Read Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler Online
Authors: Antony C. Sutton
Tags: #Europe, #World War II, #20th Century, #General, #United States, #Military, #Economic History, #Business & Economics, #History
These corporations were deeply involved in both the promotion of Roosevelt's New Deal and the construction of the military power of Nazi Germany. Putzi Hanfstaengl's role in the early days, up to the mid-1930s anyway, was an informal link between the Nazi elite and the White House. After the mid-1930s, when the world was set on the course for war, Putzis importance declined — while American Big Business continued to be represented through such intermediaries as Baron Kurt von Schroder attorney Westrick, and membership in Himmler's Circle of Friends.
Footnotes:
1William E. Dodd,
Ambassador Dodd's Diary, 1933-1938,
(New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1941), p. 360.
2Ernst Hanfstaengl,
Unheard Witness,
(New York: J.B. Lippincott, 1957), p.
28.
3Ibid., p.
4Ibid., p. 52.
5Ibid., p. 53.
6Ibid., p. 59.
7Ibid., p. 122.
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CHAPTER EIGHT: Putzi: Friend of Hitler and Roosevelt
8Ibid., pp. 197-8.
9Ibid., p. 214.
10Ladislas Farago,
The Game of the Foxes,
(New York: Bantam, 1973), p. 97.
11Ibid., p. 106.
12Ernst Hanfstaengl,
Unheard Witness, op.
cit., p. 76.
13Ibid.
14Ibid., pp. 310-11.
15
Dustbin
report EF/Me/1. Interview of Thyssen, p. 13.
16Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht,
Confessions of" The Old Wizard,"
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1956), p. 276.
17George Dimitrov,
The Reichstag Fire Trial,
(London: The Bodley Head, 1934), p. 309.
18Ibid., p. 310.
19Ibid., p. 311.
20Helmut Magers,
Ein Revolutionar Aus Common Sense,
(Leipzig: R. Kittler Verlag, 1934).
21Nixon, Edgar B., Editor,
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Foreign Affairs,
(Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1969), Volume 1: January 1933-February 1934. Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. Hyde Park, New York.
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CHAPTER NINE: Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
CHAPTER NINE
Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
During the entire period of our business contacts we. had no inkling of
Farben's conniving part in Hitler's brutal policies. We offer any help we can
give to see that complete truth is brought to light and that rigid justice is done.
(F. W. Abrams, Chairman of the Board, Standard Oil of New Jersey, 1946.) Adolf Hitler, Hermann Goering, Josef Goebbels, and Heinrich Himmler, the inner group of Naziism, were at the same time heads of minor fiefdoms within the Nazi State. Power groups or political cliques were centered around these Nazi leaders, more importantly after the late 1930s around Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler, Reich-Leader of the S.S. (the dreaded
Schutzstaffel).
The most important of these Nazi inner circles was created by order of the Fuehrer; it was known first as the Keppler Circle and later as Himmler's Circle of Friends.
The Keppler Circle originated as a group of German businessmen supporting Hitler's rise to power before and during 1933. In the mid-1930s the Keppler Circle came under the influence and protection of S.S. chief Himmler and the organizational control of Cologne banker and prominent Nazi businessman Kurt von Schroder. Schroder, it will be recalled, was head of the J.H. Stein Bank in Germany and affiliated with the L. Henry Schroder Banking Corporation of New York. It is within this innermost of the inner circles, the very core of Naziism, that we find Wall Street, including Standard Oil of New Jersey and I.T.T., represented from 1933 to as late as 1944.
Wilhelm Keppler, founder of the original Circle of Friends, typifies the well-known phenomenon of a politicized businessman —
i.e., a
businessman who cultivates the political arena rather than the impartial market place for his profits. Such businessmen have been interested In promoting socialist causes, because a planned socialist society provides a most lucrative opportunity for contracts through political influence.
Scenting such profitable opportunities, Keppler joined the national socialists and was close to Hitler before 1933. The Circle of Friends grew out of a meeting between Adolf Hitler and Wilhelm Keppler in December 1931. During the course of their conversation — this was several years before Hitler became dictator — the future Fuehrer expressed a wish to have reliable German businessmen available for economic advice when the Nazis took power.
"Try
to get a few economic leaders — they need not be Party members — who will be at our disposal when we come into power.
1
This Keppler undertook to do.
In March 1933 Keppler was elected to the Reichstag and became Hitler's financial expert.
This lasted only briefly. Keppler was replaced by the infinitely more capable Hjalmar Schacht, and sent to Austria where in 1938 he became Reichs Commissioner, but still able http://reformed-theology.org/html/books/wall_street/chapter_09.htm (1 of 9) [8/4/2001 9:44:18 PM]
CHAPTER NINE: Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
to use his position to acquire considerable power in the Nazi State. Within a few years he captured a string of lucrative directorships in German firms, including chairman of the board of two I.G. Farben subsidiaries: Braunkohle-Benzin A.G. and Kontinental Oil A.G.
Braunkohle-Benzin was the German exploiter of the Standard Oil of New Jersey technology for production of gasoline from coal. (See Chapter Four.)
In brief, Keppler war the chairman of the very firm that utilized American technology for the indispensible synthetic gasoline which enabled the Wehrmacht to go to war in 1939.
This is significant because, when linked with other evidence presented in this chapter, it suggests that the profits and control of these fundamentally important technologies for German military ends were retained by a small group of international firms and businessmen operating across national borders.
Keppler's nephew, Fritz Kranefuss, under his uncle's protection, also gained prominence both as Adjutant to S.S. Chief Heinrich Himmler and as a businessman and political operator. It was Kranefuss' link with Himmler which led to the Keppler circle gradually drawing away from Hitler in the 1930s to come within Himmler's orbit, where in exchange for annual donations to Himmler's pet S.S. projects Circle members received political favors and not inconsiderable protection from the S.S.
Baron Kurt von Schroder was, as we have noted, the I.T.T. representative in Nazi Germany and an early member of the Keppler Circle. The original Keppler Circle consisted of:
THE ORIGINAL (PRE-1932) MEMBERS OF THE
KEPPLER CIRCLE
Circle Member
Main Associations
Wilhelm KEPPLER
Chairman of I.G. Farben
subsidiary Braunkohle-Benzin
A.G. (exploited Standard Oil of
N.J. oil from coal technology)
Fritz KRANEFUSS
Keppler's nephew and Adjutant
to Heinrich Himmler. On
Vorstand of BRABAG
Kurt von SCHRODER
On board of all International
Telephone & Telegraph
subsidiaries in Germany
Karl Vincenz KROGMANN
Lord Mayor of Hamburg
August ROSTERG
General Director of
WINTERSHALL
Emil MEYER
On the board of I.T.T.
subsidiaries and German
General Electric.
Otto STEINBRINCK
Vice president of
VEREINIGTE STAHLWERKE
(steel cartel founded with Wall
Street loans in 1926)
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CHAPTER NINE: Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
Hjalmar SCHACHT
President of the REICHSBANK
Emil HELFFRICH
Board chairman of
GERMAN-AMERICAN
PETROLEUM CO. (94-percent
owned by Standard Oil of New
Jersey) (See above under
Wilhelm Keppler)
Friedrich REINHARDT
Board chairman
COMMERZBANK
Ewald HECKER
Board chairman of ILSEDER
HUTTE
Graf von BISMARCK
Government president of
STETTIN
The S.S. Circle of Friends
The original Circle of Friends met with Hitler in May 1932 and heard a statement of Nazi objectives. Heinrich Himmler then became a frequent participant in the meetings, and through Himmler, various S.S. officers as well as other businessmen joined the group. This expanded group in time became Himmler's Circle of Friends, with Himmler acting as protector and expeditor for its members.
Consequently, banking and Industrial interest — were heavily represented in the inner circle of Naziism, and their pre-1933 financial contributions to Hitlerism which we have earlier enumerated were amply repaid. Of the "Big Five" German banks, the Dresdner Bank had the closest connections with the Nazi Party: at least a dozen members of Dresdner Bank's board of directors had high Nazi rank and no fewer than seven Dresdner Bank directors were among Keppler's expanded Circle of Friends, which never exceeded 40.
When we examine the names comprising both the original pre-1933 Keppler Circle and the post-1933 expanded Keppler and Himmler's Circle, we find the Wall Street multi-nationals heavily represented — more so than any other institutional group. Let us take each Wall Street multinational or its German associate in turn — those identified in Chapter Seven as linked to financing Hitler — and examine their links to Keppler and Heinrich Himmler.
I.G. Farben and the Keppler Circle
I.G. Farben was heavily represented within the Keppler Circle: no fewer than eight out of the peak circle membership of 40 were directors of I.G. Farben or a Farben subsidiary.
These eight members included the previously described Wilhelm Keppler and his nephew Kranefuss, in addition to Baron Kurt von Schroder. The Farben presence was emphasized by member Hermann Schmitz, chairman of I.G. Farben and a director of Vereinigte Stahlwerke, both cartels built and consolidated by the Wall Street loans of the 1920s. A U.S.
Congressional report described Hermann Schmitz as follows:
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CHAPTER NINE: Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
Hermann Schmitz, one of the most important persons in Germany, has achieved
outstanding success simultaneously in the three separate fields, industry,
finance, and government, and has served with zeal and devotion every
government in power. He symbolizes the German citizen who out of the
devastation of the First World War made possible the Second.
Ironically, his may be said to be the greater guilt in that in 1919 he was a
member of the Reich's peace delegation, and in the 1930's was in a position to
teach the Nazis much that theft had to know concerning economic penetration,
cartel uses, synthetic materials for war.
2
Another Keppler Circle member on the I.G. Farben board was Friedrich Flick, creator of the steel cartel Vereinigte Stahlwerke and a director of Allianz Versicherungs A.G. and German General Electric (A.E.G.).
Heinrich Schmidt, a director of Dresdner Bank and chairman of the board of I.G. Farben subsidiary Braunkohle-Benzin A.G., was in the circle; so was Karl Rasehe, another director of the Dresdner Bank and a director of Metallgesellschaft (parent of the Delbruck Schickler Bank) and Accumulatoren-Fabriken A.G. Heinrich Buetefisch was also a director of I.G.
Farben and a member of the Keppler Circle. In brief, the I.G. Farben contribution to Rudolf Hess' Nationale Treuhand — the political slush fund — was confirmed after the 1933
takeover by heavy representation in the Nazi inner circle.
How many of these Keppler Circle members in the I.G. Farben complex were affiliated with Wall Street?
MEMBERS OF THE ORIGINAL KEPPLER CIRCLE
ASSOCIATED WITH U.S. MULTI-NATIONALS
Member of
Standard Oil
General
Keppler Circle
I.G. Farben
I.T.T.
of New Jersey Electric
Wilhelm
Chairman of
KEPPLER
Farben
—
subsidiary
BRABAG
Fritz
On Aufsichrat
—
KRANEFUSS
of BRABAG
Emil Heinrich
On board of
Board of
MEYER
all I.T.T.
A.E.G.
German
subsidiaries:
—
Standard/Mix
&
Genest/Lorenz
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CHAPTER NINE: Wall Street and the Nazi Inner Circle
Emil
Chairman of
HELFFRICH
DAPAG
(94-percent
owned by
Standard of New
Jersey
Friedrich
I.G. Farben
Board of
—
—
FLICK
A.E.G.
Kurt von
On board of all
SCHRODER
I.T.T.
subsidiaries in
Germany
Similarly, we can identify other Wall Street institutions represented in the early Keppler's Circle of Friends, confirming their monetary contributions to the National Trusteeship Fund operated by Rudolf Hess on behalf of Adolf Hitler. These representatives were Emil Heinrich Meyer and banker Kurt von Schroder on the boards of all the I.T.T. subsidiaries in Germany, and Emil Helffrich, the board chairman of DAPAG, 94-percent owned by Standard Oil of New Jersey.
Wall Street in the S.S. Circle
Major U.S. multi-nationals were also very well represented in the later Heinrich Himmler Circle and made cash contributions to the S.S. (the Sonder Konto S) up to 1944 — while World War II was in progress.