Read Goebbels: A Biography Online
Authors: Peter Longerich
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Europe, #Germany, #Historical, #Holocaust, #Nonfiction, #Retail
At the beginning of March 1944 for the first time the Americans launched a series of daylight air raids on Berlin, primarily aimed at industrial targets but causing limited damage.
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Goebbels’s propaganda tactic was to not refer to the “extremely stupid and contemptible boasts” of the Americans about the alleged success of the raids “because it’s in our interest that the Americans should be satisfied with their raids on Berlin.”
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The last raid on Berlin for the time being occurred on March 24. During the following months the Allied air forces concentrated on preparing for the landing in France.
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In view of the air raids the German authorities began to concentrate more of their efforts on retaliation. In January the Luftwaffe had launched a counteroffensive against London (described by the British as the “Baby Blitz”), of which Goebbels had great expectations.
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But the raids remained largely ineffective; only a few bombers actually managed to reach the British capital. In January there were two, in March six raids with a decreasing number of aircraft.
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Despite this comparatively limited offensive potential, Goebbels claimed that these air raids had had “an enormous impact”; he believed they had caused “substantial damage throughout the London area” and gave credence to absurdly exaggerated reports stating that the raids had caused more casualties than all the Allied raids on Berlin
put together.
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On the other hand, his notes also contain doubts about the devastating effect of the bombing—for example, when he writes that the raids might have been launched more for “psychological than material reasons.”
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But even as far as this aspect was concerned, he tended to gross exaggeration. He believed that the “hysterical reactions” of the London press showed “how low morale in England has sunk.”
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The last of these raids occurred on April 18. After that the ever smaller fleet concentrated on other targets until the raids were broken off at the end of May.
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Now the regime’s hopes were focused on the new weapons of retaliation, which were expected to produce a powerfully demoralizing effect that would decide the outcome of the war. The deployment of these weapons, however, kept being postponed.
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On April 17 Hitler argued that they should postpone the retaliation for a time even though the weapons were ready for action. If they succeeded in defeating an Allied invasion, that would be the moment to deploy the weapons in order to bring about a catastrophic blow to morale in Great Britain.
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State secretary Walter Schieber informed him at the beginning of May that, although the flying bomb was ready, the A4 (V-2) could not yet be deployed, as improvements were necessary that could take between two and four months. A third weapon, the Millipede, could be ready for deployment in June or July. (This referred to the project for a long-range gun, also called a high pressure pump, that in fact was never used against Great Britain.)
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The news about the A4 in particular came as a “great disappointment” to Goebbels, and he wondered whether Hitler, who had told him something different a few days before, was actually informed about the state of affairs. He evidently did not consider whether Hitler might have given him rather too optimistic a picture.
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In the meantime, in spring 1944 the Allies were continuing their air raids on German territory. In April Goebbels had to deal with the raid on Cologne on April 20
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and the raid on Munich on April 24. He objected to the fact that Gauleiter Paul Giesler was making what he considered exorbitant demands for the provisioning of the Munich population: “Hardly have they experienced a major raid, and they behave as if they were bearing the whole burden of the air war.”
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Apart from bombing cities, however, during the spring the Allies developed a further strategy that very soon placed the German war
machine in serious difficulties. The raids by the Allied air forces in May concentrating on the German hydrogenation plants soon led, as is clear from the Goebbels diaries, to an alarming shortage of fuel. It was only the fact that from June 1944 onward the main task of the Allied air forces was to provide support for the landing in Normandy that prevented the German war machine from grinding to a halt.
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Understandably, this aspect of the Allied air war was not referred to by German propaganda.
The raids on the German civilian population were handled differently. On May 24 Goebbels noted in his dairy that up until then the air war had resulted in a total of 131,000 deaths in the Reich as a whole, a figure that was undoubtedly “worrying.” On the same day he wrote an article whose contents he had discussed in detail with Hitler and which appeared the following day in the
Völkischer Beobachter
under the title “A Word About the Air War.” According to Goebbels the enemy’s air war was aiming to “break the German civilian population’s morale.” In his article Goebbels expressed sympathy for the fact that the rage and hatred of the population that was directly affected was finding expression in acts of revenge on Allied pilots who had been shot down, and he made it clear that they could no longer claim the protection of the German security forces. “It does not seem to us possible and tolerable to deploy the German police and Wehrmacht against the German people when they are treating child murderers in the way they deserve.”
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After the article had appeared, he hoped that “very soon a big pilot hunt would begin in Germany.”
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By launching—fictitious—reports of actual instances of vigilantism committed against pilots, he hoped to make an impact in the enemy countries.
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He returned to the topic in a speech made in Nuremberg on June 3 announcing that nobody would be “put in prison […] for speaking German” with a pilot who had been shot down.
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In fact there were probably around 350 lynchings of Allied pilots, which were usually carried out by local Party functionaries, SS members, soldiers, and police, almost all of them after the publication of this article.
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The increasing number of Allied air raids in the west suggested that the enemy was trying to cut off links to the Atlantic Wall,
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a clear indication of the Allied landing that was to come. From April onward Goebbels was expecting an invasion “in the very near future.”
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Hitler told him that “the invasion will fail, indeed even that
he can repel it with a vengeance.” Hitler was convinced that with its failure, the crisis in Britain would “accelerate” and that this would then lead to an increase in the communist movement, as had happened in Germany in November 1918.
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But if he succeeded in defeating the invasion then “we would have an entirely new war situation.”
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The reports on the public mood prepared by the Party’s Reich propaganda offices were in line with this assessment. They interpreted the fact that large sections of the population were expecting the invasion to decide the outcome of the war “for good or ill” as an anticipation of victory.
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On several occasions in May Goebbels read into these reports that people were “longing for”
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the invasion; indeed on June 3 he noted that the population was really “afraid” that the invasion might not happen. This fear was very soon shown to be completely unjustified.
Between an Apocalyptic Mood and Total War
Accomplices and rivals: In summer 1944, Goebbels, together with Himmler and Bormann, succeeded in establishing a “wartime internal dictatorship,” as he called it, and in reducing the inactive Göring to a largely ceremonial role. From left to right, the main protagonists: Göring, Goebbels, Himmler, and Bormann.
On June 5, 1944, Goebbels visited Hitler on the Obersalzberg. The meeting took place against the rather gloomy background created by a German announcement on the same day of the fall of Rome.
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But Hitler wanted to read something positive into the increasing number of failures, since every “military defeat provides us with a political opportunity” and, in particular, “further military successes by the Soviets would have a devastating effect on the western enemies.”
During the following months Goebbels was to cling to this peculiar logic like a drowning man clutching at straws.
During a walk to the Tea House, Hitler then outlined his further plans, which, according to Goebbels, demonstrated “an extraordinarily profound imagination.” “The Führer is now convinced that we can’t do a deal with England. He considers England a lost cause and is thus determined to strike it a lethal blow if there is the slightest opportunity of doing so.” Goebbels, however, was somewhat irritated by this announcement: “At the moment I’m rather puzzled by how he is actually going to do this, but the Führer has so often made plans that at the time appeared absurd but he was then able to carry out.” In fact, however, Goebbels must have been very disappointed with Hitler’s statement. The last time Goebbels raised with Hitler the question of a separate peace with Britain appears to have been in October 1943, and now he was forced to face the fact that since then he had made no progress whatsoever.
Goebbels used the conversation to strongly criticize Ribbentrop, whose diplomatic abilities Hitler “greatly overestimated.” Goebbels disputed the claim that Ribbentrop had a “very effective and constructive policy.” And he was “horrified” when Hitler suggested Rosenberg as a possible successor to Ribbentrop as foreign minister. “Rosenberg instead of Ribbentrop would be going from the frying pan into the fire.”
After this meeting—it was already late at night—Goebbels had been invited to visit the Bormanns. At four o’clock in the morning after an entertaining evening, he headed for Berchtesgaden. There he was informed that the Allied landing in France had begun in the early hours. This did not come as a total surprise to Goebbels because on June 2 he had learned from Göring’s intelligence service (Forschungsamt) that the French resistance had received instructions from Britain that indicated that it must “be going to happen in the next few days.”
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Hitler, who was receiving the Hungarian prime minister, Döme Sztójay, at Schloss Klessheim on that day, asked Goebbels to meet him there. Goebbels found the Führer “full of vim and vigor” since, Hitler reassured him, the invasion had occurred “exactly at the spot” where they had thought it would come, moreover “using precisely the means and methods” that they had prepared for. Both these statements were obviously white lies designed to perk up his propaganda
minister. Hitler made it clear he was convinced that the troops that had landed could be wiped out by the available Panzer reserves.
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The Allies were able to link their bridgeheads together relatively quickly and to land considerable numbers of troops and amounts of equipment, but during the following weeks they did not succeed in breaching the German lines, manned by units that had been hurriedly brought together, or to penetrate into the French interior. Thus until the middle of July Goebbels’s diaries contain varying reports of the Normandy battles, as there still seemed to be a chance that the Allied bridgehead could be crushed.
Although Goebbels had banned the use of the term
retaliation
at the end of 1943,
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during the first months of 1944 propaganda had continually hinted that a massive counterblow was impending, most recently Goebbels on June 4 in a speech at Nuremberg, where he said that they were hoping that the retaliation would have a “decisive impact on the war.”
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During the past months his word-of-mouth propaganda had further strengthened this expectation.
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But Goebbels had to take account of the fact that the longer the retaliation failed to happen, the less credible it became.
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When there was no response to the Allied invasion in the form of huge “retaliatory attacks,” there was a danger that the continual disappointment of people’s expectations would become a problem for domestic propaganda.
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It was not until the night of June 15–16 that London began to be targeted by flying bombs.
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Goebbels’s response to the news was almost euphoric: “The German people are ecstatic. Without our having to use the word ‘retaliation,’ news of the retaliation is spreading like wildfire among the public.”
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However, he warned against excessive optimism about the new weapon. At his ministerial conference on June 16 he urged restraint on his staff.
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On the same day, however, Dietrich ignored this approach by instructing the press to comment on the attacks in such a way that the reader was left to draw the conclusion that this was the start of the anticipated “retaliation.”
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The following day Goebbels noted that he considered that “this development represented a tremendous danger for us, for if these hopes and illusions are not fulfilled then in the end […] the government
will be held responsible.”
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By the word
government
he meant above all himself, for he was the public figure who had recently been most associated with the topic of retaliation. Goebbels then gave the “strictest instructions effectively to put the brakes on the retaliation propaganda and revert to normal reporting.”
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However, it is clear from the diary that it was not Dietrich but Hitler himself who had instructed that “the German press should make the most of the question of the retaliation weapon.” When Goebbels pointed out “the difficulties that might be anticipated,” the “Führer” agreed with him that “the deployment of the retaliation weapon should be given very thorough coverage in the press but without raising any hopes among the German people that, given the situation, cannot be fulfilled for the time being.”
That the British described it as purely a terror weapon persuaded Goebbels that it would be inadvisable to retain its original name of “hell hound.”
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Hitler finally decided—Goebbels claimed to have been the originator
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—to call it the V-1 (for
Vergeltung
, “retaliation”) in order to make it clear that it was the first in a series of weapons of retaliation, each of which would be more effective than its predecessor.
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In the meantime, the impact of the V-1 propaganda was in danger of getting out of control. On June 20 Goebbels noted: “Some people still believe that retaliation will play a decisive role in a very short time. Naturally there’s no question of that.”
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The “hangover”
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that he had been afraid of soon kicked in. He learned from the reports of the Party’s Reich propaganda offices that “after the sudden improvement brought about by the deployment of the retaliation weapon the mood has significantly deteriorated.”
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Meanwhile, Goebbels tried to collect all the information he could about the impact of the bombs, which, given the British ban on news reports, was extremely difficult. His diary entries were thus inevitably speculation.
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He was completely wrong about their accuracy, believing that 80 to 90 percent of the bombs reached their target; in fact just over 20 percent reached the Greater London area.
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He reached the provisional conclusion that “our retaliation weapon is not having the huge success that some of our hard-liners assumed it would, but it has had a fairly devastating effect on English morale and strength of purpose as well as on English military potential.”
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But despite such supposed “successes” of retaliation, he had no doubt
that the “overall picture of military developments” was extremely negative. As he wrote on June 21, if he “bore this in mind, both as regards the west, the south, as well as the Karelia front, and in the air, then it makes me feel rather dizzy. One only needs to consider where such a development, if it went on for a year, might lead in order to see how critical the situation currently is.” Then once again he tried to reassure himself. There was a whole series of positive factors in the current situation and, above all, one should not forget that “every military crisis is extraordinarily beneficial for political developments because they increasingly sharpen the differences in the enemy camp, which can only work to our advantage.” In other words, Goebbels had completely adopted Hitler’s logic.
In fact he saw another way of at least prolonging the war. On June 21 he outlined to Hitler on the Obersalzberg his view that so far “total war” had just been “a slogan.” It was vital to “reform the Wehrmacht from top to bottom.” He told Hitler that “by using drastic measures” he was “prepared and in a position to provide him with a million soldiers and this would be done by ruthlessly screening the Wehrmacht’s organization as well as the civilian sector.”
As he told his propaganda minister, however, Hitler believed that the moment for “a big appeal for total war in the real sense of the word” had not yet come. Goebbels took the opposite view but failed to get his way, concluding that Hitler wanted “to follow the evolutionary rather than the revolutionary path,” which he could “not quite see the point of.”
As far as further political developments were concerned, he was obliged to recognize that Hitler was “further away than ever from believing or hoping that he could come to an arrangement with England.” England, according to Hitler, “would be totally destroyed in this war.” He preferred to leave aside the question of whether, on the other hand, “at some time in the future we shall be able to reach a deal with the Soviet Union.” He thought that in view of the current military situation he was unable to answer this question. Once again Goebbels’s attempt to raise the issue of a separate peace had come to nothing. “This conversation,” he concluded, “was one of the most serious that I have ever had with the Führer. But it was completely harmonious. I believe that the Führer has inscribed in his memory many of the things I have said to him. Sooner or later he will undoubtedly return to them.”
On June 22, the day after this conversation, the major Soviet summer offensive against Army Group Center was launched and soon produced important advances leading to large German units being outmaneuvered, surrounded, and then destroyed.
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Goebbels, who in contrast to Hitler had not reckoned with a Russian offensive on the third anniversary of the German attack on the Soviet Union,
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noted on June 27 that “a real crisis has developed.”
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At the end of June the 3rd Panzer Army was largely wiped out near Witebsk, as was the 9th Army, which had been surrounded near Bobruisk. On July 3 the Red Army succeeded in taking Minsk.
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During the following days the 4th Army, which was surrounded east of Minsk, was also, bit by bit, almost completely destroyed.
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But the Soviet advance went farther: Vilnius was surrounded on July 8 and had to be surrendered on the 14th.
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Goebbels’s diary entries reflect his increasing helplessness, indeed despair at this situation. “It must after all be possible to hold the front at some point,” he noted on July 9. “If things go on like this the Soviets will very soon be on our East Prussian border. I keep asking myself in despair what the Führer is doing about it.” At the same time, in view of these events, he was preoccupied with a somewhat macabre idea: “I can only hope that if the Soviets really do reach our Reich frontier, then at last total war will be realized. Why it isn’t happening already is completely beyond my comprehension.” Sometimes he even began to doubt Hitler’s leadership skills. “At the moment the Führer’s playing a very risky game. It would be wonderful if he won it because then we would rescue the Baltic states and the Baltic Sea, but equally it would be terrible if he lost the game.”
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Goebbels was somewhat relieved when, in the middle of July, he learned that after almost four months Hitler had returned from the Obersalzberg to the Wolf’s Lair in East Prussia.
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In view of the bad news coming from every front as well as Hitler’s unwillingness either to declare total war or to seek a political conclusion to the war, Goebbels decided to concentrate propaganda entirely on the theme of retaliation. Although he had had to accept the fact that so far this had been rather counterproductive as far as the German population was concerned, he now hoped that a new V weapon campaign could bridge the gap until the arrival of the V-2 weapon. At the meeting on June 22 Hitler had told him that the V-2 would be deployed starting in August, and while it would “not achieve an immediately
decisive impact on the war,” it would bring “a decision closer.”
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Moreover, in writing “retaliation is our number one weapon,”
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he was making the point that at that moment there were no other alternatives either in terms of propaganda or in terms of politics.
Thus at the beginning of July Goebbels instructed the media “to emphasize even more than before the retaliatory character of our weapon.”
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He considered the speech that Churchill made to the British Parliament on July 6, 1944, concerning the effects of the V weapons as simply an attempt to play them down, and he was pleased to note that the evacuation of women and children from London was being restarted.
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On July 23 in an article in
Das Reich
dealing with “The Question of Retaliation,” Goebbels stated that it “was not coming to an end but had only just begun.” But he emphasized that in the end technological superiority was decisive only when linked to superior “morale.”
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In his speech broadcast on July 26, Goebbels attempted to sustain people’s hopes about the decisive effects of the new technology by announcing further V weapons. They had “not only caught up with the enemy but overtaken them.” And to emphasize the point he added a personal experience: “Recently, I saw some German weapons, and looking at them not only made my heart beat faster but for a moment it stopped altogether.”
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