Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin (92 page)

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Authors: Timothy Snyder

Tags: #History, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #European History, #Europe; Eastern - History - 1918-1945, #Political, #Holocaust; Jewish (1939-1945), #World War; 1939-1945 - Atrocities, #Europe, #Eastern, #Soviet Union - History - 1917-1936, #Germany, #Soviet Union, #Genocide - Europe; Eastern - History - 20th century, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Holocaust, #Massacres, #Genocide, #Military, #Europe; Eastern, #World War II, #Hitler; Adolf, #Presidents & Heads of State, #Massacres - Europe; Eastern - History - 20th century, #World War; 1939-1945, #20th Century, #Germany - History - 1933-1945, #Stalin; Joseph

BOOK: Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
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30
Streit,
Keine Kameraden
, 143, 153. Compare Kay,
Exploitation
, 2.

31
See Keegan,
Face of Battle
, 73; Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 51; Förster, “German Army,” 22; and
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 288.

32
Arnold, “Eroberung,” 27-33.

33
On Kiev, see Berkhoff,
Harvest
, 170-186, maximum death total (56,400) at 184; also Arnold, “Eroberung,” 34. On Kharkiv, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 192;
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, at 328, gives a minimum of 11,918.

34
Kay,
Exploitation
, 181, 186.

35
Wagner was in 1944 one of the plotters against Hitler. See
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, at 193 and 311, for quotations. One million is the estimate usually given in the Western literature; see, for example, Kirschenbaum,
Siege
; and Salisbury,
900 Days
. The Soviet estimate is 632,000; see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 308. On food and fuel, see Simmons,
Leningrad
, 23.

36
Gerlach,
Krieg
, 36; Salisbury,
900 Days
, 508-509; Simmons,
Leningrad
, xxi; Kirschenbaum,
Siege
, 1.

37
Głębocki, “Pierwszy,” 179-189.

38
Simmons,
Leningrad
, 51.

39
The diary is on display at the State Museum of the History of St. Petersburg in the exhibition “Leningrad in the Years of the Great Patriotic War.”

40
On the numbers cited, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 209. On the projected number of prisoners, see Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 783.

41
Bartov,
Hitler’s Army
, 87; Polian, “Violence,” 123; Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 800-801. See also Merridale,
Ivan’s War
, 28; and Braithwaite,
Moscow
, 165.

42
Berkhoff,
Harvest
, 94-96; Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 845-857. For a general perspective on the treatment of prisoners of war, see the superb Keegan,
Face of Battle
, 49-51.

43
Polian, “Violence,” 121. Datner estimates 200,000-250,000; see
Zbrodnie
, 379.

44
Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 805; Gerlach,
Krieg
, 24.

45
On “comrades,” see Dugas,
Vycherknutye
, 30.

46
On the chain of authority, see Streim,
Behandlung
, 7. Quotation: Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 219; also Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 801. See also Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 808. On cannibalism, see Shumejko, “Atanasyan,” 174; and Hartmann, “Massenvernichtung,” 124.

47
On ration cuts, see Megargee,
Annihilation
, 119. For “pure hell,” see
Ich werde es nie vergessen
, 178. On Minsk, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 227-229; Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 768, 856; Gerlach,
Krieg
, 51; Polian, “Violence,” 121; Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 807; and Beluga,
Prestupleniya
, 199. On Bobruisk, see Pohl, Herrschaft, 224. On Homel, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 224; and Dugas,
Sovetskie Voennoplennye
, 125. On Mahileu, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 224-225. On Molodechno, see Gerlach,
Krieg
, 34; and Magargee,
Annihilation
, 90; also Bartov,
Hitler’s Army
, 79.

48
On Kirovohrad, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 239-244. On Khorol, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 226. On Stalino, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 227; and Datner,
Zbrodnie
, 404.

49
Motyka, “Tragedia jeńców,” 2-6; Kopówka,
Stalag 366
, 47. On the 45,690 people who died in the General Government camps, see Dugas,
Sovetskie Voennoplennye
, 131. Compare Młynarczyk,
Judenmord
, 245 (250,000-570,000).

50
On the lack of warm clothing, see Bartov,
Eastern Front
, 112. On the three Soviet soldiers, see Dugas,
Sovetskie Voennoplennye
, 125.

51
Ich werde es nie vergessen
, 113.

52
On the civilians who tried to bring food to camps, see Berkhoff,
Harvest
, 95, 101; and Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 808. On Kremenchuk, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 226.

53
Compare
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 188.

54
On the intention to kill Soviet elites, see Kay,
Exploitation
, 104. On Hitler in March 1941, Streim,
Behandlung
, 36. For the text of the guidelines, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 53-55.

55
On the 2,252 shootings, see Römer,
Kommissarbefehl
, 581.

56
On 2 July 1941, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 63; Kay,
Exploitation
, 105; and Kershaw,
Fateful Choices
, 453. On the instructions given to the Einsatzgruppen and their fulfillment, see Datner,
Zbrodnie
, 153; Streim,
Behandlung
, 69, 99; and Berkhoff,
Harvest
, 94. On October 1941, see Streit, “German Army,” 7.

57
Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 204 (and 153 and 235 for the estimates of fifty and one hundred thousand). Overmans estimates one hundred thousand shootings in “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 815. Arad estimates eighty thousand total Jewish POW deaths; see
Soviet Union
, 281. Quotation (doctor): Datner,
Zbrodnie
, 234. On medicine as a nazified profession, see Hilberg,
Perpetrators
, 66.

58
Streim,
Behandlung
, 102-106.

59
For an estimate at the low end, see Streim,
Behandlung
, 244: minimum 2.4 million. For estimates of 3-3.3 million, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 210; Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 811, 825; Dugas,
Sovetskie Voennoplennye
, 185; and Hartmann, “Massenvernichtung,” 97. For an estimate at the high end, see Sokolov, “How to Calculate,” 452: 3.9 million. On morale, see
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 204.

60
On 7 November 1941, see Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 817. Compare Gerlach and Werth, “State Violence,” 164. See also Streim,
Behandlung
, 99-102, 234. On the four hundred thousand total deaths among those released, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 215. Quotation (Johannes Gutschmidt): Hartmann, “Massenvernichtung,” 158; a similar estimation by Rosenberg is in Klee, “Gott mit uns,” 142.

61
Belgium: Kay,
Exploitation
, 121.

62
On Goebbels, see Evans,
Third Reich at War
, 248. Compare Kay,
Exploitation
, 109; Longerich,
Unwritten Order
, 55, 60; Browning,
Origins
; Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 747; Gerlach,
Krieg
, 178; Arad,
Reinhard
, 14; and Aly,
Architects
, 160.

63
On the asphyxiation experiments, see Overmans, “Kriegsgefangenpolitik,” 814; Longerich,
Unwritten Order
, 82; Longerich,
Himmler
, 567; Datner,
Zbrodnie
, 208, 428;
Verbrechen
, 281; Mazower,
Hitler’s Empire
, 383; Browning,
Origins
, 357; and Klee, “Gott mit uns,” 136.

64
On the number of prisoners recruited, see Pohl,
Herrschaft
, 181. See also Black, “Handlanger,” 313-317; and Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 207-208.

CHAPTER 6: FINAL SOLUTION

1
Browning and Gerlach have debated whether Hitler’s decision came in summer/autumn or in December 1941. In this chapter I am arguing that shooting Jews was the fifth version of the Final Solution, and the first one to show promise. The idea that the Jews could be removed from Europe by killing them must have been in the minds of Himmler and Hitler no later than August. It is quite possible that the two of them discussed this explicitly, although they need not have done so. Reinhard Koselleck (
Futures Past
, 222) cites Hitler, who is himself citing (unknowingly, I assume) Dostoevsky in
Crime and Punishment
: one need not admit to having plans, even to oneself, in order to have them. For my purposes, December 1941 is the more important date, since that was the time when other associates of Hitler grasped that the Final Solution meant the total mass murder of Jews rather than the murder of some and the deportation of others.

2
See however the important revisions of Speer’s role in Tooze,
Wages of Destruction.
The problem was posed in its classical form by Milward,
German Economy
, 6-7 and passim. Quotation: Longerich,
Himmler
, 561. The massive debate over “institutionalism” and “functionalism” cannot be presented here. This discussion began before the centrality of the eastern front to the Holocaust was understood. Like several other scholars, I am arguing that the thinkability and the possibility of a Final Solution by mass murder emerged from a combination of signals from above (for example, Hitler to Himmler, Himmler to Bach) and from below (for example, Einsatzgruppe A to Himmler, Himmler to Hitler) or indeed in both directions (the relationship between Jeckeln and Himmler). The place where murder emerged as the method of the Final Solution was the eastern front, where the main technique was shooting.

3
Quotation: Mazower,
Hitler’s Empire
, 368. On Wannsee, see Gerlach, “Wannsee”; and Longerich,
Unwritten Order
, 95. See also, generally, Roseman,
Villa.
The connection between Hitler and Rosenberg’s civilian administration is made in Lower, “Nazi Civilian Rulers,” 222-223.

4
Einsatzgruppe A, B, C, D respectively: 990 men, 655 men, 700 men, 600 men. See MacLean,
Field Men
, 13. On “numbers . . . too small,” see Browning, “Nazi Decision,” 473. On the importance of the Order Police, see Pohl, “Schauplatz,” 152. The death count is from Brandon, “First Wave.” At least 457,436 Jews were killed by the Einsatzgruppen by the end of 1941.

5
This is not explicitly argued in these terms in Longerich,
Himmler
, but I believe that the interpretation squares with the arguments presented there. Compare Gerlach,
Kalkulierte Morde
, 115; and Lück, “Partisanbekämpfung,” 229.

6
Quotation: Wasser, “Raumplannung,” 51. See also Mazower,
Hitler’s Empire
, 378 and passim; and Steinberg, “Civil Administration,” 647.

7
The Romanian lands taken by Stalin were invaded by the Romanian army, not the German. They were followed by Einsatzgruppe D; see Angrick,
Besatzungspolitik.

8
See Snyder,
Reconstruction.

9
The deportation figures are in Angrick,
Riga
, 46. If conscription is included, the total rises to 34,000.

10
MacQueen, “White Terror,” 97; Angrick,
Riga
, 59. Among the two hundred thousand I include Jews in Vilnius and surrounding areas annexed to Lithuania.

11
Arad,
Soviet Union
, 144, 147; MacQueen, “White Terror,” 99-100; Angrick,
Riga
, 60.

12
Tomkiewicz,
Ponary
, 191-197.

13
Ibid., 203.

14
Angrick,
Riga
, 66-76. See also Arad,
Soviet Union
, 148.

15
Weiss-Wendt,
Estonians
, 39, 40, 45, 90, 94-105.

16
The 9,817 count in
Verbrechen
is at 93. See also Wnuk,
Za pierwszego Sowieta
, 371 (11,000-12,000); and Hryciuk, “Victims,” 183 (9,400).

17
On interwar anti-Jewish politics, see, generally, Polonsky,
Politics
; and Mendelsohn,
Jews.

18
On Białystok, see Matthäus, “Controlled Escalation,” 223; and
Verbrechen der Wehrmacht
, 593. Spektor (in “Żýdzi wołyńscy,” 575) counts thirty-eight pogroms in Volhynia; and the authors and editors of
Wokół Jedwabnego
, about thirty in the Białystok region.

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