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Hitler

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by Peter Longerich




  HITLER

  A Biography

  Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries.

  Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press

  198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016, United States of America.

  © Peter Longerich 2019

  First published in German by Sielder Verlag as Hitler: Biographie, 2015

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by license, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reproduction rights organization. Inquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above.

  You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Longerich, Peter, author. | Noakes, Jeremy, translator. | Sharpe, Lesley, 1952– translator.

  Title: Hitler : a biography / Peter Longerich ; translated by Jeremy Noakes and Lesley Sharpe.

  Description: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2019] | Includes bibliographical references and index.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2019015905| ISBN 9780190056735 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780198796091 (UK edition : alk. paper) | ebook ISBN 9780190057145

  Subjects: LCSH: Hitler, Adolf, 1889–1945. | Heads of state—Germany—Biography. | Germany—Politics and government—1933–1945. | National socialism. | Holocaust, Jewish (1939–1945)

  Classification: LCC DD247.H5 L5613 2019 | DDC 943.086092 [B]—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019015905

  1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2

  Printed by LSC Communications, United States of America

  Acknowledgements

  I should like to express my thanks to everyone who helped me write and publish this biography. It could not have been written without the support of the staff of the various archives and libraries I consulted. I am very grateful to them all, and in particular, once again, to the staff at the Institute for Contemporary History in Munich for their tireless efforts.

  In the early stages of this book I had the opportunity to discuss its subject’s personality with a group of psychoanalysts in Hamburg and a circle of psychotherapists and psychoanalysts in Munich. I am grateful for the help I received from Sabine Brückner-Jungjohann, Christiane Adam, Gundula Fromm, Ulrich Knocke, Rüdiger Kurz, Astrid Rutezki, Dirk Sieveking and Gudrun Brockhaus, Falk Stakelbeck, Heidi Spanl, and Corinna Werntz.

  My sincere thanks go to Thomas Rathnow and Jens Dehning of Siedler Press and to all their colleagues at Siedler, and also to Daniel Bussenius and Jonas Wegerer for their work in editing the text.

  Munich, October 2015

  Contents

  Abbreviations

  Introduction

  Prologue: A Nobody

  I. The Public Self

  1. Back in Munich: Politicization

  2. Joining the Party

  3. Hitler Becomes Party Leader

  4. The March to the Hitler Putsch

  5. The Trial and the Period of the Ban

  II. CReating A Public Image

  6. A Fresh Start

  7. Hitler as a Public Speaker

  8. A New Direction

  9. Conquering the Masses

  10. Strategies

  11. On the Threshold of Power

  III. Establishing the Regime

  12. ‘The Seizure of Power’

  13. First Steps in Foreign Policy

  14. ‘Führer’ and ‘People’

  15. Breaking out of the International System

  16. Becoming Sole Dictator

  IV. Consolidation

  17. Domestic Flashpoints

  18. Initial Foreign Policy Successes

  19. The Road to the Nuremberg Laws

  20. A Foreign Policy Coup

  21. ‘Ready for War in Four Years’ Time’

  22. Conflict with the Churches and Cultural Policy

  23. Hitler’s Regime

  V. Smokescreen

  24. Resetting Foreign Policy

  25. From the Blomberg–Fritsch Crisis to the Anschluss

  26. The Sudeten Crisis

  27. After Munich

  28. Into War

  VI. TRiumph

  29. The Outbreak of War

  30. Resistance

  31. War in the West

  32. Diplomatic Soundings

  33. The Expansion of the War

  34. Operation Barbarossa

  35. The Radicalization of Jewish Policy

  36. The Winter Crisis of 1941/42

  37. The Pinnacle of Power

  38. Hitler’s Empire

  VII. Downfall

  39. The Turning Point of the War and Radicalization

  40. With His Back to the Wall

  41. Defeat Looms

  42. 20 July 1944

  43. Total War

  44. The End

  Conclusion

  Notes

  Bibliography

  Illustrations

  Index

  Abbreviations

  (A) Abendausgabe (evening edition)

  AA Auswärtiges Amt (Foreign Office)

  ADAP Akten zur deutschen auswärtigen Politik

  AHA Allgemeines Heeresamt

  (B) Berlin edition

  BAB Bundesarchiv, Abt. Berlin

  BAF Bundesarchiv, Abt. Freiburg

  BAK Bundesarchiv, Abt. Koblenz

  BDC Berlin Document Center

  BDM Bund Deutscher Mädel

  BHStA Bayrisches Hauptstaatsarchiv

  BK Bayerischer Kurier

  BMP Bayerische Mittelpartei

  BT Berliner Tageblatt

  BVG Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe

  BVP Bayerische Volkspartei

  ČSR Tschechoslowakische Republik (Československ. republika)

  DAF Deutsche Arbeitsfront

  DAP Deutsche Arbeiterpartei

  DAZ Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung

  DBFP Documents on British Foreign Policy

  DDP Deutsche Demokratische Partei

  DNB Deutsches Nachrichtenbüro

  DNVP Deutschnationale Volkspartei

  Domarus Hitler, Adolf, Reden und Proklamationen 1932–1945, ed. Max Domarus

  DSP Deutschsozialistische Partei

  DStP Deutsche Staatspartei

  DVFP Deutschvölkische Freiheitspartei

  FRUS Foreign Relations of the United States

  FZ Frankfurter Zeitung

  Gestapo Geheime Staatspolizei (Secret State Police)

  Goebbels TB The Diaries of Joseph Goebbels

  GPU Vereinigte staatliche politische Verwaltung (Gossudarstwennoje Polititscheskoje Uprawlenije)

  Gruppenkdo. Gruppenkommando

  GVG Grossdeutsche Volksgemeinschaft

  GWU Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht

  HJ Hitlerjugend (Hitler Youth)

  HL Heeresleitung

  HSSPF Höherer SS- und Polizeiführer

  IfZ Institut für Zeitgeschichte, Munich

  IMT International Military Tribunal

  Inf.Rgt. Infanterieregiment

  JK Hitler. Sämtliche Aufzeichnungen 1905–1924, ed. Eberhard Jäckel and Axel Kuhn

  KAM Kriegsarchiv München

  KdF Kraft durch Freude

  Kp. Kompanie

  KPD Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands

  KPdSU Komm
unistische Partei der Sowjetunion

  KTB Kriegstagebuch (war diary)

  KTB OKW Kriegstagebuch des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht (Wehrmachtführungsstab)

  KTB Seekriegsleitung Das Kriegstagebuch der Seekriegsleitung

  k.u.k. kaiserlich und königlich

  KZ Konzentrationslager

  LA Berlin Landesarchiv Berlin

  LHA Landeshauptarchiv Linz

  LT Linzer Tagespost

  (M) Midday edition; in the case of VB, Munich edition

  MB Münchener Beobachter

  MGM Militärgeschichtliche Mitteilungen

  MK Hitler, Adolf, Mein Kampf

  MNN Münchner Neueste Nachrichten

  Ms. Manuskript

  MSPD Mehrheitssozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands

  (N) Norddeutsche Ausgabe (North-German edition)

  NARA US National Archives and Records Administration, Washington

  NL Nachlass (private papers)

  NS nationalsozialistisch/Nationalsozialismus

  NSBO Nationalsozialistische Betriebszellenorganisation

  NSDAP Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei

  NSDStB Nationalsozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund

  NSFB Nationalsozialistische Freiheitsbewegung

  NSKK Nationalsozialistisches Kraftfahrkorps

  NSV Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt

  NZZ Neue Zürcher Zeitung

  OA Oberabschnitt

  OA Moskau Osobyi Archive, Moskow

  OB Oberbefehlshaber (commander-in-chief )

  OBdH Oberbefehlshaber des Heeres (c-in-c of the army)

  OKM Oberkommando der Marine (navy high command)

  OKW Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (armed forces high command)

  ÖStA Österreichisches Staatsarchiv

  PA NS-Presseanweisungen der Vorkriegszeit

  PAA Politisches Archiv des Auswärtigen Amtes, Berlin

  PolDir. Polizeidirektion

  PrGS Preussische Gesetzsammlung

  (R) Reichsausgabe

  RAD Reichsarbeitsdienst

  RDI Reichsverband der Deutschen Industrie

  RFM Reichsfinanzministerium

  RFSS Reichsführer-SS

  RGBl. Reichsgesetzblatt

  RIB Reserve-Infanterie-Brigade

  RIR Reserve-Infanterie-Regiment

  RM Reichsmark

  RMBliV Reichsministerialblatt für die innere Verwaltung

  RMI Reichsministerium des Innern

  RPL Reichspropagandaleitung

  RSA Hitler, Adolf, Reden, Schriften, Anordnungen

  RSHA Reichssicherheitshauptamt

  RVE Reichsvereinigung Eisen

  SA Sturmabteilung

  SAM Staatsarchiv München

  SD Sicherheitsdienst

  Sopade Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands im Exil

  Sopade Deutschland-Berichte der Sozialdemokratischen Partei Deutschlands Sopade 1934–1940

  SPD Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands

  SprkAkte Spruchkammerakte

  SS Schutzstaffel

  StA Riga Staatsarchiv, Riga

  StAnw. Staatsanwaltschaft

  StJb Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich

  TB Tagebuch (diary)

  TP Tagesparole

  TWC Trials of War Criminals before the Nuernberg Military Tribunals

  UF Ursachen und Folgen. Vom deutschen Zusammenbruch 1918 und 1945 bis zur staatlichen Neuordnung Deutschlands in der Gegenwart, ed. Herbert Michaelis and Ernst Schraepler

  USPD Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands

  UWW Unser Wille und Weg

  VB Völkischer Beobachter

  VEJ Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistische Deutschland 1933–1945

  VfZ Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte

  VK Völkischer Kurier

  VZ Vossische Zeitung

  YV Yad Vashem

  ZStL Zentrale Stelle Lugwigsburg

  1. M. Erstes Morgenblatt (first morning edition)

  2. M. Zweites Morgenblatt (second morning edition)

  Introduction

  Arguably no individual in modern history has managed to accumulate such immense power in such a relatively short space of time as Adolf Hitler; no-one else has abused power so extravagantly and finally clung on to it so tenaciously, to the point where his regime collapsed totally, with the loss of millions of lives. Hitler is thus an extreme example of how personal power can be acquired and monstrously abused – a phenomenon that bursts the confines of a conventional historical biography. In Hitler’s case even the interpretative model frequently employed by historians of exploring the interaction of structural factors and individual personality is inadequate. For we are dealing with a figure who did not exercise power within the framework of established constitutional politics or the generally accepted rules of a political system, but instead dismantled this framework and created new structures of power to suit himself. These structures were indissolubly linked to him personally, and indeed in general his dictatorship represented an extraordinary example of personalized power. The regime’s ‘structures’ are inconceivable without Hitler and Hitler is nothing without his offices.

  Yet at the same time this dictatorship cannot be reduced to Hitler as an individual or explained in anything like adequate terms by his biography. We must instead adopt a much broader view that takes in the history of the period as a whole: for example, the phenomenon of National Socialism, its causes and roots in German history, and the relationship between Hitler and ‘the Germans’, to name but a few factors. While any interpretation that dwells too much on Hitler himself risks falling into ‘Hitlerism’ and begins to read like an apologia, any comprehensive examination of the historical circumstances and conditions runs the opposite danger of losing sight of Hitler as an agent and presenting him as a mere puppet of external forces, a blank screen on which contemporary movements are projected. That would result in Hitler, of all people, being marginalized as a figure of historical importance and his personal responsibility within this historical process being obscured.

  The main challenge of a Hitler biography is thus to explain how such an extreme concentration of power in the hands of a single individual could arise from the interplay of external circumstances and the actions of that individual. On the one hand, it must present the forces that acted upon Hitler and, on the other, those that were set in motion by him.

  Contrary to a widely-held view, our present-day knowledge of National Socialism is by no means complete or even close to being complete. Historical research into National Socialism has developed many specialized branches and is constantly bringing new knowledge to light on a very wide range of aspects of the movement and the regime. One thing becomes clear from looking at a cross-section of these studies, namely that Hitler was actively involved in the most disparate areas of politics to a much greater extent than has hitherto been generally assumed. He himself created the conditions in which this could happen, by bringing about the step-by-step fragmentation of the traditional state apparatus of power into its component parts, ensuring that no new and transparent power structures developed, and instead giving far-reaching tasks to individuals who were personally answerable to him. This consistently personalized leadership style gave him the opportunity to intervene largely at will in the most diverse areas, and, as the scholarship of the last two decades in particular has demonstrated, he made liberal use of these opportunities. However, as the structures of power in Hitler’s regime were diffuse, there is no consolidated and comprehensive collection of sources relating to Hitler’s exercise of that power; it is the mosaic produced by the numerous studies of specific areas that reveals Hitler’s decision-making as wide-ranging and frequently informal. It is becoming increasingly evident that in a whole series of key political areas he really did hold the reins and involve himself (though with varying degrees of intensity at different times and in different spheres) in matters of detail, o
n top of dealing with the business of day-to-day politics. This will become clear not only in the realm of foreign policy, but also in particular with regard to the persecution of the Jews and the Nazi state’s eugenic policies, constitutional issues, rearmament (along with efforts to balance its economic impact), Church and cultural policy, propaganda, and a complex set of issues connected with managing the Party. During the war new areas were added: the military command of the Wehrmacht and its supplies and equipment, as well as matters of importance to the home front such as food supplies and female labour.

  In the course of time Hitler created for himself immense scope for his own activity and indeed in some areas of politics he was virtually autonomous. He was capable of deciding on war or peace, he established the foundations of the European continent’s ‘new order’ as he saw fit, and he made arbitrary decisions about genocide and other programmes of mass murder on the basis of ‘racial’ factors. Yet although this freedom of action Hitler enjoyed was probably unique in modern European history, it nevertheless arose from historical preconditions and was certainly not limitless.

  The most important of these preconditions was the emergence of an extreme right-wing mass movement as a reaction to defeat in war, revolution, and the Versailles Treaty, and to the world economic crisis and the failure of democracy to tackle this crisis. Additional potent factors present in German society and in particular among the elites – nationalism, authoritarianism, racism, militarism, revisionist attitudes in foreign policy, and imperialism – could be exploited by this mass movement, once it had come to power. And not least among the historical factors that smoothed the way for Hitler was the fact that countervailing forces, in the first instance inside Germany itself and then later within the European context, were incapable of putting up adequate resistance, did not exist at all, or failed. Thus Hitler really was in a position, first in Germany in 1933/34 and then in Europe during 1938–41, to create tabula rasa and to realize many of his plans in the power vacuum that had come about through the destruction of established orders.

  Hitler acted not simply as a ‘catalyser’ or ‘medium’ for historical processes that existed independently of him.1 Rather, he shaped these in a very distinct and highly individual manner by channelling, reinforcing, and concentrating existing forces and energies, while mobilizing dormant but potential ones, and by exploiting ruthlessly the weakness or passivity of his opponents and deliberately destroying them. Although in the process he took account of tactical considerations, his political priorities were unambiguous: from the beginning of his career the notion of an empire [‘Reich’] ordered on racial lines was central. For two and a half decades he never wavered from this. With regard to the external borders and the structure of this empire, however, and to the time-scale and means to achieve this aim he proved extraordinarily flexible. Hitler’s political strategy can no more be explained by positing a ‘programme’ or a ‘phased plan’ (which was a central element in the interpretation advanced by the ‘intentionalist’ school of historians2) than it can by the notion of some kind of unbridled opportunism.3 The challenge is rather to account for this special blend in Hitler of obsession with a utopian goal combined at times with unscrupulous pragmatism; the latter propensity could amount almost to a reversal of ends and means. The figure who emerges is not so much a political strategist or ideologue as above all a ruthless, hands-on politician. I argue in this biography that critical turning points in Hitler’s policies cannot be seen as the result of external constraints and structural determinants but were the product of decisions he forced through in the face of resistance and significant retarding factors.

 

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