Soldaten: On Fighting, Killing, and Dying (38 page)

Read Soldaten: On Fighting, Killing, and Dying Online

Authors: Sonke Neitzel,Harald Welzer

Higher-ranking officers, for example, Major General
Gerhard Bassenge, were particularly concerned about being held responsible for the things that had been carried out with or without Hitler’s knowledge:

B
ASSENGE
: We have been completely deceived by our F
ÜHRER
. We were … … with completely wrong assumptions—the path was forced on us. The oath was sworn in 1933, when H
INDENBURG
was still there, and when conditions were quite different. After one year things were quite different—by then we had taken the oath!
518

Soldiers’ disappointment that the future was almost certainly not going to be as bright as had been promised revealed the emotional
significance of the National Socialist project and their faith in the Führer. Colonel
Reimann, for instance, was clearly frustrated:

R
EIMANN
: It had all gone so well. It was all so marvellous and so perfect, and then with that damned R
USSIA
it all went awry. There are two people who didn’t know that in R
USSIA
it is cold in winter; one was N
APOLEON
B
ONAPARTE
, and the other was the F
ÜHRER
, the dilettante general, but everyone else knew.
519

T
HE
F
ÜHRER
AS
F
AILURE

“What is the difference between C
HRIST
and H
ITLER
? With C
HRIST
one died for all.” (Laughter.)

Lieutenant General
Friedrich von Broich, July 1943
520

After the
6th Army capitulated in Stalingrad in February 1943, doubts began to multiply as to whether final victory was still possible. Even if the majority of soldiers did not point the finger of blame at Hitler, the number of statements critical of him grew. “I must admit that A
DOLF
isn’t all he should be, for instance, his treatment of the Jews isn’t right,” a
Private First Class Harnisch complained.
521
Colonel
Helmuth Rohrbach even believed: “Apparently the F
ÜHRER
doesn’t listen to our generals, it’s lamentable. One man can’t be a politician, a statesman and a general at the same time. That’s madness.”
522

In 1944,
Sergeant Doetsch and First Sergeant Bräutigam arrived at a remarkable conclusion considering their socialization as young fighter pilots:

D
OETSCH
: A few days before these new raids on L
ONDON
began, some bigwig came to see us and made a speech. I can’t remember who he was, but he behaved like a hysterical woman.

B
RÄUTIGAM
: Was it perhaps the leader of operations in E
NGLAND
?

D
OETSCH
: That’s possible. He shouted: “Set fire to their houses, so that I can go to the F
ÜHRER
and say the GAF has been over E
NGLAND
again.” He actually implored us: “You mustn’t fail, put your last ounce into it!” He was quite hysterical.

B
RÄUTIGAM
: Yes, taking after the F
ÜHRER
.

D
OETSCH
: When you think what a dreadful mess H
ITLER
has made of things, as a good German you can’t help coming to the conclusion that he really ought to be shot.

B
RÄUTIGAM
: You are right there, but one must not say so.

D
OETSCH
: I certainly won’t say so to the people here.
523

Of course, most of the critical remarks about Hitler contained remnants of personal sympathy and traces of
faith. For instance, a sharpshooter named
Caesar pondered what he would do if he were to encounter the leaders of his country:

C
AESAR
: I’ve been wondering what I would do if I were to meet H
ITLER
and his friends in flight. I decide that I would say to them: “I can’t do anything for you, but I won’t tell anyone that I’ve seen you here. There’s a path through the wood there, so go and hide in the bushes.” The only exception I might possibly make would be
H
IMMLER
.
524

Two recent master’s theses that have analyzed the statements of POWs of all ranks interned at
Fort Hunt in the United States have come to another conclusion.
525
Faith in the Führer tended to recede drastically among the lower ranks after Normandy while generally being maintained further up the
hierarchy. This is another indication that the personal
identification and
emotional investment stabilized people’s trust in Hitler. But these indices need to be pursued. The reverse and difficult-to-grasp side of faith in the Führer is what does
not
occur in the POWs’ conversations: political reflection about what went wrong. In fact, the
depoliticization of German soldiers would seem to be one of National Socialism’s most lasting achievements.

Soldiers tended to see what was happening as not their affair, but the business of their omnipotent Führer and his circle of helpers, whom the soldiers saw alternately as philistine, corrupt, incompetent, or criminal. They did not, in the main, have a political opinion on the National Socialist state, the dictatorship, or the persecution of Jews. The criticism they put forth was aimed at the personal traits of Nazi bigwigs and occasionally at individual policies. But it was very rare for the POWs to engage in political debates about decisions or perspectives. Clear differences in position or opinion seldom emerge. This is one of the central results of totalitarian rule. It creates a mental
lack of alternatives and makes people fully
dependent on the charismatic leader, to whom they stay true even when their mutual downfall is inevitable. As the protocols reveal especially with respect to higher-ranking officers, politics is replaced by faith. And since
faith in the Führer was simultaneously a faith of Germans in themselves, every threat to positive images of Hitler was also a threat to the project in which people had invested so much energy and emotion. The fear was that this project would turn out to be utterly worthless.
526

Ideology

T
HÖNE
: I expect you have heard about the treatment of the
Jews in R
USSIA
. In
P
OLAND
the Jews got off comparatively lightly. There are still Jews in P
OLAND
living there. But in the occupied parts of R
USSIA
there aren’t any left.

V. B
ASSUS
: Were the ones in R
USSIA
considered more dangerous?

T
HÖNE
: More hatred—they were not dangerous. I am not letting any cat out of the bag by telling you this. I think I can safely say that all Jews in R
USSIA
, including women and children, were shot without exception.

V. B
ASSUS
: Wasn’t there some compelling motive for it?

T
HÖNE
: Hatred was the compelling motive.

V. B
ASSUS
: Hatred by the Jews—or?

T
HÖNE
: By us. It isn’t a reason, but it is actual fact.

First Sergeant von Bassus and Lieutenant Thöne, February 2, 1944
527

The laconic nature of the above exchange is what makes it so remarkable. While Bassus looks for reasons for the destruction of European Jews, Lieutenant Thöne repeatedly points out that the phenomenon needs no justification. Hatred is enough of a spark, without any further motivation such as the alleged danger represented by Jews or their purported hatred for
Germans. Even more astonishing is Thöne’s assertion that German hatred is not a reason, but a sheer fact. It’s hard to imagine a clearer formulation of what
autotelic violence is, and it points up one finding about the deep psychological effect of National Socialist ideology on the soldiers subjected to surveillance. Ideology was not prominent among the things that occupied soldiers’ minds. Many soldiers may have been perfectly willing to use violence to solve the alleged “
Jewish question,” but an astonishing number of them were explicitly against it. But for all of them, the existence of the question was a given, regardless of whether they as individuals thought the Nazis’ anti-Jewish policies were good or bad, right or wrong.

T
HE
S
PECTRUM OF
O
PINION

In April 1943, after reading the nineteenth-century German poet
Heinrich Heine,
First
Lieutenant Fried remarked: “They say that the Jews weren’t able to master the
German language in literature and so on. But the ‘
Journey through the Harz’ is marvellous.”
528

A few months earlier a low-level officer named
Wehner* declared: “When I meet a Jew I could shoot him out of hand. The number
of Jews we killed in
P
OLAND
! We did them in mercilessly.”
529

Both statements were made around roughly the same time by two members of the same branch of the military, the Luftwaffe. So is it fair to say that Fried represented humanistic Germany whereas Wehner was an
anti-Semitic
ideological warrior? Our material provides no evidence that enjoying Heine’s “Journey Through the Harz” was any indication of whether or not someone was capable of murdering Jews. Conversely, of course, we can conclude that Wehner was fanatic enough to refuse to read books by Jewish authors (his other statements confirm this). The juxtaposition of these two excerpts indicated the spectrum of opinion expressed in the protocols about
Jews and
racism in general. On the one hand, the transcripts contain praise for Heine and Jewish doctors, chemists, and physicists as well as
emotional rejections of the
Holocaust and the persecution of Jews in general.
530
On the other, the protocols are also full of theories about a global Jewish conspiracy, including “Jewified” England and America, as well as tales of glee after killing Jews.
531
In short the transcripts contain just about everything under the sun. Moreover, contradictory opinions were not only expressed by two or more POWs in dialogue. As we saw in the section on the Holocaust, single individuals often used seeming mutually exclusive arguments and expressed diametrically opposed perspectives. “The Nazis are worse swine than the Jews,”
532
remarked one POW, while another opined, “The
Japanese are the Jews of the east.”
533

Some statements indicate how far the anti-Semitic imagination was given free rein:

E
RFURTH
: I always disliked seeing the
Jewish women from G
ERMANY
who had to clean the streets in R
IGA
. They still kept on speaking German. It was revolting! That should be forbidden,
and they should not be allowed to speak anything but Yiddish.
534

Other utterances were nothing short of absurd: “I am the ping-pong champion of Western
Germany. But I am out of practice. I gave up the game after a typical Jew-boy—sixteen years old—had beaten me. Then I said to myself: ‘That is certainly not real sport!’ ”
535
Conversations about racial issues or “the Jews” have the same basic structure as other exchanges. Remarks are interjected, and stories told, before the POWs change the subject. Such conversations aimed primarily at establishing consensus and did not admit of one side insisting on a point, doggedly asking questions, or arguing. In the main, a unity of perspective and
political evaluation was quickly established, and in any case soldiers did not see topics dealing with Jews as particularly important. If the topics were broached, soldiers usually had an opinion, but no one seems to have been particularly eager to bring them up.

That impression is confirmed by a detailed analysis carried out by
Alexander Hoerkens, who examined the role of ideology in two thousand pages of transcripts from the protocols. He determined that less than one fifth of the excerpts concerned political, racial, or ideological topics.
536
The everyday routine of the war was far more important to POWs. With a few notable exceptions, the “
Jewish” topic was just another subject of conversation, and it was treated as such by both hard-core anti-Semites and enthusiastic exterminators and those who were generally repulsed by Nazi crimes. When the talk did turn to the mass executions, the conversation was often about fears of reprisals: “Don’t you think that the
shooting of all those Jews, of women and children, will be avenged? My brother, who is an infantryman, has told me a lot about how they were pushed into the
graves before they were really dead.”
537

Just as there were some committed National Socialists who thought the persecution
of Jews was a historical mistake, there were also clear anti-Nazis who thought anti-Semitism was the party’s only reasonable policy. Two soldiers, for instance, got quite hot under the collar when discussing “the Nazis”:

H
ÖLSCHER
: It is obvious that from the very first, from 1933, they were preparing for war. And even if they said in their speeches
a score of times: “We don’t want any war, ask the mothers, and ask the wounded”—those were H
ITLER
’s words—what I
say to myself, what I believe, is that that was a sheer lie. He lied! He, who so often said he didn’t want war!

V. B
ASTIAN
: What I always said was, then why does he talk so much about it; it’s perfectly obvious that we Germans don’t want war at all, that we aren’t at all in a position to conduct a war, and that we’re fed up with it.

H
ÖLSCHER
: He meant exactly the opposite, he wanted war. I can’t help laughing when I hear them abusing each other about who’s responsible for the war … H
ITLER
was already well-known for his
brutalities through his S.A. and S.S. men, through their brawls at public meetings. They accomplished everything by beating people up. H
ITLER
says himself: “National Socialism means fighting.”

V. B
ASTIAN
: Yes, fighting, that’s what it means.

H
ÖLSCHER
: That means they never stop fighting, it’s a perpetual fight, an ever-lasting brawl. The individual counts for nothing, the Fatherland is everything. They said to themselves: “We’ll just show the fools of 1919 what can be made of G
ERMANY
.” Say what you like, the man’s crazy. What he does can only be done by a man who has terrific nerve and exceptional stamina and who has absolutely no regard for losses …

V. B
ASTIAN
: At any rate, I have still no idea of where the Nazis are going to land us in the end. That swine with his brown shirt!
538

Other books

April (Calendar Girl #4) by Audrey Carlan
A Close Connection by Patricia Fawcett
Here Lies Bridget by Paige Harbison