nationalist enough. The great turning point of his early life came in spring
1931 when he was dismissed from military service as a result of a broken
engagement promise and his subsequent arrogant behaviour towards
xviii
INTRODUCTION
the military court of honour. His dismissal at the height of the Great
Depression roughly coincided with his first meeting with his future wife,
Lina von Osten, who was already a committed Nazi and who convinced
him to apply for a staff position in Heinrich Himmler’s small but elite SS.
Until this moment, Heydrich’s life might have taken a very different
direction, and indeed he initial y possessed few obvious qualifications for
his subsequent role as head of the Gestapo and the SD. Crucial for his
future development were his experiences and personal encounters
within
the SS after 1931, and in particular his close relationship with Heinrich
Himmler. In other words, the most significant contributing factor to
Heydrich’s radicalization was his immersion in a political milieu of young
and often highly educated men who thrived on violent notions of cleansing
Germany from its supposed internal enemies while simultaneously
rejecting bourgeois norms of morality as weak, outdated and inappropriate
for securing Germany’s national rebirth.
Yet his immersion in this violent world of deeply committed political
extremists does not in itself explain why Heydrich emerged as arguably
the most radical figure within the Nazi leadership. At least one of the
reasons for his subsequent radicalism, it will be argued, lies in his lack of
early Nazi credentials. Heydrich’s earlier life contained some shortcom-
ings, most notably the persistent rumours about his Jewish ancestry that
led to a humiliating party investigation in 1932, and his relatively late
conversion to Nazism. To make up for these imperfections and impress his
superior, Heinrich Himmler, Heydrich transformed himself into a model
Nazi, adopting and further radicalizing key tenets of Himmler’s world-
view and SS ideals of manliness, sporting prowess and military bearing.
Heydrich even manipulated the story of his earlier life to shore up his
Nazi credentials. He supposedly fought in right-wing militant Freikorps
units after the Great War, but his involvement in post-1918 paramilitary
activity was at best minimal. Nor do any records exist to prove that he was
a member of the various anti-Semitic groups in Halle to which he later
claimed to have belonged.
By the mid-1930s, Heydrich had successful y reinvented himself as one
of the most radical proponents of Nazi ideology and its implementation
through rigid and increasingly extensive policies of persecution. The
realization of Hitler’s utopian society, so he firmly believed, required
the ruthless and violent exclusion of those elements deemed dangerous
to German society, a task that could best be carried out by the SS as the
executioner of Hitler’s wil . Only by cleansing German society of all
that was alien, sick and hostile could a new national community emerge
and the inevitable war against the Reich’s arch-enemy, the Soviet
Union, be won. The means of ‘cleansing’ envisaged by Heydrich were
I N T R O D U C T I O N
xix
to change dramatical y between 1933 and 1942, partly in response to
circumstances beyond his control and partly as a result of the increasing
Machbarkeitswahn
– fantasies of omnipotence – that gripped many senior
SS men, policy planners and demographic engineers after the outbreak
of the Second World War: the delusional idea that a unique historical
opportunity had arisen to fight, once and for al , Germany’s
real or imagined enemies inside and outside the Reich. While the mass
extermination of Jews seemed inconceivable even to Heydrich before
the outbreak of war in 1939, his views on the matter radicalized over the
fol owing two and a half years. A combination of wartime brutalization,
frustration over failed expulsion schemes, pressures from local German
administrators in the occupied East and an ideological y motivated deter-
mination to solve the ‘Jewish problem’ led to a situation in which he
perceived systematic mass murder to be both feasible and desirable.
The ‘solution of the Jewish question’ for which Heydrich bore direct
responsibility from the late 1930s was, however, only part of a much
broader wartime plan to recreate the entire ethnic make-up of Europe
through a massive project of expelling, resettling and murdering millions
of people in Eastern Europe after the Wehrmacht’s victory over the Soviet
Union. As Acting Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia – a position
he held between September 1941 and his violent death in June 1942 –
Heydrich underlined his fundamental commitment to these plans by
initiating a uniquely ambitious programme of racial classification and
cultural imperialism in the Protectorate.
Despite his drive for the Germanization of East-Central Europe,
Heydrich was fully aware that its complete realization had to wait until
the Wehrmacht’s victory over the Red Army. It was simply impossible
from a logistical point of view to expel, resettle and murder an estimated
30 million Slavic people in the conquered East while simultaneously
fighting a war against a numerically superior alliance of enemies on the
battlefields. The destruction of Europe’s Jews, a much smaller and more
easily identifiable community, posed considerably fewer logistical prob-
lems. For Heydrich and Himmler, the swift implementation of the ‘final
solution’ also offered a major strategic advantage vis-à-vis rival agencies in
the occupied territories: by documenting their reliability in carrying out
Hitler’s genocidal orders, they recommended themselves to the Führer as
the natural agency to implement the even bigger post-war project of
Germanization.22
Heydrich’s life therefore offers a uniquely privileged, intimate and
organic perspective on some of the darkest aspects of Nazi rule, many of
which are often artificially divided or treated separately in the highly
specialized literature on the Third Reich: the rise of the SS and the
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INTRODUCTION
emergence of the Nazi police state; the decision-making processes that
led to the Holocaust; the interconnections between anti-Jewish and
Germanization policies; and the different ways in which German occupa-
tion regimes operated across Nazi-controlled Europe. On a more personal
level, it illustrates the historical circumstances under which young men
from perfectly ‘normal’ middle-class backgrounds can become political
extremists determined to use ultra-violence to implement their dystopian
fantasies of radically transforming the world.
C H A P T ER I
✦
Death in Prague
The 27th of May 1942 was a beautiful day. The morning dawned
bright and auspicious over the Bohemian lands, occupied by Nazi
Germany since 1939. After a long and exceptionally cold winter, spring
had finally arrived. The trees were in full blossom and the cafés of Prague
were buzzing with life. Some twenty kilometres north of the capital, in the
leafy gardens of his vast neo-classical country estate, the undisputed ruler
of the Czech lands and chief of the Nazi terror apparatus, Reinhard
Heydrich, was playing with his two young sons, Klaus and Heider, while
his wife, Lina, heavily pregnant with their fourth child, was watching from
the terrace, holding their infant daughter, Silke.1
Both privately and professionally, Heydrich had every reason to
be content. At the age of only thirty-eight, and as the second most
powerful man in the SS behind Heinrich Himmler, he had built a reputa-
tion as one of the most uncompromising executors of Hitler’s dystopian
fantasies for the future of the Reich and Nazi-occupied Europe. The
‘solution of the Jewish question’ in Europe, with which Heydrich had
been officially charged in January 1941, was making rapid progress: by
the spring of 1942, the Germans and their Eastern European accomplices
had murdered some 1.5 million Jews, predominantly through face-to-face
shootings. Many more would die in the killing factories in former
Poland where construction work for stationary gassing facilities had
begun the previous winter. Despite Germany’s recent declaration of
war on the United States, Heydrich’s future looked bright. On the Eastern
and North African fronts, the German army was rapidly advancing
and about to deal a number of devastating blows against the Allies.
Resistance activities, to be sure, had increased throughout Europe since
the German invasion of the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941, but
Heydrich had good reason to be confident that these challenges to Nazi
rule would strengthen, rather than weaken, the influence of the SS on
2
HITLER’S HANGMAN
German occupation policies, where Heydrich was widely considered to be
the rising star.
Contrary to his usual habit of driving to work shortly after dawn,
Heydrich left his country estate at around 10 o’clock that morning. His
driver, Johannes Klein, a man in his early thirties, was waiting for him in
the lobby, ready to take Heydrich to his office in Prague Castle, and, from
there, to the airport where Heydrich’s plane was to fly him to Berlin to
report to Hitler on the future governance of the Protectorate and to make
more general policy suggestions on the combating of resistance activities
throughout occupied Europe. As usual, they travelled the short distance to
Prague in a Mercedes convertible and without a police escort. As Klein
and Heydrich commenced their journey, neither of the two men could
know that some fifteen minutes down the road, in the suburb of Libeň,
three Czechoslovak agents from Britain were nervously waiting for them,
their guns and grenades carefully concealed under civilian clothing.2
Secret plans to assassinate Reinhard Heydrich had emerged in London
more than half a year earlier, in late September 1941. The origins of the
plan have remained highly controversial to this day and have given rise to
all sorts of conspiracy theories, largely because the parties involved – the
British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and the Czechoslovak
government-in-exile under President Edvard Beneš – officially denied all
responsibility for the assassination after 1945. Neither of them wanted to
be accused of condoning political assassination as a means of warfare,
particularly since it had always been clear that the Germans would
respond to the killing of a prominent Nazi leader with the most brutal
reprisals against the civilian population.3
The surviving documents on the assassination reveal that the plan to kill
Heydrich was primarily born out of desperation: ever since the fall of
France in the summer of 1940, and the inglorious retreat of the British
Expeditionary Forces from Dunkirk, the British authorities had been
struggling to regain the military initiative. With no chance of being able
to defeat the German army by themselves, the British hoped to incite
popular unrest in the Nazi-occupied territories, thereby deflecting vital
German military resources to a number of trouble spots. Hugh Dalton,
the Minister of Economic Warfare, talked about creating subversive
organizations behind enemy lines, while the War Office was emphatically
calling for ‘active efforts to combat the serious loss of confidence in the
British Empire which has arisen . . . following our recent disasters’.4
Neither Dalton nor anyone else in the British cabinet had a firm
grasp of the immense difficulties and deterrents facing the underground
organizations in Nazi-occupied Europe. Nor did they appreciate how
complicated it was to conduct small-scale sabotage operations. The
D E AT H I N P R AG U E
3
Czechs and Poles in exile in Putney and Kensington were more realistic.
They were unwilling to jeopardize their existing intelligence networks at
home by organizing ambitious mass uprisings that could only fail in the
face of an overwhelming German military presence. However, even when
measured against the generally low levels of resistance activity in early
1941, the Czechs were seen by the British to be particularly complacent.
As Beneš’s chief intelligence adviser, František Moravec, admitted after
the war, in terms of resistance activities in the occupied territories
‘Czechoslovakia was always at the bottom of the list. President Beneš
became very embarrassed by this fact. He told me that in his consultations