democrats, the trade
unions, and dissidents from the Nazi Party under Gregor Strasser.
In January 1933, however, Schleicher had to admit failure in these
efforts and asked Hindenburg for emergency powers along with the
same postponement of elections that he had opposed earlier, to
which the president reacted by dismissing Schleicher.
Appointment as Chancellor
Meanwhile, Papen tried to get his revenge on Schleicher by working
toward the General's downfall, through forming an intrigue with the
camarilla and
Alfred Hugenberg,
media mogul and chairman of the DNVP. Also involved were
Hjalmar Schacht,
Fritz Thyssen and other leading German
businessmen. They financially supported the Nazi Party, which had
been brought to the brink of bankruptcy by the cost of heavy
campaigning. The businessmen wrote letters to Hindenburg, urging
him to appoint Hitler as leader of a government "independent from
parliamentary parties" which could turn into a movement that would
"enrapture millions of people."[[Image:Bundesarchiv Bild
146-1972-026-11, Machtübernahme Hitlers.jpg|thumb|Adolf Hitler, at
a window of the Reich's Chancellory, receives an ovation from
supporters in his first day in office as
Chancellor. (30 January
1933)]]
Finally, the president reluctantly agreed to appoint Hitler
Chancellor of a coalition government formed by the NSDAP and DNVP.
However, the Nazis were to be contained by a framework of
conservative cabinet ministers, most notably by Papen as
Vice-Chancellor and by Hugenberg
as Minister of the Economy. The only other Nazi besides Hitler to
get a portfolio was
Wilhelm Frick, who
was given the relatively powerless interior ministry (in Germany at
the time, most powers wielded by the interior minister in other
countries were held by the interior ministers of the states). As a
concession to the Nazis, Göring was named
minister without portfolio. While
Papen intended to use Hitler as a figurehead, the Nazis gained key
positions.
On the morning of 30 January 1933, in Hindenburg's office, Adolf
Hitler was sworn in as Chancellor during what some observers later
described as a brief and simple ceremony. His
first speech as Chancellor took place on 10
February. The Nazis' seizure of power subsequently became known as
the
Machtergreifung.
Reichstag fire and the March elections
Having become Chancellor, Hitler foiled all attempts by his
opponents to gain a majority in parliament. Because no single party
could gain a majority, Hitler persuaded President Hindenburg to
dissolve the
Reichstag again. Elections were scheduled for
early March, but on 27 February 1933, the
Reichstag building was set on fire.
Since a
Dutch independent
communist was found in the building, the fire was blamed on a
communist plot. The government reacted with the
Reichstag Fire Decree of 28 February
which suspended basic rights, including
habeas corpus. Under the provisions of
this decree, the
German
Communist Party (KPD) and other groups were suppressed, and
Communist functionaries and deputies were arrested, put to flight,
or murdered.
Campaigning continued, with the Nazis making use of paramilitary
violence, anti-communist hysteria, and the government's resources
for propaganda. On election day, 6 March, the NSDAP increased its
result to 43.9% of the vote, remaining the largest party, but its
victory was marred by its failure to secure an absolute majority,
necessitating maintaining a coalition with the DNVP.

Parade of SA troops past Hitler –
Nuremberg, November 1935
"Day of Potsdam" and the Enabling Act
On 21 March, the new
Reichstag was constituted with an
opening ceremony held at Potsdam's garrison church. This "Day of
Potsdam" was staged to demonstrate reconciliation and unity between
the revolutionary Nazi movement and "Old Prussia" with its elites
and virtues. Hitler appeared in a tail coat and humbly greeted the
aged President Hindenburg.
Because of the Nazis' failure to obtain a majority on their own,
Hitler's government confronted the newly elected
Reichstag
with the
Enabling Act that
would have vested the cabinet with
legislative powers for a period of four years.
Though such a bill was not unprecedented, this act was different
since it allowed for deviations from the constitution. Since the
bill required a ⅔ majority in order to pass, the government needed
the support of other parties. The position of the Centre Party, the
third largest party in the
Reichstag, turned out to be
decisive: under the leadership of
Ludwig
Kaas, the party decided to vote for the Enabling Act. It did so
in return for the government's oral guarantees regarding the
Church's liberty, the
concordats signed by German states and the continued existence of
the Centre Party.
On 23 March, the
Reichstag assembled in a replacement
building under extremely turbulent circumstances. Some SA men
served as guards within while large groups outside the building
shouted slogans and threats toward the arriving deputies. Kaas
announced that the Centre Party would support the bill with
"concerns put aside," while Social Democrat
Otto Wels denounced the act in his speech. At the
end of the day, all parties except the Social Democrats voted in
favour of the bill. The Communists, as well as some Social
Democrats, were barred from attending. The Enabling Act, combined
with the
Reichstag Fire Decree, transformed Hitler's
government into a legal dictatorship.
Removal of remaining limits
With this combination of
legislative and
executive power, Hitler's
government further suppressed the remaining political
opposition. The Communist Party of
Germany and the
Social Democratic Party
(SPD) were banned, while all other political parties were forced to
dissolve themselves. Finally, on 14 July, the Nazi Party was
declared the
only legal party in
Germany.
Hitler used the SA paramilitary to push Hugenberg into resigning,
and proceeded to politically isolate Vice-Chancellor Papen. Because
the SA's demands for political and military power caused much
anxiety among military and political leaders, Hitler used
allegations of a plot by the SA leader
Ernst Röhm to purge the SA's leadership
during the
Night of the Long
Knives. As well, opponents unconnected with the SA were
murdered, notably Gregor Strasser and former Chancellor Kurt von
Schleicher.

In 1934, Hitler became Germany's
president under the title Führer und Reichskanzler (Leader and
Chancellor of the Reich).
President
Paul von Hindenburg
died on 2 August 1934. Rather than holding new presidential
elections, Hitler's cabinet passed a law proclaiming the presidency
dormant and transferred the role and powers of the head of state to
Hitler as
Führer und
Reichskanzler (leader and chancellor). As head of state,
Hitler now became supreme commander of the armed forces. When it
came time for the soldiers and sailors to swear the traditional
loyalty oath, it had been altered into an oath of personal loyalty
to Hitler. In a mid-August plebiscite, these acts found the
approval of 84.6% of the electorate. This action technically
violated both the
constitution
and the Enabling Act. The constitution had been amended in 1932 to
make the president of the High Court of Justice, not the
chancellor, acting president until new elections could be held. The
Enabling Act specifically barred Hitler from taking any action that
tampered with the presidency. However, no one dared object.
In 1938, Hitler forced the resignation of his War Minister
(formerly Defense Minister),
Werner
von Blomberg, after evidence surfaced that Blomberg's new wife
had a criminal past. Prior to removing Blomberg, Hitler and his
clique removed Fritsch whom they denounced as a homosexual. Hitler
replaced the Ministry of War with the
Oberkommando der Wehrmacht
(High Command of the Armed Forces, or OKW), headed by General
Wilhelm Keitel. More importantly,
Hitler announced he was assuming personal command of the armed
forces. He took over Blomberg's other old post, that of
Commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces,
for himself. He was already Supreme Commander by virtue of holding
the powers of the president. The next day, the newspapers
announced, "Strongest concentration of powers in Führer's
hands!"
Third Reich
Having secured supreme political power, Hitler went on to gain
public support by convincing most Germans he was their savior from
the economic Depression, the Versailles treaty, communism, the
"
Judeo-Bolsheviks", and other
"undesirable"
minorities. The Nazis
eliminated opposition through a process known as
Gleichschaltung ("bringing into
line").
Economy and culture
Hitler oversaw one of the greatest expansions of industrial
production and civil improvement Germany had ever seen, mostly
based on debt flotation and expansion of the military. Nazi
policies toward women strongly encouraged them to stay at home to
bear children and keep house. In a September 1934 speech to the
National Socialist Women's Organization, Adolf Hitler argued that
for the German woman her "world is her husband, her family, her
children, and her home." This policy was reinforced by bestowing
the Cross of Honor of the German Mother on women bearing four or
more babies. The unemployment rate was cut substantially, mostly
through arms production and sending women home so that men could
take their jobs. Given this, claims that the
German economy achieved near
full employment are at least partly
artifacts of propaganda from the era. Much of the financing for
Hitler's reconstruction and rearmament came from currency
manipulation by Hjalmar Schacht, including the clouded credits
through the
Mefo bills.
Hitler oversaw one of the largest infrastructure-improvement
campaigns in German history, with the construction of dozens of
dams,
autobahns, railroads, and other civil
works. Hitler's policies emphasised the importance of family life:
men were the "breadwinners", while women's priorities were to lie
in bringing up children and in household work. This revitalising of
industry and infrastructure came at the expense of the overall
standard of living, at least for those not affected by the chronic
unemployment of the later Weimar Republic, since wages were
slightly reduced in pre-World War II years, despite a 25% increase
in the cost of living. Laborers and farmers, the traditional voters
of the NSDAP, however, saw an increase in their standard of
living.
Hitler's government sponsored architecture on an immense scale,
with
Albert Speer becoming famous as
the first architect of the Reich. While important as an architect
in implementing Hitler's classicist reinterpretation of German
culture, Speer proved much more effective as armaments minister
during the last years of World War II. In 1936, Berlin hosted the
summer Olympic games, which
were opened by Hitler and
choreographed
to demonstrate Aryan superiority over all other races, achieving
mixed results.
Although Hitler made plans for a
Breitspurbahn (
broad gauge railroad network), they were
preempted by World War II.
Had the railroad been built, its gauge would
have been three metres, even wider than the old Great Western Railway of Britain
.
Hitler contributed slightly to the design of the car that later
became the
Volkswagen Beetle and
charged
Ferdinand Porsche with its
design and construction. Production was deferred because of the
war.
Hitler
considered Sparta
to be the
first National Socialist state, and praised its early eugenics treatment of deformed
children.
An important historical debate about Hitler’s economic policies
concerns the “modernization” debate. Historians such as
David Schoenbaum and
Henry Ashby Turner have argued that
social and economic polices under Hitler were modernization carried
out in pursuit of anti-modern goals. Other group of historians
centered around
Rainer Zitelmann
have contended that Hitler had a deliberate strategy of pursuing a
revolutionary modernization of German society.
Rearmament and new alliances
In a meeting with his leading generals and admirals on 3 February
1933 Hitler spoke of "conquest of
Lebensraum in the East
and its ruthless Germanisation" as his ultimate foreign policy
objectives. In March 1933, the first major statement of German
foreign policy aims appeared with the memo submitted to the German
Cabinet by the State Secretary at the
Auswärtiges Amt
(Foreign Office), Prince Bernhard von Bülow (not to be confused
with his more famous uncle, the former Chancellor
Bernhard von Bülow), which advocated
Anschluss with Austria, the
restoration of the frontiers of 1914, the rejection of the Part V
of Versailles, the return of the former German colonies in Africa,
and a German zone of influence in
Eastern
Europe as goals for the future. Hitler found the goals in
Bülow's memo to be too modest.
In March 1933, to resolve the deadlock
between the French demand for sécurité (“security”) and
the German demand for gleichberechtigung (“equality of
armaments”) at the World
Disarmament Conference in Geneva
, Switzerland
, the British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald presented the compromise
“MacDonald Plan”. Hitler
endorsed the “MacDonald Plan”, correctly guessing that nothing
would come of it, and that in the interval he could win some
goodwill in London by making his government appear moderate, and
the French obstinate.
In May 1933, Hitler met with
Herbert
von Dirksen, the German Ambassador in Moscow. Dirksen advised
the
Führer that he was allowing relations with the Soviet
Union to deteriorate to a unacceptable extent, and advised to take
immediate steps to repair relations with the Soviets. Much to
Dirksen's intense disappointment, Hitler informed that he wished
for an anti-Soviet understanding with Poland, which Dirksen
protested implied recognition of the German-Polish border, leading
Hitler to state he was after much greater things than merely
overturning the
Treaty of
Versailles.
In June 1933, Hitler was forced to disavow
Alfred Hugenberg of the German National
People's Party, who while attending the
London World Economic Conference
put forth a programme of colonial expansion in both Africa and
Eastern Europe, which created a major storm abroad.
Speaking to the
Burgermeister of Hamburg
in 1933, Hitler commented that Germany required
several years of peace before it could be sufficiently rearmed
enough to risk a war, and until then a policy of caution was called
for. In his "peace speeches" of 17 May 1933; 21 May 1935 and
7 March 1936 Hitler stressed his supposed pacific goals and a
willingness to work within the international system. In private,
Hitler's plans were something less than pacific. At the first
meeting of his Cabinet in 1933, Hitler placed military spending
ahead of unemployment relief, and indeed was only prepared to spend
money on the latter if the former was satisfied first. When the
president of the
Reichsbank, the former Chancellor Dr.
Hans Luther, offered the new government
the legal limit of 100 million
Reichmarks to finance
rearmament, Hitler found the sum
too low, and sacked Luther in March 1933 to replace him with
Hjalmar Schacht, who during the next
five years was to advance 12 billion
Reichmarks worth
of "Mefo-bills" to pay for rearmament.
A major initiative in Hitler's foreign policy in his early years
was to create an alliance with Britain.
In the 1920s, Hitler
wrote that a future National Socialist foreign policy goal was "the
destruction of Russia
with the
help of England." In May 1933, Alfred Rosenberg in his capacity as head of
the Nazi Party's Aussenpolitisches Amt (Foreign Political
Office) visited London
as part of
a disastrous effort to win an alliance with Britain. In
October 1933, Hitler pulled Germany out of both the
League of Nations and
World Disarmament Conference
after his Foreign Minister Baron
Konstantin von Neurath made it appear
to world public opinion that the French demand for
sécurité was the principal stumbling block.
In line with the views he advocated in
Mein Kampf and
Zweites Buch about the necessity of
building an Anglo-German alliance, Hitler, in a meeting in November
1933 with the British Ambassador, Sir
Eric
Phipps, offered a scheme in which Britain would support a
300,000-strong German Army in exchange for a German “guarantee” of
the
British Empire. In response, the
British stated a ten-year waiting period would be necessary before
Britain would support an increase in the size of the German Army. A
more successful initiative in foreign policy occurred with
relations with Poland.
In spite of intense opposition from the
military and the Auswärtiges Amt who preferred closer ties
with the Soviet
Union
, Hitler, in the fall of 1933 opened secret talks
with Poland that were to lead to the German–Polish
Non-Aggression Pact of January 1934.
In February 1934, Hitler met with the British
Lord Privy Seal, Sir
Anthony Eden, and hinted strongly that Germany
already possessed an Air Force, which had been forbidden by the
Treaty of Versailles. In the fall of 1934, Hitler was seriously
concerned over the dangers of
inflation
damaging his popularity. In a secret speech given before his
Cabinet on 5 November 1934, Hitler stated he had "given the working
class his word that he would allow no price increases. Wage-earners
would accuse him of breaking his word if he did not act against the
rising prices. Revolutionary conditions among the people would be
the further consequence."
Although a secret German armaments programme had been on-going
since 1919, in March 1935, Hitler rejected Part V of the Versailles
treaty by publicly announcing that the
German
army would be expanded to 600,000 men (six times the number
stipulated in the Treaty of Versailles), introducing an Air Force
(
Luftwaffe) and increasing the
size of the Navy (
Kriegsmarine). Britain, France, Italy and
the League of Nations quickly condemned these actions. However,
after re-assurances from Hitler that Germany was only interested in
peace, no country took any action to stop this development and
German re-armament continued. Later in March 1935, Hitler held a
series of meetings in Berlin with the British Foreign Secretary Sir
John Simon and Eden,
during which he successfully evaded British offers for German
participation in a regional security pact meant to serve as an
Eastern European equivalent of the
Locarno pact while the two British
ministers avoided taking up Hitler's offers of alliance. During his
talks with Simon and Eden, Hitler first used what he regarded as
the brilliant colonial negotiating tactic, when Hitler parlayed an
offer from Simon to return to the League of Nations by demanding
the return of the former German colonies in Africa.
Starting
in April 1935, disenchantment with how the Third Reich had
developed in practice as opposed to what been promised led many in
the Nazi Party, especially the Alte Kämpfer (Old Fighters;
i.e., those who joined the Party before 1930, and who tended to be
the most ardent anti-Semitics in the Party), and the SA
into lashing
out against Germany's Jewish minority as a way of expressing their
frustrations against a group that the authorities would not
generally protect. The rank and file of the Party were most
unhappy that two years into the Third Reich, and despite countless
promises by Hitler prior to 1933, no law had been passed banning
marriage or sex between those Germans belonging to the “Aryan” and
Jewish “races”.
A Gestapo
report from the spring of 1935 stated that the rank
and file of the Nazi Party would "set in motion by us from below,"
a solution to the "Jewish problem," "that the government would then
have to follow." As a result, Nazi Party activists and the
SA started a major wave of assaults, vandalism and boycotts against
German Jews.
On 18 June 1935, the
Anglo-German Naval Agreement
(A.G.N.A.) was signed in London which allowed for increasing the
allowed German tonnage up to 35% of that of the British navy.
Hitler called the signing of the A.G.N.A. "the happiest day of his
life" as he believed the agreement marked the beginning of the
Anglo-German alliance he had predicted in
Mein Kampf. This
agreement was made without consulting either France or Italy,
directly undermined the League of Nations and put the Treaty of
Versailles on the path towards irrelevance. After the signing of
the A.G.N.A., in June 1935 Hitler ordered the next step in the
creation of an Anglo-German alliance: taking all the societies
demanding the restoration of the former German African colonies and
coordinating (
Gleichschaltung) them into a new
Reich Colonial League (
Reichskolonialbund) which over the
next few years waged an extremely aggressive propaganda campaign
for colonial restoration. Hitler had no real interest in the former
German African colonies.
In Mein Kampf, Hitler had
excoriated the Imperial
German
government for pursuing colonial expansion in
Africa prior to 1914 on the grounds that the natural area for
Lebensraum was Eastern Europe, not Africa. It was
Hitler’s intention to use colonial demands as a negotiating tactic
that would see a German “renunciation” of colonial claims in
exchange for Britain making an alliance with the
Reich on
German terms.
In the summer of 1935, Hitler was informed that, between inflation
and the need to use foreign exchange to buy raw materials Germany
lacked for rearmament, there were only 5 million
Reichmarks available for military expenditure, and a
pressing need for some 300,000
Reichmarks/day to prevent
food shortages. In August 1935, Dr.
Hjalmar Schacht advised Hitler that the wave
of anti-Semitic violence was interfering with the workings of the
economy, and hence rearmament. Following Dr. Schacht’s complaints,
plus reports that the German public did not approve of the wave of
anti-Semitic violence, and that continuing police toleration of the
violence was hurting the regime's popularity with the wider public,
Hitler ordered a stop to "individual actions" against German Jews
on 8 August 1935. From Hitler's perspective, it was imperative to
bring in harsh new anti-Semitic laws as a consolation prize for
those Party members who were disappointed with Hitler's halt order
of 8 August, especially because Hitler had only reluctantly given
the halt order for pragmatic reasons, and his symapthies were with
the Party radicals. The annual Nazi Party Rally held at Nuremberg
in September 1935 was to feature the first session of the
Reichstag held at that city since 1543.
Hitler had planned to
have the Reichstag pass a law making the Nazi Swastika
flag the flag of the German Reich, and a major speech in
support of the impending Italian aggression against Ethiopia
. Hitler felt that the Italian aggression
opened great opportunities for Germany. In August 1935, Hitler told
Goebbels his foreign policy vision as: "With England eternal
alliance. Good relationship with Poland . . .
Expansion to the East. The Baltic belongs to
us . . . Conflicts Italy-Abyssinia-England, then
Japan-Russia imminent."
At the last minute before the Nuremberg Party Rally was due to
begin, the German Foreign Minister Baron
Konstantin von Neurath persuaded
Hitler to cancel his speech praising Italy for her willingness to
commit aggression. Neurath convinced Hitler that his speech was too
provocative to public opinion abroad as it contradicted the message
of Hitler’s “peace speeches”, thus leaving Hitler with the sudden
need to have something else to address the first meeting of the
Reichstag in Nuremberg since 1543, other than the
Reich Flag Law. On 13 September 1935, Hitler hurriedly
ordered two civil servants, Dr. Bernhard Lösener and Franz Albrecht
Medicus of the Interior Ministry to fly to Nuremberg to start
drafting anti-Semitic laws for Hitler to present to the
Reichstag for 15 September. On the evening of 15
September, Hitler presented two laws before the
Reichstag
banning sex and marriage between “Aryan” and Jewish Germans, the
employment of “Aryan” woman under the age of 45 in Jewish
households, and deprived “non-Aryans” of the benefits of German
citizenship. The laws of September 1935 are generally known as the
Nuremberg Laws.
In October 1935, in order to prevent further food shortages and the
introduction of rationing, Hitler reluctantly ordered cuts in
military spending In the spring of 1936 in response to requests
from
Richard Walther
Darré, Hitler ordered 60 million
Reichmarks of foreign
exchange to be used to buy seed oil for German farmers, a decision
that led to bitter complaints from Dr. Schacht and the War Minister
Field Marshal
Werner von
Blomberg that it would be impossible to achieve rearmament as
long as foreign exchange was diverted to preventing food shortages
Given the economic problems which was affecting his popularity by
early 1936, Hitler felt the pressing need for a foreign policy
triumph as a way of distracting public attention from the
economy.
In an interview with the French journalist
Bertrand de Jouvenel in February 1936,
Hitler appeared to disavow
Mein Kampf by saying that parts
of his book were now out of date and he was not guided by them,
though precisely which parts were out of date was left unclear. In
March 1936, Hitler again violated the Versailles treaty by
reoccupying the
demilitarized zone in the Rhineland. When
Britain and France did nothing, he grew bolder. In July 1936, the
Spanish Civil War began when the
military, led by General
Francisco
Franco, rebelled against the elected
Popular Front government. After
receiving an appeal for help from General Franco in July 1936,
Hitler sent troops to support Franco, and Spain served as a testing
ground for Germany's new forces and their methods. At the same
time, Hitler continued with his efforts to create an Anglo-German
alliance.
In July 1936, he offered to Phipps a promise
that if Britain were to sign an alliance with the Reich,
then Germany would commit to sending twelve divisions to the Far
East to protect British colonial possessions there from a Japanese
attack. Hitler's offer was refused.
In August 1936, in response to a growing crisis in the German
economy caused by the strains of rearmament, Hitler issued the
"Four-Year Plan Memorandum" ordering
Hermann Göring to carry out the
Four Year Plan to have the German economy
ready for war within the next four years. During the 1936 economic
crisis, the German government was divided into two factions, with
one (the so-called "free market" faction) centering around the
Reichsbank President Hjalmar Schacht and the former Price
Commissioner Dr.
Carl Friedrich
Goerdeler calling for decreased military spending and a turn
away from
autarkic policies, and another
faction around Göring calling for the opposite. Supporting the
"free-market" faction were some of Germany's leading business
executives, most notably Hermann Duecher of
AEG,
Robert Bosch of
Robert Bosch GmbH,
and Albert Voegeler of
Vereinigte Stahlwerke AG. Hitler
hesitated for the first half of 1936 before siding with the more
radical faction in his "Four Year Plan" memo of August. Historians
such as
Richard Overy have argued that
the importance of the memo, which was written personally by Hitler,
can be gauged by the fact that Hitler, who had something of a
phobia about writing, hardly ever wrote anything down, which
indicates that Hitler had something especially important to say.
The "Four-Year Plan Memorandum" predicated an imminent all-out,
apocalyptic struggle between "Judo-Bolshevism" and German National
Socialism, which necessitated a total effort at rearmament
regardless of the economic costs. In the memo, Hitler wrote:
Since the outbreak of the French Revolution, the world
has been moving with ever increasing speed toward a new conflict,
the most extreme solution of which is called Bolshevism, whose
essence and aim, however, are solely the elimination of those
strata of mankind which have hitherto provided the leadership and
their replacement by worldwide Jewry.
No state will be able to withdraw or even remain at a
distance from this historical
conflict . . .
It is not the aim of this memorandum to prophesy the
time when the untenable situation in Europe will become an open
crisis.
I only want, in these lines, to set down my conviction
that this crisis cannot and will not fail to arrive and that it is
Germany's duty to secure her own existence by every means in face
of this catastrophe, and to protect herself against it, and that
from this compulsion there arises a series of conclusions relating
to the most important tasks that our people have ever been
set.
For a victory of Bolshevism over Germany would not lead
to a Versailles treaty, but to the final destruction, indeed the
annihilation of the German people . . .
I consider it necessary for the Reichstag to
pass the following two laws: 1) A law providing the death penalty
for economic sabotage and 2) A law making the whole of Jewry liable
for all damage inflicted by individual specimens of this community
of criminals upon the German economy, and thus upon the German
people.
Hitler called for Germany to have the world's "first army" in terms
of fighting power within the next four years and that "the extent
of the military development of our resources
cannot be too
large, nor its pace too swift" (italics in the original) and
the role of the economy was simply to support "Germany's
self-assertion and the extension of her
Lebensraum."
Hitler went on to write that given the magnitude of the coming
struggle that the concerns expressed by members of the "free
market" faction like Schacht and Goerdeler that the current level
of military spending was
bankrupting Germany were irrelevant.
Hitler wrote that: "However well balanced the general pattern of a
nation's life ought to be, there must at particular times be
certain disturbances of the balance at the expense of other less
vital tasks. If we do not succeed in bringing the German army as
rapidly as possible to the rank of premier army in the
world . . . then Germany will be lost!" and "The
nation does not live for the economy, for economic leaders, or for
economic or financial theories; on the contrary, it is finance and
the economy, economic leaders and theories, which all owe
unqualified service in this struggle for the self-assertion of our
nation." Documents such as the Four Year Plan Memo have often used
by right historians such as
Henry
Ashby Turner and
Karl Dietrich
Bracher who argue for a “primacy of politics” approach (that
Hitler was not subordinate to German business, but rather the
contrary was the case) against the “primacy of economics” approach
championed by Marxist historians (that Hitler was a “agent” of and
subordinate to German business).
In August
1936, the freelance Nazi diplomat Joachim von Ribbentrop was appointed
German Ambassador to the Court of St.
James
. Before Ribbentrop left to take up his post
in October 1936, Hitler told him: “Ribbentrop . . .
get Britain to join the Anti-Comintern Pact, that is what I want
most of all. I have sent you as the best man I’ve got. Do what you
can . . . But if in future all our efforts are still
in vain, fair enough, then I’m ready for war as well. I would
regret it very much, but if it has to be, there it is. But I think
it would be a short war and the moment it is over, I will then be
ready at any time to offer the British an honourable peace
acceptable to both sides. However, I would then demand that Britain
join the Anti-Comintern Pact or perhaps some other pact. But get on
with it, Ribbentrop, you have the trumps in your hand, play them
well. I’m ready at any time for an air pact as well. Do your best.
I will follow your efforts with interest”.

On 25 October 1936, an Axis was
declared between Italy and Germany.
An Axis was declared between Germany and Italy by Count
Galeazzo Ciano, foreign minister of Fascist
dictator
Benito Mussolini on 25
October 1936.
On 25 November of the same year, Germany
concluded the Anti-Comintern
Pact with Japan
.
At the
time of the signing of the Anti-Comintern Pact invitations were
sent out for Britain, China
, Italy and
Poland to adhere; of the invited powers only the Italians were to
sign the pact, in November 1937. To strengthen relationship
with Japan, Hitler met in 1937 in Nuremberg
Prince Chichibu, a brother of emperor
Hirohito.
However, the meeting with Prince Chichibu
had little consequence, as Hitler refused the Japanese request to
halt German arms shipments to China
or withdraw
the German officers serving with the Chinese in the Second Sino-Japanese War.
Both the military and the
Auswärtiges Amt (Foreign Office)
were strongly opposed to ending the informal
German alliance with
China that existed since the 1910s, and pressured Hitler to
avoid offending the Chinese. The
Auswärtiges Amt and the
military both argued to Hitler that given the foreign exchange
problems which afflicted German rearmament, and the fact that
various Sino-German economic agreements provided Germany with raw
materials that would otherwise use up precious foreign exchange, it
was folly to seek an alliance with Japan that would have the
inevitable result of ending the Sino-German alignment.
By the latter half of 1937, Hitler had abandoned his dream of an
Anglo-German alliance, blaming "inadequate" British leadership for
turning down his offers of an alliance.
In a talk with the
League of Nations High Commissioner for the Free City of
Danzig
, the Swiss diplomat Carl Jacob Burckhardt in September
1937, Hitler protested what he regarded as British interference in
the "German sphere" in Europe, though in the same talk, Hitler made
clear his view of Britain as an ideal ally, which for pure
selfishness was blocking German plans.
Hitler had suffered severely from stomach pains and eczema in
1936–37, leading to his remark to the Nazi Party's propaganda
leadership in October 1937 that because both parents died early in
their lives, he would probably follow suit, leaving him with only a
few years to obtain the necessary
Lebensraum. About the
same time, Dr. Goebbels noted in his diary Hitler now wished to see
the "Great Germanic Reich" he envisioned in his own lifetime rather
than leaving the work of building the "Great Germanic Reich" to his
successors.
On 5
November 1937, at the Reich Chancellory
, Adolf Hitler held a secret meeting with the War
and Foreign Ministers and the three service chiefs, recorded in the
Hossbach Memorandum, and stated
his intentions for acquiring "living space" Lebensraum for
the German people. He ordered the attendees to make plans
for war in the east no later than 1943 in order to acquire
Lebensraum. Hitler stated the conference minutes were to
be regarded as his "political testament" in the event of his death.
In the
memo, Hitler was recorded as saying that such a state of crisis had
been reached in the German economy that the only way of stopping a
severe decline in living standards in Germany was to embark
sometime in the near-future on a policy of aggression by seizing
Austria and Czechoslovakia
. Moreover, Hitler stated that the
arms race meant that time for action had to occur
before Britain and France obtained a permanent lead in the arms
race. A striking change in the Hossbach Memo was Hitler’s changed
view of Britain from the prospective ally of 1928 in the
Zweites Buch to the "hate-inspired antagonist" of 1937 in
the Hossbach memo. The historian
Klaus
Hildebrand described the memo as the start of an "ambivalent
course" towards Britain while the late historian
Andreas Hillgruber argued that Hitler was
embarking on expansion "without Britain," preferably "with
Britain," but if necessary "against Britain."
Hitler's intentions outlined in the Hossbach memorandum led to
strong protests from the Foreign Minister, Baron
Konstantin von Neurath, the War
Minister Field Marshal Werner von Blomberg and the Army Commander
General
Werner von Fritsch that
any German aggression in Eastern Europe was bound to trigger a war
with France because of the French alliance system in Eastern
Europe, the so-called
cordon
sanitaire and if a Franco-German war broke out, then
Britain was almost certain to intervene rather than risk the chance
of a French defeat. The aggression against Austria and
Czechoslovakia were intended to be the first of a series of
localized wars in Eastern Europe that would secure Germany’s
position in Europe before the final showdown with Britain and
France. Fritsch, Blomberg and Neurath all argue that Hitler was
pursuing an extremely high risk strategy of localized wars in
Eastern Europe that was most likely to cause a general war before
Germany was ready for such a conflict, and advised Hitler to wait
until Germany had more time to rearm. Neurath, Blomberg and Fritsch
had no moral objections to German aggression, but rather based
their opposition on the question of timing—determining the best
time for aggression.
Late in November 1937, Hitler received as his guest the British
Lord Privy Seal,
Lord
Halifax who was visiting Germany ostensibly as part of a
hunting trip. Speaking of changes to Germany's frontiers, Halifax
told Hitler that: "All other questions fall into the category of
possible alterations in the European order which might be destined
to come about with the passage of time. Amongst these questions
were Danzig, Austria and Czechoslovakia. England was interested to
see that any alterations should come through the course of peaceful
evolution and that the methods should be avoided which might cause
far-reaching disturbances." Significantly, Halifax made clear in
his statements to Hitler, though whether Hitler appreciated the
significance of this or not is unclear, that any possible
territorial changes had to be accomplished peacefully, and that
though Britain had no security commitments in Eastern Europe beyond
the Covenant of the League of Nations, that Britain would not
tolerate territorial changes via war. Hitler seems to have
misunderstood Halifax's remarks as confirming his conviction that
Britain would just stand aside while he pursued his strategy of
limited wars in Eastern Europe.
Hitler was most unhappy with the criticism of his intentions
expressed by Neurath, Blomberg, and Fritsch in the Hossbach Memo,
and in early 1938 asserted his control of the military-foreign
policy apparatus through the
Blomberg-Fritsch Affair, the
abolition of the War Ministry and its replacement by the
OKW, and by sacking Neurath as
Foreign Minister on 4 February 1938, assuming the rank, role and
tile of the
Oberster Befehlshaber der Wehrmacht. The
British economic historian
Richard
Overy commented that the establishment of the OKW in February
1938 was a clear sign of what Hitler's intentions were since
supreme headquarters organizations such as the OKW are normally set
up during wartime, not peacetime. The Official German history of
World War II has argued that from early 1938 onwards, Hitler was
not carrying out a foreign policy that had carried a high risk of
war, but was carrying out a foreign policy aiming at war.
The Holocaust

An American soldier stands near a
wagon piled high with corpses outside the crematorium in the newly
liberated Buchenwald concentration camp
One of the foundations of Hitler's social policies was the concept
of
racial hygiene. It was based on
the ideas of
Arthur de Gobineau,
a French count;
eugenics, a pseudo-science
that advocated racial purity; and
social Darwinism. Applied to human beings,
"
survival of the fittest"
was interpreted as requiring racial purity and killing off
"
life unworthy of life." The
first victims were children with physical and developmental
disabilities; those killings occurred in a programme dubbed
Action T4. After a public outcry, Hitler
made a show of ending this program, but the killings in fact
continued (see
Nazi eugenics).
Between
1939 and 1945, the SS
, assisted
by collaborationist governments and
recruits from occupied countries, systematically killed somewhere
between 11 and 14 million people, including about six million
Jews, in concentration camps,
ghettos and mass executions, or through less
systematic methods elsewhere. In addition to those gassed to
death, many died as a result of starvation and disease while
working as
slave labourers (sometimes
benefiting private German companies).
Along with Jews,
non-Jewish Poles
,
Communists and political opponents, members of resistance groups,
homosexuals, Roma, the physically handicapped and
mentally retarded, Soviet
prisoners of war (possibly as many as three
million), Jehovah's Witnesses,
Adventists, trade unionists, and psychiatric patients were killed.
One of
the biggest centres of mass-killing was the extermination camp complex of Auschwitz-Birkenau
.
The Holocaust (the
Endlösung der jüdischen Frage or "Final
Solution of the Jewish Question") was planned and ordered by
leading Nazis, with
Heinrich
Himmler and
Reinhard Heydrich
playing key roles.
While no specific order from Hitler
authorizing the mass killing has surfaced, there is documentation
showing that he approved the Einsatzgruppen
killing squads that followed the German army
through Poland and Russia, and that he was kept well informed about
their activities. The evidence also suggests that in the
fall of 1941 Himmler and Hitler decided upon mass extermination by
gassing. During interrogations by Soviet
intelligence officers declassified over
fifty years later, Hitler's valet
Heinz
Linge and his military aide Otto Gunsche said Hitler had "pored
over the first blueprints of
gas
chambers." His private secretary,
Traudl Junge, testified that Hitler knew all
about the death camps.
To make
for smoother cooperation in the implementation of this "Final
Solution", the Wannsee
conference
was held near Berlin on 20 January 1942, with
fifteen senior officials participating, led by Reinhard Heydrich
and Adolf Eichmann. The
records of this meeting provide the clearest evidence of planning
for the Holocaust. On 22 February, Hitler was recorded saying to
his associates, "we shall regain our health only by eliminating the
Jews".
World War II
Early diplomatic triumphs
Alliance with Japan
In
February 1938, Hitler finally ended the dilemma that had plagued
German Far Eastern policy, namely whether to continue the informal
Sino-German
alliance that existed with Republic of China
since the 1910s or to create a new alliance with
Japan
. The military at the time strongly favored
continuing Germany's alliance with China. China had the support of
Foreign Minister
Konstantin von
Neurath and War Minister
Werner
von Blomberg, the so called "China Lobby" who tried to steer
German foreign policy away from war in Europe. Both men, however,
were sacked by Hitler in early 1938. Upon the advice of Hitler's
newly appointed Foreign Minister, the strongly pro-Japanese
Joachim von Ribbentrop,
Hitler chose to end the alliance with China as the price of gaining
an alignment with the more modern and powerful Japan.
In an address to the
Reichstag, Hitler announced German recognition of Manchukuo, the Japanese-occupied puppet state in
Manchuria, and renounced the German claims
to the former colonies in the Pacific
held by
Japan. Hitler ordered an end to arm shipments to China, and
ordered the recall of all the German officers attached to the
Chinese Army. In retaliation for ending German support to China in
the war against Japan, Chinese Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek canceled all of the
Sino-German economic agreements, which deprived the Germans of raw
materials such as
tungsten that the Chinese
had previously provided. The ending of the Sino-German alignment
increased the problems of German rearmament as the Germans were now
forced to use their limited supply of foreign exchange to buy raw
materials on the open market.
Austria and Czechoslovakia
In March 1938, Hitler pressured Austria into unification with
Germany (
the Anschluss) and made a
triumphant entry into Vienna on 14 March. Next, he intensified a
crisis over the German-speaking
Sudetenland districts of Czechoslovakia.
On 3 March 1938, the British Ambassador Sir
Neville Henderson met with Hitler and
presented on behalf of his government a proposal for an
international consortium to rule much of Africa (in which Germany
would be assigned a leading role) in exchange for a German promise
never to resort to war to change the frontiers. Hitler, who was
more interested in
Lebensraum in Eastern Europe then in
participating in international consortiums, rejected the British
offer, using as his excuse that he wanted the former German African
colonies returned to the
Reich, not an international
consortium running Central Africa. Moreover, Hitler argued that it
was totally outrageous on Britain’s part to impose conditions on
German conduct in Europe as the price for territory in Africa.
Hitler ended the conversation by telling Henderson he would rather
wait twenty years for the return of the former colonies than accept
British conditions for avoiding war.
On 28 to 29 March 1938, Hitler held a series of secret meetings in
Berlin with
Konrad Henlein of the
Sudeten Heimfront (Home Front),
the largest of the ethnic German parties of the Sudetenland. During
the Hitler-Henlein meetings, it was agreed that Henlein would
provide the pretext for German aggression against Czechoslovakia by
making demands on Prague for increased autonomy for Sudeten Germans
that Prague could never be reasonably expected to fulfill.
In April
1938, Henlein told the foreign minister of Hungary
that “whatever the Czech government might offer, he
would always raise still higher demands ... he wanted to sabotage
an understanding by all means because this was the only method to
blow up Czechoslovakia quickly”. In private, Hitler
considered the Sudeten issue unimportant; his real intentions being
to use the Sudeten question as the justification both at home and
abroad for a war of aggression to destroy Czechoslovakia, under the
grounds of self-determination, and Prague’s refusal to meet
Henlein’s demands.
Hitler’s plans called for a massive military
build-up along the Czechoslovak
border, relentless propaganda attacks about the
supposed ill treatment of the Sudetenlanders, and finally,
“incidents” between Heimfront activists and the
Czechoslovak authorities to justify an invasion that would swiftly
destroy Czechoslovakia in a few days campaign before other powers
could act. Since Hitler wished to have the fall harvest
brought in as much as possible, and to complete the so-called “West
Wall” to guard the Rhineland, the date for the invasion was chosen
for late September or early October 1938.
In April 1938, Hitler ordered the OKW to start preparing plans for
Fall Grün (Case Green), the
codename for an invasion of Czechoslovakia. Further increasing the
tension in Europe was the May Crisis of 19–22 May 1938. The May
Crisis of 1938 was a false alarm caused by rumors that
Czechoslovakia would be invaded the weekend of the municipal
elections in that country, erroneous reports of major German troop
movements along the Czechoslovak border just prior to the
elections, the killing of two ethnic Germans by the Czechoslovak
police, and Ribbentrop's highly bellicose remarks to Henderson when
the latter asked the former if an invasion was indeed scheduled for
the weekend, which led to a partial Czechoslovak mobilization and
firm warnings from London against a German move against
Czechoslovakia before it was realized that no invasion was intended
for that weekend. Though no invasion had been planned for May 1938,
it was believed in London that such a course of action was indeed
being considered in Berlin, leading to two warnings on 21 May and
22 May that the United Kingdom would go to war with Germany if
France became involved in a war with Germany. Hitler, for his part,
was to use the words of an aide, highly “furious” with the
perception that he had been forced to back down by the Czechoslovak
mobilization, and warnings from London and Paris, when he had in
fact been planning nothing for that weekend. Though plans had
already been drafted in April 1938 for an invasion of
Czechoslovakia in the near future, the May Crisis and the
perception of a diplomatic defeat further reinforced Hitler in his
chosen course. The May Crisis seemed to have had the effect of
convincing Hitler that expansion "without Britain" was not
possible, and expansion "against Britain" was the only viable
course. In the immediate aftermath of the May crisis, Hitler
ordered an acceleration of German naval building beyond the limits
of the
A.G.N.A., and in
the "Heye memorandum", drawn at Hitler's orders, envisaged the
Royal Navy for the first time as the principle opponent of the
Kriegsmarine.
At the conference of 28 May 1938, Hitler declared that it was his
"unalterable" decision to "smash Czechoslovakia" by 1 October of
the same year, which was explained as securing the eastern flank
"for advancing against the West, England and France. At the same
conference, Hitler expressed his belief that Britain would not risk
a war until British rearmament was complete, which Hitler felt
would be around 1941–42, and Germany should in a series of wars
eliminate France and her allies in Europe in the interval in the
years 1938–41 while German rearmament was still ahead. Hitler's
determination to go through with
Fall Grün in 1938
provoked a major crisis in the German command structure. The Chief
of the General Staff, General
Ludwig
Beck protested in a lengthy series of memos that
Fall
Grün would start a world war that Germany would lose, and
urged Hitler to put off the projected war. Hitler called Beck's
arguments against war "
kindische Kräfteberechnugen"
("childish calculations").
On 4 August 1938, a secret Army meeting was held at which Beck read
his report. They agreed something had to be done to prevent certain
disaster. Beck hoped they would all resign together but no one
resigned except Beck. However his replacement,
General Franz Halder, sympathised with Beck and
together they conspired with several top generals,
Admiral Wilhelm Canaris (Chief of German
Intelligence), and
Graf
von Helldorf (Berlin's Police Chief) to arrest Hitler the
moment he gave the invasion order. However the plan would only work
if both Britain and France made it known to the world that they
would fight to preserve Czechoslovakia. This would help to convince
the German people that certain defeat awaited Germany. Agents were
therefore sent to England to tell Chamberlain that an attack on
Czechoslovakia was planned and their intentions to overthrow Hitler
if this occurred. However the messengers were not taken seriously
by the British. In September, Chamberlain and Daladier decided not
to threaten a war over Czechoslovakia and so the planned removal of
Hitler could not be justified. The Munich Agreement therefore
preserved Hitler in power.
Starting in August 1938, information reached London that Germany
was beginning to mobilize reservists, together with information
leaked by anti-war elements in the German military that the war was
scheduled for sometime in September. Finally, as a result of
intense French, and especially British diplomatic pressure,
President
Edvard Beneš unveiled on
5 September 1938, the “Fourth Plan” for constitutional
reorganization of his country, which granted most of the demands
for Sudeten autonomy made by Henlein in his Karlsbad speech of
April 1938, and threatened to deprive the Germans of their pretext
for aggression. Henlein’s
Heimfront promptly responded to
the offer of “Fourth Plan” by having a series of violent crashes
with the Czechoslovak police, culminating in major clashes in
mid-September that led to the declaration of martial law in certain
Sudeten districts.
In a response to the threatening situation,
in late August 1938, the British
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain had conceived of
Plan Z, namely to fly to Germany, meet Hitler, and then work out an
agreement that could end the crisis. On 13 September 1938,
Chamberlain offered to fly to Germany to discuss a solution to the
crisis. Chamberlain had decided to execute Plan Z in response to
erroneous information supplied by the German opposition that the
invasion was due to start any time after 18 September. Though
Hitler was not happy with Chamberlain’s offer, he agreed to see the
British Prime Minister because to refuse Chamberlain’s offer would
confirm the lie to his repeated claims that he was a man of peace
driven reluctantly to war because of Beneš’s intractability.
In a
summit at Berchtesgaden
, Chamberlain promised to pressure Beneš into
agreeing to Hitler's publicly stated demands about allowing the
Sudetenland to join Germany, in return
for a reluctant promise by Hitler to postpone any military action
until Chamberlain had given a chance to fulfill his promise.
Hitler had agreed to the postponement out of the expectation that
Chamberlain would fail to secure Prague’s consent to transferring
the Sudetenland, and was, by all accounts, most disappointed when
Franco-British pressure secured just that. The talks between
Chamberlain and Hitler in September 1938 were made difficult by
their innately differing concepts of what Europe should look like,
with Hitler aiming to use the Sudeten issue as a pretext for war
and Chamberlain genuinely striving for a peaceful solution.
When
Chamberlain returned to Germany on 22 September to present his
peace plan for the transfer of the Sudetenland at a summit with
Hitler at Bad
Godesberg
, the
British delegation was most unpleasantly surprised to have Hitler
reject his own terms he had presented at Berchtesgaden as
now unacceptable. To put an end to Chamberlain’s
peace-making efforts once and for all, Hitler demanded the
Sudetenland be ceded to Germany no later then 28 September 1938
with no negotiations between Prague and Berlin and no international
commission to oversee the transfer; no plebiscites to be held in
the transferred districts until after the transfer; and for good
measure, that Germany would not forsake war as an option until all
the claims against Czechoslovakia by Poland and Hungary had been
satisfied. The differing views between the two leaders were best
symbolized when Chamberlain was presented with Hitler’s new demands
and protested at being presented with an ultimatum, leading Hitler
in turn to retort that because his document stating his new demands
was entitled “Memorandum”, it could not possibly be an ultimatum.
On 25 September 1938 Britain rejected the Bad Godesberg ultimatum,
and began preparations for war. To further underline the point, Sir
Horace Wilson, the
British government’s Chief Industrial Advisor, and a close
associate of Chamberlain was dispatched to Berlin to inform Hitler
that if the Germans attacked Czechoslovakia, then France would
honor her commitments as demanded by the Franco-Czechoslovak
alliance of 1924, and “then England would feel honor bound, to
offer France assistance”. Initially, determined to continue with
attack planned for 1 October 1938, sometime between 27 and
28 September, Hitler changed his mind, and asked to take up a
suggestion, of and through the intercession of Mussolini, for a
conference to be held in Munich with Chamberlain, Mussolini, and
the French Premier
Édouard
Daladier to discuss the Czechoslovak situation. Just what had
caused Hitler to change his attitude is not entirely clear, but it
is likely that the combination of Franco-British warnings, and
especially the mobilization of the British fleet, had finally
convinced him of what the most likely result of
Fall Grün
would be; the minor nature of the alleged
casus belli
being the timetables for the transfer made Hitler appear too much
like the aggressor; the view from his advisors that Germany was not
prepared either militarily or economically for a world war;
warnings from the states that Hitler saw as his would-be allies in
the form of Italy, Japan, Poland and Hungary that they would not
fight on behalf of Germany; and very visible signs that the
majority of Germans were not enthusiastic about the prospect of
war. Moreover, Germany lacked sufficient supplies of oil and other
crucial raw materials (the plants that would produce the synthetic
oil for the German war effort were not in operation yet), and was
highly dependent upon imports from abroad. The
Kriegsmarine reported that should war come with Britain,
it could not break a British blockade, and since Germany had hardly
any oil stocks, Germany would be defeated for no other reason than
a shortage of oil. The Economics Ministry told Hitler that Germany
had only 2.6 million tons of oil at hand, and should war with
Britain and France, would require 7.6 million tons of oil.
Starting on 18 September 1938, the British refused to supply metals
to Germany, and on 24 September the Admiralty forbade British ships
to sail to Germany. The British detained the tanker
Invershannon carrying 8,600 tons of oil to Hamburg,
which caused immediate economic pain in Germany. Given Germany's
dependence on imported oil (80% of German oil in the 1930s came
from the New World), and the likelihood that a war with Britain
would see a blockade cutting Germany off from oil supplies,
historians have argued that Hitler's decision to see a peaceful end
to call off
Fall Grün was due to concerns about the oil
problem.

Chamberlain, Daladier, Hitler and
Mussolini at the Munich Conference
On 30 September 1938, a one-day conference was held in Munich
attended by Hitler, Chamberlain, Daladier and Mussolini that led to
the
Munich Agreement, which gave in
to Hitler's ostensible demands by handing over the
Sudetenland districts to Germany.
Since London and
Paris had already agreed to the idea of a transfer of the disputed
territory in mid-September, the Munich Conference mostly comprised
discussions in one day of talks on technical questions about how
the transfer of the Sudetenland would take place, and featured the
relatively minor concessions from Hitler that the transfer would
take place over a ten day period in October, overseen by an
international commission, and Germany would wait until Hungarian
and Polish
claims
were settled. At the end of the conference, Chamberlain had
Hitler sign a declaration of Anglo-German friendship, to which
Chamberlain attached great importance and Hitler none at all.
Though Chamberlain was well-satisfied with the Munich conference,
leading to his infamous claim to have secured “peace in our time”,
Hitler was privately furious about being “cheated” out of the war
he was desperate to have in 1938. As a result of the summit, Hitler
was
TIME magazine's
Man of the Year for 1938.
By appeasing Hitler, Britain and France left Czechoslovakia to
Hitler's mercy. Though Hitler professed happiness in public over
the achievement of his ostensible demands, in private he was
determined to have a war the next time around by ensuring that
Germany's future demands would not be met. In Hitler’s view, a
British-brokered peace, though extremely favorable to the
ostensible German demands, was a diplomatic defeat which proved
that Britain needed to be ended as a power to allow him to pursue
his dreams of eastern expansion. In the aftermath of Munich, Hitler
felt since Britain would not ally herself nor stand aside to
facilitate Germany’s continental ambitions, it had become a major
threat, and accordingly, Britain replaced the Soviet Union in
Hitler’s mind as the main enemy of the
Reich, with German
policies being accordingly reoriented.
Hitler expressed his
disappointment over the Munich Agreement in a speech on 9 October
1938 in Saarbrücken
when he lashed out against the Conservative
anti-appeasers Winston Churchill,
Alfred Duff Cooper and Anthony Eden, whom Hitler described as a
warmongering anti-German fraction, who would attack Germany at the
first opportunity, and were likely to come to power at any
moment. In the same speech, Hitler claimed “We Germans will
no longer endure such governessy interference. Britain should mind
her own business and worry about her own troubles”. In November
1938, Hitler ordered a major anti-British propaganda campaign to be
launched with the British being loudly abused for their "hypocrisy"
in maintaining world-wide empire while seeking to block the Germans
from acquiring an empire of their own.
A particular
highlight in the anti-British propaganda was alleged British humans
rights abuses in dealing with the Arab uprising in the Palestine Mandate and in India
, and the
"hyprocrisy" of British criticism of the November 1938 Kristallnacht event. This marked a
huge change from the earlier years of the Third
Reich,
when the German media had portrayed the British Empire in very
favorable terms. In November 1938, the Foreign Minister
Joachim von Ribbentrop was ordered to
convert the Anti-Comintern Pact into an open anti-British military
alliance, as a prelude for a war against Britain and France. On
27 January 1939, Hitler approved the
Z
Plan, a five-year naval expansion program which called for a
Kriegsmarine of 10
battleships,
four aircraft carriers, three
battlecruisers, eight
heavy cruisers, 44
light cruisers, 68
destroyers and 249 U-boats by 1944 that was
intended to crush the
Royal Navy. The
importance of the Z Plan can be seen in Hitler's orders that
henceforward the
Kriegsmarine was to go from third to one
in allotment of raw materials, money and skilled workers. In the
spring of 1939, the
Luftwaffe was ordered to start
building a strategic bombing force that was meant to level British
cities. Hitler’s war plans against Britain called for a joint
Kriegsmarine-Luftwaffe offensive that was to stage "rapid
annihilating blows" against British cities and shipping with the
expectation that "The moment England is cut off from her supplies
she is forced to capitulate" as Hitler expected that the experience
of living in a blockaded, famine-stricken, bombed out island to be
too much for the British public.

In November 1938, in a secret speech to a group of German
journalists, Hitler noted that he had been forced to speak of peace
as the goal in order to attain the degree of rearmament "which were
an essential prerequisite ... for the next step". In the same
speech, Hitler complained that his peace propaganda of the last
five years had been too successful, and it was time for the German
people to be subjected to war propaganda. Hitler stated: "It is
self-evident that such peace propaganda conducted for a decade has
its risky aspect; because it can too easily induce people to come
to the conclusion that the present government is identical with the
decision and with the intention to keep peace under all
circumstances", and instead called for new journalism that "had to
present certain foreign policy events in such a fashion that the
inner voice of the people itself slowly begins to shout out for the
use of force." In later November 1938, Hitler expressed his
frustration with his more cautious advice he was receiving from
some quarters Hitler called the economic expert
Carl Friedrich Goerdeler, General
Ludwig Beck, Dr.
Hjalmar Schacht, the diplomat
Ulrich von Hassell, and the economist
Rudolf Brinkmann as “the overbred intellectual circles" whom were
trying to block him from fulifilling his mission by their appeals
to caution, and but for the fact that he needed their skills
"otherwise, perhaps we could someday exterminate them or do
something of this kind to them"
In
December 1938, the Chancellery of the Führer headed by
Philipp Bouhler received a letter
concerning a severely physically and mentally disabled baby girl
named Sofia Knauer living in Leipzig
. At that time, there was a furious rivalry
existing between Bouhler’s office, the office of the
Reich
Chancellery led by Hans-Heinrich Lammers, the Presidential
Chancellery of
Otto Meissner, the
office of Hitler’s adjutant Wilhelm Brückner and the Deputy
Führer s office which was effectively headed by
Martin Borman over control over access to
Hitler. As part of a power play against his rivals, Bouhler
presented the letter concerning the disabled girl to Hitler, who
thanked Bouhler for bringing the matter to his attention and
responded by ordering his personal physician Dr.
Karl Brandt to kill Knauer. In
January 1939, Hitler ordered Bouhler and Dr. Brandt to henceforward
have all
disabled infants born in Germany killed. This was the origin
of the
Action T4 program. Subsequently Dr.
Brandt and Bouhler acting on their own initiative, in the
expectation of winning Hitler’s favor, expanded the T4 program to
killing, first, all physically or mentally disabled children in
Germany, and, second, all disabled adults.
In late 1938 and early 1939, the continuing economic crisis caused
by problems of rearmament, especially the shortage of foreign hard
currencies needed to pay for raw materials Germany lacked together
with reports from Göring that the Four Year Plan was hopelessly
behind schedule forced Hitler in January 1939 to reluctantly order
major defense cuts with the
Wehrmacht having its steel
allocations cut by 30%, aluminum 47%, cement 25%, rubber 14% and
copper 20%. On 30 January 1939, Hitler made his "Export or
die" speech calling for a German economic offensive ("export
battle", to use Hitler's term), to increase German foreign exchange
holdings to pay for raw materials such high-grade iron needed for
military materials. The "Export or die" speech of 30 January 1939
is also known as Hitler’s "Prophecy Speech". The name which that
speech is known comes from Hitler’s "prophecy" issued towards the
end of the speech:
"One thing I should like to say on this day which may
be memorable for others as well for us Germans: In the course of my
life I have very often been a prophet, and I usually been ridiculed
for it.
During the time of my struggle for power it was in the
first instance the Jewish race which only received my prophecies
with laughter when I said I would one day take over the leadership
of the State, and it that of the whole nation, and I that I would
then among many other things settle the Jewish
problem.
Their laughter was uproarious, but I think that for
some time now they have been laughing on the other side of the
face.
Today I will be once more the prophet.
If the international Jewish financiers outside Europe
should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war,
then the result will not be the bolsheviszation of the earth, and
thus the victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race
in Europe!"
A significant historical debate has swung around the “Prophecy
Speech”. Historians who take an
intentionist line such
as
Eberhard Jäckel have argued
that at minimum from the time of the “Prophecy Speech” onwards,
Hitler was committed to genocide of the Jews as his central goal.
Lucy Dawidowicz and Gerald Fleming
have argued that the "Prophecy Speech" was simply Hitler's way of
saying that once he started a world war, he would use that war as a
cover for his already pre-existing plans for genocide.
Functionalist historians
as
Christopher Browning have
dismissed this interpretation under the grounds that if Hitler were
serious with the intentions expressed in the “Prophecy Speech”,
then why the 30-month “stay of execution” between the outbreak of
World War II in September 1939, and the opening of the first
Vernichtungslager in
late 1941. In addition, Browning has pointed to the existence of
the
Madagascar Plan of 1940–41 and
various other schemes as proof that there was no genocidal master
plan. In Browning’s opinion, the "Prophecy Speech" was merely an
manifestation of bravado on Hitler’s part, and had little
connection with actual unfolding of anti-Semitic policies.
At least part of the reason why Hitler violated the Munich
Agreement by seizing the Czech half of Czechoslovakia in March 1939
was to obtain Czechoslovak assets to help with the economic crisis.
Hitler
ordered Germany's army to enter Prague
on 15
March 1939, and from Prague Castle
proclaimed Bohemia and Moravia a German protectorate.
Start of the Second World War
As part of the anti-British course, it was deemed necessary by
Hitler to have either Poland a satellite state or otherwise
neutralized. Hitler believed this necessary on both strategic
grounds as way of securing the
Reich s eastern flank and
on economic grounds as a way of evading the effects of a British
blockade. Initially, the German hope was to transform Poland into a
satellite state, but by March 1939 when the German demands had been
rejected by the Poles three times, which led Hitler to decide upon
the destruction of Poland as the main German foreign policy goal of
1939. On 3 April 1939 Hitler ordered the military to start
preparing for
Fall
Weiss (Case White), the plan for a German invasion to be
executed on 25 August 1939 In August 1939, Hitler spoke to his
generals that his original plan for 1939 had to “... establish a
acceptable relationship with Poland in order to fight against the
West” but since the Poles would not co-operate in setting up an
“acceptable relationship” (i.e. becoming a German satellite), he
believed he had no other choice other than wiping Poland off the
map. The historian
Gerhard Weinberg
has argued since Hitler’s audience comprised men who were all for
the destruction of Poland (
anti-Polish feelings were
traditionally very strong in the German Army), but rather less
happy about the prospect of war with Britain and France, if that
was the price Germany had to pay for the destruction of Poland, it
is quite likely that Hitler was speaking the truth on this
occasion. In his private discussions with his officials in 1939,
Hitler always described Britain as the main enemy that had to be
defeated, and in his view, Poland’s obliteration was the necessary
prelude to that goal by securing the eastern flank and helpfully
adding to Germany’s
Lebensraum.
Hitler was much
offended by the British “guarantee” of Polish independence issued
on 31 March 1939, and told his associates that "I shall brew them a
devil's drink" In a speech in Wilhelmshaven
for the launch of the Admiral Tirpitz
battleship on 1 April 1939, Hitler threatened to denounce the
A.G.N.A if the British persisted with their "encirclement" policy
as represented by the "guarantee" of Polish independence. As
part of the new course, in a speech before the
Reichstag
on 28 April 1939, Adolf Hitler complaining of British
“encirclement" of Germany, renounced both the
Anglo-German Naval Agreement
and the
German–Polish
Non-Aggression Pact.
As a
pretext for aggression against Poland, Hitler claimed the Free City of
Danzig
and the right for “extra-territorial” roads
across the Polish Corridor which
Germany had unwillingly ceded under the Versailles treaty. For Hitler,
Danzig was just a pretext for aggression as the Sudetenland had
been intended to be in 1938, and throughout 1939, while
highlighting the Danzig issue as a grievance, the Germans always
refused to engage in talks about the matter. A notable
contradiction existed in Hitler's plans between the long-term
anti-British course, whose major instruments such as a vastly
expanded
Kriegsmarine and
Luftwaffe that would
take several years to complete, and Hitler's immediate foreign
policy in 1939, which was likely to provoke a general war by
engaging in such actions as attacking Poland. Hitler's dilemma
between his short-term and long-term goals was resolved by Foreign
Minister Ribbentrop who told Hitler that neither Britain nor France
would honor their commitments to Poland, and any German-Polish war
would accordingly be a limited regional war. Ribbentrop based his
appraisal partly on an alleged statement made to him by the French
Foreign Minister
Georges Bonnet in
December 1938 that France now recognized Eastern Europe as
Germany’s exclusive sphere of influence. In addition, Ribbentrop's
status as the former Ambassador to London made him in Hitler's eyes
the leading Nazi British expert, and as a result, Ribbentrop's
advice that Britain would not honor her commitments to Poland
carried much weight with Hitler. Ribbentrop only showed Hitler
diplomatic cables that supported his analysis. In addition, the
German Ambassador in London,
Herbert
von Dirksen tended to send reports that supported Ribbentrop's
analysis such as a dispatch in August 1939 that reported Neville
Chamberlain knew “the social structure of Britain, even the
conception of the British Empire, would not survive the chaos of
even a victorious war”, and so would back down. The extent that
Hitler was influenced by Ribbentrop’s advice can be seen in
Hitler's orders to the German military on 21 August 1939 for a
limited mobilization against Poland alone. Hitler chose late August
as his date for
Fall Weiss in order to limit disruption to
German agricultural production caused by mobilization. The problems
caused by the need to begin a campaign in Poland in late August or
early September in order to have the campaign finished before the
October rains arrived, and the need to have sufficient time to
concentrate German troops on the Polish border left Hitler in a
self-imposed situation in August 1939 where Soviet co-operation was
absolutely crucial if he were to have a war that year.
The Munich agreement appeared to be sufficient to dispel most of
the remaining hold which the "collective security" idea may have
had in Soviet circles, and, on 23 August 1939,
Joseph Stalin accepted Hitler's proposal to
conclude a
non-aggression pact
(the
Molotov-Ribbentrop
Pact), whose secret protocols contained an agreement to
partition Poland. A major historical debate about the reasons for
Hitler’s foreign policy choices in 1939 concerns whether a
structural economic crisis drove Hitler into a “flight into war” as
claimed by the Marxist historian
Timothy
Mason or whether Hitler’s actions were more influenced by
non-economic factors as claimed by the economic historian
Richard Overy. Historians such as William
Carr,
Gerhard Weinberg and
Ian Kershaw have argued that a non-economic
reason for Hitler’s rush to war was due to Hitler’s morbid and
obsessive fear of an early death, and hence his feeling that he did
not have long to accomplish his work. In the last days of peace,
Hitler oscillated between the determination to fight the Western
powers if he had to, and various schemes intended to keep Britain
out of the war, but in any case, Hitler was not to be deterred from
his aim of invading Poland. Only very briefly, when news of the
Anglo-Polish alliance being signed on 25 August 1939 in response to
the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact (instead of the severing of
ties between London and Warsaw predicted by Ribbentrop) together
with news from Italy that Mussolini would not honor the
Pact of Steel, caused Hitler to postpone the
attack on Poland from 25 August to 1 September. Hitler chose to
spend the last days of peace either trying to maneuver the British
into neutrality through his offer of 25 August 1939 to “guarantee”
the British Empire, or having Ribbentrop present a last-minute
peace plan to Henderson with an impossibly short time limit for its
acceptance as part of an effort to blame the war on the British and
Poles. On 1 September 1939, Germany
invaded western Poland. Britain and
France declared war on Germany on 3 September but did not
immediately act. Hitler was most unpleasantly surprised at
receiving the British declaration of war on 3 September 1939, and
turning to Ribbentrop angrily asked “Now what?” Ribbentrop had
nothing to say other then that Robert Coulondre, the French
Ambassador would probably be by later that day to present the
French declaration of war. Not long after this, on 17 September,
Soviet forces invaded eastern Poland.
After the fall of Poland came a period journalists called the
"
Phoney War". In part of
north-western Poland annexed to Germany, Hitler instructed the two
Gauleiters in charge of the area, namely
Albert Forster and
Arthur Greiser to “Germanize” the area, and
promised them "There would be no questions asked" about how this
"
Germanization" was to be
accomplished. Hitler’s orders were interpreted in very different
ways by Forster and Greiser. Forster followed a policy of simply
having the local Poles sign forms stating they had German blood
with no documentation required, whereas Greiser carried out a
brutual ethnic cleansing campaign of expelling the entire Polish
population into the Government-General of Poland. When Greiser,
seconded by Himmler complained to Hitler that Forster was allowing
thousands of Poles to be accepted as “racial” Germans and thus
"contaminating" German “racial purity”, and asked Hitler to order
Forster to stop. Hitler merely told Himmler and Greiser to take up
their difficulties with Forster, and not to involve him. Hitler’s
handling of the Forster-Greiser dispute has often been advanced as
an example of
Ian Kershaw's theory of
“Working Towards the Führer”, namely that Hitler issued vague
instructions, and allowed his subordinates to work out policy on
their own.
After the
conquest of Poland
, another
major dispute broke out between different factions with one
centering around Reichsfüherer SS Heinrich Himmler and Arthur Greiser championing and carrying out
ethnic cleansing schemes for Poland, and another centering around
Hermann Göring and Hans Frank calling for turning Poland into the
"granary" of the Reich. At a conference held at
Göring's Karinhall estate on 12 February, 1940, the dispute was
settled in favor of the Göring-Frank view of economic exploitation,
and ending mass expulsions as economically disruptive. On 15 May,
1940 Himmler showed Hitler a memo entitled "Some Thoughts on the
Treatment of Alien Population in the East", which called for
expelling the entire Jewish population of
Europe into
Africa and reducing
the remainer of the Polish population to a “"leaderless laboring
class" Hitler called Himmler's memo "good and correct". Hitler’s
remark had the effect of scuttling the so-called Karinhall
argreement, and led to the Himmler-Greiser viewpoint triumphing as
German policy for Poland.
During this period, Hitler built up his forces on Germany's western
frontier.
In April 1940, German forces invaded
Denmark
and Norway
.
In May
1940, Hitler's forces attacked France, conquering the Luxembourg
, Netherlands
and Belgium in the process. These victories
persuaded Benito Mussolini of Italy to join the war on Hitler's
side on 10 June 1940. France
surrendered on 22 June 1940.
Britain,
whose forces evacuated France by sea from Dunkirk
, continued to fight alongside other British dominions in the
Battle of
the Atlantic. After having his overtures for peace
rejected by the British, now led by Winston Churchill, Hitler
ordered bombing raids on the United Kingdom
. The
Battle of
Britain was Hitler's prelude to a planned invasion. The attacks
began by pounding
Royal Air Force
airbases and
radar stations protecting
South-East England. However, the
Luftwaffe failed to
defeat the Royal Air Force.
On 27 September 1940, the Tripartite Treaty was signed in Berlin by
Saburo Kurusu of Imperial
Japan
, Hitler, and Ciano. The purpose of the
Tripartite treaty, which was directed against an unnamed power that
was clearly meant to be the United States
was to deter the Americans from supporting the
British. It was later expanded to include Hungary,
Romania
and Bulgaria
. They were collectively known as the
Axis Powers.
By the end of October
1940, air superiority for the invasion Operation Sealion could not be assured,
and Hitler ordered the bombing of British cities, including London,
Plymouth
, and Coventry
, mostly at night.
In the Spring of 1941, Hitler was distracted from his
plans for the East by various activites
in
North Africa, the
Balkans, and the
Middle
East. In February,
German
forces arrived in Libya to bolster the Italian forces there. In
April, he launched the
invasion
of Yugoslavia which was followed quickly by the
invasion of Greece. In May, German forces
were sent to support
Iraqi rebel forces
fighting against the British and to
invade Crete. On 23 May, Hitler released
Fuhrer Directive No.
30.
Path to defeat
On 22 June 1941, three million German troops attacked the Soviet
Union, breaking the non-aggression pact Hitler had concluded with
Stalin two years earlier. A major historical dispute concerns
Hitler's reasons for
Operation
Barbarossa. Some historians such as
Andreas Hillgruber have argued that
Barbarossa was merely one "stage" of Hitler's
Stufenplan
(stage by stage plan) for world conquest, which Hillgruber believed
that Hitler had formulated in the 1920s. Other historians such as
John Lukacs have contended that Hitler
never had a
stufenplan, and that the invasion of the
Soviet Union was an
ad hoc move on the part of Hitler due
to Britain's refusal to surrender. Lukacs has argued that the
reason Hitler gave in private for Barbarossa, namely that
Winston Churchill held out the hope that
the Soviet Union might enter the war on the Allied side, and that
the only way of forcing a British surrender was to eliminate that
hope, was indeed Hitler's real reason for Barbarossa. In Lukacs's
perspective, Barbarossa was thus primarily an anti-British move on
the part of Hitler intended to force Britain to sue for peace by
destroying her only hope of victory rather than an anti-Soviet
move.
Klaus Hildebrand has
maintained that Stalin and Hitler were independently planning to
attack each other in 1941. Hildebrand has claimed that the news in
the spring of 1941 of Soviet troop concentrations on the border led
to Hitler engaging in a
flucht nach vorn ("flight
forward"—i.e. responding to a danger by charging on rather than
retreating.) A third fraction comprising a diverse group such as
Viktor Suvorov, Ernst Topitsch,
Joachim Hoffmann,
Ernst Nolte, and
David
Irving have argued that the official reason given by the
Germans for Barbarossa in 1941 was the real reason, namely that
Barbarossa was a "preventive war" forced on Hitler to avert an
impeding Soviet attack scheduled for July 1941. This theory has
been widely attacked as erroneous; the American historian
Gerhard Weinberg once compared the
advocates of the preventive war theory to believers in "fairy
tales"
This
invasion seized huge amounts of territory, including the Baltic states, Belarus
, and Ukraine. It also encircled and
destroyed many Soviet forces, which Stalin had ordered not to
retreat.
However, the Germans were stopped barely
short of Moscow
in
December 1941 by the Russian winter
and fierce
Soviet resistance
. The invasion failed to achieve the quick
triumph Hitler wanted. On 18 December 1941, the appointment book of
the
Reichsführer-SS Heinrich
Himmler shows he met with Hitler, where to in answer to
Himmler's question "What to do with the Jews of Russia?", Hitler's
response is recorded as "
als Partisanen auszurotten"
("exterminate them as partisans"). The Israeli historian
Yehuda Bauer has commented that the remark
recorded in Himmler’s book is probably as close historians will
ever get to a definitive order from Hitler for the Holocaust.
Hitler's
declaration of war against the United States
on 11 December 1941, four days after the Empire of
Japan
's attack on Pearl Harbor
, Hawaii
and six
days after Nazi Germany's closest approach to Moscow, set him
against a coalition that included the world's largest empire (the
British Empire), the world's greatest industrial and financial
power (the United States), and the world's largest army (the Soviet
Union).
In late
1942, German forces were defeated in the second
battle of El Alamein
, thwarting Hitler's plans to seize the Suez Canal
and the Middle
East. In February 1943, the Battle of
Stalingrad
ended with the destruction of the German 6th Army. Thereafter came the
Battle of
Kursk
. Hitler's military judgment became
increasingly erratic, and Germany's military and economic position
deteriorated along with Hitler's health, as indicated by his left
hand's severe trembling. Hitler's biographer
Ian Kershaw and others believe that he may have
suffered from
Parkinson's
disease.
Syphilis has also been
suspected as a cause of at least some of his symptoms, although the
evidence is slight.
Following the allied invasion of
Sicily
(
Operation Husky) in 1943, Mussolini
was deposed by
Pietro Badoglio, who
surrendered to the Allies. Throughout 1943 and 1944, the Soviet
Union steadily forced Hitler's armies into retreat along the
Eastern Front. On 6
June 1944, the Western Allied armies landed in northern France in
what was one of the largest
amphibious operations in history,
Operation Overlord. Realists in
the German army knew defeat was inevitable, and some plotted to
remove Hitler from power.
In July 1944, Claus von Stauffenberg planted a bomb in Hitler's Führer Headquarters, the Wolfsschanze
(Wolf's Lair) at Rastenburg
, but Hitler narrowly escaped death. He
ordered savage reprisals, resulting in the executions of more than
4,900 people, sometimes by
starvation in
solitary confinement followed by slow
strangulation. The main resistance
movement was destroyed, although smaller isolated groups continued
to operate.
Defeat and death
By late 1944, the Red Army had driven the Germans back into Central
Europe and the
Western Allies were
advancing into Germany. Hitler realized that Germany had lost the
war, but allowed no retreats. He hoped to negotiate a separate
peace with America and Britain, a hope buoyed by the death of
Franklin D. Roosevelt on 12 April 1945. Hitler's
stubbornness and defiance of military realities allowed the
Holocaust to continue. He ordered the complete destruction of all
German industrial infrastructure before it could fall into Allied
hands, saying that Germany's failure to win the war forfeited its
right to survive. Rather, Hitler decided that the entire nation
should go down with him. Execution of this
scorched earth plan was entrusted to arms
minister
Albert Speer, who disobeyed
the order.
In April 1945, Soviet forces attacked the outskirts of Berlin.
Hitler's followers urged him to flee to the mountains of Bavaria to
make a last stand in the
National
Redoubt. But Hitler was determined to either live or die in the
capital.
On 20
April, Hitler celebrated his 56th birthday in the Führerbunker
("Führer's shelter") below the
Reichskanzlei (Reich Chancellery
). The garrison commander of the besieged
Festung Breslau ("fortress
Breslau"), General
Hermann Niehoff,
had chocolates distributed to his troops in honor of Hitler's
birthday.
By 21 April,
Georgi Zhukov's
1st Belorussian Front had broken
through the defenses of German General
Gotthard Heinrici's
Army Group Vistula during the
Battle of the Seelow Heights.
The Soviets were now advancing towards Hitler's bunker with little
to stop them. Ignoring the facts, Hitler saw salvation in the
ragtag units commanded by Waffen SS General
Felix Steiner. Steiner's command became known
as
Armeeabteilung Steiner ("
Army Detachment Steiner"). But "Army
Detachment Steiner" existed primarily on paper. It was something
more than a corps but less than an army. Hitler ordered Steiner to
attack the northern flank of the huge
salient created by the
breakthrough of Zhukov's 1st Belorussian Front. Meanwhile, the
German
Ninth Army, which had
been pushed south of the salient, was ordered to attack north in a
pincer attack.
Late on 21 April, Heinrici called
Hans Krebs chief of the
Oberkommando des Heeres
(Supreme Army Command or OKH) and told him that Hitler's plan could
not be implemented. Heinrici asked to speak to Hitler but was told
by Krebs that Hitler was too busy to take his call.
On 22 April, during one of his last military conferences, Hitler
interrupted the report to ask what had happened to General
Steiner's offensive. There was a long silence. Then Hitler was told
that the attack had never been launched, and that the withdrawal
from Berlin of several units for Steiner's army, on Hitler's
orders, had so weakened the front that the Russians had broken
through into Berlin. Hitler asked everyone except Wilhelm Keitel,
Hans Krebs,
Alfred Jodl,
Wilhelm Burgdorf, and
Martin Bormann to leave the room, and
launched a tirade against the perceived treachery and incompetence
of his commanders. This culminated in an oath to stay in Berlin,
head up the defense of the city, and shoot himself at the
end.
Before the day ended, Hitler again found salvation in a new plan
that included General
Walther Wenck's
Twelfth Army. This new plan
had Wenck turn his army—currently facing the Americans to the
west—and attack towards the east to relieve Berlin. Twelfth Army
was to link up with Ninth Army and break through to the city. Wenck
did attack and, in the confusion, managed to make temporary contact
with the Potsdam garrison. But the link with the Ninth Army, like
the plan in general, was ultimately unsuccessful.
On 23 April, Joseph Goebbels made the following proclamation to the
people of Berlin:
The same
day, second in command of the Third Reich and commander of
the Luftwaffe Hermann Göring sent a telegram from
Berchtesgaden
in Bavaria. Göring argued that, since
Hitler was cut off in Berlin, he should assume leadership of
Germany as Hitler's designated successor. Göring mentioned a time
limit after which he would consider Hitler incapacitated. Hitler
responded, in anger, by having Göring arrested. Later when Hitler
wrote his will on 29 April, Göring was removed from all his
positions in the government.
Further on the 23 April, Hitler appointed
General der Artillerie Helmuth
Weidling as the commander of the Berlin
Defense
Area. Weidling replaced Lieutenant General
(
Generalleutnant)
Helmuth
Reymann and Colonel (
Oberst)
Ernst Kaether. Hitler also appointed
Waffen SS General (SS Brigadeführer)
Wilhelm Mohnke the (Kommandant) Battle
Commander for the defense of the government sector (Zitadelle
sector) that included the Reich Chancellery and Führerbunker.
By the end of the day on 27 April, Berlin was completely cut off
from the rest of Germany.
On 28
April, Hitler discovered that SS
leader
Heinrich Himmler was trying to discuss surrender terms with the
Western Allies (through the Swedish
diplomat Count Folke
Bernadotte). Hitler ordered Himmler's arrest and had
Himmler's representative in Berlin
Hermann Fegelein shot.
During the night of 28 April, General Wenck reported that his
Twelfth Army had been forced back along the entire front. Wenck
noted that no further attacks towards Berlin were possible. General
Alfred Jodl (Supreme Army Command) did not provide this information
to Hans Krebs in Berlin until early in the morning of 30
April.
On 29 April, Hitler dictated his will and political statement to
his private secretary,
Traudl Junge.
Hans Krebs, Wilhelm Burgdorf, Joseph Goebbels, and Martin Bormann
witnessed and signed this
last will and testament
of Adolf Hitler. On the same day, Hitler was informed of the
violent death of Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini on 28 April, which is
presumed to have increased his determination to avoid
capture.
On 30 April 1945, after intense
street-to-street combat, when Soviet troops
were within a block or two of the Reich Chancellery, Hitler
committed suicide, shooting himself in the temple while
simultaneously biting into a
cyanide
capsule. Hitler's body and that of
Eva
Braun were put in a bomb crater, doused in
gasoline by SS Sturmbannführer
Otto Günsche and other
Führerbunker aides, and set alight as the Red Army
advanced and shelling continued.
On 2 May, Berlin surrendered. In the postwar years there were
conflicting reports about what happened to Hitler's remains.
After the
fall of the Soviet Union it was revealed from records in the Soviet
archives that the bodies of Hitler, Eva Braun, Joseph and Magda
Goebbels, the six Goebbels
children, General Hans
Krebs and Hitler's dogs, were secretly buried in graves near
Rathenow
in Brandenburg
. In 1970, the remains were disinterred,
cremated and scattered in the
Elbe River
by the Soviets. According to the Russian Federal Security Service,
a fragment of human skull stored in its archives and displayed to
the public in a 2000 exhibition came from the remains of Hitler's
body and is all that remains of Hitler. The authenticity of the
skull has been challenged by historians and researchers. DNA
analysis conducted in 2009 showed the skull fragment to be that of
a woman under the age of 40.
Legacy
Hitler, the Nazi Party and the results of
Nazism are typically regarded as gravely immoral.
Historians, philosophers, and politicians have often applied the
word
evil in both a secular sense of
the word and in a religious sense. Historical and
cultural portrayals of Hitler in
the west are overwhelmingly condemnatory. The display of swastikas
or other
Nazi symbols is prohibited
in Germany and Austria.
Holocaust
denial is prohibited in both countries.
Outside of Hitler's birthplace in Braunau am Inn, Austria is a
stone marker engraved with the following message:
Loosely translated it reads: "For peace, freedom // and democracy
// never again fascism // millions of dead remind [us]"
However, some people have referred to Hitler's legacy in neutral or
favourable terms.
Former Egyptian
President Anwar El
Sadat spoke of his 'admiration' of Hitler in 1953, when he was
a young man, though it is possible he was speaking in the context
of a rebellion against the British Empire. Louis Farrakhan has referred to him as a
"very great man".
Bal Thackeray,
leader of the right-wing Hindu Shiv Sena
party in the Indian
state of
the Maharashtra
, declared in 1995 that he was an admirer of
Hitler. Friedrich Meinecke, the German historian, said of
Hitler's life that "it is one of the great examples of the singular
and incalculable power of personality in historical life".
Religious beliefs
Hitler was raised by
Roman
Catholic parents, but after he left home, he never attended
Mass or received the
sacraments. However, after
he had moved to Germany, where the Catholic and the Protestant
church are largely financed through a
church
tax collected by the state, Hitler (like
Goebbels) never "actually left his church or
refused to pay church taxes. In a nominal sense therefore," the
historian Steigmann-Gall states, Hitler "can be classified as
Catholic." But, as Steigmann-Gall has also pointed out in the
debate about
religion in Nazi
Germany: "Nominal church membership is a very unreliable gauge
of actual piety in this context."
In public, Hitler often praised
Christian heritage, German Christian culture,
and professed a belief in an Aryan
Jesus
Christ, a Jesus who fought against the Jews. In his speeches
and publications Hitler spoke of his interpretation of Christianity
as a central motivation for his antisemitism, stating that "As a
Christian I have no duty to allow myself to be cheated, but I have
the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice." His private
statements, as reported by his intimates, are more mixed, showing
Hitler as a religious man but critical of traditional Christianity.
Here Hitler made at least one attack against Catholicism that
"resonated
Streicher's contention
that the Catholic establishment was allying itself with the Jews."
In light of these private statements, for
John S. Conway
and many other historians it is beyond doubt that Hitler held a
"fundamental antagonism" towards the Christian churches. The
various accounts of Hitler's private statements vary strongly in
their reliability; Most importantly,
Hermann Rauschning's
Hitler
speaks is considered by most historians to be an invention. An
overview about Hitler's religious beliefs, based on his apparent
private statements, can be found in the acclaimed book by Michael
Rißmann or in Richard Steigmann-Gall's controversial book on Nazism
and Christianity, pp. 252–259.
In the political relations with the churches in Germany however,
Hitler readily adopted a strategy "that suited his immediate
political purposes". Hitler had a general plan, even before the
rise of the Nazis to power, to destroy Christianity within the
Reich. The leader of the Hitler Youth stated "the destruction of
Christianity was explicitly recognized as a purpose of the National
Socialist movement" from the start, but "considerations of
expedience made it impossible" publicly to express this extreme
position.
It is believed that, in contrast to some Nazi ideologues, Hitler
did not adhere to
esoteric ideas,
occultism, or
Ariosophy,
and he ridiculed such beliefs in
Mein Kampf. Others
believe the young Hitler was strongly influenced, particularly in
his racial views, by an abundance of occult works on the mystical
superiority of the Germans, like the occult and anti-semitic
magazine
Ostara, and give credence
to the claim of its publisher
Lanz
von Liebenfels that Hitler visited Liebenfels in 1909 and
praised his work.The historians are still divided on the question
of the reliability of Lanz' claim of a contact with Hitler.
Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke
considers his account reliable,
Brigitte
Hamann leaves the question open and
Ian
Kershaw is extremely sceptical.
Hitler for a time advocated for Germans a form of the Christian
faith he called "
Positive
Christianity", a belief system purged of what he objected to in
orthodox Christianity, and featuring added racist elements. By 1940
however, it was public knowledge that Hitler had abandoned
advocating for Germans even the
syncretist idea of a positive Christianty. Hitler
maintained that the "
terrorism in religion is, to put it
briefly, of a Jewish dogma, which Christianity has universalized
and whose effect is to sow trouble and confusion in men's
minds."
In addition to not attending
Mass or
receiving the
sacraments, Hitler favored
aspects of
Protestantism if they were
more amenable to his own objectives. At the same time, he adopted
some elements of the Catholic Church's hierarchical organization,
liturgy and phraseology in his politics.
Hitler expressed admiration for the
Muslim
military tradition and directed Himmler to initiate Muslim SS
Divisions as a matter of policy. According to one confidant, Hitler
stated in private, "The Mohammedan religion too would have been
much more compatible to us than Christianity. Why did it have to be
Christianity with its meekness and flabbiness ..."
Hitler once stated, "We do not want any other god than Germany
itself. It is essential to have fanatical faith and hope and love
in and for Germany."
Health
Hitler's health has long been the subject of debate. He has
variously been said to have had
irritable bowel syndrome,
skin lesions,
irregular heartbeat,
Parkinson's disease,
syphilis,
Asperger
syndrome and a strongly suggested addiction to
methamphetamine. He had problems with his
teeth and his personal dentist
Hugo
Blaschkestated that he fitted a large
dental bridge to his upper jaw in 1933
and that on 10 November 1944 he carried out surgery to cut off part
of the bridge due to a gum infection that was causing him severe
toothache. He reported that he was also suffering from a
sinus infection
After the early 1930s, Hitler generally followed a
vegetarian diet, although he ate meat on
occasion. There are reports of him disgusting his guests by giving
them graphic accounts of the slaughter of animals in an effort to
make them shun meat. A fear of
cancer (from
which his mother died) is the most widely cited reason, though many
authors also assert Hitler had a profound and deep love of animals
.
Martin
Bormann had a greenhouse constructed for him near the Berghof
(near Berchtesgaden
) to ensure a steady supply of fresh fruit and
vegetables for Hitler throughout the war. Photographs of
Bormann's children tending the greenhouse survive and, by 2005, its
foundations were among the only ruins visible in the area that was
associated with Nazi leaders.
Hitler was a non-smoker and promoted aggressive
anti-smoking campaigns
throughout Germany. He reportedly promised a gold watch to any
of his close associates who quit (and gave a few away).
Several
witness accounts relate that, immediately after his suicide was
confirmed, many officers, aides, and secretaries in the
Führerbunker
lit cigarettes.
Sexuality
Hitler presented himself publicly as a man without a domestic life,
dedicated entirely to his political mission.
He had a fiancée in the 1920s,
Mimi
Reiter, and later had a mistress,
Eva
Braun. He had a close bond with his half-niece
Geli Raubal, which some commentators have
claimed was sexual, though there is no evidence that proves this.
According to John Toland (in his book
A.H.: a Definitive
Biography), Hitler would often visit Geli in the manner of a
suitor, and restricted his niece's movement unless she was
chaperone by him. All three women
attempted suicide (two succeeded), a fact that has led to
speculation that Hitler may have had sexual fetishes, such as
urolagnia, as was claimed by
Otto Strasser, a political opponent of Hitler.
Reiter, the only one to survive the Nazi regime, denied this.
During the war and afterwards
psychoanalysts offered numerous inconsistent
psycho-sexual explanations of his pathology. Some theorists have
claimed that Hitler had a relationship with British fascist
Unity Mitford. More recently,
Lothar Machtan has argued in his book,
The Hidden Hitler, that
Hitler was
homosexual.
Family
Paula Hitler, the last living member of
Adolf Hitler's immediate family, died in 1960.
The most prominent and longest-living direct descendants of Adolf
Hitler's father, Alois, was Adolf's nephew
William Patrick Hitler.
With his wife
Phyllis, he eventually moved to Long Island
, New
York
, changed his last name, and had four
sons. None of William Hitler's children have had any
children of their own.
Over the years various investigative reporters have attempted to
track down other distant relatives of the Führer. Many are now
alleged to be living inconspicuous lives and have long since
changed their last name.
- Klara Hitler, mother
- Alois Hitler, father
- Alois Hitler, Jr.,
half-brother
- Angela Hitler Raubal,
half-sister
- Bridget Dowling,
sister-in-law
- Eva Braun, mistress and then wife
- Geli Raubal, niece
- Gretl Braun, sister-in-law through
Hitler's marriage to Eva Braun
- Heinz Hitler, nephew
- Hermann Fegelein,
brother-in-law through Hitler's marriage to Eva Braun
- Ilse Braun, sister-in-law through
Hitler's marriage to Eva Braun
- Johann Georg Hiedler,
presumed grandfather
- Johann Nepomuk Hiedler,
maternal great-grandfather, presumed great uncle and possibly
Hitler's true paternal grandfather
- Leo Raubal Jr, nephew
- Maria Schicklgruber,
grandmother
- Paula Hitler, sister
- William Patrick Hitler,
nephew
Hitler in media
Oratory and rallies
Hitler was a gifted
orator who captivated
many with his beating of the lectern and growling, emotional
speech. He honed his skills by giving speeches to soldiers during
1919 and 1920. He became adept at telling people what they wanted
to hear (the stab-in-the-back, the Jewish-Marxist plot to conquer
the world, and the betrayal of Germany in the Versailles treaty)
and identifying a scapegoat for their plight. Over time, Hitler
perfected his delivery by rehearsing in front of mirrors and
carefully choreographing his display of emotions. He was coached by
a self-styled clairvoyant who focused on hand and arm gestures.
Munitions minister and architect
Albert
Speer, who may have known Hitler as well as anyone, said that
Hitler was above all else an actor.
Massive Nazi rallies staged by Speer were designed to spark a
process of self-persuasion for the participants. By participating
in the rallies, by marching, by shouting
heil, and by
making the stiff armed salute, the participants strengthened their
commitment to the Nazi movement. This process can be appreciated by
watching
Leni Riefenstahl's
Triumph of the Will,
which presents the 1934 Nuremberg Rally. The camera shoots Hitler
from on high and from below, but only twice head-on. These camera
angles give Hitler a Christ-like aura. Some of the people in the
film are paid actors, but most of the participants are not. Whether
the film itself recruited new Nazis out of theater audiences is
unknown. The process of self-persuasion may have affected Hitler.
He gave the same speech (though it got smoother and smoother with
repetition) hundreds of times first to soldiers and then to
audiences in beer halls. These performances may have made his
hatreds more intense, especially his all-consuming hatred of the
Jews.
Recorded in private conversation
Hitler visited Finnish
Field Marshal
Mannerheim on 4 June
1942. During the visit an engineer of the Finnish broadcasting
company
YLE, Thor Damen, recorded Hitler and
Mannerheim in conversation, something which had to be done secretly
since Hitler never allowed recordings of him off-guard. Today the
recording is the only known recording of Hitler not speaking in an
official tone. The recording captures 11½ minutes of the two
leaders in private conversation. Hitler speaks in a slightly
excited, but still intellectually detached manner during this talk
(the speech has been compared to that of the working class). The
majority of the recording is a monologue by Hitler. In the
recording, Hitler admits to underestimating the Soviet Union's
ability to conduct war.
Patria picture disc
Adolf Hitler even released a 7"
picture
disc with one of his speeches. Known as the
Patria (
Fatherland) picture disc,
the obverse bears an image of Hitler giving a speech and has a
recording of both a speech by Hitler and also Party Member Hans
Hinkel. The reverse bears a hand holding a swastika flag and the
Carl Woitschach recording (1933—Telefunken A 1431) "In Dem Kampf um
die Heimat—Faschistenmarsch".
Documentaries during the Third Reich
Hitler appeared in and was involved to varying degrees with a
series of films by the pioneering filmmaker
Leni Riefenstahl via
Universum Film AG (UFA):
Hitler was the central figure of the first three films; they
focused on the
party rallies of the
respective years and are considered propaganda films. Hitler also
featured prominently in the
Olympia film. Whether the
latter is a propaganda film or a true documentary is still a
subject of controversy, but it nonetheless perpetuated and spread
the propagandistic message of the
1936 Olympic Games depicting Nazi
Germany as a prosperous and peaceful country. As a prominent
politician, Hitler was featured in many
newsreels.
Television
Hitler's attendance at various public functions, including the 1936
Olympic Games and Nuremberg Rallies, appeared on television
broadcasts made between 1935 and 1939. These events, along with
other programming highlighting activity by public officials, were
often repeated in public viewing rooms. Samples from a number of
surviving television films from Nazi Germany were included in the
1999 documentary
Das Fernsehen unter dem Hakenkreuz (Television
Under the Swastika).
Documentaries post Third Reich
- The World at War
(1974): a Thames Television series
which contains much information about Hitler and Nazi Germany,
including an interview with his secretary, Traudl Junge.
- Adolf Hitler's Last Days: from the BBC series "Secrets
of World War II" tells the story about Hitler's last days during
World War II.
- The Nazis: A Warning From History (1997): six-part BBC
TV series on how the cultured and educated Germans accepted Hitler
and the Nazis up to its downfall. Historical consultant is Ian
Kershaw.
- Cold War (1998): a CNN series about the Cold War between the United States
and the Soviet Union. The series begins with World War II footage,
including Hitler, and how the Cold War began in earnest after
Germany surrendered.
- Im toten Winkel—Hitlers
Sekretärin (Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary) (2002): an
exclusive 90 minute interview with Traudl Junge, Hitler's
secretary. Made by Austrian Jewish director André Heller shortly
before Junge's death from lung cancer, Junge recalls the last days
in the Berlin bunker. Clips of the interview were used in
Downfall.
- Undergångens
arkitektur (The Architecture of Doom) (1989): documentary
about the National Socialist aesthetic as envisioned by
Hitler.
- Das Fernsehen unter dem Hakenkreuz (Television Under the
Swastika) (1999): documentary by Michael Kloft about the
domestic use of television in Nazi Germany for propaganda purposes
from 1935 to 1944.
- Ruins of the Reich
(2007): four-part series of the Rise and Fall of Hitler's Reich and
its effects, created by Third Reich historian R.J. Adams
Films
- The Death of Adolf
Hitler, a British (7 January 1973) made-for-television
production, starring Frank Finlay. The
movie depicts the last days of Hitler.
- Hitler: The Last Ten
Days (1973): movie depicting the days leading up to Adolf
Hitler's death, starring Sir Alec
Guinness.
- Hans-Jürgen
Syberberg's Hitler—Ein Film aus Deutschland
(Hitler: A Film from
Germany) (1977): a seven-hour work in four parts. The
director uses documentary clips, photographic backgrounds, puppets,
theatrical stages, and other elements.
- The Bunker
(1981): a U.S. made-for-television movie describing the last days
in the Führerbunker from 17 January 1945 to 2 March 1945. The film
stars Sir Anthony Hopkins.
- Europa, Europa (1990):
based on the true story of a German Jew who joined the Hitler Youth
in order to avoid capture. Hitler is portrayed by Ryszard Pietruski.
- Fatherland (1994): a hypothetical view of Germany in
1964, had Hitler won World War 2, adapted from the novel by former journalist Robert Harris.
- The Empty Mirror
(1996): a psychodrama which speculates
on the events following Hitler (portrayed by Norman Rodway) surviving the fall of Nazi
Germany.
- Moloch
(1999): Hitler portrayed by Leonid
Mozgovoy in a fictional drama set at his Berghof
Retreat
in the Bavarian Alps
.
- Max (2002): fictional
drama depicting a friendship between
Jewish art dealer Max Rothman (John
Cusack) and a young Adolf Hitler (Noah
Taylor) as a failed painter in Vienna.
- Hitler: The Rise of
Evil (2003): two-part TV series about the early years of
Adolf Hitler and his rise to power (up to 1933), starring Robert Carlyle.
- Der Untergang
(Downfall) (2004): German movie about the last days of
Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich, starring Bruno Ganz. This film is partly based on the
autobiography of Traudl Junge, a favorite secretary of Hitler's. In
2002, Junge said she felt great guilt for "... liking the greatest
criminal ever to have lived."
- Valkyrie (2008):
Hitler, played by David Bamber, is
portrayed as a target of the infamous assassination plot by
Stauffenberg.
- Dr Freud Will See You Now Mr Hitler (2008): radio
drama by Laurence
Marks and Maurice Gran presenting
an imagined scenario in which Sigmund
Freud treats the young Hitler. Toby
Jones played Hitler.
See also
Footnotes
- Rosenbaum,
R. (1999). Explaining
Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil. Harper
Perennial. ISBN 0-06-095339-X
- Dieter Schenk, Frank: Hitlers Kronjurist und
General-Gouverneur, 2006, p.65. ISBN 978-3100735621: "Dass
Adolf Hitler bestimmt kein Judenblut in den Adern hatte, scheint
mir aus seiner ganzen Art dermaßen eklatant bewiesen, dass es
keines weiteren Wortes bedarf," (p.330 of Frank's memoirs
published in 1953 as Im Angesicht des Galgens. Deutung Hitlers
und seiner Zeit aufgrund eigener Erlebnisse und
Erkenntnisse).
- Anna Elisabeth Rosmus, Out of Passau: Leaving a City Hitler
Called Home, p. 41
- John Toland, Adolf Hitler, 1976 ISBN
0-385-42053-6
- Rosmus, op cit, p. 35
- .
- Alastair Jamieson, Nazi leader Hitler really did have only one
ball.html, The Daily Telegraph, retrieved on 20
November 2008
- Rosenbaum, Ron, " Everything You Need To Know About Hitler's
"Missing" Testicle", Slate, Nov. 28, 2008
- Samuel W. Mitcham, Why Hitler?: the genesis of the Nazi
Reich. Praeger, 1996, p.67
- Alison Kitson, Germany, 1858-1990: Hope, Terror, and
Revival, Oxford University Press, 2001,
P.1921
- Ian Kershaw, Hitler, Pearson Education, 2000,
p.60
- The party's name was officially changed in 1920 to include the
prefix "National Socialist."
- Kershaw p. 239.
- Katrina Vanden Heuvel The Nation
1865–1990, p. 66, Thunder's Mouth Press, 1990 ISBN
1-56025-001-1
- See Verbotzeit
for details.
- Leitz, Christian Nazi Foreign Policy, Routledge:
London, United Kingdom, 2004, p. 50
- Weinbeg, Gerhard The Foreign Policy of Hitler's Germany
Diplomatic Revolution in Europe 1933–36, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press,
1970, p. 65
- Weinberg, Gerhard The Foreign Policy of Hitler's Germany
Diplomatic Revolution in Europe 1933–36, Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1970, p. 66
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 596–597
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 599–600
- Kershaw, Ian Hitler Hubris, New York: Norton, 1999 p.
578
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 601–602
- Hitler, Adolf Mein Kampf; Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1971 p. 138
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 630–631
- Overy,
Richard “Misjudging Hitler” pp. 93–115 from The Origins of
the Second World War Reconsidered edited by Gordon Martel
Routledge: London, United Kingdom, 1999 pp. 98–99
- Overy, Richard “Misjudging Hitler” pp. 93–115 from The
Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered edited by Gordon
Martel Routledge: London, United Kingdom, 1999 p. 98
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 623–624
- Overy, Richard “Misjudging Hitler” from The Origins of the
Second World War Reconsidered edited by Gordon Martel
Routledge: London, United Kingdom, 1999 p. 103
- Kershaw, Ian The Nazi Dictatorship : Problems and
Perspectives of Interpretation, London : Arnold ; New York p.
51
- Jeremy Noakes and Geoffrey Pridham (editors) Nazism
1919–1945 Volume 3 Foreign Policy, War and Racial Extermination A
Documentary Reader, University of Exeter Press, Exeter, Devon,
United Kingdom, 1997 p. 673
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 p. 642
- Aigner, Dietrich “Hitler’s Ultimate Aims” from Aspects of
the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch, London: Macmillan, 1985
p. 264
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990 pp. 636–637
- Hillgruber, Andreas "England's Place In Hitler's Plans for
World Dominion" pp. 5–22 from Journal of Contemporary
History, Volume 9, 1974 pp. 13–14
- Overy, Richard Overy, Richard “Misjudging Hitler” pp. 93–115
from The Origins of the Second World War Reconsidered
edited by Gordon Martel Routledge: London, United Kingdom, 1999 pp.
101–103
- Overy, Richard "Misjudging Hitler" from The Origins of the
Second World War Reconsidered edited by Gordon Martel
Routledge: London, United Kingdom, 1999 pp. 101–102
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Volume I, Clarendon
Press: Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom, 1990 p. 638
- The Munich Crisis, 1938 Edited by Igor Lukes, Erik
Goldstein, Routledge: 1999
- Hillgruber, Andreas "England's Place In Hitler's Plans for
World Dominion" pp. 5–22 from Journal of Contemporary
History, Volume 9, 1974 pp. 14–15
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War, Clarendon Press:
Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom, 1990 p. 663
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War, Clarendon Press:
Oxford, 1990 p. 654
- [Terry Parssinen|The Oster Conspiracy of 1938: The Unknown
Story of the Military Plot to Kill Hitler|Pimlico Press|2004|ISBN
1844133079]
- Middlemas, Keith Diplomacy of Illusion Weidenfeld and
Nicolson: London, United Kingdom, 1972 pp. 340–341
- Middlemas, Keith Diplomacy of Illusion Weidenfeld and
Nicolson: London, United Kingdom, 1972 p. 364
- Dilks, David “`We Must Hope For The Best and Prepare For The
Worse’” from The Origins of The Second World War edited by
Patrick Finney, London: Arnold 1997 p. 44
- Middlemas, Keith Diplomacy of Illusion p. 368
- Overy, Richard “Germany and the Munich Crisis: A Mutilated
Victory?” from The Munich Crisis, London: Frank Cass, 1999
p. 208
- Overy, Richard “Germany and the Munich Crisis: A Mutilated
Victory?” from The Munich Crisis, London: Frank Cass, 1999
p. 207
- Overy, Richard “Germany and the Munich Crisis: A Mutilated
Victory?” from The Munich Crisis London: Frank Cass 1999
pp. 207–209
- Bullock, A. Hitler: A Study in Tyranny, 469
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War Clarendon Press:
Oxford, 1990 pp. 671, 682–683
- Rothwell, Victor The Origins of the Second World War,
Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001 pp. 90–91
- Messerschmidt, Manfred “Foreign Policy and Preparation for War”
from Germany and the Second World War edited by Wilhelm
Deist, Hans-Erich Vokmann and Wolfram Wette, Volume I, Clarendon
Press: Oxford, United Kingdom, 1990 pp. 671, 682–683
- Rothwell, Victor The Origins of the Second World War,
Manchester University Press: Manchester, United Kingdom, 2001 pp.
90–91
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38
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from Germany and the Second World War, Clarendon Press:
Oxford, 1990 pp. 682–683
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Macmillan Press: London, 1998 pp. 164–165
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from Germany and the Second World War, Clarendon Press:
Oxford, 1990 p. 91
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from Germany and the Second World War Clarendon Press:
Oxford, 1990 p. 691
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War’ pp. 68–82 from Germany, Hitler and World War II,
Cambridge University Press:
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 1995 p. 73
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the Great Powers (1938–early 1939)" pp. 196–234 from Aspects of
the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch, Macmillan: London, United
Kingdom p. 204
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the Great Powers (1938–early 1939)" pp. 196–234 from Aspects of
the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch, Macmillan: London, United
Kingdom p. 204
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78
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pp. 84–85
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from Germany and the Second World War, Volume I, Clarendon
Press: Oxford, United Kingdom, 1990 pp. 688–690
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Macmillan Press: London, 1998 p. 178
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the Great Powers” from Aspects of the Third Reich edited
by H.W. Koch, London: Macmillan 1985 p. 212
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from Germany and the Second World War Clarendon Press:
Oxford, United Kingdom, 1990 pp. 688–690
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Ribbentrop" from The Diplomats 1919–39 edited by
Gordon A.
Craig and Felix Gilbert pp. 435–436
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International Affairs, Oxford University Press, 1949
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and the war in 1939” from The Origins of The Second World War
edited by Patrick Finney Edward Arnold: London, United Kingdom,
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pp. 415–419 from The Journal of Modern History, Volume 27,
Issue # 4, December 1955
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from Germany and the Second World War, Clarendon Press:
Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom, 1990 p. 714
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Pantheon, 1989 p. 43
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Theory of the Origins of the Second World War by Ernst
Topitsch pp. 800–801 from The American Historical Review,
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- Bauer, Yehuda Rethinking the Holocaust Yale University
Press, 2000, p. 5
- Joachimsthaler, Anton. The Last Days of Hitler - The
Legends - The Evidence - The Truth, Brockhampton Press, 1999,
pp 160–167.
- V.K. Vinogradov and others, Hitler's Death: Russia's Last
Great Secret from the Files of the KGB, Chaucer Press 2005,
111. This work reproduces a Soviet map showing that the bodies were
buried in a field near the village of Neu Friedrichsdorf,
approximately one kilometre east of Rathenow.
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Reich, 260–277
- Shirer, p 21
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Response, p. 205, in: Journal of Contemporary History Volume 42, No. 2
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Memoirs of a Confidant, Henry Ashby Turner, ed. (New Haven,
1985), p. 65
- Conway 1968: 3
- SHARKEY, JOE Word for Word/The Case Against the Nazis; How
Hitler's Forces Planned To Destroy German Christianity, New
York Times, 13 January 2002
- The Nazi Master Plan: The Persecution of the Christian
Churches, Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion, Winter 2001,
publishing evidence compiled by the O.S.S. for the Nuremberg
war-crimes trials of 1945 and 1946
- The Religious Affiliation of Adolf Hitler
Adherents.com
- Rosenbaum, Ron [Explaining Hitler] p. xxxvii, p. 282 (citing
Yehuda Bauer’s belief that Hitler’s racism is rooted in occult
groups like Ostara), p. 333, 1998 Random House
- Rißmann 2001: 122
- Rißmann 2001: 249 (Footnote 539)
- Poewe, Karla O, New Religions and the Nazis, p. 30, Routledge
2006
- "Hitler's Table Talks" Christianity: 4 April 1942,
Martin Bormann, published 1953)
- History of the Bosnian Muslim Nazi 13th SS Handzar
Division AOL News
- Heiden, Konrad A History of National Socialism, p. 100, A.A.
Knopf, 1935
References
- Joachimsthaler, Anton (1999), The Last Days of Hitler - The
Legends - The Evidence - The Truth, Brockhampton Press, ISBN
1-86019-902-X
External links
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- Speeches and publications