Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
demographic collapse resulting from contagious Old World diseases
and exploitive western imperial rule. By comparison, the Nazis conspired to murder the entire Jewish population of eastern Europe and
condemned subject Christian communities to homicidal levels of
forced labor and slow starvation.
These policies were both indefensibly barbaric and stupidly counterproductive. In the early months of the eastern campaign, the
Ukrainians and other subject communities that had suffered under
Soviet imperial rule were ready to welcome the advancing German
armies as liberators. Instead, the Nazis executed Ukraine nationalist leaders and forced the entire community back into an unhappy
alliance with Stalin through inhumanly brutal extractive policies.
Captives of their own racist ideology, the Nazis abandoned the triedand-true tactic of divide and rule. It was only in 1944 that Rosenberg found the backbone to complain publicly that the Germans had
missed a golden opportunity to exploit the Ukrainians’ deep hatred of
the Soviets. This would prove shortsighted later in the war, but unalloyed ruthlessness made the Nazis’ systems of imperial extraction
exceptionally lucrative in the near term. Freed from the constraints
of long-term planning and humanitarian sentiment, they set out to
strip-mine their conquered territories.
France under the Nazis 375
In the west, Nazi empire builders manipulated the terms of
the Hague Conventions, which allowed victorious powers to make
defeated nations assume the costs of their occupation. The Netherlands’ bill came to one hundred million guilders per month between
1940 and 1942, which increased the Dutch national budget by more
than sixfold. Similarly, the Germans charged eighteen million francs
to the Belgium government and seized its gold reserves.
The Nazis’ greatest extractive innovation was turning modern
fi nancial mechanisms into instruments of imperial exploitation. They
used the international clearing system, which European central banks
used to balance imports and exports, to force conquered nations to
fund the Reich’s food and raw material imports. Normally, importers
would pay for foreign goods by depositing the purchase price in clearing accounts in their own national bank. This bank would then transfer the sum to their trading partners’ national bank, which would in
turn credit the exporters’ accounts in their own currency. The Nazis,
however, never fulfi lled their side of the bargain. This meant that state
banks in the conquered territories had to reimburse their exporters
by printing more money, which made them pay for the Third Reich’s
imports. This system was so effi cient that Germany owed its “trading
partners” twenty-nine billion reichsmarks by the summer of 1944.23
While high-ranking Nazis followed Napoleon’s example in plundering Europe of its great works of art and moveable treasures, they
found that currency manipulation was a much simpler alternative to
the messy business of day-to-day looting. Instead of seizing food and
materials from western Europeans, the conquering German forces
“paid” for them with Reich Credit Bank certifi cates. These certifi cates,
which were denominated in paper notes ranging from fi fty pfennigs
to fi fty marks, looked like money, but they were not legal tender in
Germany. The central banks of defeated nations had to redeem them,
which forced them to cover the cost of German military requisitions. As
with the clearing system, these banks had to make up the shortfall by
issuing more money. This highly infl ationary form of imperial extraction had the double virtue of appearing to be legal under the Hague
Conventions because the Germans seemingly paid for their plunder.
The Nazis usually withdrew the certifi cates at the end of a successful
campaign to ensure that local economies did not collapse entirely, but
they kept them in circulation in France until December 1943 to wring
as much wealth as possible out of the Reich’s rich historical enemy.
376 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
The Nazis also garnered popular support at home by giving common German soldiers and civilians a healthy share of the imperial
spoils. They infl ated the offi cial exchange rate between the reichsmark
and the currencies of defeated nations to increase German purchasing
power. Families in Germany sent money and extensive shopping lists
to their men in uniform. In return, they received packages of Greek
tobacco, Norwegian herring, North African shoes, Russian bacon, and
French velvet, silk, liqueurs, and coffee. Under what became known as
the “schlep decree,” Göring mandated that soldiers returning home
on leave could bring back as much of this purchased booty as they
could personally carry. The French bore the greatest weight of these
policies by virtue of their shared border with Germany and because
they had some of the most tempting goods. Even mayors and other
civic offi cials in Germany took part in this form of modern looting by
buying artifi cially inexpensive raw materials in France by the freight
train load. All told, nonmilitary purchases of French goods came to
125 million marks by mid-1943.24
By comparison, most eastern economies were not suffi ciently
developed to sustain these more advanced extractive methods. The
Nazis also had no inclination to be as gentle with their “subhuman”
Slavic subjects as they were with “civilized” western nations. Dispensing with the niceties of bank certifi cates and clearing accounts,
German forces stripped Poland and the occupied Soviet Union of
food and other raw materials with the full knowledge that millions
of people would starve. Western Europeans made similar forced contributions to the Reich’s breadbasket, but their exports to Germany
brought only severe malnutrition, not famine.
In addition to stealing their food, the Nazis also turned millions of
eastern Europeans into slave laborers. This strategy refl ected the reality that, as in the premodern empires, the Nazi empire’s wealth was
still in subject labor. Desperate for manpower to free German men
for military service and spare German women from factory work,
the Reich plenipotentiary for labor allocation, Fritz Sauckel, scoured
occupied Europe for workers. While coerced Frenchmen, Belgians,
Dutchmen, Danes, and Norwegians helped meet the Reich’s labor
needs, they were spared the worst of the Nazi forced labor policies.
In the east, Sauckel’s men grabbed people off the streets or seized
them in churches and theaters. In Poland, every male between the
ages of eighteen and sixty was liable for compulsory labor. As a result,
France under the Nazis 377
there were approximately seven million foreign forced laborers in
Germany by mid-1944.25 Technically, these unfortunate people were
not slaves because the Nazis paid them. But their employers imposed
heavy payroll deductions for room and board on men and women
who were living at virtual starvation levels in labor camps. The Nazi
regime additionally transferred much of its labor costs to defeated
governments by making them responsible for the back wages and
family benefi ts of their citizens working in the Reich.
Even the Holocaust had an extractive element. Although the
Nazis’ hysterical anti-Semitism was highly irrational, their xenophobic policies paid economic returns. Initially, Hitler planned to move
against the Jews only after a quick Nazi victory, but once the initial
blitzkrieg in the east failed, he abandoned all restraint. As in the new
imperial Africa, Nazi racial doctrines reduced Jews to the level of subhumans and left them dangerously vulnerable. The difference was
that where western European empires simply sought profi t, the Nazis
plotted genocide. In preparation for their fi nal solution to the “Jewish problem,” Hitler’s men set about segregating Jews from larger
subject populations through special armbands, discriminatory laws,
forced ghettoization, and eventually deportation to concentration and
extermination camps.
These tactics made it easier for the Germans to seize the Jews’ savings and material wealth. Inmates in the network of SS concentration
camps produced fi fty million marks per year through the production of crafts, construction and agricultural work, and industrial slave
labor. The Nazis even shipped a million cubic meters of looted Jewish
furniture to the Reich for resale at reduced rates to German families
who had lost their homes to Allied bombing. Götz Aly estimated that
the mandatory aryanization of Jewish assets and the outright theft
of their personal property generated fi fteen billion to twenty billion
reichsmarks for the Reich and puppet governments in occupied
nations.26 This plundered Jewish wealth kept subject nations suffi ciently solvent to meet their fi nancial obligations to the Third Reich
and bound collaborationist regimes more closely to the German cause
by making them accomplices to genocide.
Upon refl ection, the Nazi imperial balance sheet was impressive.
Estimates vary, but it appears that the Third Reich extracted roughly
170 billion marks from its subjects, a fi gure that was approximately
three times the total German domestic revenues for the same period.
378 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Not only did this imperial windfall keep the Nazi armies in the fi eld,
it also kept the German people relatively comfortable for much of
the war. In the Reich itself, German household income remained at
approximately 78 percent of prewar levels for most of the confl ict.
The British and American rates, by comparison, were roughly half
this fi gure.27
For common Germans, the returns of empire were even more signifi cant in the occupied territories, where their status as a conquering power freed them from the conventional constraints of morality
and civil society. Nazi doctrines of racial supremacy meant that an
implicit perquisite of service in territorial administrations or military garrisons was the privilege of self-enrichment. In addition to
extraterritorial protection from local laws and taxes, German men
also acquired power over local women. As in earlier empires, their
wealth and status made them desirable companions for those who
sought to mitigate their subjecthood. These relationships ran the
gamut from formal prostitution to marriage. Either way, a German
military administrator’s humiliation of his French counterpart in the
days following France’s capitulation exposed the lie behind Operation Seduction and made it clear that sexual domination was also a
reality of occupation: “We are the victors! You have been beaten! The
women, even the children of your country, are no longer yours! Our
soldiers have the right to have fun, and if you do anything to slight
the honor of the German army you will be arrested.”28 Typically, the
subject women, particularly lower-class women, who suffered sexual
abuse at the hands of German men rarely had any legal recourse.
Although desperate Jews in the Warsaw ghetto fought back
against the Germans in 1943, the Nazi imperial regime’s denigrating
occupation policies and crushing extractive agenda produced surprisingly few incidents of open resistance in the fi rst half of the war. This
was due in part to the barbarity and utter ruthlessness of its internal
security systems. Any village or community that had the courage
to take up arms against the Nazis faced extermination. This was the
fate of the Czechoslovakian town of Lidice, which the SS destroyed
entirely in 1942 as retribution for the murder of
Obergruppenführer
Reinhard Heydrich, the deputy Reich protector of the puppet state of
Bohemia and Moravia, by Czech partisans.
Freed from the constraints of conventional decency, the Nazis’ use
of brutality and terror as methods of imperial control were highly
France under the Nazis 379
effi cient. The SS and the Central Offi ce for Reich Security, which
coordinated and centralized the Reich’s various paramilitary and
secret police services, exercised direct control over domestic police
forces in subject nations. Exempt from judicial oversight and local
laws, these imperial enforcers had nearly total freedom of action
and answered only to Himmler himself. While in the east SS men
and security offi cers had the authority to punish subject populations
summarily, in western Europe the Nazis pretended to respect the rule
of law. But a special
Nacht und Nebel
(night and fog) decree empowered them to assassinate or abduct anyone who resisted openly. Those
who disappeared and survived ended up in one of twenty-three major
concentration camps, where overall survival rates were as low as
30 percent.
While this institutionalized brutality was formidable, violence and
intimidation alone can never serve as the sole foundation of imperial
rule. Even the Nazis needed local assistance to control their empire.
As the German police chief in Amsterdam explained: “The main support of the German forces in the police sector and beyond was the
Dutch police. Without it, not ten percent of the German occupation
tasks would have been fulfi lled. . . . Also it would have been practically