Publisher's Note When the Russians occupied Berlin in 1945 they went through the German official archives with more vigor than discrimination, shipped some material to Russia, destroyed some, and left the rest scattered underfoot They often followed a system that is difficult to understand—emptying papers on the floor and shipping to Russia the filing cabinets that had contained them. Considerable fragments of Dr. Goebbels's diaries, from which the following pages were selected, were found in the courtyard of his ministry, where they had evidently narrowly escaped burning, many of the pages being singed and all smelling of smoke. Apparently they were originally bound in the German type of office folder. Thin metal strips in the salmon-colored binders were run through holes punched in the paper, bent over, and locked into place. At that time all Berlin was one great junk yard, with desperate people laying hands on anything tangible and movable that could be used for barter. The unburned papers were taken away by one of these amateur junk dealers, who carefully salvaged the binders and discarded the contents— leaving more than 7,000 sheets of loose paper. A few binders had not been removed but most of the pages were tied up in bundles as wastepaper. It later proved a considerable task to put them together again in the right sequence, as they were not numbered. In the same batch were found a number of odds and ends from Goebbels's private files. Many of the papers were water-soaked and showed signs of dirt and the imprint of nails where they had been walked on. The edges of some were scorched, showing that attempts to burn them had failed. Among the papers in this miscellaneous batch were found the following: The Goebbels Diaries The rough draft, headed Entwurf, of a message to Hermann Goering congratulating him on his fiftieth birthday. A receipted bill from a jeweler for repairs to a Nazi party emblem—seventy-five pfennigs, dated June 20, 1939. A six-page radio address, corrected by Goebbels in blue pencil, dated October 3, 1944. A list of fifteen articles of old clothing, dated June 10, 1942, given by Goebbels to a charity collection. A note was appended that Mrs. Goebbels could do nothing about getting her donation together until she had talked with her husband. An expense account, taking up five sheets of paper, for Goebbels's trip on March 8, 1943, by airplane from Berlin to Hitler's GHQ, where Goebbels remained one day and then flew back to Berlin after a conference with Hitler. Expenses totaled 85 marks. A letter dated June 2, 1931, signed by two women, in response to a request published by Goebbels in the newspaper, Angriff, asking for witnesses to an incident on June 1, 1931 (before Hitler came to power). The letter is notarized: "Dr. Goebbels and another came out of the police station in the Maikaeferkaserne with the Fuehrer. As he came through the door, the police brought one of our brown shirts (S.A. Maenner) by force up the steps to the entrance. Dr. Goebbels, who stood in their way at the door, was hit on the shoulder by one of the police officials and pushed out of the way so that he fell down the steps. The handling of our Fuehrer started a demonstration on the part of the crowd, which hooted at the police, and Heils for the Fuehrer broke out. Then the police attacked the crowd with blackjacks and we were driven off." A letter of January 26, 1939, notifying Goebbels that the taxes on his Schwanenwerder property had been increased and that he owed some back taxes for the previous year. A report by one of Goebbels's subordinates on the moving of Goebbels's property from his Schwanenwerder home to a safe place: some to Lanke, and some into the air-raid shelter in the Hermann Goeringstrasse. The inventory includes oriental rugs, furniture, Gobelin tapestries, lamps, cut glass, silver, porcelain, linen, et cetera. The report concludes that Goebbels's valet, Emil, would be responsible for taking Goebbelsfe pistols into the Hermann Goeringstrasse shelter during an alarm. And "Pistole" was underlined in the original. A letter dated January 2, 1933 (about four weeks before Hitler took over), showing that Goebbels was in trouble about his income tax. The letter was written by a Nazi tax consultant, who reported that in dealing with the tax people he "registered a complaint on the ground that such a payment is impossible and would result in the destruction of your economic independence." A subsequent letter, dated March 28, 1933 (two months after the Nazis were in power), indicated that the tax specialist, Schuler, had been able to fix up the matter of the back taxes satisfactorily. A telegram sent by Goebbels one month before his death (March 13, 1945) to Colonel Berger, thanking the German troops at the Neisse River bridgehead for their collection and the donation of more than a quarter of a million marks for Winter Relief. There was also a typewritten undated balance sheet showing Goebbels's income, the allowance he made to Frau Goebbels, et cetera. For income-tax purposes he declared a total income of 10,281.55 marks, of which he paid 6,481.55 to his wife, leaving 3,800 for himself. There was a handwritten analysis of Goebbels's income for the years 1933 through 1937 inclusive. It was done in thirteen columns, showing income from book royalties, salary, interest, deductions for various taxes, et cetera. His total income before taxes and deductions was: 1933 34,376 marks 1934 134,423 1935 62,190 1936 63,654 1937 66,905 One sheet of paper, handwritten, but not in Goebbels's writing, was headed: Account with Central Publishing Company of the National Socialist party. From December 16, 1935, to December 23, 1936, he drew advances amounting to 290,000 marks against future royalties. His book royalties from December 31, 1935, to December 31, 1936, amounted to 63,416.31 marks. So he was in debt to the Nazi Publishing Company (Centralverlag der NSDAP) to the amount of 226,583.69 marks. It is an interesting side light on Goebbels's financial methods that whereas in 1936 he declared a total income of 63,654 marks, his income from book royalties alone amounted to approximately the same—63,416.31 marks. An account for the purchase of paintings showed that 154,000 marks' worth of paintings were bought, on which a 5 per cent commission was paid for purchase or handling. This was dated January 30, 1945—three months before Berlin fell. The paintings, with a few exceptions, were all by German artists. Six gifts of paintings were noted, with dates of gift to: Sauckel, on his fiftieth birthday, October 27, 1944. Gauleiter Streicher, on his sixtieth birthday, February 12, 1945. Dr. Ley, on his fifty-fifth birthday, February 15, 1945. Dr. Hierl, on his seventieth birthday, February 24, 1945. Schaub, on his birthday, August 10, 1944. Minister Dr. Meissner, on his sixty-fifth birthday, March 13, 1945. There are a number of drafts of birthday telegrams. Apparently Goebbels had a system whereby his office automatically laid before him drafts of birthday greetings which he, Goebbels, then corrected. A memorandum dated June 4, 1942, to Goebbels, called attention to four birthdays coming in the following week. In red crayon was a notation, erledigt, or taken care of, about the birthday of the Minister of Posts, Dr. Ohnesorge, aged 70. Beside the name of Professor Paul Schultze Naumburg, aged 73, Goebbels wrote Nein. Beside the name of Richard Strauss, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, aged 78, on Thursday, June 11, Goebbels also wrote Nein. Beside the name of Jenny Jugo, Goebbels wrote Blumen/Karte (flowers and card). There was a file on Goebbels's mortgage of 100,000 marks on the Schwanenwerder place, which he apparently bought after the outbreak of war in 1939. The diaries were typed on fine water-marked paper, which was rare in wartime Germany and available only to high government officials. In looking over the material offered for sale or barter, a customer was struck by the impressive quality of the paper and sensed that he must have fallen on something of interest and importance. He acquired the lot for its value as scrap paper. The bundles, roughly roped togeth- er, passed through several hands, and eventually came into the possession of Mr. Frank E. Mason, who has made a number of visits to Germany since the war. Mr. Mason has had long experience in Germany, first as Military Attach6 at the American Embassy in Berlin at the end of World War I and later as a correspondent. It was obvious to him that the material consisted of fragments of Dr. Goebbels's diaries. An examination by Louis P. Lochner, former chief of the Berlin bureau of the Associated Press, revealed the authenticity of the documents, as Mr. Lochner himself explains in detail in his introduction to this volume. Publication was decided on only after this had been clearly established. Goebbels indulged in free-and-easy abuse of everybody who disagreed with him. His entries are given as he wrote them, with the gutter language into which he frequently lapsed. This was essential to a faithful presentation, although the publishers obviously share neither his views nor his expression of them. The selections reveal Goebbels as the unflagging motive force behind the vicious anti-Semitism of the Nazi regime. His aim was the extermination of all Jews. Hitler was in complete sympathy with this infamous project, as were his henchmen. Goebbels's role was to keep Hitler's mind inflamed and obtain authority to carry out specific measures against the Jews. He thus reveals himself as having a major share of responsibility for the atrocities that shocked the world. A number of examples of this distasteful material have been reproduced, not only because they reflected Goebbels's mentality, but more particularly because his views were translated into action and are therefore of vital significance. Goebbels also reveals himself as violently opposed to the Christian churches. He makes it clear that while he wants to devote himself to the extermination of the Jews during the war, he plans to deal with the churches after the war and reduce them to impotence. The task of selecting, editing, and translating the text of this important document was exacting. It called for a man with knowledge and scholarly background. It is fortunate that Mr. Lochner was available for this work. He brought to it long experience, knowledge of European politics, wide acquaintance among political figures under the Weimar Republic and the Nazi regime, and complete command of the German language. For more than twenty years he was chief The Goebbels Diaries of the Berlin bureau of The Associated Press, and on his return to this country in 1942 he wrote What About Germany? — a book that has had considerable success. He had unique standing in Berlin, as is shown by the fact that for many years he was president of the Foreign Press Association and for six years president of the American Chamber of Commerce. The publishers regret that it was possible to make use of only a small part of the original material in a single volume. The level of interest could have been maintained if far more space had been available. The original diaries will serve as source material for many future writers, and to this end they are to be deposited in the Hoover War Library at Stanford University where they will be accessible to the public. It is hoped that this will result in further translations and publications. Hugh Gibson Introduction BY LOUIS P. LOCHNER I went at the task of selecting representative material for ook with a good deal of trepidation. Here were some 7,100 pages (approximately 750,000 words) of German copy to select from, yet the book was to be limited to about five hundred printed pages. It was much the same sort of situation I faced constantly during my years of newspaper service as chief of the Berlin Bureau of The Associated Press of America: whenever Adolf Hitler delivered one of his addresses to the German Reichstag, which often lasted for two hours, I was faced with the problem of remaining within the number of words that the newspapers having membership in the Associated Press could absorb, yet missing nothing of importance to the reader. The Goebbels diaries, from which representative sections have been selected for this book, cover the following periods: January 21, to May 23, 1942, with the entries for March 22 to March 25 and April 10 missing. December 7 to December 20, 1942. March 1 to March 20, 1943. April 9 to May 28, 1943, with the entries for May 2 to May 6 missing. July 25 to July 30, 1943. September 8 to September 30, 1943. November 1 to November 30, 1943, with the entries for November 5 and November 23 missing. December 4 to December 9, 1943. No doubt some of the missing pages went up in flames, for there is a smell of burnt paper to the whole collection, and some pages are singed. It is also likely that large sections of the diaries, indeed whole volumes, were destroyed in ignorance of their content and importance. If this be true, the world has lost documents of inestimable value. Each day Joseph Goebbels dictated at great length an account of what transpired the previous day. This fact should be kept in mind by the reader, who may occasionally be puzzled to find the Propaganda Minister referring to an event as having occurred on one day when obviously it must have transpired the day before. For his diaries he used an especially heavy watermarked paper and large German-Gothic script of a sort one seldom finds on typewriters. There was triple spacing between the lines, and the margins were wide. No ordinary mortal in those days could have commanded such paper or permitted himself the luxury of such large type and generous spacing. Although Goebbels seems never to have failed to record his daily observations, which in some cases took up as many as eighty-five typewritten pages, he apparently seldom, if ever, took the time to read over what he had previously written. It thus happened that he was frequently repetitious; in fact, at times he used virtually the same words on two consecutive days to describe the same event. Every day's entry began with Die Lage (The Situation). It was virtually a recapitulation of the daily military communique—the confidential and complete communiqu6 to which only privileged persons had access. In a few cases Die Lage is followed by the words "To be inserted later." The little doctor's busy life was such, however, that he never seems to have bothered to have this material inserted later. (Paul) Joseph Goebbels was born October 29, 1897, in the smoky factory town of Rheydt in the Rhineland. He was the son of a factory foreman, Fritz Goebbels, and his wife, Maria Odenhausen, a blacksmith's daughter. His parents were devout Roman Catholics, as were his various relations. The boy Joseph—or, as he was nicknamed, Jupp (pronounced Youp)—attended one of the Catholic grade schools of this textile center of 30,000 inhabitants, and also went through the Gymnasium, or high school, of his native city. He was rejected for military service during World War I because of a deformed foot. He managed to secure a number of Catholic scholarships and attended eight famous German universities—Bonn, Freiburg, Wuerzburg, Munich, Cologne, Frankfurt, Berlin, and finally Heidelberg, where he took his Ph.D. degree in 1921 at the age of twenty-four. He studied history, philology, and the history of art and literature. His ambition was to be a writer. The year of his graduation at Heidelberg he wrote an unsuccessful novel, Michael, and followed it by two plays, Blood Seed (Blutsaat) and The Wanderer (Der Wanderer), which no producer would accept. He also applied, unsuccessfully, for a reporter's job on the Berliner Tagcblatt, internationally famed liberal daily. All these experiences, together with the loss of the war and the collapse of the German Empire, embittered him and kept him restlessly wandering from Rheydt to Cologne, Berlin, and Munich, until, rather by accident, he heard Adolf Hitler speak at Munich in 1922. Young Joseph Goebbels first tried to interest university students in Hitler's message and thereby discovered that he had the gift of eloquence. That was just the sort of man Hitler needed. The Fuehrer tested his disciple's abilities in the Rhine and Ruhr, then under Allied occupation. Working under an assumed name, Goebbels managed to win converts to Nazism and located his office at Hattingen in the Ruhr Valley. In 1924 the French occupation authorities ejected him. Goebbels than drifted to Elberfeld, where he became editor of a Nazi organ, Voelkische Freiheit (Racist Freedom). His articles against the French Negro troops of occupation were especially vitriolic. That same year he was appointed business manager for the Nazi gau, or district, of Rhine-Ruhr. I have been fortunate in having access to an important document dealing with this period of Goebbels's life. Former President Hoover, during a visit to Germany in 1946, was given a hand-written diary kept by Dr. Goebbels from August 12, 1925, to October 16, 1926, which he has kindly placed at my disposal. This diary is important in its revelation of a little scoundrel in training to become a great scoundrel. In addition, it gives valuable evidence of the authenticity of the later diaries. The accounts of those days are replete with references to beer-hall fights, street brawls, and encounters with the police. Goebbels turned his back completely upon the church in which he was raised, and abandoned the faith of his fathers. Father and Mother Goebbels were greatly displeased at their son's apostasy. He complains, on the occasion of a visit to his parents at Rheydt, September 11, 1925: "Father is serious and uncommunicative. That depresses me." He writes on the occasion of his twenty-eighth birthday at Elberfeld: "Not a word from home. How hurt I feel!" Two days later he observes: "Not a word from home for my birthday, nor anything else. That rather pains me. I am gradually losing contact. And yet I think so often and with such love of home. Why do I have to lose everything, yes, everything?" In speaking of his visits he occasionally refers to his much younger brother, Konrad. He does not mention his brother Hans, his senior by two years, probably because Hans no longer lived at home in 1925—26. -He did manage, however, in 1933 to secure a lucrative position for Hans as Director General of the Provincial Fire and Life Insurance Companies of the Rhine Province. He seemed especially attached to his only sister Maria. I cite a few examples from the handwritten earlier diaries: September 30, 1925: "Dr. Ley is a fool and possibly an intriguer." October 2, 1925: "Stresemann has started for the Locarno Conference, to sell Germany out to capitalism. That fat, complacent swine!" October 12, 1925: "In Munich [Nazi] scoundrels are at work—nitwits who won't tolerate real brains That's the reason for the opposition to Strasser and me."* October 26, 1925: "Streicher spoke. Like a pig." January 26, 1926: "Kaufmann arrived with Lucas. I don f t like it. Lucas is a stupid camel. Likes to show off. But there's nothing to him." March 27, 1926: "Went to the office for a moment. Found that camel, Dr. Ziegler, there. He had been saying bad things about me. Defamed me. I can tell it by the looks of the scoundrel." ^ These examples are sufficient to establish a similarity of vituperative expressions between both sets of diaries, and to indicate that the later diaries, although typewritten, chronicled Goebbels's real thoughts. This is true also of Goebbels's commentaries on Hitler. If one had only the typewritten diaries to go by, one might conclude from the adulation amounting almost to deification of the Fuehrer that Goebbels was writing with a view to expediency rather than from conviction—witness an entry like that of March 19, 1942: "As long as he [the Fuehrer] and is among us in good health, as long as he can give us the strength of his spirit and the power of his manliness, no evil can touch us." Could such an apotheosis have been written in sincerity by as coldly calculating a realist as Joseph Goebbels, by a man who from time to time even disagreed with the leader? Here again the earlier diaries furnish corroborative evidence. They prove that Joseph Goebbels, who otherwise seemed to love no one but himself and his children, did indeed adore Adolf Hitler. I quote a few significant entries: November 6, 1925: "Brunswick. We drove to see Hitler. He was just eating his dinner. Immediately he jumped up and stood facing us. He squeezed my hand. Like an old friend. "And these large blue eyes! Like stars. He is happy to see me. I am supremely happy. . . . "Later I drove to the meeting and talked for two hours. Tremendous applause. Then heils and hand-clapping. He has arrived. He shakes my hand. He is completely exhausted from his great speech [delivered elsewhere]. Then he took the floor here for half an hour. "Wit, irony, humor, sarcasm, earnestness, passion, white heat—all this is contained in his speech. This man has everything it takes to be king. The great tribune of the people. The coming dictator." November 23, 1925: "Plauen. I arrive. Hitler is there. My joy is great. He greets me like an old friend. And lavishes attention on me. I have him all to myself. What a guy (So ein KerU). "And then he speaks. How small I am! "He gives me his picture. With a greeting to the Rhine-land. •'Heil Hitler.... "I want Hitler to be my friend. His picture is standing on my table. I simply could not bear it if I ever had to despair of this man." December 29, 1925: "Rheydt Awakened early in the morning. Schmitz brought me a package. A Christmas greeting from Hitler. His book, bound in leather, with a dedication, 'In recognition of the exemplary manner of your fighting.' I am happy!" April 13, 1926: "Munich. At 8 p.m. by car to the Buerger-braeu. Hitler is already there. My heart beats as though it were about to burst (zum Zerspringen). Into the hall. Frenzied greetings. Man after man, the house jam-packed. Streich-er opens the proceedings. Then I speak for two and a half hours. I give everything there is in me. The people simply rave. They applaud noisily. As I conclude, Hitler embraces me. His eyes are filled with tears. I am happy.*' April 19, 1926: "Stuttgart. Hitler embraces me when he sees me. He lavishes a lot of praise on me. I believe he has taken me to his heart as no one else." June 14, 1926: "Elberfeld. I am so happy Hitler is coming. I venerate and love him." June 16, 1926: "Duesseldorf. Hitler has been here for two days.... Hitler, the dear old comrade. One cannot but like him as a person. In addition he is an outstanding personality. One always learns something new from this obstinate man. As a speaker he combines gesture, mimicry, and language in great harmony. The born agitator. With that man one can conquer the world. Unleash him and he makes the whole corrupt republic totter. His most beautiful words yesterday: 4 God showed us mercy beyond measure in our struggle. His most beautiful gift to us is the hatred of our enemies, whom we in turn hate with all our hearts.' " July 6, 1926: "Weimar. Hitler spoke. About politics, the Idea, and organization. Deep and mystical. Almost like a gospel. One shudders as one skirts the abyss of life with him. I thank Fate which gave us this man." When one reads these earlier diary entries, one cannot but conclude that the diaries of 1942 and 1943 are sincere in their portrayal of a very close relationship of mutual trust between Hitler and Goebbels. The sequel to the diaries, too, bears testimony to the sincerity of Goebbels's adoration of his Fuehrer and to the sincerity of the diaries: he committed suicide immediately after Hitler passed out of his life! ^ Unfortunately space does not permit the systematic inclusion of excerpts from the earlier handwritten diaries. Nevertheless, some sections of them seem to me essential for a proper understanding of Goebbels and his time. There is, first of all, Goebbels's revelation of his attitude toward his fellow men. The diaries for 1942—43 convey this only by inference. On August 12, 1925, however, he put down in black and white: "As soon as I am with a person for three days, I don't like him any longer; and if I am with him for a whole week, I hate him like the plague." On October 15, 1925, he observed, "I have learned to iespise the human being from the bottom of my soul. He makes me sick in my stomach. Phooey!" On April 24, 1926, he had occasion to write: "Much dirt and many intrigues. The human being is a canaille." On August 9, 1926, he found that "The only real friend one has in the end is the dog." This was followed on August 17 with a further tribute to his dog Benno: "The more I get to know the human species, the more I care for my Benno." The earlier diaries further reveal, as already pointed out, that Goebbels's parents by no means approved of his conversion from Catholicism to Nazism. Apparently son Joseph attempted occasionally to argue things out, for I find the laconic entries, Krach mit Voter (set-to with Father), and Krach zu Hause (family fight) recurring from time to time. On January 20, 1926, he wrote: "For a long time no word from home. They are angry with me. I am an apostate." The earlier diaries afford insight into the little doctor's personal habits for which one looks in vain in the 1942—43 versions: his love life. Goebbels's amours were a matter of notoriety throughout Germany. His philandering even after he had become a Reich Minister was so well known and so scandalous that his wife, Magda, would on more than one occasion have sued for divorce had not Hitler insisted that he would stand for no marital scandal in the case of a person so highly placed as Dr. Goebbels. In the diaries here offered, however, the chronicler of his life and work, otherwise so candid, chooses to be silent on this much-commented phase of extracurricular activities. The Goebbels diaries for 1925 and 1926 make spicy reading for anybody interested in the amours of men of affairs. His loves in those years were Alma, Else, Anke, an unnamed Franconian, and a Munich girl—not successively but simultaneously. Here are some entries: August 14, 1925: "Alma wrote me a postcard from Bad Harzburg. The first sign of her since that night This teasing, charming Alma! I rather like the kid. "Received first letter from Else in Switzerland. Only Else dear can write like that Soon I'm going to the Rhine for a week, to be quite alone. Then Else will come to call for me. How happy I am in anticipation!" August 15, 1925: "In these days I must think so often of Anke. Why just now? Because it is travel time? How wonderful it was to travel with her! This wonderful wench! "I am yearning for Else. When shall I have her in my arms again? . . . "Else dear, when shall I see you again? "Alma, you dear featherweight! "Anke, never can I forget you! "And now I am, oh, so lonesome!" August 27, 1925: "Three days on the Rhine. I am lazy, go hiking, and sleep. .. . "Not a word from Else. Did she fail to receive my postcard? Or is she angry with me? How I pine for her! "I am living in the same room as I did with her last Whitsuntide. What thoughts! What feeling! Why doesn't she come? "I am standing at the Rhine waiting for you. Come, oh come, you kindly one, and bless me!" August 30, 1925: "I received an invitation to give an address in Recklinghausen. How peculiarly that strikes me! I should like to speak there provided I knew Anke to be sitting among the listeners." September 3, 1925: "Else is here! On Tuesday she returned jubilantly from Switzerland—fat, buxom, healthy, gay, only slightly tanned. She is very happy and in the best of spirits. She is good to me and gives me much joy." October 14, 1925: "Why did Anke have to leave me quite alone? Was it a case of a broken pledge? On her part or mine? I just mustn't think about these things. Work alone can relieve me. . . . Probably that is best, after all!" October 29, 1925: "Birthday! Twenty-eight years old "I am getting old. I notice that today with a shudder. My hair is thinning out. On the way to baldness. "But I want in all eternity to remain young at heart!" December 21, 1925: "There is a curse on me and the women. Woe to those who love me! What a painful thought! It makes one despair." December 29, 1925: "To Crefeld last night with Hess. Christmas celebration. A delightful, beautiful girl from Fran- conia. She's my type. Home with her through rain and storm, Au revoir! "Else arrived." January 20, 1926: "I yearn for the loving hands of a kindly woman." January 31, 1926: "Missed the train. Swore and cursed. But charming chambermaid from Munich!" February 6, 1926: "I yearn for a sweet woman! Oh, torturing pain! Do ydu call that life?" Elsewhere in this introduction I have referred to Goeb-bels's radicalism. Two entries (among others) in the earlier diaries show how close the then young agitator felt to the Communists: October 23, 1925: "In the final analysis it would be better for us to end our existence under Bolshevism than to endure slavery under capitalism." January 31, 1926: 44 I think it is terrible that we and the Communists are bashing in each other's heads. . . . Where can we get together sometime with the leading Communists?" It was over the issue of radicalism, in fact, that Goebbels in 1926 for a while entertained grave doubts about Adolf Hitler. On February 15, 1926, Goebbels heard the Fuehrer speak at Bamberg. The little doctor wrote: "Hitler talked for two hours. I feel as though someone had beaten me. What sort of a Hitler is this? A reactionary? Extremely lacking in poise and assuredness. Russian question: quite off the beam. Italy and England our natural allies! Terrible! Our task, he says, is the destruction of Bolshevism. Bolshevism is a Jewish creation. We must break Russia. Two hundred and eighty millions! .. . "I am unable to say a word. I feel as though someone had hit me over the head.. .. How^ my heart hurts! ... I should like to cry.. .. "Certainly one of the greatest disappointments of my life. I no longer have complete faith in Hitler. That is the terrible thing about it: my props have been taken from under me. I am only half a person." A month later, however, Goebbels begins to regain confidence that Hitler, after all, is right. On March 13 he wrote: "I read Adolf Hitler's The South Tyrol Question and the Problem of Germany's Alliances, a wonderfully clear and broad-minded brochure. He's a great guy, all rigjit— our chief." His last doubts were dispelled when he heard Hitler speak in Munich on April 13. Here is the story of his capitulation: "Hitler arrived. ... He spoke for three hours. Brilliantly. He can make you doubt your own views. Italy and England our allies. Russia wants to devour us. All that is contained in his brochure and in the second volume of Mein Kampf which is to appear soon. "We disagree. We ask questions. He gives brilliant replies. I love him. The social question: he opens great new vistas. He has thought everything through. His ideal: a just collectivism and individualism. As to soil—everything on and under it belongs to the people. Production to be creative and individualistic. Trusts, transportation, et cetera, to be socialized. That's something! He has thought it all through. I am now at ease about him. He is a he-man. He takes everything into account. A hothead like that can be my leader. I bow to the greater man, to the political genius." Goebbels's script is one of the most difficult I have ever deciphered. Ordinarily German hand-writing does not bother me in the least. When I first looked at the handwritten diaries of Joseph Goebbels cursorily I thought, "What regular, clear writing!" On closer inspection, however, the Goebbels calligraphy proved anything but easy to read. It seemed, indeed, like a mirror of the man Goebbels as I knew him: apparently frank and straightforward, with a disarming smile and ingratiating voice, he was in reality a master at hiding his real thoughts behind a mask of urbanity. In his handwriting, too, he evidently tried to hide something. More difficult even than deciphering Goebbels's writing, however, was the translation of his innumerable German colloquial and slang expressions. I could meet the problem only by using equivalent American slang. From the beginning of his career as a National Socialist Goebbels was a glutton for work. He spoke night after night, edited his paper, attended to a multitude of details of political organization, and still found time with Gregor Strasser to start the National-Sozialistische Briefe (National Socialist Letters) which were soon eagerly read by German workers. Goebbels could truly claim that he and Strasser secured Hitler his working-class following—Hitler himself had appealed mainly to the middle class, the petty bourgeoisie, as well as to ardent nationalists of every persuasion. These Briefe were also a powerful weapon in the Goeb-bels-Strasser fight within the young and uproarious Nazi party against the "conservatives" such as Gottfried Feder, Hermann Esser, and, strangely enough, Julius Streicher. Goebbels was always to be found on the side of the radicals. The Goebbels-Strasser duumvirate did not last long. At the Nazi party convention of 1926 at Bamberg, Bavaria, Goebbels soon sensed that Strasser and the Fuehrer did not see eye to eye, and decided his bread was buttered on the Hitler side. He sided with his idol against his friend. Hitler rewarded him on November 9, the anniversary of the ill-fated beer-cellar putsch of 1923, by making him Gauleiter for Greater Berlin, a task well calculated to test to the full the abilities of the little doctor, as an organizer, writer, strategist, and political leader. The capital in those days was known as das rote Berlin (Red Berlin). It polled a large Communist vote, and the Socialists were the dominating party. That was grist for the fiery doctor's mill. Street brawls and beer-hall fights were the order of the day. In 1927 Goebbels founded a weekly paper, Der Angriff (The Attack), which by 1929 became a biweekly and from 1930 on a daily. If the Communists hitherto held a monopoly on guttersnipe vituperative language, they now had a thing or two to learn from the venomous Nazi editor. Goebbels's career as a parliamentarian began in 1928, when he was elected to the German Reichstag. A year later he also became a town councillor of Berlin. Time and again the Nazi organization of Berlin came into conflict with the police and was forbidden. Nevertheless Goebbels managed in 1927 to show up at the Nuremberg party convention with 700 Berlin SA Brown Shirts. Adolf Hitler was much impressed with der gescheite Dr. Goebbels (the cleverly intelligent Dr. Goebbels), as I once heard him call his Propaganda Minister in a Reichstag speech. This young man showed that he possessed something which many an older politician could well envy him: an uncanny understanding of the psychology of the German people. Goebbels was very often way off in his estimate of foreign nations; however, he did know his fellow Germans. In 1929 Hitler made the then thirty-two-year-old Goebbels Reich Propaganda Leader of the Nazi party. "Propaganda has only one object," the new Reichsleiter said on one occasion—"to conquer the masses. Every means that furthers this aim is good; every means that hinders it is bad." He had already given samples of his skill at propaganda not only by his articles and the innumerable handbills and posters he designed, but also in the books, all written before 1930, The Unknown SA Man, Lenin or Hitler? The Second Revolution, Buch Isidor, and Knorke. Goebbels was quite willing to admit that his speeches and writings were usually on the "primitive" side. "Our propaganda is primitive," The Associated Press reported him as saying, "because the people think primitively. We speak the language the people understand." In his Battle for Berlin (Kampf um Berlin), written in 1934, after he had already become Reich Propaganda Minister but dealing with his years as Gauleiter of Berlin from 1929 on, he wrote: "Masses are unformed stuff. Only in the hands of the political artists do the masses become a people and the people a nation." Goebbels proved to be a wizard at demagoguery. He mixed satire with humor, irony with sombemess, quips in the vernacular with pontifical adjurations. His dark piercing eyes, his straight black hair brushed back, his taut skin, made one think of certain representations of Mephistopheles. January 30, 1933, brought the accession of Adolf Hitler to undreamed-of power. In the first official announcements the name of Dr. Goebbels was conspicuously absent. Hermann Goering and Wilhelm Frick were the only two National Socialists besides Adolf Hitler in the first Hitler cabinet. Goebbels could well afford to wait. Hitler had great plans for him. On June 30, 1933, he decreed the establishment of a new cabinet office, that of Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, with Joseph Goebbels as its head, stating that the new venture would be "responsible for all tasks having to do with influencing the mental and spiritual life of the nation, for winning allegiance to the state, its culture and economy, for informing the public at home and abroad about the nation, and for administering all institutions and installations contributing to these ends." Decree followed decree, expanding his powers and func- tions. There was the Reich Culture Chamber Law of September 22, 1933, channeling all intellectual and cultural life into this one chamber with its six sub-chambers (Reich Radio Chamber, Reich Theater Chamber, Reich Press Chamber, et cetera) and appointing Goebbels as president which, under Nazism, meant dictator. There was the Journalists' Law of October, 4 1933, which made all newsmen servants of the state and subject to license by Goebbels. There was the decree of November 26, 1936, forbidding all artistic criticism. Soon Goebbels unblushingly forbade the publication of speeches by cabinet members. He even decreed that nobody could quote past utterances of the Fuehrer without the approval of his Propaganda Ministry. Goebbels unscrupulously used his vast powers to foster anti-Semitism by fabricating stories about atrocities allegedly committed by the Jews. As World War II loomed on the horizon—and no Nazi besides Hitler himself knew better than Goebbels how certain it was to come—he kept up a constant barrage of stories alleging maltreatment and even torture of German nationals by the populations of neighboring states. He thus prepared the ground well for Hitler's war on civilization. Even after his phenomenal rise to power Goebbels never lost sight of the desirability of making himself persona gratis-sima to Adolf Hitler. He could not impress Hitler with a war record like that of Hermann Goering, the Pour le Merite aviation ace of World War I, as he was physically incapacitated for military service. The Fuehrer, however, laid great stress upon large families. Goebbels had married the comely and socially presentable Magda, a woman who in her first marriage to a German industrialist named Quandt already had one son, Harald. It was a matter of common gossip in Berlin society circles that Joseph Goebbels insisted that his wife deliver one baby a year. His offspring consisted of six children at the end of the Hitler regime. Goebbels, coldly calculating that these children would probably not have much of a chance in a world to which Nazism was anathema, poisoned them all and prevailed upon Magda likewise to take poison. Before the war, however, the wife and children were quite an asset in Goebbels's bid for Hitler's affection. The children were taught to say nice things to "Onkel Adolf." Goebbels records with pride that the Fuehrer during his private talks usually inquired about Hilde, Holde, and Helga. He apparently knew the three younger children, Heide, Hedda, and Hel-muth less well. Also, he vowed that after the war he would see to it that his family devote itself to his idol even more than before the great conflict. Such was the Joseph Goebbels of pre-World War H days, such were his powers. The diaries will show that even these powers did not satiate his inordinate ambition, but that he used the Fuehrer's absence at the military front virtually to set himself up as dictator in domestic affairs. I saw Dr. Joseph Goebbels for the first time in 1932 during the brief chancellorship of Franz von Papen, when the ban on Nazi party public meetings in Prussia and on the wearing of Party uniforms was lifted by this wily diplomat and politician, who told me he permitted the Nazis to meet freely "so that they might hang themselves by their own words." The Nazis immediately staged a series of demonstrations all over Greater Berlin, among them one in the famed Sports Palace, Berlin's Madison Square Garden. In those days the Nazis craved international attention, and the foreign press was assigned choice seats on the huge platform, near the speaker's lectern. What struck me as I heard Dr. Goebbels that first time, and what made me watch him closely thereafter, was the fact that this diminutive man, one of the most versatile spellbinders Germany has had in generations, was absolutely cool and self-possessed while at the same time he gave the impression of being deeply stirred and carried away by his own eloquence. His voice, of a deeply resonant quality, seemed to quiver with emotion. His gestures seemed passionate. His general attitude seemed to be that of a man so wrapped up in his fanaticism that time meant nothing so long as he had a message to deliver. I noticed something else, however: his fascinatingly delicate hands moved in powerful gestures without the slightest trembling and belied the quiver in his voice. His gestures, although seemingly spontaneous, indicated careful planning, for he always threw himself into position for a particular gesture before actually beginning to execute it. Beside him lay a watch which he consulted from time to time by a stealthy glance, clearly showing that he was well aware of the passage of time. In short, here was a showman who knew exactly what he was doing every moment and who calculated in advance the effect of every spoken word and every gesture. Disgustingly grating though the*raucous voice of Adolf Hitler was and disturbing though the frequent breaks in his voice were as he talked himself into a high pitch of frenzied exaltation, the hearer nevertheless had the impression that here was a man who believed what he said or at least intoxicated himself into this belief on hearing his own fulminations. With Goebbels I had the feeling that he would have defended Communism, monarchy, or even democracy with the same pathos and emotion, yes, even the same fanaticism, had his idol, Hitler, chosen to sponsor any of these. About three years later a German friend told me of attending a party at which Goebbels amused all present by successively delivering a speech on behalf of the restoration of the monarchy, the re-establishment of the Weimar Republic, the introduction of Communism in the German Reich, and, finally, on behalf of National Socialism. "I assure you," this friend said, "that I was ready at the end of each speech to join the particular cause Goebbels had just advocated. He had compelling and convincing arguments for each of the four forms of government." A striking example of Goebbels's capacity for unabashed prevarication was given the foreign correspondents accredited at Berlin on November 10, 1938, the day after Hitler had given the "go" sign to his hordes to loot Jewish shops, demolish Jewish property, set fire to synagogues, and arrest innocent Jews. We were asked to come to the Propaganda Ministry late that forenoon, as Dr. Goebbels wished to make a statement. Ordinarily at our daily press conference, which was usually conducted by the section chief in charge of foreign press matters of the Propaganda Ministry, we sat in armchairs on which one could easily write. Also, there was always ample opportunity for asking questions. This time we were led into the so-called < Throne Room," a large, ceremonial hall of the Leopold Palace, housing the Propaganda Ministry. There were no seats. We stood around until it was time for the Minister to appear. Suddenly he entered with, quick, nervous steps, invited us to stand in a semicircle about him, and then delivered a declaration to the effect that "all the accounts that have come to your ears about alleged looting and destruction of Jewish property are a stinking lie (sind erstunken und erlo-gen). Not a hair of a Jew was disturbed (den Juden ist kein Haar gekruemmt worden)" We looked at one another in amazement. In all our journalistic careers no one among us had experienced anything like it. Only three minutes from the Wilhelmplatz, on which the Propaganda Ministry was located, was Berlin's famous shopping street, the I^eipziger Strasse, at the head of which was Wertheim's internationally known department store, its great show windows broken, its celebrated displays a pile of rubble. Yet Goebbels dared tell us that what we had seen with our own eyes was a "stinking lie.** After a few paralyzing moments we had recovered sufficiently from this shock to want to press Dr. Goebbels with questions. He had disappeared. He had cleverly used the moment of our consternation to eliminate any possibility of our asking him embarrassing questions. What Goebbels failed to include in his calculations when he launched this coup was that while all of us truthfully reported his words and, in order to be able to remain at our posts in Germany, refrained from tearing his statement to pieces, we had the previous day sent long eyewitness accounts of burning synagogues, demolished show windows, beaten Jews, and Nazi gangsters moving through the streets and shouting "Juda Verrecke [Croak the Jews]!" My wife and I had spent hours the night before watching frenzied Nazis at their work of destruction. Also, some of us had filed stories just before the Goebbels news conference began, describing how we had picked our way to the Wilhelmplatz by making many a detour in order not to cut our tires on the smashed glass of costly display windows that littered the main thoroughfares. The effect, therefore, of our truthful reporting of Goeb-bels's statement was quite different from what Hitler's Propaganda Minister had expected. The whole civilized world was shocked when on the evening of May 10, 1933, the books of authors displeasing to the Nazis, including even those of our own Helen Keller, were solemnly burned on the immense Franz Joseph Piatz between the University of Berlin and the State Opera on Unter den Linden. I was a witness to the scene. All afternoon Nazi raiding parties had gone into public and private libraries, throwing onto the streets such books as Dr. Goebbels in his supreme wisdom had decided were unfit for Nazi Germany. From the streets Nazi columns of beer-hall fighters had picked up these discarded volumes and taken them to the square above referrred to. Here the heap grew higher and higher, and every few minutes another howling mob arrived, adding more books to the impressive pyre. Then, as night fell, students from the university, mobilized by the little doctor, performed veritable Indian dances and incantations as the flames began to soar skyward. When the orgy was at its height, a cavalcade of cars hove into sight. It was the Propaganda Minister himself, accompanied by his bodyguard and a number of fellow torch bearers of the new Nazi Kultur. "Fellow students, German men and women!" he said as he stepped before a microphone for all Germany to hear him. "The age of extreme Jewish intellectualism has now ended, and the success of the German revolution has again given the right of way to the German spirit . . . "You are doing the right thing in committing the evil spirit of the past to the flames at this late hour of the night It is a strong, great, and symbolic act—an act that is to bear witness before all the world to the fact that the spiritual foundation of the November Republic has disappeared. From these ashes there will rise the phoenix of a new spirit. . . . "The past is lying in flames. The future will rise from the flames within our own hearts. . . . Brightened by these flames our vow shall be: The Reich and the Nation and our Fuehrer Adolf Hitler: Heil! Heil! Heil!" The few foreign correspondents who had taken the trouble to view this "symbolic act" were stunned. What had happened to the "Land of Thinkers and Poets"? they wondered Goebbels always played the double role of living a luxurious life but pretending to be simple—the true representative of the common man in Germany. It would not do for the people to read what a gay party he was giving—the drab enumeration of prominent people who attended gave his communique the flavor of a stilted official reception. It is true that at the very beginning of his career as a cabinet minister, he forgot for a short while that he had chosen to pose as the outstanding exponent of the proletarian sector of the Nazi movement. A newsreel, Daddy's Birthday, was released showing the private life of the Goebbels family. The Minister made the psychological mistake of permitting a scene to be filmed which showed his children, each with a groom for his pony. At some of the showings the audience booed and whistled, and within a few days the newsreel was withdrawn. He also made a psychological mistake when he prevailed upon his wife, Magda, to become head of a Nazi fashion center in July 1933. Public ridicule resulted in the complete closing down of this venture. Goebbels was quick to profit from these two mistakes. From then on he was the simple man who "contrasted sharply with his then closest rival, the pleasure-loving, epicurean, spendthrift Hermann Goering. In fact Goebbels even made use of his prerogatives as Minister of Propaganda to forbid the publication of certain pictures of Goering's costly Opera Ball on January 12, 1936. For purposes of window dressing the bemedaled Minister of Aviation had invited to this ball such social luminaries as Ex-Czar Ferdinand of Bulgaria, the former German Crown Prince Frederick Wilhelm and his family (one son, Prince Louis Ferdinand, however, refused to attend, as he saw through the maneuver), Duke Charles Edward of Coburg and Goth a, Krupp von Bohlen und Hal-bach, Werner von Siemens, and others. Goebbels did not want the German public to know that any top Nazi was coq$orting with the former German aristocracy and plutocracy. Nor did he want the public to know that the vast Opera House was redecorated in white satin and that more than a million marks had been spent to give luster to the occasion. In that connection I recall a so-called Bier abend (in other words, a buffet supper with beer, sandwiches, and salads) given in the Propaganda Ministry in honor of provincial journalists from all over Germany who had come to Berlin for what was called a convention, but in reality was an indoctrination week in Nazi news policies. The vice-president, the secretary, and I were invited as representatives of the Foreign Press Association and were the only foreigners present. We were asked to take seats informally. A functionary of the Propaganda Ministry presided at each round table for eight to ten persons. Fortunately for me I happened to sit down at a table over which someone from the moving-picture division of the Ministry presided; in other words, a man who did not know the newsmen. I was careful not to pronounce my name distinctly when all of us in that group mutually introduced ourselves, and was happy to note that the Propaganda Ministry representative regarded me as just another provincial correspondent. It was not long before he delivered himself of something which, by comparing notes with my other colleagues, was being said in almost the same words at all the other tables. "Our Minister, Dr. Goebbels, is one of the most modest men I ever knew," quoth his handy man. "He hates all pomp and luxury. He is therefore very much embarrassed that he has had to move into a large villa at Schwanenwerder on the Wannsee. But he realizes that as Minister of the Reich he owes something to his official position. After all, he can't receive a distinguished guest like Count Ciano in a five-room apartment! So he is putting up with the inconvenience of a rather swanky villa as a national duty." Goebbels was clever enough to have learned from the newsreel fiasco that a luxurious suburban estate would draw unfavorable comment. What better way of forestalling criticism than letting the men throughout Germany who controlled pubHc opinion through their newspapers know how chagrined he was at having to live in luxury? Costly parties were the order of the day in Hitler's Third Reich. The beer-hall fighters who had won their way to power and position by brute force considered themselves entitled to the spoils of war, and Hitler approved. One high-water mark of such festivities had been the Goering Opera Ball. It would lead too far afield to describe it in a book devoted to Goebbels. Even this sumptuous ball, however, was nothing compared with the Venetian Night given by the man of the people, Joseph Goebbels, in July 1937 in honor of the delegates to the convention of the International Chamber of Commerce. Peacock Island, charmingly located in idyllic Wannsee, some fifteen miles outside of Berlin on the way to Potsdam, with its romantic castle erected in 1794 for Frederick Wil-helm III, had been converted into a scene from the Arabian Nights. As we crossed over from the mainland on a pontoon bridge, the path leading to where Dr. and Mrs. Goebbels waited to receive their guests was lined on both sides with hundreds of the prettiest girls from Berlin's numerous higher schools. AH of them were dressed in white silk breeches and blouses, white silk stockings, and white leather slippers. Each held a white wand. They bowed as the guests slowly walked several hundred yards to the reception line. On a beautiful greensward tables had been set for groups of twelve, ten, eight, and smaller parties. We were some three thousand guests. A sumptuous dinner was served the like of which we had not eaten in Berlin for years, for Rudolf Hess had already delivered himself of the slogan, "Guns instead of butter." Fringing the greensward on one side was the longest bar I have ever seen, with eighty attendants at our service to concoct any drink that might be wanted, or to serve champagne without limit. Every lady guest was presented with an artistic figurine from the Prussian State Porcelain Factory. In another part of the island a gigantic rotunda had been constructed in which the guests could dance, and on which, later in the evening the ensemble of the Civic Opera performed a charming ballet and other members of Berlin's artist colony put on a floor show. All for the glory of the Third Reich! But the official communique for the German press was stilted and drab. The common people were not to know that the days of Augustus the Strong of Saxony and Poland had returned to Germany under the auspices of the tribune of the people, Joseph Goebbels. During the first year of the Nazi regime the foreign correspondents had virtually no contact with the newly created Propaganda Ministry. Goebbels ignored the foreign press (except for certain satellite journalists), since the overwhelming majority of the newsmen from other countries on duty in Berlin were critical, to say the least, of Nazism. Gradually Goebbels realized that such a condition of affairs was untenable; that so long as foreign correspondents were tolerated there must also be some official contact between them and the German authorities. Even unfavorable publicity would be better than no publicity at all. Besides, Hitler might at any time accuse him of having failed even to try to win over the foreign correspondents to an understanding of what he and his movement were attempting to do. In the spring of 1934, therefore, Goebbels reversed himself and invited the foreign correspondents as well as the diplomatic corps to a tea party in Leopold Palace. Shortly afterward the Foreign Press Association gave its traditional annual banquet in honor of the German Government, the diplomatic corps, and leaders of German thought. In the Republican days most members of the cabinet had attended. The German Chancellor or the Foreign Minister had always delivered a major speech. The Nazis snubbed us. No cabinet member came—only a few minor officials. In the years of the Weimar Republic it had not been difficult for me to find appropriate words of welcome to our German and foreign diplomatic guests. The leaders of the short-lived German republic were anxious to fit themselves into the pattern of a co-operative, peaceful world. But to speak on an occasion like this, when the Nazi Government deliberately snubbed us, and yet not risk deportation, was far more difficult. Unwittingly the absent Dr. Goebbels came to my rescue. Some days before our banquet a representative of Der Angriff had been ejected from Rumania. That, of course, was before Ion Antonescu. I cannot remember what the specific charges were. In general they were the same as those made— and rightly so—against so many German correspondents abroad after the Nazis took over. Most of these men were now no longer reporters; they were political agents of the Nazi regime. Goebbels seized upon the occasion to write a scathing editorial protesting against the eviction. He posed as a champion of free speech and untrammeled inquiry into facts. The foreign correspondent, he held, must be permitted to contact not only the government but also the opposition, must have the privilege of writing both complimentary and uncomplimentary things about the country of which he is a guest. In short, Goebbels advocated for his correspondents abroad all those things that we had been permitted to do under the Weimar Republic but were being reprimanded and even threatened for doing in the Third Reich. My speech on this occasion was, for once, "Made in Germany." I stated that it was a comforting thing for a foreign correspondent to find that his conception of his duties coincided with that of the country to which he was assigned. I therefore took pleasure in quoting the official German position on this matter. After concluding the reading of the Goebbels editorial, I said that every foreign correspondent present no doubt agreed with this official Nazi view as expressed by Dr. Goebbels, wherefore I raised my glass to that freedom of the press on which we were all agreed, and which had been aptly defined in Der Angriff. If I ever saw silly faces, it was those of the few Nazis present. Quite by accident I came to hear Goebbels make a pronouncement which put the final touch on Nazi regimentation of the German mind. Among the numerous invitations to public ceremonies which constantly passed over my desk in The Associated Press Bureau at Berlin there was one asking me to attend a meeting of the Reichskulturkammer (Reich Chamber of Culture) in Philharmonic Hall at noon, November 29, 1936. Goebbels was to be the speaker. That meant we would receive the text of his address via the German News Bureau soon after he had finished. Therefore, why bother to go to the meeting? Preceding and following the address, however, Berlin's Philharmonic Orchestra was to play. I was willing even to listen to a tirade by Goebbels if I could hear Beethoven and Schubert performed by the Berlin Philharmonic. I hastened to the nearby hall. Goebbels arose and, in cold, biting language, and without his usual effort to ingratiate himself with his listeners, calmly announced that musical, theatrical, literary, and artistic criticism was hereafter forbidden. The professional press and radio critics were ordered to limit themselves to Betrachtungen (reflections or contemplations), which meant that they might write something about the artist himself and his method of work, possibly even a word or two as to how the musical composition or the play had originated, but nothing to indicate a critical attitude toward either the performer or his work. The representatives of every sector of German art present looked at one another in amazement. The newspaper critics bit their lips in livid rage. The last vestige of relative freedom of the press was thus eliminated by the dictum of the Propaganda Minister. I was glad I had gone. To observe the sinugness with which Goebbels addressed the leaders of art and culture in Germany, to catch the malicious glint in his eye as he noted the helpless consternation of his listeners, and to hear the raucous applause of the Nazi party leaders of the beer-hall roustabout type who were sprinkled among the writers, musicians, painters, sculptors, and other artists—that was worth coming for. Strangely enough, my last experience as a free man in Germany had to do with Joseph Goebbels. Stranger still, although Goebbels and I had a mutual aversion toward each other—Goebbels said in his diary entry for May 19, 1942, what he thought of me—my last experience was a gratifying one. Here is the unusual story: At Hanover there was a dear friend of our family, Frau Lotte B, a Jewess. She was arrested and ordered deported to the Baltic States, then under German occupation. Her husband had been a naval captain in World War I and had a distinguished record. He had taken his son to the United States where news reached him of the November 1938 pogrom. He saw that a return to Germany meant disaster. Therefore he moved heaven and earth to have his wife join him, and actually secured a visa to Cuba for her. Friends in Germany were instrumental in obtaining transit visas through France and Spain. Despite Frau B's possessing the necessary papers for emigration, the Nazis placed her on one of the cattle trains filled with Jews who were to be shipped to some Baltic ghetto— Riga, if I remember correctly. It was at this stage of events that mutual friends acquainted me with the situation. I ran from office to office, only to learn that, in the last analysis, Jewish affairs were in the hands of none other than Joseph Goebbels. If ever it was difficult for me to become a petitioner it was now. I loathed Dr. Goebbels. I hated to ask him for anything. I feared he might ask something of me in return which my conscience would forbid me to do. Yet the thought of this splendid woman being permanently separated from her husband and child, left to perish miserably in a concentration camp, would not let me sleep. For the first and only time in my life I therefore asked a favor of Dr. Goebbels. I reminded him that in the first place the Nazis on assuming power had specifically stated they would treat Jews with a distinguished war record differently from others of their race or religion. Herr B's record as a naval hero was beyond challenge. Therefore he was—so I argued—entitled to special consideration. Secondly, I argued that the purpose of the evacuations obviously was to drive all Jews out of Germany. Then what objection could there be to letting Frau B start westward for America instead of eastward to the Baltic States? In either case Nazi Germany would be rid of her. On more than one occasion I have been baffled by the unpredictable workings of the Nazi mind. To my surprise Goebbels sent me word through Dr. Rudolf Semler of the Propaganda Ministry, who had been very helpful to me in this matter, that he would see to it that Frau B was taken off the ghetto train and allowed to proceed to Spain. He attached no conditions. He did not try to make a deal with me. Dr. Semler told me privately, however, that I had "shamed" him into taking favorable action by my reference to Herr B's war record. Pearl Harbor followed soon thereafter, and four days later, on December 11, 1941, Adolf Hitler declared war on the United States. We journalists were permitted to join the embassy and consulate staffs for internment at Bad Nauheim where we had to wait five months before being allowed to proceed to Lisbon and there board the New York-bound SS Drottningholm which had just brought the Axis diplomats and journalists to Portugal. On the morning of December 14, just as Mrs. Lochner and I were about to drive to the American Embassy to join the rest of the internees, the telephone rang. It was the Postal Ministry which read a telegram to me from Frau B stating that she had arrived safely in Madrid. What was Goebbels's place in the Nazi scheme of things? I remember a talk I had back in 1930 with Ernst Roehm, the only man in the Nazi hierarchy who addressed Adolf Hitler by the familiar German "Du." He was brought to my Oifice by a Bolivian diplomat, Federico Nielsen-Reyes, who thought it high time an Associated Press representative knew some of the men of the coming regime in Germany. Roehm in turn introduced me to Hitler several months later. Discussing the various leaders of the Nazi movement, Roehm pointed out that Goebbels often annoyed Hitler by the guttersnipe language used in the Angriff, the Berlin organ of the Nazi party of which Goebbels was editor in chief. "Goebbels is a special case, and the Fuehrer at first did not know what to do with him," Roehm told me. "He finally decided that, since Berlin was so 'red,' Goebbels might well work off his energies there." Step by step, moving rather cautiously at first, Goebbels entrenched himself. He took sides against Roehm and was in Hitler's immediate entourage during the crisis of June 30, 1934, when the fate of the regime seemed to hang in the balance. At the same time he seems to have looked out for a possibility of securing a berth elsewhere in case the repercussions of the Roehm revolt and the attendant wholesale purges proved too great for Hitler to retain his dictatorship. Coming to Prague soon after to cover a story there, I received an unexpected visit from Otto Strasser, leader of the "Black Front" which for a while played with Hitler and had then broken away from him because he was not radical enough. Strasser at that time claimed that Goebbels was in contact with him and was ready to join the Strasser forces in case Hitler were overthrown. I believe it is no exaggeration to say that at the time when the Goebbels diaries were written the little doctor was the most important and influential man after Hitler, not even excepting the seemingly all-powerful Heinrich Himmler. Goering, the successor-designate to Hitler, was already in eclipse. Himmler had only brute force at his command. He was not a man of exceptional intellect. Nor was he powerful in his own right. His power, like that of Martin Bormann, depended upon Adolf Hitler. His clumsiness in trying to negotiate a separate peace in the closing days of the war shows what was bound to happen to him once he failed to act on directives from Hitler. Goebbels on the other hand, undoubtedly had brains. He was vested with more and more authority as time went on, until by 1943 he was virtually running the country while Hitler was running the war. One indication of the power exerted by Goebbels is his repeated mention that he issued orders to arrest this or that person. The following entry, under date of November 19, 1943, illustrates what I mean: "There is some complaint about the attitude of certain classes of our population toward English prisoners of war. ... I have given orders that people who are so unmindful of their honor as to behave thus be summoned into court and given heavy penitentiary sentences." In fact, a careful reading of the diaries makes one feel that Goebbels was a law unto himself, barring only his respect for Adolf Hitler, whose will he, in the last analysis, obeyed, even though he by no means meekly accepted an adverse decision but kept reverting to the subject until he had either changed the Fuehrer's mind or found him adamant in his decision. What, then, are some of the other characteristics of Goebbels as he reveals himself in his diaries for 1942-43? Overshadowing all other characteristics was his inordinate ambition. Obsessed with ambition, he became a glutton for work—not because he was overconscientious, but because he was driven on by an almost psychopathic lust for power. To achieve power he needed to be in the know on what was going on around about him. Accordingly we find him listening by the hour to the gossip of men who could inform him on the foibles and weaknesses of possible rivals. We find him sticking his nose into everything, even in matters which in nowise concerned him. I could turn to almost any page of his diaries and find him occupying his mind with such matters as potato rations, hair-dos for women in wartime, Nazi terminology in foreign-language dictionaries, griping by the average citizen, requisitioning of copper and pewter ware, the administration of justice, new taxes, houses of ill fame for foreign slave workers, fees for troop entertainers, diet for dancing girls, women in industry, experiments in artificial insemination, itinerary for Countess Ciano, civilian behavior in wartime, character of radio shows, German foreign policy, attitude toward occu- pied countries, corruption in high places—just to mention a few topics at random. So ambitious was Goebbels that he refused to take out time for necessary rest. Apparently he feared that by being away from his duties for even a fortnight he might miss something of importance in the determining of which he should have a hand. He writes about trouble with his nerves, about an itch that has become unbearable, about being very tired and badly in need of rest, about the terrible pain caused by a bad kidney attack, et cetera. Yet such is his ambition and jealous concern for keeping power in his hands that he refuses consistently to heed his doctor's orders to go to Karlsbad for a cure. Hand in hand with his overweening ambition went a colossal vanity. "The Fuehrer told Speer he never once discovered a psychological error in my propaganda," he wrote jubilantly on April 24, 1943. 'The Fuehrer said if he had a dozen persons like myself he would appoint me," he wrote complacently in connection with filling a post of gauleiter. "I was in top form and used persuasive and pointed arguments," he exclaimed on February 7, 1942. "My articles are so fascinating both for the German and the international readers," was his comment on April 6, 1942. A little flattery—and Goebbels was ready to change his opinion about a person. This is strikingly illustrated in the case of King Boris of Bulgaria. Goebbels hated royalty and aristocracy. The Hohenzollerns weren't "worth a hoot," the Italian royal house was "despicable," Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands "surely a sad sight." Quite in keeping with this general estimate of blue bloods was his opinion of King Boris as expressed in his diary for January 25, 1942: "a sly, crafty fellow," who "is said to be playing a somewhat double-faced game." Then Boris did him the honor of summoning him for a private audience which, although scheduled to last only twenty minutes, stretched out for more than an hour. Goebbels hears that his articles are "required reading" for the Bulgarian monarch, that he uses Goebbels's arguments in talking to his military staff, that Goebbels would have prevented German defeat in 1918 had he then been Minister for Propaganda. Suddenly Goebbels reversed himself; he now wrote of Boris (see diary entry for March 28, 1942): "He is a real people's king ... an impassioned devotee of Hitler's genius as a leader . . . sympathetic." Goebbels was undoubtedly one of the most radical of the Nazi leaders. His early doubt about Hitler, as I have pointed out previously, revolved about the question whether the Fuehrer saw social and economic problems radically enough. But this radicalism extends to all fields other than the social-economic. He insists upon a fundamental change in the administration of justice, even to the extent of throwing overboard existing legal concepts and substituting Hitler's supreme will and the "sound common sense of the people" as the basis for legal findings. It is he who suggests to Hitler that he should have the sham Reichstag expressly confer upon the Fuehrer the right to dismiss from office anybody he pleases without a hearing. He wants Hitler to authorize the shooting of enemy parachutists and is disappointed that the Fuehrer does not agree with him. Above all, Goebbels's radicalism was attested by the fact that he, more conspicuously than any other Nazi leader, advocated "total war." The whole nation must take part in this war, he felt. He therefore opposed so-called "soup money" for civil servants when they had to work longer hours, insisting that the civilian should fare no better than the soldier. He advocated the drafting of women into important war industries—again on the theory that the entire nation must wage this war. With Goebbels, only a Nazi was a full-fledged human being. However often he may lose his temper over the shortcomings of his fellow leaders, in the last analysis they rank higher with him than non-Nazis. To him the WafTen-SS is a military element far superior to the regular army. General Sepp Dietrich is admirable because he is the leading general of the SS troops. Next come Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, Colonel General Eduard Dietl, and Colonel General Heinz Guderian, all of them ardent Nazis. The leftovers from imperial and republican days, men such as Brauchitsch, Manstein, Bock, Busch, Kuechler, List, Haider, Fromm, Stu-elpnagel, are either not to be trusted or are inept or lacking in imagination. Even Party considerations failed to count with him, however, when the interests of his own Propaganda Ministry were involved. He will not stand for having the Party establish a general news service of its own. He intervenes when Gauleiter Joseph Buerckel tries to set up an independent cultural office. He resents any attempt by the Ministry of the Interior, which is technically in charge of civil-service appointments and at the head of which is one of Hitler's oldest collaborators, Dr. Wilhelm Frick, to have any say about appointments to the Propaganda Ministry, and denies, the Finance Ministry its right to be consulted on these appointments on the ground that the budget is involved. Goebbels was a peculiar mixture of realist and wishful thinker. Despite his vanity he often viewed situations with a greater sense of realism than did some of his co-leaders. He saw, for instance, how wrong it was for the Nazi regime not to drive a wedge between the conquered peoples of the East and the Bolsheviks by promising the Ukrainians, White Russians, and others land for the peasants and religious freedom. Ardent Nazi though he was, he was acutely aware of the danger to the regime inherent in the love for good living, even in wartime, by leaders of the regime. Not because he was humane, but because he was a realist, Goebbels advocated decent food and pay for slave labor. Only by offering food and monetary inducements, he felt, would these forced laborers step up production. Parenthetically I may add that he was an extreme realist when it came to his own health. When he had the violent kidney attack he preferred to entrust his precious body to the care of Catholic nuns as nurses, spurning the much-advertised "Brown Sisters" of the Nazi regime. On the other hand Goebbels frequently shows that wishful thinking could easily sidetrack his innate sense of realism. He refused to believe, for instance, because he did not want to believe, that America really had great potentialities for war production. Instead, he pooh-poohed American claims and accused President Roosevelt, General Marshall, Secretary of the Navy Knox, and Harry Hopkins of exaggerating American production. Wishful thinking led him to prophesy that the Allies, on reaching Italy, would indulge in wholesale looting of art treasures, that Italy would never declare war on Germany, that Sir Stafford Cripps would not accept an appointment to go to India, that President Roosevelt was trying to seize Tndia and the French colonial empire, and that Germany proper could never be invaded. The diaries become almost humorous reading in those passages in which Goebbels feigns moral indignation at certain occurrences in the Allied camp. For instance, he pretends to be sickened on reading about the telegrams sent to Stalin by the "plutocracies" on the occasion of Red Army day—as though this were any different from what the Nazis did during their brief marriage of convenience with the Bolsheviks from the autumn of 1939 until June, 1941. Time and again he assumes a holier-than-thou attitude toward the Western Powers as regards the alleged falsification or witholding of news. Yet his diaries are replete with cynical admissions that he has doctored the news and kept the German public in ignorance of important developments. In this introduction space forbids dealing with numerous other aspects of the diaries which make them a veritable Book of Revelations on the Nazi regime. Suffice it merely to indicate some of them. Totalitarianism is revealed as amazingly inept and bungling, quite in contrast to the popular notion that authoritarian regimes at least are efficient, however brutal they may be. The vaunted German Luftwaffe is shown to have been far weaker in the years under discussion than the outside world assumed it to be. The aims and methods of Nazi foreign policy are disclosed with a frankness and cynicism that makes National Socialism stand forth as absolutely amoral and immoral, as ready to cheat friend, foe, and neutral alike. Hitler's and Goebbels's contempt for other nations and their public men was abysmal. Goebbels gloatingly planned the extermination of all Jews, and the reduction of the Christian churches to impotence. Also the Goebbels diaries are calculated to cause wide discussion as to whether Allied psychological warfare was waged with the necessary acumen, and whether Unconditional Surrender did not needlessly prolong the war. The Goebbels diaries are by no means merely a vain public official's reflections on his own importance and his non-authoritative interpretations of contemporaneous events. They are the day-by-day record of occurrences in Germany and the world, written by one of the three top men in the Nazi hierarchy, who in the early days of the regime were often called "the Nazi trinity." Adolf Hitler, of course, was the Number One man. If any further evidence of this is needed, the Goebbels diaries clearly establish this fact. Next there was Hermann Goering, designated by Hitler as his successor in the event of his death or incapacity. And finally there was the little doctor, Joseph Goebbels, the third man of the trinity, whose story is told in the following pages in his own words. January 1942 The Goebbels diaries begin six weeks after Pearl Harbor. On December 7, 1941, the Japanese had made their sneak attack; four days later Adolf Hitler, to the surprise even of many of his most intimate followers, declared war on the United States. Shortly before, the German armies for the first time had met with major reverses. A winter of unexampled severity had come so rapidly in Russia that the German drive on Moscow was abruptly stopped. Not only did a German Government spokesman have to admit in a press conference on December 8, 1941, that it was now out of the question to reach Moscow, but Dr. Goebbels took the unusual step of making a radio appeal to the German nation on December 20 to donate furs, woolens, anything warm available for the soldiers at the front. Hitler further astounded the world by announcing on December 21 that Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch had been removed as Generalissimo of the Army and that the Fuehrer had taken personal command. In a New Year's message to the German people Hitler further warned that hard fighting was ahead in 1942. On the Allied side, four major events took place after Pearl Harbor and before the date of the first entry in the diaries: 1. Winston Churchill, it was announced on December 22, flew to Washington for a conference with President Roosevelt; 2. British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden, it was revealed 42 December 28, went to Moscow to confer with Stalin and Molotov; 3. Representatives of all twenty-six nations than at war with the Axis issued a "Declaration of the United Nations** on January 1, 1942, in which each pledged not to make a separate peace with the enemy; 4. United States Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles on January 15, at the opening session of the Rio de Janeiro conference, urged that the Latin-American countries sever all ties with the Axis. January 21, 1942 Japan has notified us that it has requested Thailand not to declare war on England for the present, nor to adhere to the Three-Power Pact, since the Japanese desire to use Thailand as much as possible for assembling their forces against Burma unhindered without being disturbed by enemy air raids. Immediately upon my return to Berlin I gave the cabinet a detailed report on the over-all situation, based on my discussions with the Fuehrer. I gave a rather long report and supplied a considerable number of details, but pledged all participants to strictest secrecy. [Goebbels was summoned to Hitler's headquarters in East Prussia from time to time. Cabinet meetings were practically a thing of the past, at least as far as Hitler himself was concerned. This was a rare occasion.] After that I talked at length with Martin. I tried to persuade him to tell me the names of all officers in the OKW and the OKH who are guilty of fostering defeatism, and to make a written report on them. The Fuehrer has called for such a written report from me so that he may take proper measures. [OKW stands for Ober-Kommando der Wehrmacht, or Supreme Command of the Armed Forces. OKH stands for Ober-Kommando des Heeres, or Supreme Command of the Army. Lieutenant Colonel Martin was the liaison officer of the Wehrmacht to the Propaganda Ministry.] I told Martin it wasn't right for him to spare these people but that on the contrary he must stand by his oath of allegiance to the Fuehrer. He agreed with me absolutely and declared himself willing to proceed in accordance with my proposals. That won't make his colleagues love him, but the Fuehrer has expressly guaranteed to take him under his personal protection if he makes such a report. That should be sufficient for an officer, aside from the fact that he must summon enough courage to report defeatist currents to the top level. At the end of World War I all responsible men-stated in their memoirs what they thought and what they really ought to have done, but nobody had done it. Now we don't want to do so much thinking, but rather act and do what our conscience commands us to do. Martin is quite open-minded toward my line of reasoning ... [In view of later developments, which culminated in the attempt on Hitler's life on July 20, 1944, it is interesting to note that certain officers were spreading defeatist propaganda more than two years before this attempt. After Stalingrad, as a matter of fact, few responsible officers believed in victory.] With Gutterer I discuss our tactics with reference to other ministries. I consider it my duty not only to keep my own Ministry in order, but also to proceed generally against the defeatism prevalent in Berlin Government quarters. I won't shirk this duty, no jnatter what the consequences. I fear neither a fact nor a person, but only the possibility of losing the war. In times of crisis fear of persons is a most dangerous thing and there is but one sin, as Nietzsche put it; namely, that of cowardice. It is sometimes much more difficult to be courageous in civilian than in military life. That sort of courage is now d propos and necessary. [Leopold Gutterer was under-secretary in Goebbels's Propaganda Ministry and ranked directly behind the minister. In this first available diary entry Goebbels already stands revealed as a ruthless radical who considered it his duty to act as Hitler's deputy in domestic matters. The impression given by the Goebbels diary throughout is that Hitler ran the war while Goebbels ran the country.] We are receiving reports about the extraordinarily low morale of the Bolshevik troops along the border of Man-chukuo. But I prevent publication of such information because it might awaken too great hopes in the German people. I am very keen about holding such reports back. The German people must face the hard facts of war and must not nurture empty hopes. An American newspaper [sic], The Reader's Digest, with a circulation of 5,300,000, has published a sensational article which asserts that the United States in the last analysis is unable to undertake anything against the armed forces of the Axis. America's war was a hopeless undertaking and could only result in bleeding the nation white. At least one voice in the wilderness! It remains to be seen, however, whether this viewpoint will make headway. 1 Heydrich has now installed his new Government of the Protectorate. Hacha has made the declaration of solidarity with the Reich that was requested of him. Heydrich's policy in the Protectorate is truly a model one. He mastered the crisis there with ease. As a result the Protectorate is now in the best of spirits, quite in contrast to other occupied or annexed areas. [Reinhard Heydrich, known as The Hangman, was Heinrich Himm-ler's right-hand man as chief of the Security Police of the Gestapo until his appointment as Protector of Bohemia-Moravia, succeeding Baron Konstantin von Neurath, who was considered too mild. Heydrich was notorious for his ruthless methods. Goebbels was wfbng in characterizing Heydrich's administration as a "model" one under which the Czechs were happy, for Heydrich was later assassinated at Prague in May 1942 by a group of exasperated Czechs. Former Supreme Court Judge Emil Hacha became Hitler's satellite "president" of the Protectorate after the partition of the Czechoslovak Republic in 1938 and the flight of its president, Eduard BeneS.] I have ordered my men to proceed rigorously against Berlin defeatism and if necessary box the ears of some sourpuss, thereby creating a fait accompli and teaching all potential defeatists a lesson. We are living in extremely tough times, and tough measures are necessary. [Goebbels never hesitated to invoke rowdy measures. About a year before the Nazis took Germany over, he had his henchmen release mice during a Berlin performance of the motion-picture version of Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, The panic which ensued resulted in the cancellation of later showings.] My visit to the Fuehrer's GHQ has had the most beneficent consequences for me personally. Not that I needed to be buoyed up by the Fuehrer, but, thank God, the Fuehrer absolutely approved the course on which I have embarked. That is both reassuring and inspiring. I now feel secure and *No such assertion was ever made in any article in The Reader's Digest. like most American magazines, prior to Pearl Harbor, The Reader's Digest published articles pro and con America's participation in the war, some of which were seized upon by Goebbels and distorted for his own purposes. can approach the solution of the difficult problems in store for us in the immediate future with sovereign certainty. January 22, 1942 The Japanese Foreign Minister, Togo, delivered an extraordinarily firm, manly, and diplomatically clever speech in Parliament. He rejected the theory of race struggle, stretched out the hand of peace to the South American states, and above all handled the people in East Asia, who are oppressed by the English and Americans, with exceptional psychological skill. The Japanese are pursuing a tactical course fraught with extraordinary danger both for England and the United States. It is evident that the Japanese have had considerable political and diplomatic experience. Added to their great military powers this experience is calculated to achieve corresponding successes. [Shigenori Togo, born 1882, was Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1941-42 and Minister of Education in 1943. He had previously been Secretary of Embassy in Berlin and Washington, Counsellor of Embassy in Berlin, Director of European and West Asiatic Affairs of the Japanese Foreign Office in 1933-36, and Ambassador to Germany in 1937-39, to Russia in 1939-40.] The debate in England still revolves around the argument that a victory must be won at least in one theater of war, and that this theater is Libya. Churchill has become a collector of deserts—an activity into which England only a few years ago tried to force Mussolini. Our relations with France are being subjected to severe strain. I discussed this subject at length with the Fuehrer during my last visit to GHQ. The Fuehrer doesn't want any preliminary peace. Nor does he believe that France is in any way ready to help us create the new order in Europe. Even Petain wants to bide his time and seize upon an auspicious moment for restoring France to the position of a Great Power. The French could render us some service in North Africa, but it isn't sufficiently important for us to meet their wishes. The French Fleet, too, can't be placed at our service at present since it lacks the necessary fuel. The Fuehrer has become somewhat suspicious of Abetz. However great Abetz's achievements may have been in the question of German-French relations, the fact must not be overlooked that he has a French wife and that he will therefore always be under a severe psychological strain. [Otto Abctz, a former member of the German Democratic party and in his younger years an ardent pacifist, became a member of the French section of Joachim von Ribbentrop's Intelligence Bureau soon after Hitler's accession to power in Germany. From 1935 until 1939 he was a professional propagandist for the Nazis in France, but was expelled in 1939, some months before World War II began. The German Foreign Office sent him back to France in June 1940 as plenipotentiary to the Army of Occupation in France. From August 1940 until 1944 he was German envoy to the Military Administration in Paris.] Lieutenant Colonel Martin has handed me his written declaration for the Fuehrer. His doing so was an act of extraordinary courage, which I value highly in him. The Fuehrer now certainly has the data for proceeding energetically against defeatist tendencies in the OKW and especially in the OKH. An example must be made here, for if such tendencies exist among officers, how can one blame the common man for gradually losing courage and getting the blues? The reports of the SD reveal the following: The anxiety of the German people about the Eastern Front is increasing. Deaths owing to freezing are an especially important factor in this connection. The number of cases of freezing revealed by transports from the Eastern Front back home is so enormous as to cause great indignation here and there. Unrest is, however, not sufficiently great to constitute a threat. People continue to criticize the OKW communique* because it gives no clear picture of the situation. Soldiers' mail, too, has a devastating effect. Words cannot describe what our soldiers are writing back home from the front. This is in part because every individual wants to appear important. The passion for showing off here plays a considerable role. When the soldier writes and exaggerates he doesn't stop to think that he may be causing his family and his relatives a lot of worry. I suggest once more that the OKW indoctrinate the soldiers on this point, but I don't expect much. It is a question of a human weakness against which one is powerless. [The SD— Sicherheits-Dienst or Security Service—was a special section of the Gestapo and was especially responsible for the security of the Nazi leaders. It undertook constant opinion samplings.] Movie production is flourishing almost unbelievably despite the war. What a good idea of mine it was to have taken possession of the films on behalf of the Reich several years ago! It would be terrible if the high profits now being earned by the motion-picture industry were to flow into private hands. I talked with Stephan about the question of buying up news concerns abroad. I believe we should continue to do so, for the greater the number of news outlets, especially newspapers, we own abroad, the better will this be for our future role of leadership in Europe. lDr. Werner Stephan was secretary of the Democratic party before the Nazis took over, but changed his politics quickly and became the right-hand man of Dr. Otto Dietrich, undersecretary in the Propaganda Ministry. He was later taken over directly by Goebbels, who entrusted him with the task of quietly buying up newspapers, news agencies, movie houses, and other facilities for German propaganda in foreign countries.] I saw the new American propaganda movie, The Foreign Correspondent. It is a first-class production, a criminological bang-up hit, which no doubt will make a certain impression upon the broad masses of the people in enemy countries. Significantly enough this film, with its absolutely anti-German tendency, was allowed to run for months in Sweden. The Swedes and the Swiss are playing with fire. Let us hope they will burn their fingers before this war is over. January 23, 1942 Rommel's boldly conceived attack in North Africa is extremely gratifying. The English are again trying to alibi with weather difficulties. In the course of the day, however, they must nevertheless admit being pushed back quite a distance. Rommel is praised highly by the English press. He is altogether one of our most popular generals. We could well use a few more such big shots. [Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, born in 1891, a product of Tuebingen University, received Imperial Germany's highest decoration, the Pour le Mtrite, for bravery in the Isonzo battle in 1917. After the war he became a teacher in the Dresden Military Academy. An early Nazi, he was attached to Hitler's bodyguard, and commanded the Fuehrer's headquarters in the Austrian, Sudetenland, and Czech occupations, and during the Polish campaign of 1939. During the 1940 campaign in France he commanded a Panzer division, and in 1941 was tranferred to North Africa, where he acquired the sobriquet of "Desert Fox** as commanding general of the Afrika Korps. In 1943 he was put in charge of northern Italy as commander in chief, and in 1944 placed in command of an army corps in France. He finally lost faith in Hitler and joined the opposition. After the great purge following the attack on Hitler's life on July 20, 1944, Rommel was visited by two high brother officers who had orders to take him along. On the way he was handed poison and told he had the choice of committing suicide, whereupon his name would remain an honored one and he be given a military funeral, or he would be tried for treason and executed, whereupon all his possessions would be confiscated and his family rendered penniless. He chose suicide and swallowed the poison while in the car—hence the legend of an "automobile accident." (See the Von Hassell Diaries for interesting additional information.)] Negotiations in Rio are continuing. Argentina is resisting pressure by the United States in every way possible* . .. Sumner Welles is trying very hard to obtain results, but the South American states, I suppose, would first like to see some military successes by the Americans before they jump into the war. One can hardly expect them to engage themselves on the side of so undependable a partner. Roosevelt no longer enjoys the reputation and prestige that he had even a few months ago. Once again I must concern myself with OFI-Havas. The French have a truly detestable news policy, especially as regards conditions in the East. I demanded that the Foreign Office launch an energetic protest in Vichy and, if necessary, threaten and apply reprisals. What an idea, to let defeated and conquered nations create difficulties for us with news! But that's what happens when you show too conciliatory an attitude toward the defeated enemy. Our policies toward France have, in my opinion, just about failed. We have made peace without concluding peace [Wir haben Frieden ge-macht, ohne Frieden abzuschliessen] and are beginning to feel the results more and more. [Before the war, the semi-official French news agency was the Agence Havas. Its assets were taken over by the Vichy government of France, and the name changed to Office Francaise (T Information, or OFI for short.] In view of this situation between ourselves and France I have declined a request to raise the ban on French literature and music in the German Reich. There is no reason why I should. We are still in a state of war with France. I don't know whether tomorrow or the day after tomorrow open war won't break out again. It is wise, therefore, for the intellectual and cultural leadership of the nation to take this possibility into account. I am about to release some three hundred officials of my Ministry to the Army and the munitions industry and to replace them by women. That involves some difficulties, but these will be gradually overcome. The Party, especially, will have to help me with this. I should like also to force society ladies and women from our better strata into this work. I therefore had a long discussion about this with Frau von-Dirksen who is very enthusiastic about my plan and who has promised to support me in a big way. [Ella von Dirksen, mother of the former German Ambassador to Japan and Great Britain, Herbert von Dirksen, was one of the first blue bloods to embrace the Nazi faith. Once a week she held open house in her spacious Berlin residence, and Goebbels was a regular caller. At Frau von Dirksen's home he was introduced to many men and women prominent in society, and it is claimed he also was taught proper table manners there.] Geheimrat Opel of the Opel Works came to me to complain of the great number of "confidential," "strictly confidential," and "secret" reports and news services emanating from different Reich offices and organizations. That has gradually become a cancerous growth. I am going to put an end to this nonsense and will replace this super-production of confidential reports by one single news service to be issued by the Ministry itself. In excited and strained times the hunger for news must somehow be satisfied. If that isn't done, conditions such as those here referred to arise which can be remedied only by great effort. [Wilhelm von Opel, head of the Adam Opel automobile works, was an ardent nationalist who in this editors presence delivered a super-patriotic speech during an international automobile fair in Berlin in the days of the Weimar Republic, claiming that the German automobile industry, hard pressed though it might be for lack of capital, would never sell out to any foreign interests. Only a few years later, in 1929, General Motors of New York absorbed the Opel plants.] At last all government departments are in accord about regulating the question of listening to foreign broadcasts. I have arrived at an agreement even with the Foreign Office. Lammers has meanwhile issued a circular letter to the highest functionaries of the Reich. It is therefore to be expected that order will gradually be established in this sector also, and that rumor mongering will be stopped by and by, especially in Berlin Government quarters. That is imperative, for especially in the so-called government circles the number of defeatists and gripers is legion. It is not true that these circles can take it when unpleasant news reaches them. They are the very ones who are most susceptible; therefore it is they who must be especially protected against defeatist tendencies or rumors. This can best be done by referring them for their reading to the regular news sources and by not letting them have any secret information at all. That goes even for a large number of ministers of the Reich who have no general conception of the over-all picture but have only to administer their own departments. They really don't have to know anything more than what is necessary for their department. It wouldn't hurt if they could be correctly informed about the over-all situation. It is half-knowledge that is always most dangerous. [Dr. Hans Heinrich Lammcrs had slowly climbed the ladder of German bureaucracy as an administrative official under the aegis of the German Nationalist party until Adolf Hitler loomed large on the political horizon. Lammers then joined the Nazi party. When Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, he needed someone with long administrative experience to organize and run his chancellery. Lammers was given the post. By the time World War II started he had risen to the rank of a Reich or cabinet minister although his job was still that of Chief of the Chancellery. He was exceedingly fond of decorations, and his uniform of an Obergruppen-fuehrer of the SS (with general's rank) was almost as spectacularly studded with decorations as was Hermann Goering's Luftwaffe uniform. Friction arose between Goebbels and Goering on the one hand and Lammers on the other over Lammers's considering himself as a sort of acting chancellor while the Fuehrer was at the front running the war. This whole conflict is described dramatically later, when Goering, Goebbels, Ley, Funk, and Speer "ganged up" against Lammers, Bormann, and Keitel. See especially the diary entry for March 2, 1943.] January 24, 1942 OFI-Havas still continues to issue tendentious an'd insolent reports about the Eastern Front. Following my suggestion, the Foreign Office has now drafted a note of protest for Vichy. It will be delivered during the next few days. We shall possibly cut the Frenchmen off from their teletypes and veto the establishment of an OFT office in Paris and in Berlin unless they accustom themselves to reporting quite differently. Rommel's latest success is wonderful. To be sure the English blame bad weather; nevertheless they must admit that our Afrika Korps has once again surprised and outguessed them by all rules of the game. The English press calls Rommel a rascal who has once again pulled a rabbit out of the hat. The propaganda which the English are carrying on for Rommel is exceedingly nearsighted from their viewpoint. They are making him one of the most popular generals in the entire world. That's perfectly okay with us, for in the first place Rommel deserves it, and second he is such an exemplary character and outstanding soldier that propaganda on his behalf can do no harm. For once propaganda is being done for the right person. The Americans are so helpless that they must fall back again and again upon boasting about their materiel. Their loud mouths produce a thousand airplanes and tanks almost daily, but when they need them in eastern Asia they haven't got them and are therefore taking one beating after another. The Rio conference has entered upon a serious crisis. Argentina is rearing on her hind legs, and Chile is now taking her side. Despite all his eloquence Sumner Welles has until this moment not attained his goal, and it is very questionable whether he will ever reach it. Argentina and Chile at the last moment refused to agree to a common formula and negotiations are beginning all over again. Roosevelt has played a somewhat unlucky hand in recent weeks. The chief reason is that he can't produce any military victories. If it is true that nothing succeeds like success, it is also true that nothing defeats like defeat. [The Pan-American Conference for Foreign Ministers opened in Rio de Janeiro on January 15, 1942, with an appeal by United States Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles for unity in breaking away from the Axis. It ended January 28, and Mr. Welles was able to state that the delegates of twenty-one American republics "officially and unanimously proclaimed that they jointly recommended the severance of diplomatic relations between all the American republics and the governments of Japan, Germany, and Italy, because of the aggression committed by a member of the Tripartite Pact against one of the American family of nations; namely, the United States.*'] In London, too, things look none too good. Even though, in my opinion, the recurring rumors of a government crisis are grossly exaggerated, nevertheless one cannot overlook the fact that the English people are very restive and apprehensive, and that Churchill must work very hard to dispel this unrest and worry. But I suppose he will succeed once again, all the more so since England has nobody to put in his place. I have received a confidential report about a talk which one of our special informants had with Petain. The situation at Vichy, according to this report, is exactly as it was characterized in my recent entry. Vichy desires neither a Bolshevik nor a complete German victory. Petain, according to our informant, is absolutely vigorous in mind and body. He is the real force behind the policy of watchful waiting. He would far prefer to have Germany and the Soviet Union grind each other to pieces and bleed each other white, thereby enabling France to resume the status of a Great Power, at least to a certain extent. The French are certainly cutting into their own flesh and, when the war is ended, will have to pay the piper for having maintained a waiting attitude far too long. [Marshal Henri-Philippe Pe'tain, who became Chief of State of the Vichy Government after the collapse of France in 1940, was condemned to death on August 14, 1945, for collaboration with the enemy, but in view of his advanced age of eighty-nine years, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.] I had a long talk with General Schmundt concerning conditions in the OKW. The Fuehrer sent him to Berlin expressly to remedy the situation. [Major General Rudolf Schmundt was chief Wehrmacht adjutant to the Fuehrer, who, in addition, had five personal adjutants taken from Nazi party formations. Schmundt kept the official military diary of Hitler's GHQ. He was killed when the bomb that was to end Hitler's life went off on July 20, 1944.] To a great degree the defeatist tendencies in the OKW and the OKH arise from the altogether too irresponsible distribution of news material, especially on the part of the Seehaus. I am going to put my foot down and see to it that our own departments do not engage in defeatist propaganda. Admiral Canaris has given me quite a number of hair-raising examples showing the irresponsible handling of confidential material. These examples suit me fine. They furnish the basis for taking exceedingly severe and radical measures. [The so-called Seehaus Service was a thorn in Goebbels's flesh, and with reason. This monitoring service, which issued a daily news letter, derived its name from the fact that it was located in what was once a very popular Berlin suburban restaurant, the Seehaus (House on the Lake), romantically situated on the Wannsee halfway between Berlin and Potsdam. To workers in the German Underground it was known that the men and women who were responsible for this monitoring service of the German Foreign Office were for the most part anti-Hitlerites who did much to stir up defeatism in Germany. They were even called the "Sabotage Club" by people in the know. While their job was the strictly technical one of listening to and taking down informative broadcasts throughout the world, the responsible officials of this service cleverly put the material together in such a manner as to raise doubts in the authenticity of news distributed by Goebbels's Propaganda Ministry. If, say, Goebbels kept from the public some defeat on the Eastern Front, the Seehaus people would spread news of the defeat to the various government departments by simply copying down what the BBC of London reported about it. When later developments showed that the BBC report was right and Goebbels wrong, readers of the Seehaus service became more skeptical of Goebbels's news reports. Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, chief of German Intelligence, was a bitter enemy of the Nazi regime. He played his part so cleverly, however, that the Nazis did not become aware of his subversive activities until 1944. Even as sophisticated a man as Goebbels evidently did not see through him, but felt so flattered that Canaris paid him a visit that he took a liking to the admiral. When the Nazis finally found out that he had been one of the main conspirators of the group which on July 20, 1944, attempted to assassinate Hitler, they were so enraged that the admiral was tortured, hanged, revived, and hanged again.] From Upper Silesia I received information to the effect that wounded soldiers are still being transported in unheated boxcars, and that the soldiers are lying, some with frozen limbs, in these trains, without blankets, neglected, and unfed for seventy or eighty hours. I am raising Cain with the hospital echelons of the Army and am arranging for the Party to take over in order that at least this extremely difficult and embarrassing problem may be solved. The Red Cross will send its advance columns also into the occupied areas close to the front so that everything possible may be done to guarantee competent care for the wounded. This shows once more that the various departments of the Wehrmacht are not in a position to meet a really difficult problem by clever improvisation. Trains of boxcars for wounded are not mentioned in the Mob.-Calendar, hence they don't exist. [The Mob.-Calendar was a book of instructions as to what was to be done in the event of mobilization.] Morale among the people is so-so. There is still a lot of talk about the dismissal of Brauchitsch. People haven't quite made up their minds whether he left because he wanted to or not. It certainly isn't true that this incident has already dropped out completely in public discussions. [Field Marshal Walther von Brauchitsch succeeded Colonel General Werner von Fritsch in 1938 as commander in chief of the German Army. HiUer soon won him over by quietly arranging for his divorce and giving him an estate. The two clicked well at first. In his famous speech to the generals at Berchtesgaden on August 22, 1939, a week before World War II broke eut, Hitler said: "Colonel General von Brauchitsch has promised me to finish the war in Poland in a few weeks. Had he reported that I need two years' or even only one year to do it, I should not have issued the order to march but should have allied myself temporarily with England instead of with Russia. For we are not in a position to carry on a long war." After the conclusion of the campaign in France in June 1940, Hitler in his Reichstag speech of July 19 gave unstinted praise to Brauchitsch.] I also have the impression that foreign broadcasts are again being listened to more extensively. About this, too, the right word must be said at an early opportunity. The Reich Food Ministry is insistent that the price of potatoes be raised. I am against that. While it is true that the farmers must get better prices as an incentive for increasing the crop acreage, on the other hand one cannot overlook the fact that a rise in the price of potatoes chiefly affects the masses, for in the budget of the common man the price of potatoes plays quite a different role from that in the budget of the wealthier classes. I therefore favor a policy of premiums financed by the state. At noon the state funeral of Field Marshal General von Reichenau was held. The ceremony was planned by the OKH. It is unbelievably bad, psychologically clumsy, and the music absolutely amateurish. Following the national anthems the first movement from the Fifth Symphony was played by pupils of the Army Music School; well, what can you expect? I arranged with General Schmundt that in future the state ceremonies of the Wehxmacht, too, be turned over to our Ministry, since we alone can guarantee that they will come off in a manner worthy of the state. [Field Marshal Walter von Reichenau (1884-1942) was one of the first high officers to embrace the Nazi faith. As chief of the Wehr-macht chancellery he exercised considerable influence, but apparently feared that such swivel-chair activity might condemn him to home duty in the event of war. He therefore requested Hitler to let him have an active command. In 1935 he was appointed commanding general of the Seventh Army Corps, with headquarters at Munich. He distinguished himself during the brief war against Poland in 1939 as commander of Army Group South. Always devoted to sports, he swam across the Vistula at the head of his troops. When the war in the West started, Von Reichenau, now a colonel general, commanded the Sixth Army, with headquarters in Belgium. At the conclusion of the campaign against France and the Lowlands in 1940, Hitler promoted him to field marshal. Hitler replaced Field Marshal Von Rundstedt with Von Reichenau in December 1941. He died January 17, 1942, so far as this editor has been able to learn, from an infection suffered in the campaign against Russia. There have, however, also been rumors that Von Reichenau met a violent death. The Von Hassell Diaries interestingly relate how "Hitler exploited it (the death) from the Party point of view."] January 25, 1942 We have issued a special communique to the effect that German submarines have succeeded in sinking 125,000 tons of enemy shipping off the American Atlantic coast. That is an exceedingly good piece of news for the German people. It bears testimony to the tremendous activity of our submarines and their widely extended radius of action, as well as to the fact that German heroism conquers even the widest oceans. At last a special bulletin! We certainly needed it, and it acts like rain on parched land. Everybody regards the communique as a very effective answer to the warmonger Roosevelt, whom the whole German people curse. Many people are in a quandary as to whether they ought to hate him or Churchill more. I talked with Sepp Dietrich, who has just returned from the southern front to get married in Berlin. He gives me a briefing on the situation along his sector of the front. He is very optimistic. In sharp contrast to the leading gentlemen of the Army, the leaders of the Waffen-SS have had National Socialist training. For them difficulties exist only to be overcome. [General Joseph (Sepp) Dietrich was commander of the Letb-standarte Adolf Hitler. Among the various formations of the Nazi SS there was a division, or Stan^arte, assigned especially to the duty of protecting the life of the Fuehrer. This bodyguard bore the name of Leibstandarte Adolf Hitler. It was armed better than any other military formation. During the war it was given precedence over other divisions, especially when it came to entering conquered cities triumphantly. Much to the chagrin of the regular Army, the seizure of a city was often postponed until the Leibstandarte could come to the scene of action for the final kill. Dietrich had been Hitler's personal chauffeur for many years. When Hitler appeared at Wiessee, Bavaria, on June 30, 1934, to arrest the rebellious Ernst Roehm, chief of staff of the SA, and his accomplices, one of Roehm's men aimed a revolver at Hitler. He was overpowered by Sepp Dietrich. From then on his rise in the Nazi hierarchy was rapid.l Rommel is generally feared in London. He is already regarded as a sort of legendary figure. It seems like a miracle that he succeeded in almost surrounding a part of the British forces. That shows what the initiative, courage, and imagination of a real soldier can do, even under the most unfavorable circumstances. In Rommel's favor is, of course, the fact that he is still very young and can stand punishment. The Australians are extremely angry because English aid for Australia is so long in coming; at present not even the initial stages of it are discernible anywhere. The Australian Government has therefore bypassed Churchill and turned to the English people with a most urgent appeal for help. This problem may become pretty precarious for England. I issue orders to continue to probe this open wound and to rub salt into it. The Rio conference seems to end in a compromise formula. Despite the energetic exertions of Sumner Welles, no unanimous resolution to declare war on Germany was passed. It was finally agreed to recommend the severance of diplomatic relations with the Axis Powers. Argentina prevailed with her obstinacy and finally prevented a complete solution, despite continuous North American pressure. I have received confidential information concerning the probable successor to the Archbishop of Canterbury. He will be Bishop Temple, who is much more dangerous than the old Canterbury gentleman. Temple is close to the Labor party, was formerly a moderate friend of Germany, and is now a real German hater. He stands 100 per cent behind Churchill, is clever at dialectics and, because of that fact, extremely dangerous. That means we may expect a number of severe attacks from the English clergy. But for the moment I see no special danger in this fact. [The Rt. Hon. Most Rev. William Temple, born, 1881, was educated at Rugby and Balliol colleges, Oxford, and became a priest in 1909. He was Bishop of Manchester, 1921-29, Archbishop of York and Primate of England, 1929-42, and in 1942 became Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of all England.] Our adversaries lament the fact that they have no compelling peace slogan. Quite obviously they would like to use it to deceive the German people. I won't permit this theme to be discussed by our writers because I am convinced that so delicate a problem had best be put on ice and killed by silence. We can surely congratulate ourselves that our enemies have no Wilson Fourteen Points. Of course, if they had them, we wouldn't be duped by them as were the German people of 1917 and 1918. Several reports indicate that anti-German sentiment in certain Bulgarian Government circles is slightly on the increase. Especially Czar Boris is said to be playing a somewhat double-faced game. He is a sly, crafty fellow, who, obviously impressed by the severity of the defensive battles on the Eastern Front, is looking for some back door by which he might eventually escape. This is a very shortsighted policy which will, of course, immediately be reversed, once our offensive has started again. . . . [King Boris, born 1894, of the House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, succeeded his father, Ferdinand, to the throne of Bulgaria in 1918, when the defeated country and ally of Germany insisted upon the latter's abdication. Boris was very fond of driving locomotives. He died under rather mysterious circumstances in 1943.] The Fuehrer sent word to me that he does not desire the circulation of the Stuermer reduced or that it cease publication altogether. I am very happy about this decision. The Fuehrer stands by his old Party members and fellow fighters and won't let occasional trouble and differences affect him. Because he is so loyal to his co-workers, these, in turn, are equally faithful to him. [The Stuermer (The Stormer) was a pornographic anti-Semitic weekly published by Julius Streicher, Gauleiter of Nuremberg, and one of the most disreputable, repulsive, and criminal characters in the Nazi hierarchy. Stretcher's debaucheries and graft became so scandalous that Hitler had finally to relieve him of his Gauleiter job. But he permitted him to continue publication of the Stuermer. All over Germany there were glass-covered bulletin boards for exhibiting the current editions of this publication. Parents protested vigorously that their children were being corrupted by reading the filthy and sexy accounts and seeing the pornographic cartoons in the Stuermer. Streicher was hanged as a major war criminal.] I, too, believe that our propaganda on the Jewish question must continue undiminished. How much is still to be done about this can be seen from the following: in connection with the evacuation of a prominent Berlin Jew, an examination of his personal papers and effects revealed that as late as the middle of 1941 the German Crown Prince wrote this Jew very cordial letters and presented him with photographs with exceedingly friendly inscriptions. The House of Hohenzollem of today isn't worth a tinker's damn. [Goebbels had no use for members of the House of Hohenzollem, whereas Goering was always proud of his friendship with Crown Prince Frederick Wilhelm. The former Crown Prince had many friends among the Jews] The problem of sexual activities of the numerous foreign workers now on German soil is a difficult one. This situation in some cases is absolutely grotesque. I suppose the final solution lies in a liberal policy of establishing houses of ill fame. But that is a rather delicate matter which must be dealt with carefully. I had a long talk with Admiral Canaris concerning the reprehensible attitude of a number of OKW and OKH officers. In his opinion one of the chief reasons is because the Seehaus Service is being distributed so widely among officers and officials. I had a list of subscribers furnished me from which it appears that the Seehaus Service has become a veritable fountainhead of defeatism. The Fuehrer has urgently requested that the list be submitted to him. He won't be very happy when he sees that one hundred and eighty officials of the Foreign Office alone are daily subscribers to the Seehaus Service. I immediately put an end to this nuisance as far as the OKW is concerned. I am permitting only two copies of the Seehaus Service to go to the OKW. At the Foreign Office, too, vigorous steps will have to be taken. In my opinion only such persons as received permission from the Fuehrer to listen to foreign broadcasts should also receive the Seehaus Service. Their number is very limited and I see no real danger there. [Reference is here made to the fact that it was generally forbidden in Nazi Germany to listen to foreign broadcasts. Special permits were issued to a few persons in official positions who were dependent upon these broadcasts for their work. The foreign correspondents accredited in Berlin also received the special permit. In signing a receipt for it they had to pledge themselves to silence about what they heard.] The officials of the Propaganda Ministry, especially the editors of the foreign-language broadcasts, must, of course, for the most part receive the Seehaus Service. But that is nothing to worry about, since I indoctrinate them daily and there is no possibility of their becoming gradually infected. Admiral Canaris fully agrees with me in this matter and promises to see to it that the sources of defeatism be stopped up in the OKW and the OKH. Officials are now to work fifty-eight hours per week instead of forty-six. The Ministry of the Interior immediately proposed that twenty-five marks per month be paid them as so-called "soup money." I regard that as wrong. Officialdom should do its duty. If it is demanded of officials that they work a few hours more in wartime than under normal peace conditions, they ought to look upon that as a sort of service of honor. January 26, 1942 I have received a report from a commanding general at the northern front which is extraordinarily favorable. The general says the Russian forces there are very weak and are being bled white. He believes the Soviet Union will collapse in the spring, provided we are in a position to deliver a few decisive blows. Even though I am not able as yet to share this optimism I nevertheless believe he has something. It may well be that the times through which we now are passing will later be regarded as the most advantageous in the entire history of this war; possibly it is actually true that the Bolsheviks are now using up their last resources and will break down under a severe blow. But let us not cling too much to such hopes. Our preparations for the coming spring and summer must be made just as though the Bolsheviks still had very great reserves. That will make us immune to surprises and we won't have moral setbacks like those of last summer and autumn. The more difficult we imagine war to be, the easier it will prove in the end. Roosevelt has nothing positive to report in the way of victories. His loud-mouthed speeches before the war are still remembered by everybody. The discrepancy between what he prophesied and what has actually happened is so obvious that he can get out of this dangerous scrape only by lies and rumors. Churchill, on the other hand, continues merrily to prevaricate. He must, for opposition against him, and especially against his co-workers, is constantly growing. Thailand has now officially declared war against England and the United Slates. That is no doubt a great help for Japan, even though the striking power of the Siamese armed forces must not be overestimated. A moral breakdown such as we experienced in November 1918 can be brought about in England only with great difficulty, if at all. We should have no illusions in this respect and should not place hopes in a type of warfare that was once successful in the case of the German people, but in all likelihood will never succeed with the English. I spent considerable time today looking into the so-called Seehaus Service, and carefully studied one day's output of this subversive office, which is being financed out of funds of its own. I have arrived at the conclusion that this service must be limited as much as possible. I hope the Fuehrer will confer the necessary powers on me to enable me to intervene rigorously. Everybody who counts now agrees with me that the dangerous manipulations of this service must be curbed to prevent a collapse of morale among the leaders of the state and the Wehrmacht. January 27, 1942 I have again spent a lot of time trying to limit the distribution of the Seehaus Service to a minimum. But I must overcome resistance after resistance because all departments of the Reich and all allegedly prominent persons are very anxious to continue to receive this material on the wrong assumption that it will give them a picture of the over-all situation. That is not at all true. The Fuehrer shares my point of view completely. He goes even further. He believes the Seehaus Service should be distributed to only a few persons in the entire country. . I talked about this at length to General Sehmundt. The Foreign Office is trying very hard at GHQ to place the blame for the failure of the Seehaus Service on the Propaganda Ministry. But it can't put this over, for after all the Seehaus Service was founded by the Foreign Office and could develop into such a mammoth concern for the spread of tendentious news only by competition with the Propaganda Ministry. - Whether or not I already have full authority for so doing, I am intervening vigorously and have especially forbidden the distribution of material to higher officials and officers since they are most easily demoralized by such a news service. Gradually all other important Reich ministers are beginning to realize that my standpoint is right, that we have been altogether too lax in this matter, and that we must pay for our negligence, as sentiment in Berlin government and military circles is essentially different from that among the masses of the people. The reason for this is that these leadership positions have depended solely upon this defeatist material and received no objective reports on the real condition of things. It is self-evident that people who are supplied daily with such material must at the same time be told how to interpret it. That's what is happening in our Ministry but not in the other ministries and departments. ... The United States is trying desperately to drag us into a discussion of racial questions, especially in regard to Japan. The American press has launched impassioned articles against the yellow race and is trying, via Stockholm, to get them published all over the world. Several Stockholm newspapers have fallen for this palpable propaganda. I suppose the Americans believe we can be persuaded to reply to this propaganda and get dragged into the discussion. That's where they are mistaken. I have forbidden the German news services even to mention these somewhat ticklish and delicate problems, as I am convinced we can't win any laurels here. As a matter of fact our position regarding Japan and the problems of eastern Asia is rather precarious, since we are uncompromising in our racial views. It is best to overcome this difficulty by silence. I have received a report from Croatia. Sentiment toward us there is getting worse all the time. There are many reasons for it, chiefly the fact that the Poglavnik [Fuehrer] has by no means firmly established himself. His pro-Italian policy, especially, finds no echo among the Croatian people. At first the attitude toward us was very friendly, but as no help is to be expected from us against the Italians, anger at the Italians is extended to us also. The Italians have already cost us considerable sympathy in the world. [Ante Pavclic, horn in 1869, the self-appointed dictator (Poglavnik) of the Axis puppet state of Croatia, lived in Italy for many years as an exile and was there given much aid by Mussolini When he assumed power, he had as his praetorian guard, just as Hitler had the SA and SS, the Croatian "Ustachi" organization. He embarked upon a pro Italian policy. The Croatian people, however, have always hated their Dttd-OOOf neighbor Italy, with its aspirations for the port of Susac and the Dalmatian coast, while they tolerated the Germans, who were formidable supporters of Croatian tourist trade.] Knothe reported to me on the results of his purchasing activities in the southeast. He has bought up a large number of movie houses. They give us certain outlets for our film distribution in the Balkans. The German motion picture now completely dominates the Balkans, and American films have been pushed back more and more. I am trying most earnestly to expand our holdings still further in the southeast so that, when peace comes, we may be so firmly entrenched there that nobody can dislodge us again. [Knothe was one of Goebbcls's numerous handy men in the Propaganda Ministry.] Sepp Dietrich is a real trouper and makes one think of a Napoleonic general. If we had twenty men like that as divisional commanders we wouldn't have to worry at all about the Eastern Front. He told me in detail how the bourgeois generals on the southern front lost their nerve and how this weakness of character naturally communicated itself to the troops. For the troops are always like their leaders, both in a good and a bad sense. The incidents that Sepp Dietrich related to me about the Russian people in the occupied areas are simply hair-raising. They are not a people, but a conglomeration of animals. The greatest danger threatening us in the East is the stolid dullness of this mass. That applies both to the civilian population and to the soldiers. The soldiers won't surrender, as is the fashion in western Europe, when completely surrounded, but continue to fight until they are beaten to death. Bolshevism has merely accentuated this racial propensity of the Russian people. In other words, we are facing an adversary about whom we must be careful. The human mind cannot possibly imagine what it would mean if this opponent were to pour into western Europe like a flood. Terboven intends to deliver a radio address bitterly attacking the Bishop of Norway, who has acquired notoriety be- cause of a number of stupid remarks. I advised him most urgently to keep hands off. I consider it beneath our dignity and harmful to our authority for a Reich commissioner in an area occupied by us to attack a public personage without, at the same time, saying how he will punish him. You attack without punishing only when you have no power. If you have power, you arrest or punish and give the reason why. [Josef Terboven, Gauleiter for the Essen area, was appointed Reich Commissioner for occupied Norway by Hider in 1940. He was sent to Norway because he was regarded as particularly "tough." Soon it became evident, however, that he was too robust after all. Goebbels later speaks of him as "the most hated man in Norway" or "a bull in a China shop." (See also diary entries of December 5 and 6, 1943.) Dr. Eivind Josef Berggraf, born in 1884, was at that time Lutheran Bishop of Oslo. He resigned in 1942 in protest against Nazi persecution of the church and was arrested in March 1943. He was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.] During an alert tonight I was .pble to sit down with a number of my old co-workers. We discussed the situation in general and in particular. I was happy to observe that my collaborators, no matter where they may be or in what office or army outfit are doing their duty, have very clear and uncompromising views. All the good training I gave them over a period of years is yielding results. I don't believe there is a single person who "graduated" under me who will lose his nerve easily. January 28, 1942 Churchill has spoken at last.... The tenor of his speech is extremely gloomy and pessimistic. He must admit that Rommel is undefeated. He compares the position of England with that of a drowning man who has only his head above water. He admits very serious losses in North Africa. But he cleverly assumes responsibility for them so as not to have to kick anybody out. The fact that he defends his co-workers awakens sympathy for him. I shall not have this section of his speech released for the German press and radio. Stalin's bust has been unveiled in the London Exchange That's where it belongs. The collaboration between Bolshevism and super-capitalism is thereby publicly symbolized. England has sunk low. She is facing difficult times. She can thank Churchill.... Churchill hasn't the faintest intention of permitting truthful news reporting. He always admits only what he can't avoid admitting or what can't be denied. . .. I had the Foreign Office give me a report on our relations to Sweden. Sweden has, after all, done more for the German war effort than is generally assumed. More particularly, Sweden has given us valuable support in our fight against the Soviet Union. While she insists on remaining neutral, that after all is very much in our favor. There can be no doubt but that she would defend her neutrality by force of arms in case we tried to put her under pressure. It isn't possible in Sweden to get after Professor Seger-stedt, publisher of Goeteborg's Handels-och Sjoefahrtstid-ning His paper is most embarrassing to the Swedish Government, but it must be permitted to continue publication because of English pressure. fTorgny Karl Segerstedt, D.D., former professor of the history of religion at Stockholm University, became editor in chief of the Goete-borg Trade and Shipping News, one of the best-known dailies in the Scandinavian peninsula, in 1917. He was an outspoken opponent of Nazism.] The King and the Crown Prince are undoubtedly on our side. The King has already once offered his abdication when a decisive question was at issue. The abdication was to become effective in case his government did not concede him such support of the German-Finnish war effort as he desired. We must therefore be satisfied with Sweden's contribution to the German-Finnish war effort, meager though it is, despite the provocative and insolent attitude of a part of the Swedish press, and not talk out of turn. [Dr. Goebbels certainly seems muddled in his own mind about Sweden's position. In this day's entry he draws comfort from the fact that Sweden is neutral and regards this as an indication that Sweden is helping Germany and is on her side. In the very next sentence, however, he states that Sweden would not hesitate to take up arms against Germany if her neutrality were threatened. Goebbels further makes the mistake of interpreting the Swedish King's offer to abdicate as a sign that he is "undoubtedly" on the German side when in fact this was a gesture to his own people to prevent Sweden's involvement in the war; in other words, a purely pro-Swedish attitude. Later references in the diaries teem with accusations about Sweden, the "state which has no right to existence anyway," the "Germanic renegade," which is "playing with fire"; the country which refused to join the International Film Chamber created by Goebbels; the nation that becomes more insolent every time Germany suffers a reverse. His contempt for Sweden is expressed on April 15, 1942: "It would have been better if we had also taken Sweden during our campaign in the north."] Just now a hot fight is on in Sweden for control of the press—a fight between Bonnier and Kreuger. Kreuger is trying desperately to retain control of the nationalistic section of the press, which in a great measure is on our side. Bonnier, however, is doing everything possible to destroy this last remnant of national press freedom in Sweden and to get the nationalistic press of Sweden into Jewish, that is pro-English, hands. I hope that the severe frost of the last fourteen days will gradually let up. At the moment, it is true, no improvement is noticeable, and it would be terrible if we bad to live through another winter like that at the beginning of 1940. But we shall find some way out; if necessary, the people at home will have to assume added burdens. The front suffers so many trials and tribulations that it is certainly reasonable to ask the people at home to contribute their share to the war effort. I authorize Seyss-Inquart to open a theater in the Hague in which opera, comic opera, and drama are to be produced. I do this with one weeping and one laughing eye for, really, the Dutch don't deserve such great cultural support. Perhaps they don't even have the proper appreciation for it. But Seyss-Inquart is very insistent, and after all the Germans in Holland have some right to such a theater. [Artur Seyss-Inquart, more than any other Austrian, was responsible for the Anschluss to Germany. Misusing his personal friendship with Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg, he managed to become Minister of the Interior and Security in February 1938 in the last Schuschnigg cabinet. That gave him, an ardent Nazi, control of the police and of Austrian officialdom. He reassured Schuschnigg again and again that he would live up to the Austrian constitution, but secretly made all preparations for Hitler's coup of a month later. The Fuehrer then appointed him Austrian Chancellor and Minister of Defense. After the integration of Austria into the Reich and its subdivision into several gaus, Seyss-Inquart in 1939 became a minister without portfolio in Hitler's so-called cabinet (which, however, never met), until World War II broke out, when he was appointed deputy governor of occupied Poland late in 1939, and Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands in 1940. He was tried as a major war criminal by the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg and hanged.] January 29, 1942 Rosenberg's office has worked out an agrarian reform for the occupied areas which envisages the gradual elimination of the kolchose [collective community farm] and the return of land to private ownership. I expect very much from this reform when brought to the attention of the broad masses of the farmers. If we should be in a position actually to give the farmers land, they would look forward to an eventual return of the Bolsheviks with decidedly mixed feelings. [Alfred Rosenberg, Nazi party Reichsletter for ideological indoctrination and editor of the official Party organ, the Voelkischer Beo-bachter (Racist Observer), was one of Hitler's earliest followers and author of an exceedingly abstruse and involved book, the Myth of the Twentieth Century, He was one of the bitterest opponents of Christianity and worked for its complete abolition in Germany. Born in the Baltic States and educated in the University of Riga, he always sidestepped the question of his opponents as to what he had done during World War I. As the German armies swept eastward in 1941 after Germany's declaration of war on Soviet Russia, Hitler appointed Rosenberg Reich Minister for the Eastern Occupied Areas. Tne appointment was made purely on the basis of personal loyalty to an old fellow Nazi and because Rosenberg knew the Russian language. He was a notoriously poor adrninistrator, however. Throughout Goebbels diary this inefficiency of Rosenberg's is harped upon. Rosenberg was hanged in Nuremberg after the International Military Tribunal found him guilty of having committed major war crimes.] The landing of American troops in northern Ireland created a great sensation. Although southern Irish territory is not involved, De Valera protested vigorously. Possibly the Americans, acting on behalf of the English, merely wanted to try out how the Irish Government would react. TTiis reaction was probably stronger than was anticipated in London, and I suppose there is momentarily no danger that the English will occupy Ireland proper. In the United States De Valera's reaction meets with feigned astonishment. But this pretended surprise offends the Irish more than it enlightens them. [Eamon De Valera was President of the Irish Republic from 1919-22, and was Prime Minister and Minister for External Affairs from 1937-1973. He was president of the League of Nations Assembly in 1938.] Terboven called me from Oslo. He intends to proceed against the Bishop of Norway, in whose home papers of an extremely compromising nature have been found concerning his collaboration with the English. I deny his request to have the controversy aired in the Reich. He will start things in Norway alone, where it is fitting and proper. I had to clear up a number of domestic questions, especially the problem of allocating paper for the production of books. The Eher Verlag is making unjustifiable claims which must be rejected. On the other hand it is true that naturally the official publishing house of the Party deserves a higher priority than any other firm. My task consists in finding the right balance. [The Eher Verlag, or publishing house, also known as "Amann's Octopus," was the official publications establishment of the Nazi party. Hitler's Mein Kampf, Rosenberg's Myth of the Twentieth Century, the daily Voelkischer Beobachter, and countless other books, pamphlets, and periodicals were published there. Hitler was generally believed to be one of the main stockholders, while the Party owned the rest. Its general manager was Max Amann, who had been the drill sergeant of Hitler's company in World War I. Like all the other "empire builders'* of the Party, Amann kept increasing the holdings of the Eher Verlag by placing so many difficulties in the way of non-Party bourgeois newspapers, even though they all now supported the Nazi regime, that they sold out on terms decidedly favorable to Amann—hence the name "Amann's Octupus," which stretched out its tentacles in every direction in the publishing world. Amann had the title of Reichsleiter of the Nazi party, in charge of the press and publications. This gave him cabinet rank.] Snow has enveloped all Berlin in a white garment. It's no fun, however, to contemplate this beautiful spectacle of nature, since every change in weather creates a whole series of new problems. One can hardly conceive of weather ideal to meet all demands. .. . In the evening I had a long talk with my mother who, to me, always represents the voice of the people. She knows the sentiments of the people better than most experts who judge from the ivory tower of scientific inquiry, as in her case the voice of the people itself speaks. Again I learned a lot; especially that the rank and file are usually much more primitive than we imagine. Propaganda must therefore always be essentially simple and repetitious. In the long run only he will achieve basic results in influencing public opinion who is able to reduce problems to the simplest terms and who has the courage to keep forever repeating them in this simplified form despite the objections of the intellectuals. January 30, 1942 It is interesting to observe what importance the clever exploitation of religion can assume. The Tartars at first had a none-too-gratifying attitude toward the German Wehrmacht But they changed about completely when permitted to sing their religious chants from the tops of minarets. Their change of attitude went so far that Tartar auxiliary companies which fought actively against the Bolsheviks could be formed. Our efforts there were supported by our propaganda companies who distributed a picture showing the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem visiting the Fuehrer. That was extremely successful. [Haj Amin cl Hussein was the Grand Mufti. He visited Germany early in November 1941, then went to Italy for about a month, and on his return to Berlin was received by Hitler on December 8, 1941. In August 1946 the British Government refused to have him come to London as a member of the Arab delegation because of his pro-Axis activities.] Churchill's stock is beginning to rise again. Although opposition to him in the Lower House is apparently strong, nobody dares propose a vote of no confidence. He had, however, to stand for some pretty outspoken criticism. On the whole this criticism was more moderate than might have been expected, after the attacks in the press these last weeks. Rommel has marched into Bengasi again and found an unbelievable amount of booty. This is a wonderful piece of news which comes extremely handy in this period of stagnation. The Fuehrer is very happy about it. He promoted Rommel to colonel general. [In the German Army generals ranked as follows: major general (there was no brigadier), lieutenant general, general, colonel general, field marshal general. Also, there was the special title of Reich Marshal given to Hermann Goering by Hitler. That gave Goering a unique rank and raised him ahead of all field marshals.] The United States newspapers are asking anxiously what has happened to their Pacific Fleet. For the most part the fleet is lying at the bottom of the ocean. [Goebbels at first believed Japanese news reports implicitly. Only much later his diary entries indicate doubt in their veracity.] Knox delivered a very pusillanimous speech. While claiming that the Japanese have become very jumpy and nervous, he tried to get himself out of his rather precarious psychological fix by telling lies. He who before the outbreak of war had been the principal spokesman, in fact the megaphone of the Roosevelt government, is now a sorry sight indeed. Apparently he feels subconsciously that, in case America were faced with a crisis, he would be made partly ^responsible for it, as he was one of the chief warmongers. [Secretary of the Navy Frank E. Knox during the first months after America's participation in the war was a favorite target for Goebbels's jibes. The little doctor was especially fond of reminding Knox of statements made before America's entry into the war.] In the Anglo-Saxon countries a bitter fight is still going on about the relative order of importance of the theaters of war. Whenever the English sustain losses in North Africa they say the European theater of war is more important; whenever they have reverses in Europe they claim the East Asia theater has precedence; but when they are defeated in East Asia the North African theater again holds higher rank. In short, precedence is always enjoyed by the theater of war in which they aren't getting a drubbing, whereas the theater in which at that time they are having reverses is always far less important. I have received pitiful reports about the situation in Greece. Hunger there has become an epidemic affecting the entire population. People are dying from undernourishment on the streets of Athens by the thousands—a result of the brutal British blockade and that, too, a blockade against a people who foolishly wanted to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for the English. That's how London thanks them. In Finland, too, food conditions are horrible. The Finnish people this winter are showing a heroism worthy of greatest admiration. We could use more such allies. The German people won't find it too difficult to give up part of their bread ration in favor of Finland. Lammers told me a lot about certain goings-on in top government departments. In the Ministry for Eastern Affairs, for instance, things don't seem to click at all. Rosenberg, after all, is more of a theoretician than a practical organizer. . . . Everywhere he is building up a gigantic apparatus of which, in the end, he loses all control. Lammers also argued that something must be done for the government officials. He mentioned an article in the National Ztitung of Essen which criticized officialdom severely. I gave orders forbidding all such attacks in the future. It won't do to have two professions in Germany, namely, that of the teacher and the government official, subjected to public criticism, whereas an editor would of course not dare to tangle with a leading Party member or a prominent military officer. I had a long talk with Viktor Lutze who told me of a number of complaints of the SA. He also wanted to get a general briefing on the situation. Apparently his conscience isn't very clear. Most likely he has again been shooting off his mouth and is looking for an alibi. Iwarned him earnestly to restrain himself in the future and in no way to criticize or cast doubt on the political or military conduct of the war. I told him emphatically that the Fuehrer will stand for no monkey business. He seemed to get the point, and I believe he will hold himself in better check hereafter. Considering his disposition, however, I doubt whether he will be able to keep this up long. [Viktor Lutze became supreme commander of Hitler's Brown Shirts, the SA (Sturmabteilung —Storm Troops) after Ernst Roehm, one of Hitler's closest friends, had been executed on the Fuehrer's personal orders during the blood purge of June 30, 1934, for allegedly plotting the overthrow of the regime. Under Lutze the SA became a negligible quantity. This entry in the diary would seem to indicate that Goebbels did not have very high regard for Lutze. In an entry on April 15, 1942, he criticizes Lutze even more severely. When the SA chieftain was killed in a motor accident in May 1943, however, and given the most pompous state funeral accorded any follower of Hitler, Goebbels sang Lutze's praises in highest terms in his diary entry of May 8, 1943.] The Fuehrer returned from his GHQ to Berlin at noon. I immediately had a long talk with him which was extraordinarily favorable and satisfactory. It fills me with joy to note how well he looks and how splendid is his spiritual and physical condition. He started right in on the Churchill speech, which the Fuehrer regards as exceptionally weak and wearisome. He, too, does not believe that Churchill is any longer sitting on top of the world, but on the other hand he sees no possibility of an early collapse of the Churchill regime.... Churchill, by the way, remarked in his speech that Hess had really flown to England in order to unseat Churchill and bring about a suitable peace. That he made this remark is a proof of his nervousness, for it is certainly exceptionally shortsighted and is grist for the mill of those who are ready for an understanding with us. [Rudolf Hess, born in 1894, Hitler's shadow until his sensational flight to England in 1941, joined the Nazi party as early as 1920 and became the Fuehrer's private secretary. He was arrested, tried, and sentenced with Hitler to imprisonment at Landsberg, Bavaria, where Hitler wrote Mein Kampf, dictating most passages to his faithful disciple, Hess. The Nazi prisoners at that time were allowed to gather together in an anteroom to Hitler's prison cell and had a good time, generally speaking. On taking over the government of Germany in 1933, Hitler made Hess a minister without portfolio and appointed him his deputy for Party matters. It is not surprising, in view of the constant intrigues among Nazis sparring for position, that Hess was unpopular with the Party membership. Trouble-shooters seldom are popular. Recalling that he had been born in Egypt of German parents, they nicknamed him der hinterhaeltige Aegypter ("the treacherous Egyptian"). Also, in view of his unctuous manner of speaking, he was called der Prediger ("the Preacher"). It was his task every year to open the Party convention at Nuremberg and preside over the plenary sessions. He was an extremely dull speaker, but his slogan, "Guns instead of butter," became internationally notorious. In 1941 he flew to the British Isles, thinking he could persuade the British people and leading politicians to make peace with Nazi Germany and join with the Germans in fighting the Soviet Russians. (See also the entry under date of February 13, 1942, last paragraph.)] The Tories are no douht playing a decisive role behind the scenes in England. Churchill has never been a friend of the Tories. He was always an outsider, and before the war was regarded as half crazy. Nobody took him seriously. The Fuehrer profoundly regrets the heavy losses sustained by the white race in East Asia, but that isn't our fault. [The Nazi alliance with the Japanese was never popular in Germany. A nation which was so indoctrinated with the conception of Nordic racial supremacy found it difficult to understand why the Japanese should be considered the racial equals of the Teutons, and why intimate relations with Jews should be punished by death whereas similar relations with the Japanese met with no official disapproval.] January 31, 1942 Churchill's closing speech in the House of Commons before the ballot on the vote of confidence was a collection of demagogic utterances. The ovation given him at the close of the session by the members was naturally a show put on for the world and has no political significance. Rommel's advance produced a veritable shock in London. There is embarrassed stammering about the recapture of Bengasi. The Reuter Agency up to this hour has not been able to offer any plausible explanation. By way of providing a good out, however, Rommel is praised beyond measure. No doubt he deserves it and nobody begrudges it to him, but on the other hand one must not overlook the fact that the English pour out this praise only in order to present themselves to the world as polished gentlemen, who are fair and more than fair to the enemy even in defeat. We know these English tactics and are no longer taken in by them. 1 continue to receive an enormous number of letters which on the whole are very favorable. Above all there is praise for my articles in the Reich, which apparently are exerting the greatest influence upon public opinion. At noon I attended a reception at the Fuehrer's in honor of a delegation of Italian party members who came to Berlin for the celebration of our accession to power. The Fuehrer was in an exceptionally good mood, and talked very animatedly and convincingly to the Italian Gauleiters. The most impressive thing is his absolute and firm conviction that victory is ours, which he expressed so clearly and irrefutably that it made the deepest impression upon the Italian gentlemen. Our guests waxed enthusiastic about the fascinating personality of the Fuehrer and especially at the youthfulness and poise of his behavior. Most of the Italian gentlemen had never before seen the Fuehrer and the impression he made on them is therefore all the more profound. [January 30, 1933 was the Tag der Machtergreifung (Day of Seizure of Power). Its anniversary was declared a legal holiday, and Hitler usually addressed the nation on January 30 in a Reichstag session or at the Sports Palace. The Sport-Palast, with a capacity of about 25,000, was Berlin's counterpart of Madison Square Garden of New York.] Later the Italians were received for lunch in my Ministry. Most members of the cabinet also attended. I could now converse at length with these gentlemen. They are an impressive elite of leaders, comparable to the best of our own Gauleiters. There isn't a single one among them who isn't full of enthusiasm for the Axis. Mussolini appears gradually to have eliminated from party leadership all elements which tried, even though only passively, to oppose his course. I received the very best impression of these Italians. After dinner there was an exchange of speeches. I talked briefly to the delegation. Alfieri and the leader of the Italian delegation also spoke. Both events, at the Fuehrer's and in the Ministry, are evidence of the cordial friendship which binds the two Axis powers together. [Dino Alfieri was Italian Ambassador in Germany at that time. He had been Goebbels's opposite number for a while as Italian Minister of Propaganda. The two men never got along very well.] Very drastic and explosive expression was given to this friendship at the afternoon mass meeting in the Sports Palace, in the course of which the Fuehrer spoke. The Sports Palace was, as usual, filled to the rafters, and turbulent enthusiasm was manifested. It reminded me of the old days during our struggle for power. The meeting came off in the manner of 1930, 1931 and 1932. When I extended words of greeting to the Fuehrer I could hardly finish any sentence, because the audience interrupted me again and again with stormy applause. I welcomed the Italian party delegation and this welcome, too, was greeted with salvos of applause by the politically alert Ber-liners. That was clever of them. The Berliners know the score and realize that the main problem of the moment is to keep the ally on our side. That is of course more difficult in winter than in summer, for in summertime our victories prevent our allies from becoming uncertain factors. Thereupon the Fuehrer spoke. . . . The general purport of his speech was to strengthen morale at home and to educate the people to become tough politically. The address made a tremendous impression both upon those present at the meeting and on the entire German nation- We may now rest assured that the main psychological difficulties have been overcome. We are now standing with both feet on the ground again. ... The enthusiasm of the audience exceeded anything that the human mind can imagine. . . . The Fuehrer has charged the entire nation as though it were a storage battery. As always, the Fuehrer is at his post ... As long as he is there, one need not worry about the future. My assertion that the Fuehrer is in good health created the deepest impression. As long as he lives in our midst in good health, as long as he can give us the strength of his spirit and the power of his manliness, ho evil can touch us. The entire people became convinced of this anew today. February 1942 QUISLING IS PROCLAIMED NORWEGIAN PREMIER. JAPANESE BOMB SURABAYA. ROMMEL'S TROOPS RECAPTURE DERNA. LORD BEAVERBROOK BECOMES MINISTER OF WAR PRODUCTION. MUSTAFA NAHAS PASHA BECOMES EGYPTIAN PREMIER. JAPANESE LAND AT SINGAPORE. THREE GERMAN MEN-OF-WAR SLIP OUT OF BREST AND HEAD FOR HOME. SINGAPORE SURRENDERS. JAPANESE CAPTURE PALEMBORG, SUMATRA OIL CENTER. CRIPPS ENTERS CHURCHILL'S WAR CABINET. RIOM TRIAL OPENS. WILLIAM TEMPLE APPOINTED ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. JAPANESE OVERRUN BALI. BRITISH APPLY "SCORCHED-EARTH" POLICY IN RANGOON. BATTLE OF JAVA SEA. P^TAIN PROMISES UNITED STATES TO KEEP FRENCH FLEET OUT OF NAZI HANDS. February 1, 1942 Japan acts with great self-assurance. Indeed the Japanese propagandists, in my opinion, often overshoot the mark. Nothing of importance has happened internationally except that Franco has delivered a speech, intended chiefly for home consumption, in which he declared that the Spaniards are God's chosen people and will remain faithful to the Catholic Church. It would be far more fitting for Spain to remain faithful to the Axis, for no special laurels are to be had from the Catholic Church. Franco, as we know, is a bigoted churchgoer. He permits Spain today to be practically governed, not by himself, but by his wife and her father confessor. That's a nice revolutionist we placed on the throne! But after all it is better for him to sit there than for any old Bolshevik who would undoubtedly be on the side of our enemies. [Francisco Franco Bahamonde, born in 1892, the Caudillo, is head of the Spanish state. From 1936-39 he commanded the Nationalist troops which ousted the Republican regime and had himself appointed "head of state and generalissimo." Since 1942 he also has had the title of President of the Political Junta of the Falange.) The German people ought not to do any griping. They still have a standard of living that is impossible in any other country of Europe, whether in the war or not. The home folk have thus far felt the war but very little, so that one need shed no tears if somewhat heavier sacrifices are now placed on their shoulders. I had reports submitted to me about a number of deficiencies. The coal situation is critical in Berlin, and if we don't adopt proper measures, it will undoubtedly become very serious in the second half of February. We shall then be forced to close the schools and even to stop production in some sections of the munitions industry. I don't want things to go that far. I spent a lot of time on the problem of increasing production. I don't believe that it can be solved by laws. I incline to the belief that something can be accomplished only by appealing to national discipline and to a sense of national duty. Also, premiums must be offered. Factories that produce especially well should receive special rations of cigarettes and alcohol. I therefore forbade the general distribution in Berlin of such alcohol as is available, and insisted that available liquor be used as rewards for special performance in the factories. February 2, 1942 The English have become decidedly more modest since the Fuehrer's speech. ... One really wonders on what grounds the English had the insolence to declare war on the Axis Powers. Either they must not have known our superiority and their inferiority, or else—and this seems more plausible— they intended from the very beginning to have other countries and peoples do their fighting for them. At any rate, that's where I attack the English vigorously in the German press and also in our foreign-language broadcasts. But the English won't let themselves be disturbed in the complacency of their arguments. They are a very peculiar people with whom it is difficult to have an argument. They are obdurate to a degree that gets on one's nerves in the long run. But possibly that is a national advantage rather than a disadvantage. February 3, 1942 A number of developments that, according to the maps, seem unfavorable to us have led the Bolsheviks once again to utter cries of triumph. They now declare that Kharkov is in immediate danger and that this enables them to strike at the very heart of our troops. Well, we shall see! ... The Bolsheviks don't seem to have confidence in their own strength any more. Even their loudest reports of victory indicate that they have their secret doubts. Certainly their special bulletins don't have the same assurance as those in mid-December. The Japanese are so cocksure and positive about their prognoses that one can hardly doubt their successes. On the other hand, of course, one must not fail to observe that the Japanese now and then exaggerate grossly and that their propaganda is very juvenile. Thus, for instance, the navy spokesman declared at Tokyo that the Japanese intend to land on the American continent and march into Washington. I call that pretty strong medicine and claim the Japanese are only hurting their cause by such pronouncements. I therefore gave orders that grossly exaggerated Japanese news items must not be published in the German press. Mistakes of this type usually occur only at the beginning of a war when the tricks of the trade have not yet been mastered. The English boast that General Auchinleck is about to start a counteroffensive [in North Africa]. That is something, however, that the English always do when things are in bad shape. Anyway, their news policy is something that we could never afford to imitate. Apparently the English people don't make their government responsible tomorrow for what it said today. It is extremely easy to lead the English people. The German people are much more sensitive about these matters. Even today utterances of leading men of the Reich dating back to September and October 1939 are still thrown up to us if things have not come off as prophesied. [Sir Claude J. E. Auchinleck, bora 1884, and educated in Wellington College, was deputy chief of General Staff Army Headquarters, India, 1936-38; served in Norway in 1940; became commander in chief of the Southern Command in 1940, of India, 1941, of the Middle East, 1941-42, and of India, 1943. President Truman awarded him the Legion of Merit in 1945.] In the United States there has been a noticeable letdown. Boastful figures concerning the potentialities of American arms production are no longer published. My attention has been called to the fact that the American war industry would of course be able to manufacture enormous quantities of materiel if life in America were slanted completely in the direction of war. So far there are no signs of this. But of course that may come more quickly than people imagine. We see by the example of the Soviet Union what a big people are able to do along that line. Public and private life there has for a quarter century been geared solely to war. The success is enormous. Quisling's appointment as premier has created a sensation in the countries at war with us and has drawn in its wake great waves of angry commentary. Quisling is hated violently in the entire enemy world and is now the target for vile calumniation. He has actually succeeded in becoming a symbol, although he doesn't really deserve it. But the more he is attacked abroad, the more it becomes our duty to support him. I therefore gave the German press instructions to give his appointment a good build-up and to see to it that with us, at least, he receives favorable publicity. On the other hand I forbid using the word "Fuehrer" in the German press when applied to Quisling. Even if he calls himself Foerer in Norway, and even if the word Foerer can easily be translated as Fuehrer, I nevertheless don't consider it right that the term Fuehrer be applied to any other person other than the Fuehrer himself. There are certain terms that .we must absolutely reserve to ourselves, among them also the word Reich. We must not tolerate any other state to call its confines a Reich. The whole world must in future understand that by Reich is meant only the German Reich. [Vidkun Quisling, born in 1887, was educated in the Royal Norwegian Officers' School and Military Academy. He was an officer of the Norwegian General Staff, 1911-23; Military Attache" in Petrograd, 1918-19; and was charged with the care of British interests in Russia during the interruption of diplomatic relationships, 1927-29. He was Norwegian Minister of Defense, 1931-33, and then became leader of the Norwegian Nationalist movement which made the entry of German troops into Norway in April 1940 easy. He became head of the German-controlled Norwegian Government in April 1940 and was appointed Premier in 1942. On October 24, 1945, he was executed for treason. King Haakon denied his wife's petition for clemency.] Seyss-Inquart wrote me a letter importuning me to include the wild purchases by German officials in the occupied areas in my campaign against the black market. These purchases have become a veritable pest. Heydrich punished them severely in the Protectorate. In the long run similar measures can probably not be avoided in other areas. Various departments of the Reich Government have acted very shamelessly in this matter. They did tremendous harm to the German name and it will take some time before we regain the respect of the peoples in the occupied areas. I received word from the western part of the Reich that eleven clergymen who are under indictment for listening to English broadcasts are soon to be tried. I informed the Fuehrer, since this trial will undoubtedly assume a pronouncedly political character. If things went my way, I would inflict the heaviest punishment on these "skypilots" [Phaffen] and would possibly even condemn them to death for doing such damage to the Reich. But of course such a question cannot be handled by itself but must be viewed as part of a larger picture, and it is up to the Fuehrer whether or not he considers such a trial desirable at this moment. Owing to the absence of Hinkel the radio programs have deteriorated very much. During the hours set aside for entertainment almost nothing but symphonic music is offered. That's what we get for letting Glasmeier appoint a musical director general, Schulz-Dornburg, to be responsible for the entertainment program. People of this type usually sit in an ivory tower and don't know what the common man wants and what he needs most. ... It is wrong to appoint a musical expert for so difficult a task. Experts are always handicapped in their relation to the common people. They lack the necessary instinct for realizing what the people are thinking. [Hans Hinkel, who was on leave for a special mission at the time of this entry, was one of the Nazi "Old Guard" who took part in Hitler's ill-fated beer-cellar putsch in Munich in 1923. He became state commissioner for the Prussian Ministry of Science, Arts, and Education in 1933, and supervisor of Jewish cultural activity in 1935. Later he joined Goebbels's Propaganda Ministry and was put in charge of its radio section. Dr. Heinrich Glasmeier was superintendent of broadcasts and deputy to Hinkel. He was also used in other capacities by Goebbels. (See, for instance, the diary entry for November 13, 1943.) When the Nazis came into power in 1933 he was appointed general manager of the Cologne Radio Station. He was on the executive board of the Reich Radio Chamber. Rudolf Schulz-Dornburg was one of innumerable German Kapellmeisters.] February 4, 1942 In the United States people are extremely concerned about the situation in the Pacific. Even that big mouth and tall talker, Knox, delivered a speech which was diametrically opposed to his emanations before the outbreak of the war. He who previously always boasted that the United States Fleet was big enough to conduct a two-ocean war must now suddenly admit very modestly that the American Fleet is hardly big enough for one ocean, that it cannot fight a two-ocean war, that the necessary labor is lacking to increase the fleet and especially the air force, that one must envisage a war of long duration, that the workers don't want to do any night-shift work, et cetera. All this gives one the impression that the United States is for the first time seriously facing the problems of the war. They could have done that at less cost if they had studied developments in Germany. Had they done so, however, they would, in all likelihood, not have entered the war. It's great fun to observe how the big mouths on the other side, who three months ago boasted how they would polish off Japan in six or eight weeks, now suddenly hem and haw and are compelled to face the facts. I permitted the release of the Knox speech to the German press and news services so they could pick it to pieces. It is excellently suited for polemics, all the more so as we can also use this occasion to refute the pompous array of figures with which Roosevelt tried to bluff the world in his last speech. Quisling gave the DNB representative a long interview about his policies. He makes the somewhat grotesque claim that in his hands as premier is concentrated all the power formerly held by the King, the Parliament, and the Prime Minister. That's laying it on a bit thick, for after all there is no Reich commissioner standing beside him! Nevertheless we release this version, since naturally we are highly interested in letting the Norwegian Government appear as big and independent as possible. [DNB stands for Deutsches Nachrichten-Buero (German News Bureau), the official news agency of the Nazi regime.] News comes from Budapest that Horthy intends to make his eldest son his presumptive successor. That would be a great misfortune, for this son is even more friendly to the Jews than Horthy himself. I hear, however, that Horthy is again in excellent health, so that the problem of his successor for the present is purely theoretical. [The son of Nicholas Horthy, Regent of Hungary, was married to a Jewess. Horthy, on being taken prisoner by the Americans in May 1945, tearfully told a group of American correspondents in Bavaria that his son was a victim of the Nazi war. Nicholas Horthy de Nagybanya, admiral of a country which has no navy and head of a kingdom which has no king, was born in 1868 in Kenderes, Hungary, the fourth son of a member of the House of Magnates. He was educated in the Imperial Austrian Naval Academy in Fiume. During World War I he commanded the battleship Hapsburg for ten months with the rank of captain, and then the cruiser Novara. Later he became a hero overnight by breaking through the Allied blockade in the Straits of Otranto. Emperor Charles I promoted him to rear admiral in command of the Austrb-Hungarian fleet over the heads of older officers. The next year he was made vice-admiral. He crushed the Communist Revolution of Bela Khun in 1919, and in 1920 was elected Regent Governor of Hungary by the Hungarian National Assembly. His word was law from then on.] February 5, 1942 Figures are now available concerning casualties because of freezing. We must differentiate between injuries of the first, second, and third degrees. First-degree frostbite comprises the light cases. Generally speaking, the soldier remains with his outfit and is treated there. Up to January 20 there were 4,000 third-degree frostbite cases, in other words, most serious cases. These 4,000 cases include 1,856 necessitating amputations of a more serious nature. . . . Besides these 4,000 third-degree cases, 46,000 cases were recorded of first and second degree, that is, injuries of a lighter or medium nature. Churchill's preparations for the East Asia conflict are being revealed more and more as amateurish. Parliament would undoubtedly have sent him flying long ago if there were an adequate successor. But look as you will far and wide, he is nowhere to be discovered. The fact that the Fuehrer in his Sports Palace address spoke such exceptionally appreciative words about the Party made a very favorable impression on the Party. The Brauchitsch question may now be regarded as settled by the Fuehrer's speech, but a last remnant of suspicion still remains with the German people. The fact that the Fuehrer himself has taken over the active command of the Army is having a wonderful effect. Recent German successes in the East are credited to him, and rightly so. He has actually saved the Eastern Front. The Jewish question is again giving us a headache; this time, however, not because we have gone too far, but because we are not going far enough. Among large segtions of the German people the idea is gaining headway that the Jewish question cannot be regarded as solved until all Jews have left the Reich. Some difficulties arise for us from the fact that the churches, especially the Catholic Church, are trying to use our seizure of church bells for war purposes as an excuse for unrestrained propaganda against National Socialism. I have therefore given orders that bells be taken away only after the population has been adequately informed by the Party of the reasons for so doing. A confidential report concerning internal conditions in Hungary indicates . . . that the Hungarians are actually ready to risk more lives [in the war effort]. It is gradually dawning upon them that they can't just sit in club chairs while the new Europe is being shaped, and later share in the successes. The Hungarians must risk blood if they want to get more territory. I wrote an article about increased production and courtesy which undoubtedly will prove a major sensation on publication. I chose my arguments very carefully and believe they will dominate public discussion. I may possibly put this expose of mine through the entire German press in order to acquaint all the people with the ideas and arguments there laid down. February 6, 1942 One of the armies [in the East] has reported that marching orders can't be carried out because there is no gasoline. Moscow is exceedingly dissatisfied with the British contribution in other theaters of war. The Bolsheviks are gradual- ly beginning to understand what a ball and chain they tied to their feet by allying themselves with the British Empire. They admit that our troops offer great resistance and that it is difficult to attain objectives when facing them.... Generally speaking one can say that the Eastern Front is no longer under severe strain. Despite Wavell's appeal to the troops in Singapore to hold out, there is almost no hope of further resistance by the island fortress. The position has become untenable chiefly because there isn't sufficient fighter-plane protection. Those 100,000 planes that Mr. Roosevelt was going to build are not yet ready; there aren't even enough ready adequately to defend a relatively small space, ... I am convinced that no matter how nonchalant they may act about Singapore, its loss will be a real shock to the English people. Churchill is already having a hard time calming public opinion. [Viscount Field Marshall Wavell, born 1883, had been commander in chief of the British Middle East Command, 1940-41, but was at this time Commander in Chief, India. In 1943 he was made Viceroy of India.] Most [British] newspapers think Churchill hasn't gone nearly far enough in reshuffling his Cabinet. People thought a number of strong men would be included; instead, Churchill got stuck with Beaverbrook. Beaverbrook seems to have obtained pretty far-reaching powers. But no man with imagination, or a strong character, can maintain his position long beside Churchill. Churchill delivered a very thin and pretty confused speech in the House, explaining the reconstruction of his Cabinet. He dwelt especially on the difficulties the British Empire faces in its relations with Australia. Australia is becoming more and more obstinate and the English world empire faces the danger that, if the crisis within the Commonwealth should develop, Australia may someday incline more toward the United States. [Goebbels's estimate of Lord iBeaverbrook underwent quick changes. Here he is represented as a strong character; on September 26, 1943, he is depicted as a great enemy of Sovietism; on September 29, 1943, as a man who favored an understanding with the Soviets. Lord Beaverbrook, the former Rt. Hon. William Maxwell Aitken, born in 1879, is a British newspaper magnate and chief stockholder of the London Daily Express. He sponsored the Empire Free Trade Movement. During the war he was successively Minister for Aircraft Production, Minister of State, of Supply, of War Production, and Lord Privy Seal.] Had a minor set-to with Rosenberg about the manner of conducting our ideological celebrations. He knows nothing about organization, that's why he is monkeying so much with it. I will hold my own against him, however. In the evening I was able to be with the children for an hour. After that I took a look at the Italian Gigli motion picture The Tragedy of Love, the aristic level of which is so far below the normal that it really ought to be prohibited. The Italians are not only not doing anything about the war effort, but they are hardly producing anything worth while in the realm of the arts. One might almost say that fascism has reacted upon the creative life of the Italian people somewhat like sterilization. It is, after all, nothing like National Socialism. While the latter goes deep down to the roots, fascism is only a superficial thing. That is regrettable, but one must recognize it clearly. National Socialism is really a way of life [eine Weltanschauung.] It always begins at the beginning and lays new foundations for life. That's why our task is so difficult, but also so beautiful, and the goal ahead is well worth our best effort [Beniamino Gigli was Italy's best-known operatic tenor after the late Enrico Caruso.] February 7, 1942 Rommel continues to be the pronounced favorite even of the enemy news services. He has succeeded in becoming a real phantom general. He is just as popular today in the United States as in London and Berlin, and one of the few figures in the German Army with a world reputation. We got hold of a secret message of the [British] Foreign Office to its embassies and legations. It is a warning not to be optimistic about the situation in the East; the German Army was by no means defeated; its power to resist was unbroken; and, as the weather improves, it must be expected to start new offensives. Nahas Pasha has issued a pro-British declaration, stating that the Anglo-Egyptian treaty will be carried out both in letter and in spirit. We don't place too great hopes in Nahas Pasha; nevertheless one must not forget that he simply had to make such a declaration because he and his government are under the thumb of the English and he can't afford in any way to oppose the pro-British course. [Mustafa El Nahas Pasha was Egyptian Prime Minister and chairman of the Wafd party. He was born in 1876 and educated at Cairo College.] A number of minor bomb explosions reported as having occurred in the baggage rooms of Berlin railway stations, among them the Anhalter and Stettiner stations. I sense a certain danger in this. Any rowdy can hand in his suitcase with a time bomb at the baggage-checking counter, and two or three hours later a part of the railway station is blown up. I am having an inquiry made as to whether baggage can't be controlled more effectively. But here, as everywhere else, we lack man power necessary for work like this. Lack of labor here, as everywhere, is the greatest problem with which we are faced at present. At noon I received the representatives of the Auslands Organisation who have come to Berlin from all European and overseas countries, and gave them a comprehensive survey of the military and political situation. I was in top form, used persuasive and pointed arguments, and won fervent applause from the representatives of the AO. I am sure they will return to their heavy labors spiritually elated. [The Auslands Organisation or AO (federation of Germans living abroad) was the contact organization for the Nazi regime to keep up its connection with and to indoctrinate Germans who emigrated to foreign countries or were in these countries on duty. As the Nazis became more powerful and efficient, the AO developed into both a propaganda and an espionage organization, the latter not so much in a technical sense, perhaps. That is, many of the rank and file of the membership probably did not realize that they were being used for espionage purposes; they merely thought they were giving information useful to the leaders of the AO in the discharge of their duties.] February 5, 1942 The reconstruction of the Egyptian Government has brought no sensational changes. Nahas Pasha declared that he intended to carry out the treaty with England without any reservation. He was clever enough, however, to obtain authority to dissolve Parliament. That, undoubtedly, is right. We did the same thing in February 1933. He must first get parliamentary backing before he can bring about fundamen- tal changes. I still hope that he may act more favorably for us than we are inclined for the present to assume. [The dissolution of the German Reichstag early in February 1933 enabled the Nazis to terrorize the population during the campaign for new elections, start the Reichstag fire, and use alleged Communist incendiarism as an excuse for outlawing the Communist party and fully entrenching themselves.] Anglo-American collaboration is the principal theme of the Anglo-Saxon press. There seem to be all sorts of difficulties about it. That's owing to the fact that in the much-advertised democracies nobody knows who is to give orders and who is to obey. Undoubtedly, too, the personal vanities and rivalries between Churchill and Roosevelt play an important role. We may certainly consider ourselves lucky not to be opposed by a front that is united ideologically. Lack of organization results in many a chance being missed, especially in this war, where everything depends upon who strikes first and most devastatingly. Rosenberg wrote me a letter stating that he intends to oppose the idea of a fight against the religious denominations. That's just too funny! Now, when we are in a tight pinch, everybody poses as a champion who fights against the very things that he himself started. I suppose the final result will be that we who have for years opposed the folly of our pronouncements on the religious question and similar things will be regarded as the real originators of the difficulties resulting from this folly! I consider it absolutely essential that the news bureaus be owned by the Reich. News policy is a sovereign function of the state, which the state can never renounce. News policy is a cardinal political affair, and political matters of this character must be in the hands of the Reich and not the Party. The Party is in no position to establish a real news service. In a news service 99.9 per cent of the items deal with news about the state leadership and only the remaining small percentage deals with the work of the Party. There will be some fights about this, but I won't give in. February 9, 1942 A serious explosion has occurred in Tangiers. The Secret Service is badly compromised. The Spaniards are raising a hell of a row. Tangiers last Saturday evening teemed with giant demonstrations against the English. Reuter is spreading the most insolent lies, claiming that it was a question of a bombing attempt by the Axis Powers. In the course of the day a shattering piece of news reached me. Dr. Todt crashed and was killed on leaving the airport of Rastenburg this morning following a visit at GHQ. The plane dropped from a height of four hundred meters and exploded on the ground. The passengers were so badly burned that it was hardly possible to gather up the corpses. This loss is absolutely overwhelming. Todt was one of the really great figures of the National Socialist regime. A product of the Party, he fulfilled a number of historic tasks, the effects of which cannot even be estimated at the moment. With the genial, spark-plug power of his personality he combined an extremely pleasing simplicity of behavior and an objectivity in his approach to his work in so compelling a form that everybody could not but esteem and love him. The ensuing months will show what we have lost in him. The Fuehrer, too, is hard hit by this loss. We have recently had to endure such heavy personnel losses that one really begins to believe that troubles never come singly. [Dr. Fritz Todt, born September 4, 1891, Minister of Munitions, was one of the top Nazis whom foreigners liked. He had none of the strutting, arrogant mannerisms of the typical Party brass hats. Modest and unassuming, he made many a foreign visitor wonder how he ever got mixed up with Nazism. His first outstanding achievement was the construction of the Reichsautobahnen, or super-highways, that proved so advantageous to the Allied armies as they swept through Germany. Next he constructed the gigantic Siegfried Line, or Westwall, opposite the Maginot Line, and later started the Ostwall as an opposite number to the Stalin Line to the east. In 1941 Hitler created a new Ministry of Munitions and appointed Todt to head it. The labor battalions which built the fortifications and followed directly behind the combat elements of the German Army to repair bridges and roads were called the Organization Todt, or OT for short.] I spent the entire day preparing the funeral ceremony for Todt. A solemn state funeral in Berlin is to honor him before, the entire world. The Fuehrer wants personally to come to Berlin to pay him a tribute on behalf of our nation and thereby to confer the last and highest honors on him. Throughout the day I feel numb over this loss. I hardly have time to think. There are so many people in public life who are as superfluous as a goiter. Death does not dare touch them. But when there is someone among them who has the ability to help make history, a senseless and cruel fate tears him from our ranks and he leaves a void that simply cannot be rilled. February 10, 1942 Generally speaking, Dr. Todt's fatal crash is regretted throughout the world. Even the English feel they must pay a tribute to his great talent for organization. Of course there are also a few English voices stupid enough to doubt the official version of the cause of Todfs death. That's the way English gentlemen are: they are nonchalant and polite as long as everything is well with them, but they tast off their masks and reveal themselves as brutal world oppressors the moment one trespasses on their preserves or a man appears on the scene with whom they must reckon. Beginning April 6, food rations must be reduced. Emphasis is laid upon the fact, however, that the workers performing hardest labor and the children are not to be affected too much. That is important, especially so far as the children are concerned. There can be no doubt that the rations in force after April 6 will no longer be sufficient to guarantee health and the maintenance of reserves of human labor power. We must therefore expect a number of developments which we have hitherto been in a position to avoid. We are now gradually entering upon conditions that in some ways resemble those of World War I during its third year. It is quite obvious that a war which extends over so long a period of time, and encompasses such tremendous spaces of earth, cannot but make a dent in the food economy of a people. It is satisfying and comforting, however, to know that similar conditions obtain in England also, so that our difficulties are not because of the blockade but rather because of the long duration of the war. Hinkel reported to me about his experiences during a trip to Bavaria. Conditions in certain parts there are nothing to be proud of. Some of the Bavarian leaders, including those of the Party, are trying in every way possible to escape war duty. After all, they aren't Prussians! [Goebbels was a Westphalian, hence a citizen of the state of Prussia, of which Westphalia was a province.] Once English world domination has been broken, one element of constant unrest and nervousness in world politics will no doubt have disappeared. The English succeeded in conquering one sixth of the earth by their methods. But that was during an epoch when the great national states were not yet ready. Now, however, Germany is ready, Italy is trying hard to get ready, and Japan is just at the point of being ready. England will have to reckon with these three new world powers. It's a fight for the highest stakes. No matter how long it lasts, we shall have to see it through. For if we don't succeed in shattering English domination in the world, all sacrifices of World War I and World War II will have been in vain. [The idea of putting an end to British world domination obsessed the Nazis. This editor recalls meeting one of the best-known and best-informed Nazi editors on the day England and France declared war on Germany because of the invasion of Poland. His first words were, "No matter what happens—this is the end of the British Empire.**] February 11,1942 In conservative English circles opposition to Cripps is be* ginning to grow. He has a disquieting way of warning and admonishing, so that they'd like to banish him to some distant diplomatic post. Cripps, however, shows no inclination to accept such a post. He is a simon-pure parlor Bolshevik and believes his hour has come. Undoubtedly Bolshevism is making progress among the English people and it is quite possible that at some future time a prophecy of the Fuehrer's may find its fulfillment, in the effect that it will not be Europe that will be corrupted by Bolshevism, but rather England and the United States. The English press hasn't yet made up its mind on which side to array itself, whether Cripps's or Churchill's, who hasn't yet publicly committed himself. One section of the English press enthusiastically praises Cripps, another section denounces him just as vigorously. All these happenings are extraordinarily full of meaning for us and are excellently suited to commentary in the German press. The fact that Cripps proclaimed Berlin as the future capital of Bolshevism is, of course, grist for our mill. The German public likes to read that sort of thing. There are always nitwits on the other side who throw us the ball whenever we want it. All we have to do is to hold up our hand and a propaganda ball flies into it from the enemy side. [Goebbels at first placed great hopes in Sir Stafford Cripps, who, he expected, would bring about a cleavage in Great Britain. In his first references to him he is full of praise for "this fair-haired boy and parlor Bolshevik." He changed his tune, however, when to his great surprise the British statesman accepted the mission to India. From then on he was "a greatly overrated man!" The Rt. Hon. Sir Stafford Cripps, son of Lord Parmoor, entered politics in 1931 when he became a Labor MP for Bristol East. He opposed the formation of the National Government. He was Ambassador to Soviet Russia, 1940-42, Lord Privy Seal and leader of the House of Commons, and subsequently, in November 1942, Minister of Aircraft Production.] Because of transportation and material shortages we are compelled to cut out all fairs for 1942. This was a difficult decision to make but one that was inevitable. In Leipzig, especially, there is great lamentation, as the fair had been Jmost entirely prepared. But there is nothing to be done about it. The needs which we must obey are more compelling. [Of all German expositions, the autumn and spring fairs at Leipzig, dating back to the Middle Ages, were the most important.] The fall of Singapore has made a very deep impression on the German public. The Japanese rate exceptionally high with us. They are regarded as an ally worthy of fighting on our side. Morale in the Ukraine is none too good. It would be a great help if we could promise land to the peasants. But as things are this is impossible. The intelligentsia is solidly on our side. The Ukrainian intellectuals know perfectly well what Bolshevism would do to them if it should return. For that reason they regard National Socialism and the German occupation as the lesser of two evils. How profound the English crisis is may be seen from the fact that Horc-Belisha, the former Jewish Minister of War, has deserted the Liberal party with two other members. Rumor has it he intends to form a new anti-Churchill party with Cripps. A number of domestic problems demand solution. Administrative reform is under discussion. Frick is trying to inject himself into the work started "by Dr. Lammers, but he is only partially successful in this. The Ministry of the Interior as a simplifier of administration is a real joke. [Wilhelm Frick, the first Nazi to attain high political office in Germany as Thuringian Minister of the Interior, was floor leader of the Nazis in the Reichstag and became Reich's Minister of the Interior on Hitler's assumption of power in 1933. Through Goebbels's intrigues Frick was eased out of his office in 1942 and appointed Protector of Bohemia-Moravia. He was hanged in Nuremberg. The feud between Goebbels and Dr. Frick was particularly bitter, even for a regime in which fights and jealousies among the leaders were the order of the day. Goebbels was an ultra-radical; Frick, a bureaucrat by training and profession, was averse to extreme measures. Goebbels was aggressive and ruthless; Frick rather mild-mannered and at times even timid. But there was also a personal reason for their enmity. Goebbels as Minister of Propaganda was also president of the Reich Culture Chamber and as such controlled the cultural and artistic life of the nation. He therefore resented it very much that Frick from time to time invited friends and associates to an evening of music in his home. Both Frick and his wife were very fond of the fine arts. Goebbels did not like this "competition."] It is disgusting how many big shots are now trying to prove to me that they can't continue their work unless they receive permission to listen to foreign radio broadcasts. In almost all cases I deny their requests. I agree to place at the disposal of every individual only such material as is essential for his special work. The task and duty of listening to foreign broadcasts must devolve on the political offices created for this purpose. Administrative offices have nothing whatever to do with it. Diewerge returned from Paris and gave me a detailed report on conditions there. He has spoken to Bonnet, who is ready to testify in the murder trial of the Jew Grynzpan which is to take place soon. Bonnet is ready to testify that he opposed the declaration of war against Germany, but that the French Government was put under such heavy pressure by the Jews that it could not avoid declaring war. This shows in what an irresponsible way this war was started and how heavily those must be punished who acted so rashly. [Dicwcrgc was a member of Goebbels's staff in the Propaganda Ministry. Georges Bonnet was Minister for Foreign Affairs in the Daladier cabinet at the time of the outbreak of World War II. In September 1939 he became Minister of Justice, a portfolio which he held until March 1940. In 1941 he became a member of the National Council. Herschel Grynzpan was a Polish Jew who came to the German Embassy on November 9, 1938, and killed his friend, Ernst vom Rath, in what was described by the Nazis at the time as a fit of homosexual jealousy. When Hitler was informed of the incident in Munich, where he and his Old Guard were celebrating the anniversary of the 1923 beer-cellar putsch, he gave orders, in a fit of rage, for a general pogrom of the Jews. This was followed later by a terrific money fine on all Jews within the Reich] The Fuehrer returned to Berlin for the funeral ceremony in honor of Reich Minister Dr. Todt. I went to see him immediately at noon and noted that the loss of Dr. Todt has shaken him badly. . . . Todt was one of the men closest to the Fuehrer. . . . The Fuehrer told me privately how hard this loss had struck him and how sad he was at the idea of one friend after another gradually leaving our group. The general situation gives the Fuehrer every reason to be satisfied with developments. He is somewhat worried about our three men-of-war, the Gneisenau, Scharnhorst, and Prinz Eugen, which have left Brest to seek a safe harbor. They are on their way, and we are all trembling lest something happen to them. It would be terrible if even one of these three ships were to share the fate of the Bismarck. Up to this hour the English haven't noticed anything, but undoubtedly they will attempt to attack the ships, as they are sure to be informed of their departure by spies. The Channel passage will be difficult but the attempt must be risked, so that the ships may at least reach a secure haven. Foreign countries will no doubt be alarmed to realize that these three ships, which have been reported sunk so often, are now majestically sailing the seas. [On May 27, 1941, the German battleship Bismarck was sunk four hundred miles off the French coast after a running sea battle with the British Navy. Goebbels naturally feared the Gneisenau, Scharnhorst, and Prinz Eugen might share her fate.] The Fuehrer regards the fall of Singapore as a very serious thing for the English. He believes a crisis may possibly arise for the British Empire. Churchill's position may be badly shaken. I am not prepared as yet to believe it. Churchill is already trying to minimize these events, and as the English know very well that Churchill's fall would provide a most serious crisis for the ^ritish war spirit, they will shrink from this last measure for settling scores with the arch liar. Week by week the Tories are becoming more and more distrustful of the Churchill policies. This distrust has been especially fed by the silly declarations of Cripps. His latest effusions have created such a sensation in neutral countries that we may in future expect all sorts of good things from this fair-haired boy [Edelknabe], The Fuehrer has the greatest respect and highest praise for the way the Japanese are conducting the war. The Japanese deserve this. They are fighting so bravely and with such an enviable national idealism that one could only wish we had more such allies. The Fuehrer's extreme confidence and his firm grasp of all domestic, foreign, and military problems are truly wonderful. He won't let anything confound or mislead him. He believes in victory more firmly than ever, and of course he has every reason to do so. We shall achieve victory provided we continue to fight for it with the same energy and with the same selflessness. At 3 p.m. the state funeral for Dr. Todt was held in the Mosaic Hall of the Reich Chancellery. It was profoundly touching. Every person of prominence in the state, Party, and Wehrmacht attended. One could weep at the thought that so valuable and indispensable a collaborator has been taken from our ranks in such a senseless way. The Fuehrer gave most eloquent expression to this idea in his address. As he spoke the Fuehrer was at times so deeply moved that he could hardly continue. But that made all the deeper impression upon those present and no doubt upon the public as well. We all have the distressing feeling of taking leave of a man who belonged to us as though he were a part of us. [The Mosaic Hall (Mosaik-Saal) was so named because the floor, walls, and ceiling of one of the large reception halls in Hitler's gaudy New Chancellery (Neue Reichskanzlei) were covered with small stones set in artistic patterns, i.e., mosaics.] The Fuehrer once more described all the achievements of the deceased in detail and said he had at first intended to confer the Knight's Cross upon him, but that he had abandoned this idea because the Knight's Cross, despite its high rank, did not do justice to Todt's meritorious service. He therefore conferred upon Todt, as the first to be thus honored, the highest class of the new German Order created by himself. Todt certainly deserved this. If anybody had a right to be awarded posthumously the highest honors that the Reich can confer, it was he. The ceremony was sad and sorrowful. When the remains of Todt were carried out of the Reich Chancellery it seemed to all of us that a brother was leaving us. On this day I was not really in the mood to attend to all sorts of petty details. The Fuehrer, too, retired. I occupied my mind with a number of problems that will assume importance only in the distant future. Work is. always the best antidote to attacks on the soul and spirit. I passed the evening in a melancholy mood. I had a growing feeling of loneliness. It is terrible even to imagine that the men who embarked upon this gigantic struggle and are responsible for so doing might be removed from their work before the conclusion of the war. Just as we won a revolution together, so we want also to win a war together. Reconstruction after the war won't be so difficult as winning victory. That's why we must now concentrate all energies upon the achievement of victory. February 12, 1942 After Singapore, Moscow is the principal theme of international discussion. Cripps's speech met with the sharpest criticism in the neutral countries. Individual English papers, too, object to his statements. But I give hardly any publicity to these voices, for it is not in our interest to classify Cripps as an outsider. On the contrary, he is to be, so to speak, the mouthpiece of the group in power in England. That gives us a much better basis for arguing against him. I have given instructions for our Ministry to prepare dictionaries for the occupied areas in which the German language is to be taught. They are, above all, to use a terminology that conforms to our modern conception of the state. Especially those expressions are to be translated that stem from our political dogmatism. That is an indirect form of propaganda from which I expect rather good results in the long run. In our propaganda we must take into consideration the impending reduction of food rations, the reasons for which must be given to the population in detail. I am having all arguments put together with which the reduction can be explained effectively. While they are very convincing, I am somewhat inclined to doubt whether they will be fully effective, for no one will listen to well-reasoned arguments if butter and meat are taken away from him. If I were an Englishman I would tremble for the fate of the Empire. But as I am not an Englishman and as I am convinced that our victory can be attained only through the collapse of the British world empire, I view developments with firm confidence. There was a time when we considered the existence of the British world empire a necessity for the welfare of Europe. This time is past Churchill gambled away the chance we gave England. England will have to pay very dearly for this statesman. But that isn't our worry. Our worry is so to wage war that the Axis Powers will soon attain complete victory. February 13, 1942 What disappointments the American people must experience these days! All hopes awakened in them seem to prove false. I am convinced that the American statesmen themselves believed what they prophesied. The United Press, for instance, reports that Hull is very much depressed over American failures to date and is thinking of resigning. Cripps continues to carry on agitation on behalf of the Bolsheviks. For us he is a propagandist whom we simply could not pay with money. I therefore ordered the press not to picture him as an outsider. On the contrary, we must represent him as a sort of mouthpiece for Churchill. Of course he isn't that actually, but he is most useful to us that way. It is claimed that Hore-Belisha and Cripps intend to found a new anti-Churchill party. It remains to be seen whether they will actually succeed in this. It would be best, of course, if Churchill were defeated and Hore-Belisha took his place. Today we would most heartily welcome a Jew as Prime Minister. Lieutenant Colonel Hermann, Dietl's adjutant, gave our ministerial conference a survey of the present situation on the northern sector of the Eastern Front. Conditions at times are really gruesome there. Some of the mountain troops have not had a furlough since the beginning of the campaign in Norway. They are exceedingly homesick and their morale is kept up only by the challenging example of Dietl. He is a true people's general. He is constantly with his troops and has achieved a popularity that is indescribable. [Colonel General Eduard Dietl, commander of the German forces in the extreme north, was a Bavarian mountaineer who distinguished himself by boldness and bravery during the Norwegian campaign in April 1940. He was a member of the Epp Freikorps in 1919, joined the Nazi party in 1920, and participated in the Hitler putsch in 1923. As a colonel he commanded the Ninety-ninth Alpine Regiment at Kempten. He participated in the occupation of Austria in 1938, and was commander of an Alpine division in Poland in 1939.] Despite their depressing surroundings, the troops themselves are in good spirits. They have gone through several crises which, however, could be overcome by joint effort. The way our people at home are taking care of these troops is most praiseworthy, Lieutenant Colonel Hermann told me. I did something extra for them and assigned a three-quarter liter bottle of schnapps to every soldier at the northern front. That means I am diverting 150,000 bottles intended for the Berlin population. The Berliner will have to get along without this schnapps; the soldiers in the north need it more. I discussed the present position of economy and foreign exchange with Funk. He is having great difficulties with Rumania. Antonescu does not deliver what he promised. To some extent he isn't in a position to do so. The dilatoriness of the Rumanians isn't so much the fault of the marshal as it is of young Mihai Antonescu, who is playing a rather disastrous role in the economic life of his country. [Walter Funk, born in 1890, was Nazi Minister of Economics and President of the Reichsbank, and was sentenced for life at Nuremberg, having been found guilty of major crimes against humanity. Funk himself exclaimed in this editor's presence, shortly after his appointment to the Economics Ministry in 1938, "Who would ever have thought Yd land up here!" For he started as an obscure journalist when his dream of becoming a musician did not materialize. He finally rose to the position of financial editor for the conservative Berliner Boersenzeitung, the organ of the capital's "Wall Street," and joined the Nazi party early. Goebbels first took him into his Propaganda Ministry as chief of the press section and with the rank of Staatssekretaer (equivalent to our undersecretary). There he had to give Hitler a daily review of press commentary. Hitler liked him so well that he promoted him to a cabinet post when Dr. Hjalmar Schacht's "orthodox" financing no longer suited the Nazis. Ion Antonescu was Rumanian dictator from 1940 to 1944. He had been one of the leaders of the Iron Guard. King Mihai dismissed him and he was classified as a war criminal by the Allies upon his arrest. Mihai Antonescu was deputy Prime Minister and president of the Liberal Youth Association. He, too, was arrested in 1944 and classified as a war criminal. Both Antonescus were executed June 1, 1946, at Bucharest.] It is a grotesque thing that neither the Italians nor the Spaniards are willing to have the war materiel which we furnish them credited to the deliveries they are to make to us. They demand that this be postponed until after the war. In other words, we are furnishing the Italians war materiel but must make separate payment for the goods the Italians furnish us. It is surely a headache. [Es ist schon ein wahres Kreuz.] We are waging this war not only by shedding our blood but also by supplying the materials and the labor. It is only right and just mat we take the leadership of Europe definitely into our hands after the war and not let ourselves be pushed off our course by any other state, no matter how big it may be or what exaggerated claims it may put in. The German people must suffer and stand for so much; they have actually won the hegemony of Europe and have a moral right to it. At noon I was a guest at the Fuehrer's. He gave a small luncheon in honor of Quisling who is in Berlin at present and conversed at length with the Fuehrer. The Fuehrer is naturally very happy that our warships succeeded in breaking through. He believes we gained enormously in prestige while the British lost prestige correspondingly. He is still of the opinion that Churchill has been maneuvered into a dangerous position and that his fall may possibly be expected. [This refers to the Gnetsenau, Scharnhorst, and Prinz Eugen which left the French harbor of Brest (see February 11, 1942), sailed through the English Channel unmolested, and arrived in a northern port.] Singapore, too, has weakened his position very much. As the crisis extended it would exhaust the energies of the English public more and more and someday a catastrophe would result. Although I am not so optimistic in these matters as the Fuehrer, I believe, nevertheless, it may be assumed that Churchill's position has been weakened, and that he must watch his step. ... As to Quisling, he developed very naive ideas in his talk with the Fuehrer, as the latter confided to me. He thinks he will be permitted to build up a new Norwegian Army, protect the Norwegian harbors himself, and finally create an entirely free Norway. That, of course, is very childish. The Fuehrer replied evasively to these claims. ^ As for myself, I have the impression that Quisling is in fact nothing but a Quisling. I can't feel any sympathy for him. He is a dogmatist and theoretician whom one can evidently not expect to develop great statesmanlike qualities. I discussed a number of internal Party measures with Bor-mann. He is very critical of Dr. Ley, who is smashing a lot of china with his hysterical articles. The Fuehrer has had to scold him hard because of his articles on increased production, since they contained veiled attacks against the Ministry of Munitions. In my presence the Fuehrer gave Ley a tongue-lashing and, when the latter tried to reply, told him that it just won't do for anybody to start things on his own at a time when other departments and other personalities are concerning themselves with the same problem. He gave orders that nothing be done in the matter of increased production without the permission of the Ministry of Munitions. [Reichsleiter Martin Bormann became Rudolf Hess's successor as Hitler's deputy in party matters after Hess's sensational flight to England in 1941. He proved to be one of the most radical and uncompromising Nazis, filled with a hatred for the Church. He was tried in absentia at Nuremberg, but no definite proof of his death was produced. He was with Hitler in his bunker almost to the last. Dr. Robert Ley, who committed sucide at Nuremberg shortly before the big war crimes trial began, was head of the German Labor Front, besides being Reichsleiter, with cabinet rank, of the political division of the Nazi party. In the early days of the Nazi regime Robert Ley was Gauleiter for Cologne-Aachen. In May 1933 he engineered a coup d'ttat against the German trade unions which at that time were still a power. The trade unions, not fully realizing the revolutionary character of Nazism, thought they could best overcome Nazism by seeming to play with h, but actually boring from within, and therefore agreed to participate in the annual demonstrations' on Europe's Labor Day, May 1. While Hitler was haranguing them on Tempelhof Field, Berlin, and the workers throughout the Reich were assembled at their customary demonstration centers to listen to the broadcasts of the speech, Ley and the SA invaded trade-union headquarters everywhere, seized the books and funds, and wrote "finis" to the German organized labor movement. Instead, Hitler commissioned Ley to organize the German Labor Front which both workers and employers were compelled to join.] Increased production, in any case, isn't a question that everybody can solve for himself, but an enormous problem that can be tackled only by common effort. The Fuehrer believes that rigorous measures must be taken, that the entire process of production must be examined anew, and that the captains of industry who are unwilling to follow the directives given by us must lose their factories, no matter whether that means their economic ruin or not. After all, nobody cares whether a soldier goes to pieces economically or even physically when he goes to war, and the soldier certainly does as much personally for the war effort, if not more, than the industrialist who manufactures arms and munitions. The Fuehrer has ordered the munitions producers to come to him in the afternoon, when he will give them instructions and tell them off. Bormann complained bitterly about Rosenberg, who has managed to create a veritable chaos in his Ministry and is picking a quarrel with every Tom, Dick, and Harry. Rosenberg, too, is a sort of Quisling type. A good theoretician but no practitioner, he is completely at sea as far as organization is concerned, besides having rather childish ideas. Hess has written a letter to his wife. It is disarmingly naYve. He still thinks he has done a great thing for the war effort and declares he believes the dream of Professor Haushofer, that he will someday return home with peace in his hands, will yet come true. As for the rest, he is chiefly concerned about his health. In other words, he hasn't stopped his quackery. He is certainly not in the condition in which we thought him to be. He is past hope of redemption. [An ihm ist Hopfen und Malz verloren.] [The reference to Hess's "quackery" recalls the fact that Hess did not believe in orthodox medicine but supported all sorts of "nature fakers" and prevailed upon Hitler to have them licensed as practitioners on a par with regular medical men.] February 14, 1942 The fact that we sailed through the Channel with our three big ships is today's great sensation in London. People act as though they were stunned. There is talk of a great sea battle, and an effort to prove that the German squadron sustained heavy losses. There isn't a word of truth to that. Meanwhile the facts are seeping through. It is a characteristic fact that the French on the Eastern Front are not giving a good account of themselves. These people are no longer worth anything. They have lost their military punch. A macabre nation, bent upon pleasure, which has rightfully suffered a catastrophe. We need no longer have any fears—the French won't cross our path for a long time to come. The Spaniards are extraordinarily courageous, but have military peculiarities which we simply cannot understand. For example, they just can't comprehend that horses must be looked after and fed. On the other hand, however, they go after the enemy like Bluecher. They have thought out a new system of defense in which the Soviet population must help, and the Russian peasants stand for this without raising an eyebrow. In that connection it is significant that most of the local population leave with us wherever our troops are compelled to withdraw. Bolshevism is a doctrine of the devil, and anybody who has once suffered from this scourge doesn't want to have anything to do with it again. The sufferings of the Russian people under Bolshevism are indescribable. This Jewish terrorism must be radically eliminated from all of Europe. That is our historic task. rit was a dogma with the Nazis that Bolshevism was a Jewish invention.] World Jewry will suffer a great catastrophe at the same time as 'Bolshevism. The Fuehrer once more expressed his determination to clean up the Jews in Europe pitilessly. There must be no squeamish sentimentalism about it. The Jews have deserved the catastrophe that has now overtaken them. Their destruction will go hand in hand with the destruction of our enemies. We must hasten this process with cold ruthlessness. We shall thereby render an inestimable service to a humanity tormented for thousands of years by the Jews. This uncompromising anti-semitic attitude must prevail among our own people despite all objectors. The Fuehrer expressed this idea vigorously and repeated it after- ward to a group of officers who can put that in their pipes and smoke it. [Inasmuch as pages 9-36 of this day's diary entry are missing, it is not apparent what the occasion was for this diatribe of Hitler's against the Jews. The Fuehrer remained in Berlin for some days following the funeral of Dr. Fritz Todt, Minister of Munitions, and constantly received his underlings. It is probably not wrong to assume that this was one of Hitler's conversations "unter vier Augen" (literally under four eyes) with Goebbels alone, of which the little doctor was so proud.] The Fuehrer realizes the full implications of the great opportunities offered by this war. He is conscious of the fact that he is fighting a battle of gigantic dimensions and that the fate of the entire civilized world depends upon its issue. The Fuehrer continues to have the greatest admiration for the Japs. They prepared everything secretly. We have now heard that Kurusu and Nomura negotiated in Washington without having the faintest idea as to what the Japanese war leaders were planning. That's a good thing. When you are gambling for the existence of your own people you should employ all methods of a tricky and superior war strategy. It means, of course, that Kurusu and Nomura played an exceedingly ludicrous role, but that is of less importance. They deserved making fools of themselves, for these two diplomats had always been the representatives of Japanese appeasement, which has now proven entirely senseless and inimical to Japan. [This entry in Goebbels's diary makes special Ambassador Saburu Kurusu and regular Ambassador Admiral Kichisaburo Nomura appear in a more favorable light. According to Goebbels they did not know what they were doing. Goebbels knew Kurusu well because he had been Japanese Ambassador to Germany preceding his mission to Washington. It was he who signed the pact of alliance in Hitler's chancellery on September 27, 1940. Berlin society at the time was agog with the rumor that Kurusu, forgetting that he was surrounded by agents of Hitler who understood Japanese, turned to his counsellor of embassy as he sat down to sign the pact and said, "I don't think I am rendering my country a service with this signature." At any rate Kurusu was recalled soon thereafter, allegedly because the remark was promptly relayed to the Fuehrer. Kurusu had an American wife and two daughters who spoke English perfectly and were very American in their outlook and behavior.] We, too, have employed such methods again and again. Our Ambassador in Moscow, Count von der Schulenburg, also hadn't the faintest idea that the Reich was determined to attack. He kept insisting that our best policy would be to make Stalin our friend and ally. He also refused to believe that the Soviet Union was making tremendous military preparations against the Reich. There is no doubt that one does best if one keeps the diplomats uninformed about the background of politics. They must sometimes play a role for which they don't have the necessary theatrical abilities, and even if they did possess them, they would undoubtedly act an appeasement role more convincingly and play the finer nuances more genuinely, if they themselves were believers in appeasement. Genuineness in playing an appeasement role is sometimes the most convincing argument for their political trustworthiness. (Count von dcr Schulcnburg was purged in connection with the executions of leading Germans implicated in the plot which culminated in the abortive attempt on Hitler's life, July 20, J944. He is frequently referred to in the Von Hostel! Diaries. Count Friedrich Werner von der Schulenburg, born November 20, 1875, was a German diplomat with a long career of service, his last posts having been Minister to Iran, Minister to Rumania, and Ambassador to Russia.] How stupidly diplomacy sometimes does these things was illustrated by the Fuehrer in an incident before the offensive in the West. At that time there was at our Legation in the Hague an obvious traitor, a certain attache Von Prittwitz, who collaborated with the [British] Secret Service. The attention of our Legation was called to this fact. The minister thereupon very cleverly called the entire staff together, explained the situation, and thereby gave the traitor a chance to escape to England just in time. With that kind of diplomacy you naturally can't steal horses! It is therefore better if the diplomats know nothing, neither a part nor the whole thing. They will then do stupid things, to be sure, but they won't do any harm. The weakness of diplomacy is its social ties. These can never be quite overcome, and one must therefore be conscious of this weakness when determining one's policies. One must not stick to old methods that have long been outmoded but must play politics and conduct war with modern methods. February 15, 1942 When one surveys the over-all situation critically one becomes convinced that there is a deep moral and political depression in London as well as in Washington. This should not be overestimated for it can naturally still be overcome. Nevertheless the Anglo-Saxons have taken such heavy blows during the last we^k that their knees are beginning to tremble. What I do personally continues to meet with general approval. What I've done with the radio as well as the newsreel is lauded in terms of highest praise. My articles are having the greatest effect throughout the world, nor need I complain of their echo among the German people. The hundreds of thousands of foreign workers now employed in the Reich are a headache. Tlie danger exists that intercourse between these workers and German women will cause a gradual deterioration of our race. This danger must be checked by every possible means. But it is difficult to discuss such a question in public because the peoples and nations affected immediately take offense. For example, the Italians fight tooth and nail against being regarded as racially inferior to, or even different from, ourselves. I had a long talk with Heydrich about conditions in the Protectorate. Sentiment there is now much more favorable to us. Heydrich's measures are producing good results. It is true that the intelligentsia is still hostile to us. But we must rally the rank and file of the people to our side and against them. The danger to German security from Czech elements in the Protectorate has been completely overcome. Heydrich operates successfully. He plays cat and mouse with the Czechs and they swallow everything he places before them. He has carried out a number of extremely popular measures, among them first and foremost the practically complete conquest of the black market. ... Slavs, he emphasized, cannot be educated as one educates a Germanic people. One must either break them or humble them constantly. At present he does the latter. Our task in the Protectorate is perfectly clear. Neurath completely misjudged it, and that's how the first crisis in Prague arose. [Baron Konstantin von Neurath, former German Foreign Minister, was too old and easy-going as first Protector of Bohemia-Moravia to suit Hitler. He was persuaded to resign for reasons of health, and Heydrich was put in his place. The whole world was shocked when, to April 1942, the Nazis completely wiped out the Czech town of Lidice as a reprisal for the assassination of Heydrich. When President Von Hindenburg appointed Hitler Chancellor on January 30, 1933, he stipulated that Foreign Minister von Neurath be retained. Hitler agreed, but on Von Neurath's sixty-fifth birthday, on February 2, 1938, relieved him of his duties and replaced him with the more robust and unscrupulous Joachim von Ribbontrop. Soon thereafter he appointed him Protector of Bohemia-Moravia at Prague. Von Neurath was condemned to fifteen years' imprisonment as a major offender in the Nuremberg War Crimes Trial in 1946.] Seyss-inquart gave me a survey of the present situation in Holland. ... The Dutchman is, generally speaking, an unpolitical individual. Calvinism and the materialistic love of good living have made him very individualistic. His character is in many respects quite strange to us. You therefore can't do very much in Holland with cultural institutions, since the Dutchman is not used to them and, in fact, hardly knows them. His pigheadedness can't be beaten. Nevertheless I believe that further developments will improve sentiment toward us in the Netherlands. Seyss-inquart is pursuing a policy of restraint which, though not altogether National Socialistic, is nevertheless purposeful. Sentiment in Paris is not hostile to us. However, the critical food situation does stand between us and the French people. If we were in a position today to supply sufficient food to the occupied areas, we could win countless moral victories. Cultural propaganda is still the best propaganda in dealing with the French. I shall therefore increase it even more. [It is interesting to observe that the French Army of Occupation and French Military Government in Germany are now stressing cultural propaganda more than the other three occupying countries do in their respective zones.] It is, by the way, a significant thing that our front-line soldiers are always missionaries for German prestige. The soldiers of the third and fourth line, however, i.e., the military bureaucracy, merely disgust a people that attaches such importance to personal bearing. But there isn't much we can do about it. Our man power is limited, and our men are now more necessary for fighting the war than for making a favorable impression by their appearance in Paris. February 16, 1942 Singapore this afternoon offered to capitulate after having fought desperately. For the first time in this war the English are obliged to hoist the white flag in grand style. That is certainly a blow to English prestige. That fact finds expression in the British press. A feeling of deep shame permeates the entire world empire. The differences between England and the United States are growing quite naturally and so quickly that we shall desist from trying to increase them by our commentary. The English might otherwise take up some of our comments and use them to prove to the Americans how undesirable such conflicts are. A precious plant like this must be allowed to grow with the aid of natural rain and natural sun under God's free sky. I expect a lot from these differences of opinion, but the time has not yet come for making them grow by artificial means. Franco delivered a very aggressive speech against Bolshevism. It would be far better if he declared war on Bolshevism. But what can you expect from that sort of general? Late at night Churchill spoke. The same old stuff. A certain hopelessness finds expression.. .. But his slogan of "Blood, Sweat, and Tears" has entrenched him in a position that makes him totally immune from attack. He is like a doctor who prophesies that his patient will die and who, every time the patient's condition worsens, smugly explains that, after all, he prophesied it. February 17, 1942 For the further progress of the war we cannot possibly think of a prime minister who would be better for us than Churchill. Aside from the fact that we are accustomed to his personality and his policies, it must not be overlooked that Churchill's strategy is so short-sighted that he will certainly lead the empire from one reverse into another. Let us therefore rejoice that he continues at the head of the world empire. If the empire is to be laid to eternal rest anyway, it is comforting to have an experienced gravedigger at hand. [This is a clear case of "sour grapes" to hide Goebbels's chagrin at Churchill's latest victory in Parliament. Both Goebbels and Hitler, it will be recalled, considered the parliamentary crisis in London as very grave.l Roosevelt radioed a speech to Canada urging subscription to the war loan. Like his little handyman [sein kleinqr Moritz] Knox, he has become extremely modest. I have the impression that the leaders in the Anglo-vSaxon camp are imbued with a spirit of deep resignation. Hull is again reported to have spoken very pessimistically to the men around him. In other words, conditions in the enemy camp are not as the somewhat frivolous commentaries in the press would have us believe them. I am having some trouble with the press because it doesn't take to my suggestions as I should like. Unfortunately Fritzsche is altogether too much on the side of the press. Why, the press ought to howl with joy \wiehern vor Freude] at being given such excellent material for commentary. Instead, the bourgeois papers especially seem to be so tired of using this material that I could burst with anger. I therefore consider it my duty to keep exhorting and goading them on. If you don't constantly build a fire under the people responsible for informing the public, and if you don't constantly push them on, they gradually become dull and tired. [Hans Fritzsche was Goebbels's top radio commentator and his deputy for news handouts to the German press. He was indicted as a major war criminal and tried at Nuremberg by the International Military Tribunal. He was acquitted but rearrested by the Germans and tried under the de-Nazification law. The German court condemned him to nine years' imprisonment. An interesting admission that the non-Nazi editors were not so gullible and tractable as Goebbels wanted them to be.] Statistics on suicides show a decreasing curve. It looks indeed as though nobody wants voluntarily to depart this life. Everybody wants to live to see the end of the war, and rightly so, for it will surely be a joyful occasion for the entire people. February 18, 1942 The participation of the Japanese in this war is a real gift from the gods for us. They have changed the situation fundamentally during this fateful winter. Thanks chiefly to them we have survived the greatest crisis. Churchill was forced to justify himself in a brief declaration in the House of Commons. His declaration is about the limit of anything he has so far done. He admits that the German Fleet succeeded in forcing its way through the Channel, but now suddenly claims that when you consider it in the right light, this is a tremendous advantage for England. The R.A.F. no longer needs to fly attacks on Brest but can now concentrate on air raids against the Reich. Besides, the German Fleet at Brest had been a constant threat to the home fleet. This threat was now practically eliminated During the forty-minute debate in the House so much dirty linen was washed that we can only be very happy about it. In the evening I had a look at the Polish-Yiddish motion picture, The Dybuk. This film is intended to be a Jewish propaganda picture. Its effect, however, is so anti-Semitic that one can only be surprised to note how little the Jews know about themselves and how little they realize what is repulsive to a non-Jewish person and what is not. Looking at this film I realized once again that the Jewish race is the most dangerous one that inhabits the globe, and that we must show them no mercy and no indulgence. This riffraff must be eliminated and destroyed. Otherwise it won't be possible to bring peace to the world. February 19, 1942 It is typical for the English to try to relieve their feelings by announcing abnormal war aims. The fact that in their periodicals they are letting their imagination run wild with plans for revenge shows how furious they are with us. The worse their military situation becomes, the more they blow themselves up. But that has always been a national disease of the British and one need not take it too seriously. These press commentaries suit us exactly. Nothing better could happen to us than to have the English at this very moment openly proclaim their intention to destroy Germany completely, that is, not only the Nazi regime, but the entire German people. American newspapers claim that Stalin has been preordained to save Christianity. What queer intellectual jumps the plutocratic spokesmen make in their present distress! Nothing is too nonsensical to be thought, said, printed, or written during this war. I am having the question investigated as to how we may in future obtain authentic news from the United States. We have established a number of news bridgeheads in South America. For the present they still function, but of course we don't know how long that will continue. The situation in the South American countries is becoming more difficult from week to week, and possibly we shall have to expect a number of declarations of war there also. As far as the military situation is concerned, they are only of secondary importance. We have published a diplomatic report sent to Daladier by the former French Minister in the Hague. It claims that the former Dutch Foreign Minister, Kleffens, at the end of 1939 suggested a plan for an attempt on the Fuehrer and Ribben-trop. There is no exact proof of this, however, as the language of the report is somewhat obscure. [Edouard Daladier, born in 1884, was French Prime Minister and Minister of National Defense, 1938-40, in other words, both during the "appeasement*' negotiations at Munich on September 30, 1938, when Czechoslovakia was compelled to cede the Sudeten!and to Hitler, and at the outbreak of World War II. He was arrested in June 1940, on the charge of "war responsibility.** Eclco Nicolaas van KJeffens, born 1894, and educated at Leyden University, is a Dutch diplomat and politician, who, after having held numerous diplomatic posts, became Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1939. Joachim von Ribbentrop, born May 30, 1893, a former champagne merchant whose title of nobility (von) was obtained irregularly through adoption by an uncle who had only a personal but not a hereditary title, was picked by Hitler because of his glib tongue and seeming knowledge of foreign affairs. He was at first a personal agent of the Fuehrer, but in 1938 was appointed Foreign Minister. He was hanged at Nuremberg.] Personally I should have preferred to hold back things like that. In wartime one should not speak of assassination either in a negative or an affirmative sense. There are certain words from which we should shrink as the devil does from Holy Water; among these are, for instance, the words "sabotage" and "assassination." One must not permit such terms to become part and parcel of everyday slang. The food difficulties in all occupied areas are enormous. For some time to come we shall not be able to overcome them. The wonder to me is that the peoples in the occupied areas are remaining so quiet. The Catholic Church continues to act in a dastardly way. A number of pastoral letters have been laid before me which are so unrealistic [weltfremd] and treacherous that nothing need be added. Nevertheless we shall not proceed against them. Let the "skypilots" [Pfaffen] have their say; well present our bill to'them after the war. Complaint has been made about the behavior of French prisoners of war, who evidently don't appreciate their relative freedom. We shall watch this carefully and possibly take away their privileges. February 20, 1942 In the United States a lot of criticism is at present directed against Churchill. We take no note of this criticism because we don't want this tender plant of disagreement between the two allies to die prematurely. Vansittart has aligned himself with the periodical, John Bull, and has declared that the German people must be completely disarmed for an entire generation and reeducated. We know that type of education by English capitalists and hard-boiled brutalists [sic]\ It's a good thing, however, that the English are now letting the cat out of the bag. That can only help our domestic propaganda. Although England is fighting at present against tremendous obstacles it cannot be said that morale among the common people is low. The English people are used to hard blows, and to a certain extent the way they take it compels admiration. In times of crisis the British Government profits by the pigheadedness of the British national character but someday, somehow, this pigheadedness will end; namely, when the blows begin to be staggering and deadly. Nobody in all Europe wants to have anything to do with Bolshevism. Even from the viewpoint of foreign policy it suits us exactly for Cripps to continue his activity. Yes, we really ought to wish that Churchill would take him into his government, a thing that according to latest reports is by no means outside the range of possibility. The Riom trial of French war criminals has begun. Daladi-er, Gamelin, and Blum are the chief defendants in the dock. It does not look as though there will be a real squaring of accounts. The whole trial will probably be conducted according to the principle, "Wash my skin but don't make me wet." Besides, the court is to sit only three days a week, and for only a few hours per session, so that we must count upon a long duration of the trial, especially considering the maze of material that must be gone through. The defendants began immediately to defend themselves vigorously. It remains to be seen whether political sensations will develop. We had really thought the causes of the war would be gone into. Instead, the intention is to determine the causes for the French defeat. We are certainly not particularly interested in that. [General Maurice Gustave Gamelin, bom 1872, was chief of staff to General Joffre in World War I. He was chief of the General Staff of the French Army in 1931-35, Inspector-General, 1935-37, and vice-president of the Higher Council of War, 1935-40. When World War II broke out he became Allied Commander in Chief for France in September 1939 but was relieved in May 1940. After the French defeat he was arrested and detained at Fort Portalet. L£on Blum, leader of the French Socialist party, was Prime Minister, 1936-37 and vice-president of the Cabinet, 1937-38. He, too, was arrested in 1940 and taken to Fort Portalet] In Brazil they are wondering whether they ought not to declare war on us on account of torpedoings by our submarines. For the moment, however, everybody is extremely careful in this respect. The South American nations know perfectly well that war can no longer remain a pure theory for them, but that they will at least have to count on German torpedoes in the event of war. That is something which, after all, might give some trouble to the corrupt characters that are now governing the South American nations. The Italians are causing us difficulties in various ways. Now they are trying to horn in on the newly founded movie industry at Bucharest, which was really to be our field. Of course they are doing it with insufficient means, but nevertheless they would like to keep their fingers in the pie. There isn't much to be done about it for the moment. They also proposed that we buy the Berlin exhibition of Italian books at a price of 400,000 marks. It is worth about 50,000 marks. This is a very touchy subject which I am referring to the Foreign Office for disposal, for German foreign policy and especially relations with our allies are chiefly its concern, and I don't see why I should spend such sums out of my budget for such trifles. The eldest son of Horthy has been designated as his [father's] deputy by acclamation of the Hungarian House of Representatives. This is a piece of first rate political skulduggery. But we are keeping hands off. . .. Horthy's son is a pronounced Jew-lover, an Anglo-phile to the bones, a man without any profound education and without broad political comprehension; in short, a personality with whom, if he were Regent of Hungary, we would have some difficulties to iron out. But this isn't the time to bother about such delicate questions. When in need the devil will eat flies, and in wartime we will stand even for an objectionable deputy regent of Hungary. After all, we must have something left to do after the war! By a decree of the Fuehrer all intercourse with Polish girls by soldiers stationed in Poland is forbidden and punishable. I doubt very much whether this decree is practical. Experience points to the contrary. The question of intercourse of German soldiers and officials in occupied areas with the female population there is exceedingly difficult and delicate. As long as German women are forbidden to follow the armies in these areas one can't be too severe, for somehow nature will claim its rights after all. It is really amusing to see how all ministers now approach the Fuehrer, asking his permission to listen to foreign radio stations. The reason they assign is nothing short of grotesque. For example, the Minister of Education declared he must know what our enemies are supplying in the way of anti-German news in order that he may indoctrinate youth against such reports! The Fuehrer rejects all such requests brusquely and encourages my efforts to keep news distribution as restricted and limited as possible. During the night the news reached us that Churchill, under pressure of public opinion, was forced to reshuffle his Cabinet. The most outstanding characteristic of this reconstruction to me seems to be the fact that Cripps has been taken into the Government. We really ought to celebrate. We could not possibly have expected anything more favorable to us. February 21, 1942 The appointment of Cripps has placed in our hands a propaganda argument that could not possibly be more favorable. It is effective for domestic as well as for foreign and also for military politics. It is good for our people, it is good for our allies, it is good for the neutrals, and it is fateful for our enemies. What better thing could we wish for or imagine? The trial at Riom is going its prescribed slow course. Gamelin, Blum, and Daladier are quite insolent in court. They act as though they were the prosecution and, as has always been the case with us, too, under similar circumstances, the judges are impressed. I suppose it won't be long before P6tain and his men will be sitting in the defendants' dock instead of the warmongers and the defeatist clique. Bishop Preysing of Berlin continues to criticize the German war leaders. I had at first intended to order him to come to see me personally and then to tell him off, but I got away from that idea because I am convinced this would lead to nothing. He would in all likelihood present me with a list of his complaints and then either deny his misdeeds or else hypocritically promise improvement. It is best not to touch on this theme at all but rather to postpone it to the end of the war. [Count Konrad von Preysing, Catholic bishop of Berlin, was one of the cleverest men in the hierarchy of the Church of Rome, as was indicated by his elevation to cardinal in 1945. The real reason, it is safe to assume, why Goebbels did not summon the bishop was that he feared this prince of the Catholic Church, who would probably have come out on top in any argument.] There is complaint about too much gabbing by the people, especially by men in uniform. Our soldiers are boasting too much. They try to make an impression upon the civilians, especially upon the women, and thereby merely create unrest and mischief. But there isn't much one can do about it. We have warned so frequently that we almost feel ashamed to raise the issue again. Human beings, especially the Germans, are talkative. You can't change them. You must take them as they are, and must put up with the deplorable consequences. In the afternoon Magda returned from her cure at Dresden. She brought Harald with her and our family is now complete again. The children are very happy to have their mother with them again. Magda told me about a number of incidents in Saxony that are nothing to be very proud of. Political conditions there are deplorable. It is a great pity that overwork prevents me from attending to all these details. The little kings throughout the land naturally make good use of such a situation. [Goebbels at this time considered himself a sort of deputy to Hitler. It was really none of his business as Minister of Propaganda to take a hand in the political situation in the various gaus. Magda was the given name of Goebbels's wife. The couple were at various times at the point of divorce, chiefly because of Goebbels's philandering, but Hitler wanted no scandal about the men closest to him and therefore repeatedly asked the couple to patch up their differences. Despite their disharmony Goebbels insisted that his wife bear him a child a year, since Hitler laid great stress on large families. Relations between the two apparently improved very much during the war, although Goebbels never speaks of his wife in the same terms of affection as he does of his children. From her first husband, a rich industrialist named Quandt, Magda Goebbels had one son, Harald. From her marriage with the Propaganda Minister resulted Helga, Hilde, Holde, and three more children.] February 22, 1942 The situation on the Eastern Front has become somewhat more critical. Here and there conditions are developing that are not exactly a cause for joy. It looks as though Stalin were making a special effort to achieve a number of noteworthy victories so that he might report them during the exercises of February 23, the Day of the Red Army. As a result the Bolsheviks attacked with unheard-of fury. They succeeded here and there in attaining isolated tactical results. Although the situation is not too critical, nevertheless it may cause us some trouble. ... Our troops are pretty well knocked out by the continuous hard fighting. At many points, too, the supply lines are not functioning. The troops don't think it funny to be sent now here, now there. Hardly have the soldiers dug themselves in when they must start moving again. The distances they must cover are pretty big but the speed with which these are negotiated is very slow indeed. We can certainly thank God that we have an equivalent for the Eastern Front in East Asia and especially in the Atlantic. Our latest news flash reporting the sinking of additional 100,000 tons off the American coast gives a mighty fillip to morale at home. A confidential report is presented to me giving me the real background to Cripps's policies. It appears that Cripps desires the Sovietization of English industry and, especially, greater participation of British production in the war. But he certainly does not desire to Bolshevize the country. That, of course, is no good for our propaganda. For us Cripps is the prototype of the Bolshevik in England. Whether he actually wants Bolshevism or not is really beside the point. It all depends on the effect. Bormann issued a decree to the Party demanding greater simplicity during appearances of leading personalities and simpler banquets; also an admonition to the Party to set a good example for the people. This decree is very commendable. Let's hope it will be observed. I talked to Hinkel about checking up on the teachers of dramatic schools. In that sector you find a crowd that had better be locked up in a concentration camp. Our enemies abroad have unfortunately gained possession of a circular letter by Bormann concerning the church question. Why does Bormann at this time have to let loose a pronouncement on the church question anyway? The church question is no problem that has any decisive importance for the winning of the war. February 23, 1942 Stalin issued [a program of] thirty points to his army. These points are about as naive as can be imagined. But I suppose he knows how to treat his Russian people. They are as primitive as the language he uses to talk to them. February 24, 1942 I have issued orders to the German press to handle the situation in the East favorably, but not too optimistically. Otherwise we might go to the opposite extreme from the preceding weeks. Our people would cease to worry at all about the situation in the East. That would be most unfortunate at this moment. Temple is to be the new Archbishop of Canterbury. He, too, is under suspicion of favoring Socialist-Bolshevik ideas. We therefore note the same development there [in the church] that we have been able to diagnose in the reshuffling of the Cabinet. The whole tendency in England now gives us an opportunity for starting a broad-scale discussion along lines which enable us more and more to appeal to conservative circles [in England] in effective terms and especially to work on the neutrals. Until now I never expected the English people would offer us a special opportunity for effective propaganda. Now, however, a little door seems to have opened for the first time by which we can slip in. Stalin addressed an appeal to the Bolsheviks and the world. While his appeal is replete with misrepresentations and false news of victories, it is, on the other hand, characterized by an impressive realism. Stalin declared the German Army by no means defeated and that it would be unworthy of a Soviet soldier to underestimate the enemy. The German Army would surely be beaten in the end, but that time was still a long way oft. Stalin received a great many telegrams of congratulation from the plutocracies. No billionaire from Wall Street missed the chance to transmit his best wishes. This whole business looks like a complete perversity of political thought and conception. Moscow is today the last hope of capitalism. What we have prophesied for many years is coming true in a most dreadful manner. The Bolsheviks no doubt are none too elated over the plutocratic congratulations. England and the United States send telegrams of homage but no arms. Stalin could certainly use weapons much better than homage. The official Turkish news agency has issued a somewhat insolent declaration about a d6marche of Von Papen which, however, is of no special importance. Turkey, after all, is compelled, in the interests of her neutrality, to have the pendulum swing now to this side, now to that One need not take this too seriously. [Ambassador Franz von Papen was apparently greatly overrated by foreign countries. At this time he had very little influence on German foreign policy. But every time he moved, some paper or news agency claimed he was engaged in a new peace move. He was, however, one of the men in high places who bears chief responsibility for Hitler's rise to power. He first intrigued against the last Republic Cabinet, that of Chancellor Heinrich Bruening, then had himself appointed Chancellor by the rather senile Von Hindenburg. When the funds of the Nazi party ran out, Von Papen arranged for a meeting of Hitler with the_ big industrialists of the Rhine and Ruhr at the home of Baron von Schroeder in Cologne, and later agreed to be Vice-Chancellor in Hitler's first cabinet. In 1934 he accepted appointment as Special Minister to Austria, where he prepared the Anschluss. He was tried at Nuremberg in 1945-46 and acquitted. Then the Germans themselves tried him and condemned him to eight years' hard labor.] We shall have to change our propaganda and our policies in the East, as already arranged with the Fuehrer. These were hitherto based on the assumption that we would take possession of the East very quickly. This hope, however, has not been realized. We must therefore envisage a longer duration and are accordingly compelled to change our slogans and our policies fundamentally. It may even become necessary to set up sham governments in the occupied countries. [Hitler's whole conception of the war he planned and unloosed upon the world was that it would be a Blitzkrieg of short duration.] February 25, 1942 Roosevelt has spoken. His address is nothing but a bluff. He advised all his listeners to arm themselves with a globe as they might not otherwise understand him, but we recommend to his listeners that when they read his speech they had better arm themselves with the addresses Roosevelt delivered before his election, since such a comparison would undoubtedly be much better than a comparison of his somewhat jumbled prognoses with the real situation on the globe. The English people seem to me to be rather .constipated. Things must come to a pretty bad pass before they lose their nerve. We must handle them much more carefully. The German people remind us even today of careless turns of speech used during the first weeks of the war. They have a good memory in that regard. The English sometimes give you the impression that they haven't any memory at all. [British doggedness in seeing the war through always puzzled the Hitlerites.] The United States boasts of a gigantic victory in the fight for Bali. They claim to have sunk all Japanese ships, but unfortunately the Japanese nevertheless landed on Bali. In the Anglo-Saxon countries you can mislead the people with tall tales like that. We wouldn't dare claim anything of the sort. The German people would box our ears right and left at such news. Arrived in Munich early, and immediately had a number of talks. [It must be remembered that Goebbels always wrote his diary on the following day. In other words, he really arrived at Munich February 24, the anniversary of Hitler's proclamation in 1920 of the Nazi party's program of twenty-five points which, he held, were unchangeable and could not be amended. Usually on February 24 the Gauleiters and other high functionaries of the Party assembled at Munich.] It looks as though we shall have to take very draconian measures. All building activity in the entire Reich is to stop completely. The Gauleiters have been ordered to watch this situation personally. Reinhardt gave a survey of the finances of the Reich.... He proved in detail that there is no possibility of an inflation either now or after the war. [Fritz Reinhardt was undersecretary in the Reich Finance Ministry. An ardent Nazi and a very aggressive personality with a strident, loud voice, he completely eclipsed the Finance Minister, mild-mannered Count Lutz von Schwerin Krosigk, a hold-over from the last cabinet of the Weimar Republic and a former Rhodes scholar. Reinhardt insisted in every public speech that the German reichsmark was more solidly founded than any other currency in the world, as it was based on the personal integrity of Adolf Hitler and the working capacity of the German people, and not on any gold or other medium of value. He never mentioned that the reichsmark was pegged, and that it was obtainable in the black market even before the outbreak of the war at one tenth its official value and even less. Even the Reichsbank made deals in which the reichsmark was given a much lower value than the official rate.] I discussed the Fischer case with Schwarz. Schwarz, too, believes Fischer should not be put on trial, either in an ordinary or a Party court, but should gradually be eliminated from office and given a business sinecure. I agreed to get it for him. [Erich Fischer was chief of the political division of the press section of the Nazi party. He evidentry committed an offense so grave that he should have been indicted and tried. But the Nazis hushed up cases of corruption involving Party members. Fischer, on the advice of Goebbels and with the acquiescence of Xaver Schwarz, was given a soft berth in some business or industrial concern. Xaver Schwarz was one of the oldest of the Nazis, and held the post of treasurer of the Party throughout. He was fond of distributing signed photographs of himself to deserving comrades and visitors. No sooner had the Nazis come into their own than he "acquired" an estate on one of the enchanting lakes of Upper Bavaria and personally supervised the construction of a sumptuous residence which, it was generally rumored, was to cost 50,000 marks (then worth $20,000). He proved such a slave driver, however, that the workers became incensed and one day put up a sign: "Xaver Schwarz! Where did you get the 50,000 marks?" When Schwarz arrived on the premises he saw the sign and fell into a rage. He telephoned the Gestapo and had Himmler's minions put every worker "through the wringer." But nobody revealed who had painted and put up the sign. Schwarz then decided to play upon human avarice. He put up a sign of his own: "Five thousand marks' reward to anyone who will reveal the perpetrators of the sign." ^ The response came promptly the next morning in the form of a new sign: "Xaver Schwarz! Where did you get the 55,000 marks?'! Ley, of course, is very sad that the campaign for increasing production was wrested from him by Speer. But there is nothing to be done about it. [Prof. Albert Speer, born 1905, an architect by profession, joined the Nazi party early—in 1933—and met with Hitler's favor, who had very decided views on architecture and permitted no ideas except those which accorded with his own views to find expression in public buildings. Speer rebuilt the Reich Chancellery at Berlin into the gaudy edifice it later became, and erected the Party buildings at Nuremberg. After the death in an airplane accident of Minister of Munitions Fritz Todt, Hitler, in 1942, appointed him in Todt's place. Among added duties gradually heaped upon him were those of Director of War Production, Director of Roads, Water and Power, and Plenary General for the Supervision and Reconstruction of Bombed Cities. Speer was indicted at Nuremberg as a major war criminal and sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment.! The Fuehrer has issued a decree by which members of the SS who violate Article 175 will in future be punished by death. This is a very wholesome decree which will render the elite organization of the Party immune to this cancer. [Article 175 in the German criminal code dealt with homosexuality. The number of the article was so well known that Germans spoke of homosexual persons as "Hundred seventy-fivers."] February 26, 1942 Churchill's last speech is the chief topic of discussion. It is a speech of deep pessimism. Seldom has Churchill painted the situation in such somber colors. Fate is gradually catching up with him. He admits that England drove the United States into the war; he had hoped, however, that Japan would not be an enemy. That, of course, is an insolent lie, for Churchill was well aware that Japan was compelled by the Three-Power Pact to take active part in the war from the moment the United States attacked the Axis Powers. [The Three-Power Pact was the alliance between Germany, Italy, and Japan signed in Hitler's Reich Chancellery on September 27, 1940. Germany and Italy declared war on the United States and not vice versa.] An attempt was made at Ankara to assassinate Ambassador von Papen and his wife. The man who threw the bomb was torn to pieces by it whereas Papen and his wife remained unhurt. The origin of this attempt is perfectly clear. It was without a doubt prepared by the [British] Secret Service in collaboration with the [Russian] GPU. . . . We are publishing the news of the attempt with the proper commentary. But we avoid playing it up too much because lavish publicity about such attempts may serve as an encouragement. [Several times in this diary Goebbels testifies to his awareness of the danger of attempts on the lives of men of the regime.] Publication of the plan for murdering the Fuehrer at first shocked the people, then angered them. The people don't want news of that sort. There are certain things that should not be discussed too publicly. Among these are the life and health of the Fuehrer. I talked to Hinkel about reducing considerably the fees for entertainers of the troops. A sort of war profiteering has developed among the artists which must be eliminated at all costs. We surely can't stand for having artists act at the front as though they were the great spiritual mentors of the soldiers and then pay them three, four, or five hundred marks per evening just for reading a poem! If our soldiers were aware of that they would in all likelihood treat the artists quite differently. [The Germans had an organization similar to the USO. For Hans Hinkel, see diary entry of February 3. Evidently the matter of providing entertainment for the troops was placed in Hinkel's hands after his return to office.] February 27, 1942 Cripps delivered his maiden speech in the House of Commons. It was cleverly done and he wove into it a number of arguments which are somewhat dangerous for us. For instance, he berated the plutocrats and the parasites who are not taking part in the war, et cetera. One can see where he is headed. I gave orders to the German news and propaganda services for the present not to report such utterances of Cripps. . . . We must not present Cripps as the representative of a new, socially conscious group with pietistic background which espouses a sort of cleansed form of Bolshevism, quite different from the one sponsored in Moscow. A situation might arise by which certain elements in Germany which are somewhat inclined toward Communism might look upon him as a sort of savior of the idea of Bolshevism. That must not happen under any circumstances. . . . Cripps must be presented to the German people, and especially to the neutral world, as the man who is carrying forward the Bolshevi-zation of Europe on the orders of Stalin and Moscow. There mustn't be a word about social arguments. I read a detailed report on the real condition of American war industry. For the moment we need have no fear. [The Nazis simply would not believe that America could develop a gigantic war industry within an incredibly short time.] The inhabitants of the occupied areas have their fill of material worries. Hunger and cold are the order of the day. People who have been thus hard hit by fate, generally speaking, don't make revolutions. I have started looking after the submarines in a big way. The U-boat men deserve it. I am especially concerned that they should receive light, relaxing literature. I ordered all my collaborators to let practical rather than theoretical considerations determine what they will furnish the troops and the German people for their uplift and entertainment. There are always ideologists in our midst who believe a man of the submarine crews on emerging from the machinery compartment dirty and oil-bespattered would like nothing better than to read the Myth of the Twentieth Century. That, of course, is sheer nonsense. This man is in no mood for such a thing and has no intention of letting himself be taught a way of life. He is living our way of life and doesn't have to be taught it. He is anxious to relax and we must make it possible for him to do so by furnishing him literature of a lighter nature, light radio music, and similar things. I am pursuing this policy in our broadcasts, our motion-picture programs, and also our literature. After the war we can talk again about ideological education. At present we are living our ideology and don't have to be taught it. February 28, 1942 The would-be murderers of Papen have been found. They are said to be Poles. Nevertheless England's hand can't be denied. The English, of course, would not hire one of their own people to make an attempt on Papen's life. The epidemic of assassination is spreading alarmingly in French cities. Our Wehrmacht commands there are not energetic enough in trying to stop it. General Stuelpnagel in Paris has been relieved; his successor is again a Stuelpnagel. It looks as though our military administration in Paris were to go to pieces because of the Stuelpnagels. (The two Stuelpnagels he referred to are Genera! Otto von Stuelpnagel, born 1878, who was military commander of France, 1940-42, and General Heinrich von Stuelpnagel (1886-1944), an infantry general who succeeded his namesake Otto, 1942-44. He was arrested and tortured to death by the Nazis after the July 20, 1944, attempt on Hitler's life.] Hadamovsky vigorously denies that Paris is hungry. The reports coming from there have been exaggerated. It is true that the food rations regularly allotted to the French are none too high, but everybody gets something in a roundabout way. The food is not rationed so effectively there as with us. One therefore must not judge by normal rations but take into account the rations that individuals secure for themselves privately. [Eugen Hadamovsky was the Nazi party's radio expert. Born on December 14, 1904, in Berlin, he joined the Nazi movement early and was appointed head of the Radio Section of the Berlin gau in 1931 by Goebbels, the Gauleiter of Berlin. Later he was made director of the Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft (Reich Broadcasting Company).] The Paris Embassy complains about the lack of clarity in the German policy toward France. It is true that we are steering a zigzag course. One ought to deal differently with the Frenchmen—either make peace or wage war. This constant oscillation, however, between severity and appeasement is an evil thing. The Philharmonic Orchestra has attained splendid heights. Its entire membership has been excused from army service, because it has important tasks to fulfill at home and because, besides, as an ensemble it has so high a value that it must not be torn asunder. March 1942 JAPANESE POUR INTO JAVA. WAVELL APPOINTED COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF INDIA AND BURMA. RENAULT FACTORIES AT BRIL-LANCOURT BOMBED BY R.A.F. JAPANESE LAND ON SALAMAUA", CAPTURE RANGOON. ESSEN HEAVILY BOMBED. TWENTY FRENCH HOSTAGES SHOT. VON KALLAY HEADS NEW HUNGARIAN CABINET. CHURCHILL ANNOUNCES CRIPPS WILL GO TO INDIA. HITLER PREDICTS TOTAL DESTRUCTION OF RUSSIA'S "BOLSHEVIK HORDES" BY SUMMER 1942. MACARTHUR REACHES AUSTRALIA. GERMANY CLOSES ALL NORWEGIAN PORTS. BRITISH COMMANDOS RAID NAZI SUBMARINE BASE AT ST. NAZAIRE, FRANCE, ROOSEVELT ANNOUNCES CREATION OF PACIFIC WAR COUNCIL. March 1, 1942 The English parachute raid [at Le Havre] is of course of quite secondary importance militarily. Merely the loss of our "Wuerzburg gadget" may bring us some trouble. Undoubtedly the defenses along the French coast did not function properly. Apparently our men have been asleep. I suspect the Fuehrer will take care of that situation. [Goebbels does not explain what the Wuerzburg gadget (Wuerzburg Geraet) is.] The fact is that living in France has never yet been a good thing for occupation troops. I hear things about our occupation forces there that are anything but flattering. It would be a good thing soon to replace the troop elements stationed there by others, and to have these replacements take place more frequently. Unfortunately this is impossible chiefly on account of the transportation problem. In any case, we have now been warned. If the English should undertake similar raids in the future, we would know how to meet them with the proper countermeasures. Un- doubtedly the English made this sally only for reasons of prestige. Mr. Churchill needs a victory and of course is going to make a terrific sensation of the parachute landing. Stafford Cripps is making himself more conspicuous. In a radio broadcast he appealed to the workers of Europe to go slow on their work. We don't take any notice of it. It is difficult to pose a counterslogan to such a slogan, for the slogan of "go slow" is Always much more effective than that of "work fast." It is best to kill such a thing with silence. The Manchester Guardian now admits that morale in England was about the lowest possible before the reshuffling of the Cabinet. I am now convinced that a crisis of dangerous proportions existed during these days in London. One never learns about such things until much later. That's the way it was, too, during World War I. The English people show fantastic national discipline, especially in wartime. Anything they want to keep to themselves simply doesn't get out. The Indian crisis is on the upgrade. We have succeeded in prevailing upon the Indian nationalist leader, Bose, to issue an imposing declaration of war against England. It will be published most prominently in the German press and commented upon. In that way we shall now begin our official fight on behalf of India, even though we don't as yet admit it openly. [Subhas Chandra Bose was head of the Zentrale freies Indien (Central Bureau for a Free India), which had its Berlin office at No. 2 Lichtenstein Allee. With Pandit K. A. Bhatta as editor, he brought out a monthly magazine, Azad Hind, with Nazi money. It was published with the English text on the right side, the German on the left. Later he left for Japan and, according to reports, was seized there by the Americans, tried, and executed for treason.] We have held back for a very long time, for the simple reason that things had not advanced far enough as yet in India and that one must not waste one's powder as long as the enemy is near. Listening to enemy and neutral broadcasts in Italy has been forbidden. At last! At last! It might just as well have been done immediately upon Italy's entry into the war. As it was, the enemy stations did lots of harm in Italy. As soon as the transportation situation has improved, we shall be able to ship potatoes into the big cities again. The potato supplies themselves are quite sufficient. We must, however, make rather big preparations for the new harvest. We are in a dilemma in as much as farmers' wives whose husbands are in the services receive such high allotments that they don't care to work. They would rather go to the nearest larger town and get themselves a hairdo. I therefore propose that, while continuing allotments to the wives of servicemen, we do not pay them out, but deposit them in savings accounts which can't be touched until after the war. Anyway, these women, who never had much money in their hands before, are simply being spoiled by what they now receive. They are getting used to a standard of living that they won't be able to keep up after the war. That will only make them dissatisfied. They must be kept to their work. We can't lick our food situation if the hands that hitherto worked on the soil don't continue to do their part. Our giving several weeks' home leave to Polish farm and factory hands, which stirred up such a rumpus, has been an extraordinary success from a propaganda viewpoint. The Polish laborers who worked in the Reich talked big when they got home. They described the Reich as a veritable paradise. It isn't so difficult any more to hire new hands. Labor is what we need most urgently today. March 2, 1942 Bose's appeal has made a deep impression on world public opinion. The crisis in India can no longer be denied. We are doing everything possible to pour oil on the fire without being caught at it. Things aren't yet far enough along for us to incite the peoples of India to open rebellion. The Japs must win some more victories before things are far enough along. This morning the British still declared with sonorous confidence that Java was to be held. In the evening they had modestly to admit that the Japanese had succeeded in landing. The communiques both in London and Washington are becoming more restrained from hour to hour. The situation in Burma, too, is regarded as exceptionally serious. The Americans are now straining at the leash. They demand energetically that the English open a second front and start an offensive. But nobody seems to know quite where the English are to attack. Some plead in favor of attempting an invasion in the west, others are for an attack on Italy. All these possibilities have naturally been taken into consideration by our war leaders, and we would give the English a warm reception were they to come. Chile sent a note warning the Axis Powers about further torpedoings. The South American states are now gradually awakening from the doped state into which the United States put them and are now viewing the general situation with perceptibly greater realism. They probably thought they could fulfill their obligations toward the Anglo-Saxons by issuing empty threats. Now, however, they see German submarines everywhere off the North and South American coasts, and must pay in blood and treasure for the Anglo-American war. That is somewhat more expensive than merely issuing bombastic declarations. This war has developed from a European war into a real world war. Anybody who places his hand in the fire must expect to get burned. March 3, 1942 In the course of the afternoon the Japanese announced the sinking of a heavy British cruiser and two British destroyers. The Japanese are gradually inflicting mortal wounds upon the enemy fleets in East Asia. Once they have gained absolute superiority in the air and on the sea in this entire area, neither the British nor the American world empire can be saved. I have received a secret report on the situation in London, from which it appears beyond doubt that a large section of the Tories is working for a separate peace with Germany. Only nobody knows as yet how to do that practically. Churchill, of course, isn't thinking of entering into any sort of discussion with us. He can fight the rebellious factions of the Tories with the dangerous weapon of Parliamentary dissolution. Undoubtedly Churchill would come out on top in an election since it would be impossible for reasons of national policy to conduct a rigorous election campaign against him. But this may change overnight. The situation in England has become so fluid that one cannot prophesy anything about the future. De Gaulle has been recognized by Roosevelt. The operatic general has for a long time fought for this distinction. It is most revealing, however, and indicative of the weak position in which the United States finds itself that it must publicly link itself up with this character. [General Charles de Gaulle was the leader of the French Resistance Movement and the first chief of state after France's liberation in 1944.] In Oslo, Bishop Berggraf and the other bishops have resigned. The chief reason for this lies in the fact that Quisling has issued a number of decrees by which Norwegian youth has been placed urjder the aegis of Nasjonal Samling. This whole affair is still somewhat obscure. In any case a new problem has arisen that is certainly going to cause us some trouble during the next few weeks, especially in the Scandinavian countries. But nowadays developments race along so fast that time will soon pass over these also. [Vidkun Quisling tried to absorb Norwegian youth in his fascist party, the Nasjonal Samling, just as Hitler virtually compelled all German children to join the Hitler Youth.] Here at home we are face to face with new shortages. We shall have to collect copper and pewter ware on a large scale since our war industry is in dire need of these raw materials. Unfortunately we can give only a limited number of substitutes for the requisitioned and collected utensils. How, for instance, are housewives to do their washing if they haven't any laundry equipment? The Ministry of Economic Affairs declares it is powerless in this matter. Nevertheless we must try to get hold of these raw materials because otherwise arms and munitions production will receive a serious setback. The forged Moelders letter to a [Catholic] dean in Stettin is being passed around secretly in the entire Catholic and Protestant world. I am going to see to it that one of the clergymen who circulated this letter be summoned into court and that the dean be made to say under oath that he never received such a letter from Moelders.... The means the churches are trying to employ are truly an effrontery. But one can see that they really have no telling arguments and must resort to lies and calumny to make any impression on the public. [The so-called forged letter of Moelders played quite a role in Germany at this time. Werner Moelders (1913-41) was the No. 1 ace of the Luftwaffe of World War II. An ardent Catholic, he protested violently when the Nazi party, after the great raid of Muenster in 1941, seized a convent in which his sister was a nun. On another occasion he was reported to have entered his name in the guest book of some prominent club and to have written in the space for profession or business, "Night pirate." When urged to change this, he is said to have replied: "You always call the R.A.F. fliers 'night pirates* in the official communiques—isn't that what I am when I fly to England?" The ,4 forged letter" was a document purported to have been written to his confessor, in which, it was claimed, he severely criticized the government. Moelders died in an airplane accident over Breslau on November 22, 1941, and there were many rumors that his death was not accidental. One credible version had it, however, that the transport plane in which he traveled was mistaken for a Russian bomber by the German Luftwaffe and that Moelders was shot down by his own comrades. He was at that time colonel and inspector of pursuit planes.] March 4, 1942 Reuter has practically given up the Burma Road as lost. It is hard to understand why the English are so wedded to an ideology of retreat and why they have so little appreciation of the precarious situation in which their world empire finds itself. In London there is boundless wrath about the appeal of Bose, whose present abode is fortunately not known. At the last moment I prevented the Foreign Office from revealing it prematurely. For the present it is a good thing to have Bose do his 6tuff from an anonymous center. There will always come some proper moment for us to reveal that he is in our midst The situation in Oslo is heading for a crisis. The question of the bishops continues to give trouble. A large number of teachers have identified themselves with the rebellious bishops. They have therefore been told either to resume their work immediately or be sent to northern Norway as forced labor. That is a very practical threat, for in that way we get rid of a part of the opposition, and we obtain the necessary man power for northern Norway. There must be no sentimentality in this matter. We are fighting for our lives and whoever crosses our path must pay for it. Again there has been an assassination in Paris. A German guard was shot to death right on the street The new mil- itary commander, also a Stuelpnagel, but apparently a better one than the first Stuelpnagel, had twenty Communists shot immediately and threatened to have an additional twenty Communists and Jews, whose names are published, executed if the culprit is not found. That's the method I proposed. If rigorously applied it will lead to visible results. March 5, 1942 Bose is trying to organize Indian resistance from Berlin. ... At present they don't know in London where Bose is really keeping himself. I am quite glad that I prevented his whereabout being revealed. I shall see to it that Bose continues to remain camouflaged. He is to be uncovered only after he has been received by the Fuehrer. Queen Wilhelmina has issued an appeal to Java that puts in the shade everything that has hitherto emanated from her. This Wilhelmina surely is a sad sight. [Diese Wilhelmine ist in der Tat ein Stueckchen Malheur.] One can see what happens if women have a decisive word to say in politics. The bomb raid on Paris is the most sensational event of the day. Its extent was far greater than at first imagined. The number of casualties is given differently by different sources, but it is certain that there are at least six hundred dead. There is even talk of one thousand dead and several thousand injured. The Vichy Government says the DeGaullists are responsible for this crime. We are exploiting this incident in a big way in our propaganda in France, especially in the areas occupied by us. . . . Petain has issued a few tear-jerking, sentimental communiques, but they show that he is a thoroughly worn-out old man who knows as much about politics as a cow knows about the Spanish language. It is reported to me that emotions have reached the boiling point in Paris. I gave our propaganda offices there exact instructions as to how to make use of the incident. How I would like to be chief of propaganda in Paris for a fortnight! With this material one could with little effort make the Paris population raving mad. It cannot be denied that we are facing far more difficult problems during the third year of war than we could even conceive of during the first year. The Goebbels Diaries 131 The purchasing power that is straying about the countly without being invested is giving us a big headache. I shall persuade the Fuehrer to talk about this problem in his next speech on winter relief. Nobody but the Fuehrer today has sufficient authority to dispel the fear and worry of our people about a coming inflation. I have received a report about the fate of the German minorities in Hungary. The Hungarians still dare to commit acts of effrontery toward us that go far beyond what we can stand for. I suppose, however, we must keep quiet for the moment. We are dependent upon them. But every one of us is yearning for the moment when we can really talk turkey to the Hungarians [wenn wir einmal Fraktur reden koenneri], March 6, 1942 Our losses in the East for the period of June 22, 1941, to February 20, 1942, were 199,448 dead (including 7,879 officers), 708,351 wounded (including 20,992 officers), 44,-342 missing (including 701 officers)—a total of 952,141 (including 29,572 officers). Until February 20, 112,627 cases of freezing or frostbite were reported, including 14,357 third-degree and 62,000 second-degree cases.. .. According to these figures it appears we had almost one million casualties in our entire campaign in the East, among them about 200,000 fatalities. That is, of course, quite a number. Nevertheless it cannot be compared with the figures of World War I. The number of those who suffered from freezing is considerably higher than we had at first imagined. The number given us at the beginning of February did indeed seem rather unlikely. The higher number is chiefly owing to the fact that the earlier figure was based solely on individual reports. Even as it is, the final figure is only a small fraction of what is being spread around among the people in the form of rumors.. .. As things stand today, I do not feel it opportune to make these figures public now. One must wait for a more favorable moment. The most suitable time for publication will come when we can claim new military victories. There is a lot of sub rosa talk in the neutral countries about the possibilities of a separate peace with the Soviet Union. In London they are already scared about it. Such fear, however, is unwarranted. The Soviet Union will and must be knocked out, no matter how long that may take. The situation is ripe for putting an end to Bolshevism in all Europe, and considering our position we can't give up that aim. A frontal attack on black markets was made in the House of Commons. No bones are made about the fact that Jews were chiefly implicated in profiteering in the food market. Heading the procession were the Jewish immigrants who went from Germanv to England. Jews always, remain the same. You must either stigmatize them with a yellow star, or put them in concentration camps, or shoot them, or else let them saturate all public life with corruption, especially during a war. There is no halfway measure. In London they are at present busy threatening further air attacks on the Reich. That has now happened so often that we don't have to take it seriously. Nevertheless I won't let reports of that kind get into the German press, because there are still dumbbells among us who fall for such threats. The extraordinarilv unfavorable effect on public opinion of the English air raids on Paris has put London decidedly on the defensive. The latest estimate in Paris is between eight hundred and one thousand dead; exact figures are still not obtainable. Feelings in France have reached the boiling point. At present the Ene^ish are not at all popular with the French people. How well they are aware of this can be seen from the fact that their broadcasts stammer new but untenable excuses practically every hour. The British Government has even felt impelled to express its sympathies to the French people. Such expressions of sympathy are of so hair-raising a cynicism that we can well claim nothing like it would be possible anywhere else in the world. The style of the message [of condolence] is so typically Churchillian that k is not difficult to discover his hand in it. Information from Paris indicates that sentiment there has become more anti-British than it has ever been before. To intensify this condition, I now propose a gigantic state funeral for those killed in the bomb raid. I planned this state funeral down to the smallest details, and the agreement of the French authorities is to be sought. I am sending Waechter to Paris to arrange everything. It is to be very demonstrative and to be so staged that no Frenchman with any heart can fail to be impressed by this ceremony. In addition I am having bill posters put up in Paris quoting especially provocative statements by the DeGaullists in London. [To Goebbels a message of condolence is evidence of "hair-raising cynicism"; a state funeral for the victims for purposes of propaganda, when arranged by the Nazi regime, is a virtue! Werner Waechter was head of the propaganda section in the national propaganda office of the Nazi party. There were various departments, such as culture, film, radio, et cetera.] The Americans had hoped that Eire would, without further ado, join their side as soon as troops landed in the English part of Ireland. They obviously overestimated the ties of the Irish to the Irishmen in America. De Valera isn't thinking of yielding to such a psychological squeeze. An SD report informed me about the situation in occupied Russia. It is, after all, more unstable than was generally assumed. The Partisan danger is increasing week by week. The Partisans are in command of large areas in occupied Russia and are conducting a regime of terror there. The national movements, too, have become more insolent than was at first imagined. That applies as well to the Baltic States as to the Ukraine. Everywhere the Jews are busy inciting and stirring up trouble. It is therefore understandable that many of them must pay with their lives for this. Anyway, I am of the opinion that the greater the number of Jews liquidated, the more consolidated will the situation in Europe be after this war. One must have no mistaken sentimentality about it. The Jews are Europe's misfortune. They must somehow be eliminated, otherwise we are in danger of being eliminated by them. The food situation in the occupied eastern areas is exceptionally precarious. Thousands and tens of thousands of people are dying of hunger without anybody even raising a finger. We shall undoubtedly face exceptional difficulties and problems there for a number of years to come. Very much water will still have to flow down the Rhine before this area has been integrated into the European economy and its rich products made available to our section of the globe. Seldom, I believe, in our generation has spring been awaited so fervently as the one now in the offing. We Germans and untold millions of human beings in the rest of the world expect the decision to come during this spring and summer. We shall do everything possible to fulfill this expectation. I do not dare to prophesy whether we shall succeed. The imponderables involved are so manifold that one can hardly include them as stable factors in a political and military estimate. One must therefore take this standpoint: Do everything that can be done, miss nothing in the way of preparations, do one's duty wherever necessary, but for the rest enter upon one's work with firm trust in one's own strength. Then success is assured. March 7, 1942 The Foreign Office gave me a report on our relations with Vichy France. Before the entry of the United States into the war we believed a bridge to European peace might be built starting from Vichy. This hope is now gone for good. The Vichy Frenchmen would be ready under certain circumstances not only to give up their neutrality, but also to take an active hand in the war if we now offered them an acceptable peace. That, however, is something the Fuehrer does not want to do. And he is right. For the situation isn't such that we are in any way dependent upon France's military support, which would always be limited anyway. We should not give our trump cards away too early. Above all, the war against France must have an historic result. While France still has even a breath of life she will always remain our enemy. We must definitely eliminate France's military and political power from a future European interplay of forces. The Fuehrer is here following a very delicately attuned [fein reagierenderi) national-political instinct, even though many members of the Foreign Office are of a different opinion. I read a detailed report from the SD and police regarding a final solution of the Jewish question. Any final solution involves a tremendous number of new viewpoints. The Jewish question must be solved within a pan-European frame. There are 11,000,000 Jews still in Europe. They will have to be concentrated later, to begin with, in the East; possibly an island, such as Madagascar, can be assigned to them after the war. In any case there can be no peace in Europe until the last Jews are eliminated from the continent. That, of course, raises a large number of exceedingly delicate questions. What is to be done with the half-Jews? What with those related to Jews? In-laws of Jews? Persons married to Jews? Evidently we still have quite a lot to do and undoubtedly a multitude of personal tragedies will ensue within the framework of the solution of this problem. But that is unavoidable. The situation is now ripe for a final settlement of the Jewish question. Later generations will no longer have the will power or the instinctive alertness. That's why we are doing a good work in proceeding radically and consistently. The task we are assuming today will be an advantage and a boon to our descendants. [No better admission of the injustice of the Nazi attitude toward the Jewish problem could be made than the statement that later generations will not act as the Nazis did.] The Ministry of Justice must admit to its disgrace that it sees no possibility of taking effective steps against the reading of the forged Moelders letter; there's no law which applies [unsere Gesetzgebung biete dafuer keine Handhabe]. That means it is no insult to say of a man, even though he is a popular hero, that he was a Catholic and practically an enemy of the state. That kind of justice isn't worth a hoot [ist keinen Schuss Pulver weri]. I am now going to have a number of clergymen, who read the Moelders letter from their pulpits and who decline to publish a denial despite being taught the facts, taken into a concentration camp and will then publish a bulletin about it. If I were Minister of Justice I would find some passage among the thousands of paragraphs which would enable me to fight such an infamous undertaking by the Church. But our justice is being administered, not in a National Socialist, but in a bourgeois manner. [The lawlessness of the Nazi regime is well illustrated by the fact that Goebbels evidently had enough power to send priests to concentration camps even though the Ministry of Justice declared there was nothing illegal about their action. All that Goebbels had to do was to ask his friend Himmler to arrest anybody he chose. Himmler was responsible to Hitler alone, and not under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Justice.] March 8, 1942 We are having great difficulties everywhere. For instance, in one army corps alone 18,000 horses fell during February, 795 of them from exhaustion. Stalin continues to fabricate pompous and mendacious reports of victories. He has once again encircled our 16th Army and destroyed nineteen German divisions. If all had been killed, taken prisoner, or been destroyed whom Stalin claims to have killed, taken prisoner, and destroyed, since the middle of November of last year, not a single German soldier would be left on Russian territory today. The reaction of world public opinion to the happenings in Paris is extremely embarrassing to the English. P6tain issued a proclamation that is neither flesh, fish, nor fowl. It is somewhat tearful and shows that the marshal has grown very old, and above all, that he wishes in no way to commit himself to an anti-English policy, which of course is understandable. While he used a few strong words against the English crime, they are undoubtedly not to be understood in a political sense. The Vichy people, incidentally, are seeing to it that the victims of the English bomb raid are buried as quickly as possible. They are being interred in the various cemeteries in the early morning hours. Attendance, I am told, is very small because nothing is said about the place and time of burial. tin other words, Goebbels's grandly planned state funeral fizzled out, despite the glowing description in the diary entry for March 10.] I find it necessary to take further measures against the "Yellow Perir propaganda which certain anonymous circles in the Reich are spreading. They are thereby torpedoing our foreign and military policy. That's a typical example showing how little we Germans know about politics. We are altogether too easily inclined to judge foreign and military questions by our feelings and sentiments, and not to think them through realistically. I am now mobilizing our Party against such nonsense. March 9, 1942 The Dutch communique [concerning Java] is, so to speak, a final epilogue. It criticizes the English severely for their lack of readiness to help and asserts that the Dutch risked all their armed forces to save Malaya, whereas now they themselves are being left pretty well in the lurch by the English and the Americans. . . . Their communique strikes one as partly tragic, partly comic. No sympathy need be wasted on such weak peoples. It is bad and regrettable for Europe that Holland loses her colonial possessions, but in the last analysis so small a people has no right to any overseas possessions so long as a nation of the rank of Germany hasn't any at all. We are faced with the difficult task of making clear to the German people that in case Churchill falls this does not mean a possible collapse of England, but, on the contrary, an even more vigorous and energetic prosecution of the war. This, of course, cannot hurt as much in the long run, but it might cause us all sorts of temporary trouble. [The Nazis evidently felt sure Sir Stafford Cripps would replace Winston Churchill as Prime Minister.] The Times has become the loud-speaker for English-Bolshevik collaboration. What has become of this serious paper of the London gentry anyway? It now demands a three-power pact between England, the United States, and the vSoviet Union. As it makes this cynical demand, it does not seem to have the slightest inhibition of an ideological nature. In late evening came the news, unconfirmed for the present, that Rangoon had fallen. If it proves true, that means the Anglo-American war leaders have once again suffered a blow from which they cannot soon recover. England is on the toboggan. The misfortune which has overtaken her in these weeks is like an avalanche that begins with small snowflakes and later, with thunderous noise, rolls irresistibly down into the valley. March 10, 1942 Cries of distress are heard from Australia. The possibility of a separate peace with Japan is already being discussed between the lines. The Japanese have come so close to Australia that it seems to lie directly before their eyes as willing and enticing booty. It has ever been the territorial aspiration of Tokyo to possess this fifth continent as territory for emigration. The shortsighted and foolish policies and the war conduct of the English and the Americans have brought the Japanese a good deal nearer to their goal. Cripps is endeavoring to push the India problem into the foreground anew. There seems to be an embittered fight backstage about India. Churchill doesn't want to yield, but Cripps believes that he can mobilize the Indian people for the British war effort by relaxing the bonds of India. I believe it is too late for that. Our funeral ceremony at the Place de la Concorde [in Paris] seems to have been tremendously impressive. On Sunday hundreds of thousands of people filed by the catafalque erected there. Nevertheless we don't make much of this event in the German press, considering the fact that heavy air raids were also made on the Ruhr region which, however, we cannot set out prominently in the German press. The German people would consider it an insult and find it hard to understand if the German press were to shed tears for the Parisians but took note of our own losses in only a few lines. I received a report from Spain. Franco has paid a visit to Catalonia. He must have been relatively clever about it. His clerical ties have been strengthened. German observers also accuse him of monarchists tendencies. Germany and Italy were not mentioned in his speech. Franco is only mediocre. One must not expect too much from him. To think what questions of domestic politics are laid before one in the course of a day! Should dancing girls be inducted into the Women's Labor Service? If one doesn't do it, they fail to get the necessary Nazi indoctrination; if one does, they become fat and ungainly and unfit for the dancing profession. We are now trying to put the dancing girls through special courses, and while organizing them as in labor service, to give them a type of work to do that will not disqualify them for their profession. March 11, 1942 Van Mook upon his arrival in Australia gave an exceptionally pessimistic interview in which he expressed quite clearly and without beating about the bush that he expected greater help from the Allies. The fact that he did not say more is, I suppose, because he was given a sizable check. [Hubertus Johannes van Mook, born 1894, was a Dutch economist and administrator educated at Surabaya College and Amsterdam, Delft, and Leyden universities. At this time he was Lieutenant Governor GeneraJ in the East Indies. He was later appointed Minister of Colonies in the Netherlands Government-in-exile at London. Goebbels was obsessed with the idea that the statesmen of small nations were in the pay of Great Britain.] Cripps expressed his unqualified admiration for Stalin and predicted certain victory for 1942. Cripps published these statements in a series of replies to twenty questions laid before him by the American periodical Life. He expressed himself somewhat more carefully with reference to the Bol-shevization of Europe. Nevertheless he indulged in a few turns of speech which, with minor corrections, we can use for exceptionally effective propaganda. . . . I don't believe Churchill will succeed in sending Cripps to India. Cripps will be careful not to give up the favorable position he now holds in London by absenting himself for a long time. For the present we have no possibility whatever of exerting any influence upon the formation of the Hungarian Cabinet, since we must ask a great deal of the Hungarians during the next weeks and months and therefore keep them in good humor. But we can later catch up with what we are neglecting to do today. I took energetic measures to stop the discussion about the "Yellow Peril." It isn't possible to discuss this theme at all today, either in a positive or negative sense. The excellent reasons which we can give for our present attitude cannot be discussed in public because they would undoubtedly insult the Japanese and furnish the English valuable material for argument against the Axis. Other reasons, however, be they of a historic or contemplative nature, are not convincing. We must therefore try to carry the real reasons to the people by a word-of-mouth propaganda, but refrain from public discussion of this problem. As a result of a pastoral letter by Bishop Preysing concerning the religious question, we find ourselves in a somewhat precarious situation in Berlin. Unfortunately a number of church buildings were requisitioned by the Party and the Gestapo without my knowledge. Although I had forbidden this in the strongest terms, a couple of smart alecks [Besser-wisser, literally better-knowers] have been at work, with the result that we have now conjured up a church conflict in Berlin which I did not desire at all but tried under all circumstances to avoid. I am now going to pound the table [mit der Faust dreinschlageri]. Here I try in every way possible to keep controversial matters away at least from my district, but now the rowdies and beer-hall fighters come and make a mess for me [bereiten mir noch Unrat] even in the Reich capital. The church question is as far as possible not to be discussed at all during the entire ^war, no matter how recalcitrant the "skypilots" may prove to be in this or that matter. After the war we shall certainly have other possibilities of making them see the light. I had a few hours' time tonight to read Wirsing's new book, The Continent Without Limit. Wirsing gives us a picture of American life, American business, culture, and politics. The material he has assembled is truly shattering. Roosevelt is one of the worst enemies of modern culture and civilization. If we do not succeed in definitely defeating the enemy, made up of Bolshevism, plutocracy, and lack of culture, the world will be headed for densest darkness. That is the reason why we must courageously and uncompromisingly take all inconveniences and hardships upon ourselves. We are actually carrying in our hands the torch that brings light to humanity. [Giselher Wirsing was editor of one of the large Munich dailies, the Muenchner Neueste Nachrickten. Foreign policy was his specialty.] March 12, 1942 Eden delivered a speech in the House of Commons in which he accused the Japanese of frightful atrocities committed against the English prisoners of war in Hong Kong. We know his line. It is above all an eloquent sign that things are exceedingly bad with the English. Every time they en- counter defeat after defeat they begin to deal in sentimentality and to weep crocodile tears. The Japanese immediately gave a tart and convincing answer. For reasons of courtesy we are displaying this reply prominently. The House of Lords has once again taken a stand against the Arabs and for the Jews. It is surprising how much Jewish influence there is among the English people, especially the upper crust, which is hardly English in character any longer. The chief reason is no doubt the fact that these Upper Ten Thousand have become so infested with the Jewish virus by Jewish marriages that they can hardly think in English. The problem of the "Yellow Peril" is assuming more and more dangerous forms in the popular discussion. I am now trying to get Ambassador General Oshima to give us a detailed interview in which he will above all indicate Japan's readiness to let the Axis Powers participate in the tremendous wealth and raw-material sources of which they have gained possession. [General Hirosi Oshima was the Japanese Ambassador to Germany at that time. He had been military attache" in Berlin at an earlier period. The Nazis kept him under the influence of alcohol most of the time.] Embarrassing consequences have resulted from the irresponsible and unpsychological publication of various court decisions. Hereafter I am having all court verdicts of any national importance released jointly by the Ministry of Justice and ourselves. Our courthouse reporters don't have the necessary feel for selecting and publishing verdicts according to psychological considerations. The publication of court decisions is not a question of mere publicity but of public education. In connection with every verdict we must ask ourselves whether publication at this moment will have a favorable or unfavorable effect. That is a matter which only our Ministry can decide in the end. [Nobody who has not lived under Nazism can grasp how absolute was Goebbels's control of the German mind. But incidents like the above at least will give the average American an inkling.] In the evening I started on a trip that is to take me first to the Ostmark [Austria] and then to Munich. Tomorrow I am to speak in Graz for the first time in my life. I am already happy in anticipation. [Graz is the capital of the Austrian province of Styria, or Steier-mark. The Styrians are a mountaineer people, hardy and frugal.] March 13,1942 Naumann has already mastered his tasks very well, and is an indispensable assistant to me. He has taken hold energetically of my prospective purchase of land in the neighborhood of Berlin. I should very much like to have some estate that belongs to me and that I earn by my own labors. It is, of course, very difficult at the moment to buy land because nobody wants to sell. But I will continue to pursue this aim. It is especially desirable for the sake of the family to own something that is stable, keeps its value, and that one can later pass on as an inheritance. v [Dr. Werner Naumann held a position similar to that of an executive assistant to the president of an American corporation. He was Goebbels's right-hand man in the little doctor's capacity of Reichs-propagandaleiter of the Nazi party. Goebbels, it will be recalled, was not only Minister of Propaganda—in other words, a state official and member of the cabinet—but also head of the propaganda department of the Nazi party and Gauleiter for Berlin. Naumann had the rank of Ministerialdirigent and was paid by the public exchequer. Goebbels, who always assumed a holier-than-thou attitude toward Goering and other open-and-above-board "grafters,*' saw nothing unethical in having Dr. Naumann take time out to act as his personal real-estate agent. Goebbels, while playing the role of the simple man of the people, was a shrewd real-estate speculator.] The reception in Graz was very large and warmhearted. The Styrians are a wonderful tribe. The young people, especially, have a capacity for enthusiasm which indicates they are anything but blas6. In the evening I spoke in the new Volkshalle to more than 25,000 people and tried to outline the prospects for the future on a somewhat higher plane. The people followed me wonderfully, and the meeting was a great success. Tojo has delivered a speech. It is noteworthy in that he gives unmistakable hints to Australia as well as India and China. He offered separate negotiations to Australia and threatened that Australia would suffer the same fate as Java in case the offer were not accepted. [General Hideki Tojo was Japanese Minister of War in the Konoye Cabinet, July to October 1941, and then succeeded Prince Konoye as Prime Minister, at the same time retaining the portfolio of Minister of War. He was indicted as a major war criminal.] Cripps's mission to India is a great world sensation. The English are placing high hopes on it. But these will presumably not be fulfilled in the way the English think. One has the impression that the British are letting the pound sterling play an important role. The Indian princes, of course, are all corruptible and being paid by England. [Goebbels's obsession that all British satellites were paid creatures was so great that he apparently even forgot that "the wealth of Ormuz and of Ind" was concentrated in the hands of Indian princes.] Whether the Indians will take their fate into their own hands is very much to be doubted. This people is divided by so many religious sects and so many racial elements that it is scarcely capable of a unified and energetic expression of will. March 14, 1942 Bose has issued a new proclamation. We are pumping it into India. Bose is an excellent worker and I am happy that I did not permit his whereabouts to be revealed for the present. There are rumors to the effect that armed conflicts have already broken out in Calcutta. Unfortunately they are not confirmed; neither has there been any confirmation that important circles in Australia favor a separate peace. We left Graz in the morning. The population gave us a very cordial and touching farewell. I am most deeply impressed with my visit to Graz, which for the first time brought me into closer contact with the population of Styria. The leadership of the gau is splendid. The population is showing a spirit that deserves admiration. One can work excellently with Uiberreither. He enjoys the greatest confidence throughout the gau. Here we have a Gauleiter with whom we can do something. ... In the afternoon we arrived in Vienna. . . . [Dr. Siegfried Uiberreither was the Gauleiter for Styria.] In the late afternoon the great Anschluss celebration took place on Hero's Square, with about 100,000 people participating. The enthusiasm was indescribable. Schirach spoke first, after which I was given the floor. In a few monumental sentences I gave a picture of the present situation which drew veritable storms of applause. The Viennese seem to have the ambition of putting their best foot forward ... [Baldur von Schirach, former Reich Youth leader, was Gauleiter for Vienna.] One need have no fears about Vienna. The passages of my address that drew the wildest applause were the ones in which I spoke of the insoluble union of this city with the Reich. Vienna has indeed become a Reich city. March 15,1942 There were raids on the Reich with Cologne as the principal target. Five major, twenty medium, and thirty-five smaller fires. The country around about was hit by phosphorous bombs. Several railway lines are temporarily out of commission. One cable factory was heavily damaged. To date five dead and twenty-nine wounded. An enemy plane was shot down by night fighters. A bomb struck the bridge across the Rhine at Muehlheim; traffic there has been interrupted. The moving-picture office of the gau has been completely destroyed. One department store burned out. My speech and my last article concerning the "Sneaking Crisis" of the British Empire commanded much attention abroad, especially in Spain, Portugal, and with the Axis Powers. I believe it is very useful for our German propaganda to have German opinion channeled through the neutral press practically every week end by quotations from my weekly contribution. In this way the German standpoint is made known in a manner that must not be underestimated. The Fuehrer has offered a reward of 100,000 marks for the apprehension of the author of the falsified Moelders letter. Through Schirach I learned that this letter was distributed very widely in Vienna by officers of the Wehrmacht. Among others even General Streccius personally participated in the distribution, believing the letter to be genuine. When Schirach challenged him and proved the forgery, he had to admit that the letter was sent him by Field Marshal General von Mackensen. This old gentleman, who knows pitifully little about politics, has for years busied himself with the church question. Unfortunately one cannot do much against him on account of the importance of his personality. Nevertheless I shall have to call the Fuehrer's attention to the disloyalty of his procedure. [Field Marshal August von Mackensen, last of the remaining German field marshals of World War I, was a Nazi showpiece like Gerhart Hauptmann and Richard Strauss. He was a staunch member of the Lutheran Confessional Synod, however, and therefore opposed the anti-Christian tendencies of Nazism. He often intervened with Hitler and other top Nazis on behalf of Protestant clergymen, among them Pastor Martin Niemoeller. General Streccius was the military commander of Vienna.] Waechter returned from Paris. He reported that sentiment among the Parisians is by no mean so anti-English as we here imagined. The Parisians are a peculiar people. At first they rejoiced that the English had inflicted damage upon the Germans with their bombs. Then, when they learned that hardly a German died, but that casualties occurred only among the Frenchmen, they suddenly griped that Paris had not been protected sufficiently by anti-aircraft guns and that no alert had been sounded. You can't do much with the Frenchmen of today. As a whole they are a macabre people, evidently doomed to national-political destruction. March 16, 1942 The Moelders letter is now making its rounds [geistert herum] in foreign countries. Radio London has seized upon this forgery to argue against the National Socialist regime. In view of the communique* we issued this can no longer do us any real damage. Nevertheless it is interesting to note to what defeatist work the German generals, headed by Field Marshal von Mackensen, have lent themselves, even though unwittingly. Either these gentlemen are too foolish to discern the motives behind a procedure launched very cleverly by the Church, or they are knowingly siding with the enemies of the state—a thing that I should not like to assume for the present. In any case I believe I must report this whole matter to the Fuehrer, and I shall do that on my next visit to GHQ. I read a report of the SD about the situation in the occupied East. The activity of Partisans has increased noticeably during recent weeks. They are conducting a well-organized guerrilla war. It is very difficult to get at them because they are using such terrorist methods in the areas occupied by us that the population is afraid of collaborating with us loyally any longer. The spearheads of this whole Partisan activity are the political commissars and especially the Jews. It has therefore proven necessary once again to shoot more Jews. There won't be any peace in these areas as long as any Jews are active there. Sentimentality is out of place here. Either we must renounce the lives of our own soldiers, or we must uncompromisingly prevent further propaganda by criminal and chaotic elements in the hinterland. In the East, nationalistic currents are increasingly observable in all former Baltic States. The populations there apparently imagined that the German Wehrmacht would shed its blood to set up new governments in these midget states, which at the end of the war, or possibly even during the war, would veer over to the side of our enemies. That is a childish, naive bit of imagination which makes no impression upon us. One would have to take the imperial regime of Kaiser Wilhelm as a model if one were to inaugurate so shortsighted a policy. National Socialism is much more coldblooded and much more realistic in all these questions. It does only what is useful for its own people, and in this instance the interest of our people undoubtedly lies in the rigorous establishment of German order within this area without paying any attention to the claims, more or less justified, of the small nationalities living there. The enemy is now making use of horoscopes in the form of handbills dropped from planes, in which a terrible future is prophesied for the German people. But we know something about this ourselves! I am having counter-horoscopes worked up which we are going to distribute, especially in the occupied areas. March 17, 1942 The Fuehrer spoke on Memorial Day in Berlin. It was an excellent, indeed a classical speech both in style and content. ..'. He gave expression to his absolute confidence that the Soviets would be completely destroyed during the ensuing summer. There was no hope for them any longer. The summer would therefore be the decisive point of the conflict. . . . The Bolsheviks would be thrown back so far that they could never again touch the cultured soil of Europe. The Bolshevik danger would thereby be eliminated for our continent. [The Heldengedenktag, literally Heroes' Memorial Day, was celebrated on the third Sunday in March. Whenever possible Hitler himself delivered the address.] The Viceroy of India assembled the Indian princes about him and adjured them most solemnly to rally to and remain on the side of England. The Indian people haven't much to expect of these princes. They are, for the most part, corrupt and bribed characters, who will go with the English as long as they receive money there. The Indian people will have to look to other quarters for their liberation. The Japanese have become somewhat insolent and overconfident. Their new ambassador to the Soviet Union at Kuibyshev has rashly declared that a naval parade of the Axis Powers before London or New York following victory by no means belonged to the realm of dreams and fantasies, but would become a reality. Would to God it were true! [Literally: His word in God's earl] My insistence on central direction of the reporting on trials was not intended to support verdicts that are out of accord with public sentiment and not let the public know about them. That wasn't my purpose. My attention has been called to this danger and I am wondering whether I ought not to send Party comrades as observers into the various courts so that they may quietly inform me and enable me to take measures against verdicts that do not correspond to the times. March 18, 1942 Sumner Welles has spoken most insulting and vulgar words against the Fuehrer because of his speech on Memorial Day. His invective fairly bursts with insults and is the best proof that things are going badly on the enemy side. Lord Halifax is much more modest in his utterances. This bigoted itinerant preacher, who, after the western offensive, declined the hand of the Fuehrer stretched out to him on behalf of peace, is now able to prophesy nothing but dark and difficult times. No doubt he would now think twice if he had the same opportunity offered again. [Viscount Halifax, the former Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, after a long and varied diplomatic career, became British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in 1938 and in this capacity visited Adolf Hitler in Berchtesgaden the same year. His term as Foreign Minister came to an end in 1940, and in 1941 he was appointed Ambassador to the United States. President Roosevelt took the unusual step of personally welcoming him on January 24, 1941, on his arrival.] March 19, 1942 In Australia they are playing with the slogan of the scorched earth. These states and countries that are tied to the apron strings of the English will never grow up. One can explain their attitude only on the ground that they are rewarded with good checks. The Turkish Foreign Minister, Saracoglu, has given an interview to an Italian newspaper in which he favors absolute neutrality toward the Axis as well as the Anglo-Saxon powers, but nevertheless uses turns of speech to which we haven't been used hitherto. His attitude is typical for Turkey. Ankara no doubt has the intention of deciding in favor of one side or the other only when victory for that side is absolutely sure. [Skukri Saracoglu (or Sarajoglu) was Turkish Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1938-42 and again from 1944 on. In 1942 he was Prime Minister for a short time. The Nazis had placed great hopes in Ambassador Franz von Papen's diplomatic ability to draw Turkey into the Axis camp, or at least to prevent her from joining the Allies.] In the Ministry of Justice they don't really know what to do about the war. Since Guertner's death the Ministry of Justice has become an orphan so far as leadership is concerned. I shall suggest a change of personnel to the Fuehrer. We shall otherwise be working in a vacuum. We propose a multitude of reforms, improvements, and drafts of laws, but they don't have the right effect because a sort of quiet sabotage is going on in the central offices. The bourgeois elements dominate there, and as the sky is high and the Fuehrer far away, it is very difficult indeed to prevail against this tough and solid bureaucracy. But I won't desist. I am convinced we shall have to adopt much more stringent measures in our conduct of the war. [Dr. Franz Guertner, former Bavarian Minister of Justice, was Reich Minister of Justice in the Van Papen Cabinet of 1932 and the shortlived Kurt von Schleicher Cabinet of 1932-33. In 1933 Hindenburg insisted that Hitler keep him on as Minister of Justice. The Fuehrer was able to bypass Guertner, however, by making the SS independent of the Judiciary and vesting in it powers of arrest without warrant and detention in concentration camps without trial. Guertner, instead of resigning in protest, meekly accepted the situation. Guertner proved a relatively mild-mannered Minister of Justice, and the Nazis heaved a sigh of relief when he died a natural death in 1941.] The slogan of increasing production won't prove very effective when the decrease in food rations becomes known. I have given orders to distribute the announcement about the decrease here and there quietly, so that no severe shock may result at the time of their actual publication. Also, the German press has been ordered to report on the difficulties of the English food situation, so that the German public may deduce from it that our shortages are not a result of the English blockade but merely a result of the general war situation. Goering has now signed the law to combat profiteering and black marketeering. However, the text presented to him by the Reich Economic Minister was a drastically amended one which was much milder at decisive points than the original. Now it will certainly not fully achieve its purpose. I shall have to report this matter once more to the Fuehrer, and I expect to be supported by Bormann and the Party. It really makes one despair how the ministerial bureaucracy tries again and again to hinder [cramp the style of] those who favor a radical conduct of the war, and to create one difficulty after another for them. This bureaucracy always rests its case on so-called common sense and the wisdom of experience. Now, the point is that our great successes in the past were achieved neither by so-called sound common sense nor through the wisdom of experience. They were the result of clever psychology and a pronounced ability to sense the thinking processes of the broad masses of the population. In Paris the bomb damage was not so bad as it had at first been supposed. The population has long forgotten it. The Frenchmen will never learn. Besides, they have in part already become very insolent. But well polish them off at the right time. By being arrogant they would like to compel us to make a preliminary peace with them. That will never do, for once they find out what the Fuehrer really demands of them, the game is up anyway. It is best to let the whole thing hang fire for the present. . . . Whether we shall succeed during the coming spring and summer in defeating the Bolsheviks—this no man can say. We know what we have and what we must risk, but we don't know what the Bolsheviks have and what they can risk. One might conjecture that they risked everything this winter, but one can't claim it with certainty. We must in part rely upon our good luck, and fight. Many situations like that arise in the course of a war. The victor will always be the one who has the greater amount of courage and the stronger nerves. It is we without a doubt who have both. March 20, 1942 Will this winter never end? Is a new glacial age in the offing? Certainly one is inclined at times to yield to this suspicion when one contemplates the constant, repeated attacks by winter weather. Through snow and frost we drove directly to GHQ. Morale there is extraordinarily good, although the endless winter has a somewhat depressing effect. But hope rightly prevails that the winter will have to end soon and then all the worries that torment us today will be over. My work in Berlin is praised by everybody. My decision to conduct our propaganda along severer lines now meets with full approval at GHQ The Fuehrer, thank God, appears to be in good health. He has gone through exceedingly difficult days, and his whole bearing shows it. The Fuehrer is really to be pitied. He must take the entire burden of the war upon his shoulders, and nobody can relieve him of the responsibility for all the decisions that must be made. I became especially conscious of this during a talk with Schaub. He told me that the Fuehrer had recently been somewhat ailing. One can understand this, for even physically it is impossible for one person to carry such a gigantic load over an extended period. Added to this is the fact that the Fuehrer practically lives in a concentration camp. Whether the guards before his GHQ are furnished by the SS or by some PW camp—the effect is the same. The loneliness of GHQ and the whole method of working there naturally have at long last an extraordinarily depressing effect upon the Fuehrer. He hasn't the slightest opportunity for relaxation, and as long as he is awake is surrounded by work and responsibility. The solitude in which he is compelled to perform his duties must sooner or later affect him deeply and gnaw at his vitals. [SS Group Leader Julius Schaub was Hitler's personal adjutant. He had been with him for many years.] If during the past winter, which is still loath to take leave, he managed to pull through relatively well, that is proof of his truly bearlike nature. The generals, for the most part, have not helped matters either. Opinions about the leadership of the German Wehrmacht are quite different today from what they were, for instance, after the offensive in France. High general staff officers are in no way able to stand severe strain or cope with heavy spiritual crises. That's something they haven't learned. They were not taught sufficiently to emulate the example of Prussian generals. Besides, the initial successes in this war have filled them too much with the idea that everything can succeed at first try and that serious difficulties cannot possibly arise anywhere. The Fuehrer alone saved the front during the past winter. The fact that he would not yield and gave no sign of weakness whatever was the real reason that the front did not become shaky but stood firm on the whole. Realizing this situation, I consider it all the more my duty to let the Fuehrer now and then have reports, news, and items that will distract him somewhat from his immediate war tasks. It must be done adroitly, so that he won't notice it, for as soon as he does, he resents all such attempts. I am glad that during the past weeks I always sent material to GHQ that interested the Fuehrer from the purely human side, especially items about art and cultural life from which he is completely cut off, although in normal times they quite preoccupy him. Toward noon I had my first, and in the afternoon my second, talk of several hours with the Fuehrer. They touched me deeply and enabled me to realize that the work I have thus far done in Berlin corresponds in every respect to what the Fuehrer envisages as civilian war conduct. Our greeting was extremely cordial. One cannot but notice that the Fuehrer is happy to welcome one of his old co-fighters and especially to be able to say in complete privacy all those things that he can't tell to a larger circle. The Fuehrer's appearance of being healthy is somewhat misleading. The superficial impression is that he is in the very best physical shape. In reality that is not the case, however. In our intimate talk he told me that recently he has been somewhat ailing. From time to time he has had to fight off severe attacks of giddiness. The long winter has affected his spiritual condition in a way that has left its mark. The Fuehrer, I recall, never cared very much for winter. In the old days we used sometimes to laugh at his physical revulsion against frost and snow. For instance, he could never understand how some people in spring could look for altitudes where there was still snow for skiing! Now his aversion to winter has received cruel and terrible vindication. He certainly never imagined that a time would come when winter would so unrelentingly take advantage of his instinctive antipathy and inflict such suffering upon German troops. All this happened to a degree hitherto considered unbelievable. This long, hard, cruel winter be damned! It has confronted us with problems that we should not have thought possible. This winter put not only the German Wehrmacht but especially its Supreme Commander under a cruel strain. It is nothing short of a miracle that we stood it. It is too early as yet to appreciate fully what the Fuehrer suffered during these months. He told me he would later have occasion to talk and possibly write about all this. The war reached its highest intensity during the period since the end of November. Sometimes, the Fuehrer said, he feared it simply would not be possible to survive. Invariably, however, he fought off the assaults of the enemy with his last ounce of will and thus always succeeded in coming out on top. Thank God the German people learned about only a fraction of all this. This shows how right it is to spare the people the heaviest burdens of the war, especially those of a spiritual nature. . . . What worries and torments the Fuehrer most is the fact that the country is still covered with snow, and that frost and cold are still stalking through field and forest. Although he doesn't talk much about it one can feel how unhappy he is about the long duration of the winter—a winter that came so suddenly and is departing so unwillingly. I told him about my experiences in Vienna, Graz, and Linz. He asked me *about the smallest details and admitted his deep yearning to return to these beautiful spots that are so dear to his heart. The Fuehrer has no misgivings about sentiment at home. He is well aware that the German people, if correctly led, will survive the severe strains of this war. I described to him in detail how difficult it will be in the next few days to make the German people understand why food rations must be reduced, and how hard it will be to put these reductions into effect. The Fuehrer has done everything possible to avoid them. Even now he will make every effort to insure greater supplies of food, especially from the Ukraine. For the moment, however, this is utterly impossible in view of the exceptionally strained transport situation. ... I don't share the Fuehrer's optimism that we shall succeed within a reasonable time in getting worth-while supplies out of the Ukraine. We lack the man power, the organization, and especially the transportation to do this. It is very doubtful whether the food situation will be any better this summer than at present. ... This damned long winter still prevents our opening the potato dugouts with their vast supplies of potatoes. Here we are at the beginning of spring, and still we are struggling with problems of the winter as though it were only the turn of the year! As soon as these dugouts can be opened, the Fuehrer approves of speeding up potato transport as much as possible. Unfortunately the Ministry of Transport has failed again. The necessary number of locomotives is lacking. We sold locomotives to foreign countries in peacetime instead of stock-piling them for the time of need. The old-fogey ministerial directors in the Reich Ministry of Transport fumbled the ball so criminally that an example ought to be made of them. The Fuehrer has decided to rule with a heavier hand henceforth. I told him of individual cases of miscarriages of justice. They paralleled his own observations. He is now determined to invoke the most radical measures. I proposed a law to the effect that whoever violates the commonly known principles of National Socialistic leadership is to be punished with imprisonment and in very serious cases even with death. Such a law would enable us to place our domestic war effort on an entirely new basis and especially to lay our hands on those who have hitherto eluded us. Schlegel-berger, the undersecretary in the Ministry of Justice, who since the death of Guertner has headed German justice, always refuses my requests on the grounds that there is no legal basis for action. That basis could be created by the proposed law. Beyond that, the failure of justice is of course a question of personalities and not of lack of laws. It is essential that the Ministry of Justice, which has been orphaned since the death of Guertner, be placed in new hands. I proposed the president of the People's Court, Thierack, who is a real National Socialist and certainly won't stumble over a thread.. .. Justice must not become the mistress of the state, but must be the servant of state policy. [Franz Schlegelberger was a holdover from the days of the Weimar Republic, where he had gradually advanced to the position of undersecretary in the Ministry of Justice by 1931. When Dr. Franz Guertner died in 1941 no successor was appointed, but Schlegelberger became Acting Minister of Justice. SS Group Leader Otto Georg Thierack was vice-president of the German Supreme Court during the first years of Nazism, but in 1939 became presiding judge of the notorious star-chamber People's Court (Volksgerichtshof) . In recognition of his radical Nazi practices there, Hitler now followed Goebbels's suggestion and appointed him Reich Minister of Justice. He was instructed by Hitler to make German justice, which still rested on Roman law, conform to the Nazi principle that "right consists in whatever is of service to the National Socialist State" (Recht ist was dem NationalSozidlistischen Stoat nuetzt).] The Fuehrer would like to have the Reichstag vote him special powers for a thorough political and military house-cleaning, so as to let the evildoers know that he is fully backed by the entire people. He intends to summon the Reichstag soon and have it vote him blanket powers for proceeding against saboteurs and especially against officials derelict in their duties.... [The Reichstag was the counterpart of the American Congress. It enjoyed somewhat limited powers during the imperial regime, became much like Congress or the English Parliament during the Weimer Republic of 1918-33, only to be reduced to a sounding board for Adolf Hitler during the Nazi regime. During Nazism it was jokingfy called the "world's best-paid singing society," for its members assembled once or twice a year to listen to Hitler, then stood up lustily to sing "Deutschland ueber Alles" and the "Horst Wessel Lied," and drew about two hundred and fifty dollars a month year in, year out, for this manifestation of lung power.] The mere existence of blanket powers for the Fuehrer, authorizing him not only to fire from their jobs officers who fail to do their duty, but to discharge them dishonorably, would work wonders. All you need to do is to select some single case and make an example of it. That clears the atmosphere. The same thing should be done on the civilian sector, for in civilian jobs, too, there are officials who in no wise perform their duties as demanded by the exigencies of war. Men in public life, no matter what their field, who are guilty of gross neglect of duty should be punished, possibly even shot: men who are not equal to their tasks because they lack intelligence or leadership qualities should be subject to dismissal without pension. . . . The Fuehrer was in a frame of mind that caused my proposals for conducting our war in a more radical manner to meet with an absolutely favorable response on his part. I needed merely to touch a theme lightly, and already I had gained my point. Everything I proposed was accepted item by item and without objection by the Fuehrer. I told the Fuehrer about Streccius of Vienna in connection with the forged Moelders letter. He simply fumed with anger. He asked me to prepare a written report for him, whereupon he will throw Streccius out without warning. As a matter of fact he did not even know this ludicrous general. .. . Unfortunately nothing can be undertaken against Mackensen. But the Fuehrer formed his opinion of the old field marshal general in political matters long ago. His opinion about various leaders of the Wehrmacht has changed fundamentally during the past winter. He does not think so much of the generals as he used to. He has nothing but contempt for many of them. I reported to the Fuehrer about the disgusting incidents at German railway stations and in German express trains, and explained that better-situated people simply will not heed our advice and our requests. He authorized me to invoke concentration-camp punishment to put an end to this nuisance. [Goebbels refers to the fact that society women and -people of wealth were able to secure sleepers and first-class seats, whereas German servicemen had to put up with inconveniences of every sort. Goebbels on one occasion, on arriving from outside Berlin, tried to argue with the better-situated to make room for servicemen, but was snubbed.] Unfortunately I must complain about Dr. Ley. He is conducting a propaganda for increasing production that is most inopportune, especially now, at a time of reduced food rations. The Fuehrer recommends that I talk personally to Ley and point out his mistake. We got to talking about political matters. The Fuehrer is very much attached to Mussolini and regards him as the only guarantor of German-Italian collaboration. The Italian people and Fascism will stick to our side as long as Mussolini is there.... The Fuehrer really intended to present him with a new Condor plane, but will refrain from so doing because he knows that Mussolini will immediately take the stick, and in case anything were to happen to him, he [Hitler] would never forgive himself.... Flying is Mussolini's great passion. During a war, however, a statesman in such a position has something else to do than to indulge in aviation sports. The Fuehrer spoke about Mussolini only in terms of greatest respect. He has made of the Italian people whatever it was possible to make of them. If here and there German-Italian collaboration doesn't function, that isn't Mussolini's fault, but is rather because of the lack of military qualities in the Italian people themselves. Then thelFuehrer came to talk about himself. It is truly touching to hear him complain about the winter that has oaused him such terrific worries and difficulties. I noted that he has already become quite gray and that merely telling about the cares of the winter makes him seem to have aged very much. ... The Fuehrer described to me how close we were during the past months to a Napoleonic winter. Had he weakened for only one moment, the front would have caved in and a catastrophe ensued that would have put the Napoleonic disaster far into the shade. Millions of fine soldiers would have been exposed to death by hunger and cold, and in all likeli- hood our workers, not to mention the intelligentsia—would have been led into slavery. Brauchitsch bears a great deal of responsibility for this eventuality. The Fuehrer spoke of him only in terms of contempt. A vain, cowardly wretch who could not even appraise the situation, much less master it. By his constant interference and consistent disobedience he completely spoiled the entire plan for the eastern campaign as it was designed with crystal clarity by the Fuehrer. The Fuehrer had a plan that was bound to lead to victory. Had Brauchitsch done what was asked of him and what he really should have done, our position in the East today would be entirely different from what it is. The Fuehrer had no intention whatever of going to Moscow. He wanted to cut off the Caucasus and thereby strike the Soviet system at its most vulnerable point. But Brauchitsch and his general staff knew better. Brauchitsch always urged going to Moscow. He wanted prestige successes instead of factual successes. The Fuehrer described him as a coward and a nincompoop. He also had tried to weaken the plan of campaign for the West. But here the Fuehrer was able to take a hand in time. . . . The Fuehrer again has a perfectly clear plan for the coming spring and summer. He does not want to overextend the war. His aims are the Caucasus, Leningrad, and Moscow. If these aims are attained by us, he is determined under all circumstances to end the campaign at the beginning of next October and to go into winter quarters early. He intends possibly to construct a gigantic line of defense and to let the eastern campaign rest there. A winter like the past can never again surprise us. Possibly this may mean a hundred years' war in the East, but that need not worry us. Our position toward what remains of Russia would then be like that of England toward India. Our offensive will in all likelihood not begin before the end of May or the beginning of June. It will then, however, start out with a devastating impact. The Fuehrer has no intention of attacking along the whole front, but rather to launch assaults on one sector at a time and there to undertake advances of really decisive importance. The first advance against the Bolsheviks will start in a couple of days in the Crimea, which the Fuehrer desires to clear completely of the enemy. The Fuehrer, incidentally, has rather high regard for the Soviet war leadership. Stalin's brutal hand has saved the Russian front. To hold our own we shall have to apply similar methods on our side. This toughness has sometimes been wanting with us and we must try to find an equivalent. It is not difficult for me to gather from this whole presentation of the situation that the Fuehrer alone saved the Eastern Front this winter. His determination and firmness have put everything back in shape again. If today he is a sick and ailing man, that was a high price to pay, but it is worth it. I can only hope that when spring comes the Fuehrer will soon be at the peak of health again. What he now needs is air, sunshine, spring, and the prospect of good weather. The whole atmosphere at GHQ is a truly depressing one. Ever to be surrounded by snow, ice, and frost allows no man to live there happily, even though he be a superman. The Fuehrer this time truly worries me. I have never seen him so serious and grave as today. I told him that I, too, was not in the best of health. We spoke intimately as man to man. War takes a severe toll on the nerves of all of us. But that can't be helped. I hope when the war is over only a memory of it will remain. My work meets with the Fuehrer's highest approval and gives him great satisfaction. It is wonderful for me to be able to chat at length with the Fuehrer about all sorts of personal things. He has the effect of a dynamo. After spending an afternoon with him, one feels like a storage battery that has just been charged anew. Our discussion turned to England. The Fuehrer regards the English crisis as more profound than I had assumed. He believes there will be a sharp movement either to the right or to the left. Either Cripps will Bolshevize England, or the Tories will take control again. At present the Fuehrer is more inclined toward the latter possibility. He believes England is about to face a situation that will no longer permit the Tories merely to look on. For the moment they are letting things drift, but undoubtedly they will be heard from when the crisis has reached its climax. The Fuehrer is rather disposed to believe that the United States will be ripe for Bolshevism at a certain moment, but today nobody can say just when that will happen. According to the briefing given the Fuehrer, Japanese aspirations are approximately these: Tokyo intends at first to gain a foothold at various points in Australia without trying to take possession of the entire Australian continent, and then to advance upon India. At first Ceylon is to be overrun, so as to paralyze all shipping around India. That will strike at one of England's main arteries. The British Empire can't stand such a strain for long. That will be our best chance for finally knocking out England. But it will take time, and you can't measure such a development with a yardstick. It is, of course, possible that England's collapse will occur quite suddenly, but one should not count too much on it and not rest one's chances solely on such a possibility. I told the Fuehrer how wonderful it is to imagine peacetime again. He feels the same way. We all long for the day when we can take part in reconstruction and not experience only the seamy side of this tremendous revolution. Every one of us has a strong yearning for life per se—for a life such as nobody can lead during the war. The Fuehrer inquired solicitously about everybody at home—how Helga, Hilde, and especially Holge were, how the entire family was, and how and what it was doing. He remembers everyone, but regrets that he can pay so little attention to matters of this kind. I decided then and there that my family and I must look after him more after this war, especially since we can't do it now that the war is on. [Helga, Hilde and Holge were three of Goebbels's children.] Finally we talked about the Jewish question. Here the Fuehrer is as uncompromising as ever. The Jews must be got out of Europe, if necessary by applying most brutal methods. For the present he does not want to become very active in the church question. He would like to save that up for the end of the war. . .. Our whole conversation was conducted in the most cordial and intimate manner. I was happy to be with the Fuehrer again. The Fuehrer was happy to be able to talk in so personal a manner in absolute privacy. His devotion and meticulous care are touching. He inquired into all sorts of details that interest him, both of a personal and factual nature. A little dog that was presented to him now plays about in his room. His whole heart belongs to that dog. The canine may do anything it wants in his bunker. At present it is the object closest to the Fuehrer's heart The Fuehrer had dinner served somewhat earlier than usual to enable me to share it before my departure. We talked at length about the gigantic military successes achieved by the Japanese. The Fuehrer is full of admiration for the Japanese Army. Aside from that, however, he naturally views the strong ascendancy of the Japanese in eastern Asia and the recession of the white man with certain misgivings. But there is nothing to be done about it. The English didn't want it otherwise.. •. The Fuehrer regretted that Antonescu did not succeed in collaborating with the Iron Guard. A stagnant condition obtains in Rumania as a result. The [political] parties are gone and Antonescu has no political group on which he can lean for support. He will have to pay dearly for it someday. But we, too, must realize that we shall have to fill with human beings such wide spaces in the East as we shall conquer. In geography there can be no spaces without human beings, just as in politics there can be no vacuums. Every space must be filled, and if we don't fill those that we control, someone else will do it. Hence our chief task will consist in filling up the areas in the East and in creating human beings to take possession of these spaces and establish their homes there. That is the question that the Japanese, too, are facing. To conquer Australia won't be hard, but to fill up Australia will be a difficult task. The English didn't succeed and that's why they are going to lose Australia. At 8:30 P.M. I had to leave. The Fuehrer was very much tpuched when I left. He wishes me to visit him again soon. I am almost benumbed at having to leave him.... A long, dreamless sleep. When we arrived in Berlin toward noon, the capital was again enveloped in a white robe of snow. Not a sign of spring anywhere. Winter has again returned. March 21, 1942 General Schmundt complained bitterly about the indolence of a number of higher officers who either do not want to understand the Fuehrer or in some cases are not able to. They are thereby robbing themselves, as General Schmundt put it, of the greatest happiness that a contemporary can today experience; namely, that of serving a genius. Vansittart delivered his maiden speech in the House of Lords. He directed a sharp attack against the German emigres who are active in London and who are against the Nazis but not against the Germans. He demands a propaganda directed against Germany as such and not against National Socialism. He wants to destroy Germany not the National Socialist movement That's music for our ears. Let Vansittart carry on. He is merely supplying grist for our propaganda mill. [Lord Vansittart was the English mouthpiece of anti-German bitter-enders. Goebbels consistently held that it was a psychological mistake for Vansittart and his followers to make no distinction between the Nazis and other Germans.] Rumors of peace have once again cropped up, especially in connection with Papen's trip to Berlin. Papen is always described by our adversaries as a great poisoner which in reality he isn't at all. Allegedly he is now to inquire into the possibilities of peace, especially a separate peace with the Soviet Union. That, of course, is stuff and nonsense. I received a report about the latest developments in German science. Research in the realm of atomic destruction has now proceeded to a point where its results may possibly be made use of in the conduct of this war. Tremendous destruo tion, it is claimed, can be wrought with a minimum of effort so that the prospects for a longer duration of the war and for a later war are terrifying. Modern technic places in the hands of human beings means of destruction that are simply incredible. German science is at its peak in this matter. It is essential that we be ahead of everybody, for whoever introduces a revolutionary novelty into this war has the greater chance of winning it [This entry is significant both because Goebbels claims that the Germans were close to perfecting the atomic bomb and because of his prophetic statement, proven at Hiroshima to have been realistic, that "whoever introduces a revolutionary novelty into this war has the greater chance of winning it* 9 ] Hilgenfeldt reported to me about his difficulties with Wehrmacht officers in taking care of the wounded who return from the East Here jurisdictional fights are being fought at a time when our wounded are in most urgent need of aid. I pounded on the table energetically. The Wehrmacht has proven unable to solve these problems; it should at least let other competent and willing departments go to work and not hinder them constantly with childish jurisdictional objections. The Wehrmacht leadership has failed so generally during this winter that it must be relieved of many tasks for which it was hitherto responsible, especially tasks for ameliorating the effects of war that can be accomplished only by improvisation. There are other offices, especially in the Party and its sub-organizations, that handle such matters better, especially because they know how to improvise and, so to speak, to stamp results out of the ground. [Erich Hilgenfeldt was head of the Nazi Social Welfare Organization known as the NSV {NationaUSazialistische Volkswohlfahrt). Goebbels, a Nazi first, last, and all the time, seized upon every opportunity to take jobs away from non-Nazi offices and put them into Nazi hands. Here he is seen taking work away from the Wehrmacht.] In the afternoon I had a more than three-hour talk with Goering, which came off in an atmosphere of the greatest friendliness and cordiality. I was happy we could let our hair down. We surveyed the overall situation, and I was gratified to note that we agree 100 per cent on all important problems. Without having consulted each other we have arrived at almost exactly the same appraisal of the situation. Goering is in exceptionally good condition physically. He works hard, achieves enormous successes, tackles problems with a healthy common sense, without much theorizing, and for this reason is pretty skeptical about certain trends in the Party. I can't blame him for this. He has the rare good fortune of not being dependent on the Party in his work, so that he can risk being more independent. In many respects he is to be envied. We start with the transportation problem. ... Then we talk in detail about the forged letter of Moelders. Goering already knew that this letter had been distributed chiefly by Macken-sen.... He has been ordered by the Fuehrer to ask Field Marshal von Mackensen to come to see him and give him a piece of his mind. Mackensen has for some time been active as a sort of granddaddy of the Christian churches. Shortsighted as he is, he assumed that Moelders had spoken on behalf of the Protestant Church, because he believed that only Protestantism had a dean. As a matter of fact the forged Moelders letter was addressed to the only Catholic dean in Germany; namely, the one at Stettin. So here Mackensen stepped into something. Now that Hindenburg is no longer alive the old gentleman is being used a little too much by subversive elements for their propaganda. But we won't stand for that Goering will give him an unequivocal piece of his mind. Goering also addressed a sharp letter to Bishops Galen of Muenster and Berning of Osnabrueck. He reminded them of their oath, pledged to him, of fidelity to the state and reprimanded them severely for their treasonable attitude. [Bishop Count Clemens von Galen of Muenster belonged to one of the oldest families in Germany, whose title of nobility dated from the ninth century. He was a bold opponent of Nazism and one of the most colorful men in the Catholic hierarchy of Germany. He received the cardinal's hat in 1946, but died of exhaustion on his way home from Rome. His colleague, Bishop Berning of Osnabrueck, was another doughty fighter against Nazism.] While I was with him, the answers to this letter happened to arrive. They are relatively meek. The bishops try to alibi and with involved turns of speech to prove that they kept their oath. Goering naturally won't accept that. I suggest to Goering that he write another letter, especially to Galen, charging him to his face with having created the greatest unrest in the Reich by his claim that seriously wounded soldiers were being liquidated, and pointing out that his utterances are being used by the English propaganda services against the National Socialist regime. On the one hand it can't be denied that certain measures of the Party, especially the decree about crucifixes, have made it altogether too easy for the bishops to rant against the state. Goering, too, is very much put out about it His whole attitude toward the Christian denominations is quite open and aboveboard. He sees through them, and has no intention whatever of taking them under his protection. On the other hand he agrees with me completely that it won't do to get started now, in wartime, on so difficult and far-reaching a problem. The Fuehrer, too, expressed that viewpoint to him as he has often expressed it to me. In this connection the Fuehrer declared that if his mother still lived, she would undoubtedly go to church today, and he could and would not hinder her.... [The Nazis insisted upon the removal of crucifixes from schools and hospitals.] We are in complete agreement about the Wehrmacht. Goering has nothing but abysmal contempt for the cowardly generals.. .. Field Marshal General Keitel, he said, was not tough enough. He wa$ probably responsible for the fact that the plan of campaign in the East did not function properly. He carried the Fuehrer's commands to the OKH with trembling knees. Brauchitsch was not alone at fault. While he bore a great part of the responsibility he was not told sufficiently plainly [by Keitel] that he must obey the Fuehrer, and that if he did not do so, he would soon feel the consequences.... [Field Marshal Wflhelm Keitel, born 1882, an officer from World War I, became chief of the Wehrmacht office of the Minister of War in 1935, succeeding General Walter von Reichenau, who had applied for an active command. Throughout World War II Keitel was chief of the Supreme Command of the German armed forces, an imposing title which in reality was nothing but a rubber-stamp position under Hitler. He was hanged in Nuremberg in 1946 as a major war criminal.] Goering, too, is not yet clear in his own mind whether the pending spring and summer offensive will succeed in smashing the Russians. He hopes for it, but so little is known about the preparations of the Bolsheviks that an exact prognosis is impossible. If we succeed in beating the Bolsheviks militarily, everything will be fine. If we fail, we shall have to face a period during which extraordinarily sharp inroads on the life of every individual will be necessary in order to render the nation secure against the impending storms. In southern Italy a number of embarrassing incidents occurred between the Luftwaffe and the female population. Goering, however, succeeded in getting things straightened out during his last visit to the Duce. We talked at some length about Hess. Goering has nothing but contempt for him. Undoubtedly he brought us into a position last summer in which we were pretty close to ruin. Had Churchill actually succeeded in discrediting our fidelity to our Allies, the war might conceivably have taken an entirely different turn. All of us were quite justified in being extremely worried at the time and having gravest doubts about the immediate future. But a kind fate held its protecting hand over us. Goering told me of his exceedingly funny and humorous experiences when last he visited the ministries along Wilhem-strasse and Unter den Linden on the Sunday on which his birthday fell. Nowhere could he find anybody. Everybody had taken the Sunday off. That is a situation I have criticized and complained about throughout this entire war. An emergency service has at last been established in one of the ministries. [Herman Goering was born January 12, 1893.] Goering spoke of Frick as a complete nincompoop. He's right about that. He criticized Darre very sharply because he does nothing but write letters and memoranda. ... He expressed most serious doubts that Rosenberg will measure up in the long run to his tremendous task. We all know, of course, that he just can't organize. He is a pure theoretician. How, then,'can he be expected to be a practical organizer and administrator of a stupendous area almost as large as a continent? [Walter Darre* was Minister of Food and Agriculture. Goebbels himself speaks again of him in an interesting way in the entries for May 19 and May 21.] Actually Russia is a land of unlimited possibilities. The dividing line between Asia and Europe has been drawn quite arbitrarily. Maybe a large part of Asia will at some time be joined to Europe, and we can then form a sort of Eurasia. That continent will then possibly have to settle scores with the United States who also represent a real continent. But that is something to worry about later. For the present we must bring the war to a victorious conclusion. Nobody knows just when we shall succeed. Goering, too, is exceedingly cautious in his prognosis. Perhaps we shall reach our goal sooner than any of us think; possibly, however, it may take a very long time still. We must fortify ourselves with strength and fortitude and view the things that are to come with great optimism.... Goering spoke in terms of highest praise about our work. We resolve to meet more frequently and have frank talks about everything. In these times it is especially necessary that the leading men about the Fuehrer understand each other well, know exactly what they want, and permit no differences to arise between them. The result of my talk with Goering is exceptionally satisfactory and favorable. To think of all one can clarify and settle in three hours like these! ... In the evening I viewed the Russian Bolshevik movie, Suvarov. It is a decidedly nationalistic film, in which the Bolsheviks try to establish a connection between the Russia of today and the old heroic history of the country. Certain passages in the film are childishly naive, as though a twelve-year-old had shot the scenes. Other passages, again, are of extraordinary vitality. There are lots of possibilities latent in the Russians. If they were really to be organized thoroughly as a people they would undoubtedly represent the most tremendous danger possible for Europe. That must be prevented, and that is one of the objectives we must attain during the pending offensive. May God grant us success! March 26, 1942 Fear of an offensive is the absolutely dominating factor on the other side. The loud noise about victories and triumphant phrases have proven barren. Bose's propaganda, conducted from Berlin, is extremely embarrassing to the English. It is being heard more widely than I at first thought possible. All the better that we have not yet revealed where he is staying! His propaganda can take effect more easily thus. Vernon Bartlett has written an article concerning British propaganda for Germany, which he considers absolutely wrong. He said Vansittart's latest speech had merely been grist for my mill, which in fact it was. t [Vernon Bartlett, M.P., was at this time diplomatic adviser to the London News Chronicle.] The more radical the English are in prophesying a disgraceful peace for Germany, the more easily I succeed in toughening and hardening German resistance. We'd be in a dangerous fix now if British propaganda from the beginning of the war to this hour had respected the German will to live and the German conception of honor. That's how Chamber-Iain began on the first day of the war. Thank God, the English did not continue along that line. Even though we would always try to discredit them by citing 1918 as an example, they would nevertheless find foolish adherents here and there, especially since the domestic situation always becomes more strained the longer the war lasts. [Goebbels, as already pointed out previously, was convinced that a propaganda policy of the Allies by which a differentiation was made between the Nazi regime and its crimes on the one hand and the decent element of Germany and its feeling for honor on the other, would have torn Germany asunder and caused great difficulties for the regime. The historian of the future will probably have to re-evaluate the wisdom of the Allied insistence upon unconditional surrender which was predicted on the assumption that all Germans were alike. Goebbels, after all, knew something about propaganda and the psychology of the German people.] The same thing would, of course, be true in the case of Italy. There, however, the English are proceeding somewhat more cleverly. The United States has now proclaimed Sforza as the standard bearer of a future Italian regime. He is the spokesman of a so-called "Free Italy." For the present such nonsense is ineffective. [Count Carlo Sforza, Italian statesman and diplomat, former Foreign Minister, was the "grand old man** of the Italian anti-Fascist emigrants. In 1920-21 he was Italian Foreign Minister. He resigned as Ambassador to France on the advent of the Fascists to power late in 1922 and was leader of the democratic opposition until the suppression of opposition parties in 1926. He went into exile and lectured at many foreign universities, including some in the United States. He returned to Italy at the age of seventy-one to become a member of the Badoglio cabinet in April 1944, and was president of the Italian Consultative Assembly in 1945.] The Foreign Office has briefed me on the situation in Brazil. There a bitter fight is on between President Vargas, who is pretty much on our side, and Foreign Minister Aran-ha, who is evidently a character bought by Roosevelt and is apparently doing everything possible to provoke a conflict with the Reich and the Axis Powers. [Getulio Dornelles Vargas, born 1882, educated at Rio Parde Military School, became President of the Brazilian Republic in 1930, after having previously served as President of the State of Rio Grande do Sul. He resigned in 1945. Oswaldo Aranha, born 1894, Brazilian diplomat, became Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1958, after having been Ambassador to the United States, 1934-38. He has more recently been playing a leading role in the United Nations.] We have, alas, no facilities for reprisal. We have about six hundred Brazilians in our hands whereas in Brazil alone there are 150,000 Germans. The economic possibilities of striking back are also extraordinarily limited with us, as we don't own one tenth as much Brazilian capital as the Brazilians possess of German capital. So we have to be rather careful. The SD report paints the situation in rather somber colors [grau in grau]. It declares no news during the entire war has had as depressing an effect as this [the shortening of food rations], and that morale has thereby reached a low never before attained. I think that is seeing things somewhat too pessimistically. It's a dirty, low thing for the Catholic Church to continue its subversive activity in every way possible and now even to extend its propaganda to Protestant children evacuated from regions threatened by air raids. Next to the Jews these politico-divines [politisierenden Pfaffen] are about the most loathsome riffraff that we are still sheltering in the Reich. The time will come after the war for an over-all solution of this problem. Only one can be the master in the state, either the Church or the state itself. National Socialism is faced with the task of establishing supremacy uncompromisingly over the political claims of the Church. The Metropole Theater folk are very grateful that I can devote a few late hours to them. For my work, however, that isn't very good; it distracts me. It engenders too deep a yearning for peace, and that won't do in wartime. Just as a wanderer in the desert shouldn't forever think of water, so a man who helps run a war must never think of peace. If and when peace comes, there is plenty of time to think of it; if it doesn't come, then there is but one task; namely, to wage war. IGoebbels's fondness for theatrical people, especially pretty actresses, was proverbial. It is not difficult to understand this nostalgic reference. The Metropole Theater specialized in musical comedies.] March 27, 1942 Nothing of importance has been reported from East Asia. The American and British press is gabbing about an offensive in Australia that the Allies have allegedly begun. Their claims are dow so modest that they even regard the mere presence of a better-known general in a certain country as an offensive. [Goebbels obviously refers to General Douglas MacArthur.] Cripps is evidently trying to force a decision [in India], for not only does he want to achieve a practical result, but success is exceedingly important to him personally. He received the journalists and cracked foolish, typically English jokes. He wouldn't commit himself. It seems quite clear that the English will try to promise the Indians dominion status after the war—a promise that they certainly wouldn't keep if England were to win the war and could further expand her imperial might. Churchill, incidentally, took the floor himself in the House of Commons. His speech bubbled over with obscure phrases. He speaks in generalities, declaring the position has improved tremendously. It hardly pays to argue with him. The German Embassy in Rome sent me a speech by Mussolini which was delivered January 3 before the Party leaders. This speech is exceptionally caustic and is directed especially against the defeatist bourgeois circles that criticize the war effort. In this confidential address Mussolini declared his unalterable determination to continue to march to the end with Germany and the Fuehrer. ... He really deserves a better people than the one he now leads. A much more clever form of propaganda against the Reich has been proposed in the United States. The idea is not to go against the German people but against Nazism. I sense a certain danger. Fortunately the enemy propaganda is not so unified and consistent as to be able to stick to such a propaganda slogan for a period of years. If this were the case we would face great difficulties every time we were under a new, heavy strain. If I were on the enemy side, I should from the very first day on have adopted the slogan of fighting against Nazism, but not against the German people. That's how Chamberlain began on the first day of the war, but, thank God. the English didn't follow through. I gave orders that the German press is not to publish or discuss turns of speech such as are being used increasingly in the American press. One should simply not talk about these things. Even if you argue about them you nevertheless spread them. The German people must remain convinced—as indeed the facts warrant-—that this war strikes at their very lives and their national possibilities of development, and that they must fight it with their entire strength. The Wafd party has achieved a glorious victory; let's not question with what means, but it did gain 216 out of 264 seats. That makes it possible for Nahas Pasha to act. Of course not much is to be expected of him, as he has probably been a satellite of the English for sometime already. Beginning with Lublin, the Jews in the General Government are now being evacuated eastward. The procedure is a pretty barbaric one and not to be described here more definitely. Not much will remain of the Jews. On the whole it can be said that about 60 per cent of them will have to be liquidated whereas only about 40 per cent can be used for forced labor. [By General Government is meant German-occupied Poland. It is obvious from this entry that Goebbels knew of the gas-chamber atrocities, but it is significant that there was any form of human depravity which he would recognize as barbaric when resorted to by Nazis.] The former Gauleiter of Vienna, who is to carry this measure through, is doing it with considerable circumspection and according to a method that does not attract too much attention. A judgment is being visited upon the Jews that, while barbaric, is fully deserved by them. The prophesy which the Fuehrer made about them for having brought on a new world war is beginning to come true in a most terrible manner. One must not be sentimental in these matters. If we did not fight the Jews, they would destroy us. It's a life-and-death struggle between the Aryan race and the Jewish bacillus. No other government and no other regime would have the strength for such a global solution of this question. Here, too, the Fuehrer is the undismayed champion of a radical solution necessitated by conditions and therefore inexorable. Fortunately a whole series of possibilities presents itself for us in wartime that would be denied us in peacetime. We shall have to profit by this. [Hitler in a Reichstag speech on January 30, 1939, prophesied that the outbreak of another world war would mean the end of the Jews in Europe. He then said: "I want today once again to make a prophecy: In case the international Jewish financiers within and outside Europe succeed once more in hurling the peoples into a world war, the result will be, not the Bolshevization of the world and with it a victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe."] The ghettos that will be emptied in the cities of the General Government will now be refilled with Jews thrown out of the Reich. This process is to be repeated from time to time. There is nothing funny in it for the Jews, and the fact that Jewry's representatives in England and America are today organizing and sponsoring the war against Germany must be paid for dearly by its representatives in Europe—and that's only right. Commander Hartenstein reported to ma about a submarine trip into the Caribbean Sea. Our submarines are finding fat booty there. The Americans are not at all prepared and have almost no defense against submarine attacks. The submarines are at sea for about sixty days all told. They keep shooting until their last torpedo is gone and on their return try, if possible, to destroy transports they meet by artillery fire. Morale among the submarine men is splendid, especially since their last great successes. It is astonishing how combat transforms young men into genuine leaders within a short time. This particular submarine commander, who almost strikes you as a teen-ager, is a real man and a leader from head to foot. March 28, 1942 Things are relatively quiet in East Asia. The Japanese seem to be catching their breath and accumulating strength for their next blow. Australia is raising a hell of a row [einen Mordskrach], It is arguing with everybody all around. Behind it all, however, there is no military power whatever. MacArthur has no easy task so far as Australia is concerned. Those in power in Australia at present are descendants of the former British penal colony. They don't mince words. They would be pretty surprised, however, if one of these days the Japanese established bases on their continent. Churchill's last speech is being debated in London. Churchill in reality spoke much more pessimistically than at first appeared. The gloomy beginning of his speech was forbidden for Reuters foreign service and was quoted only in the domestic English service. We nevertheless got hold of it and can now contrast the Churchill who strikes a note of relative optimism for the countries abroad with the Churchill who describes the situation exactly as it is for the home folk. The London propaganda offices claim Churchill has spoken the simple truth. In other words, there are two kinds of truth for this British Premier, one for foreign countries and one for home consumption. Hamsun wrote a very witty and exceptionally biting article against Roosevelt. JIamsun, one of the most outstanding intellectuals of modern Europe, has, until now, always stood by the flag of the New Order. [Goebbels here refers to the celebrated Norwegian novelist and Nobel Literature Prize winner, Knut Hamsun, whose novels, The Growth of the Soil, Hunger, Vagabonds, Mysteries, and The Last Chapter —to mention the best known—have been translated into the English language. The visit of Hamsun at the official Goebbels home on May 18, 1943, is described in detail under date of May 19.] The English are about to introduce their super-summertime. That again creates the problem for us of interrupting our entertainment broadcasts to make room for the news service in the English language. I am trying to persuade the Luftwaffe to give me one of the broadcasting stations in occupied France, for at present we can hardly afford to have the general entertainment program interrupted. Sauckel has been appointed Reich Plenipotentiary for man power. When he comes to Berlin the next time I am going to talk to him and present my wishes. Undoubtedly his strong National Socialist hand will achieve miracles. It should not be difficult to mobilize at least a million additional workers from among the German people; one must merely go at it energetically and not be scared by ever-recurring difficulties. [Fritz Sauckel, Gauleiter for Thuringia, was regarded as one of the toughest of the Old Guard Nazis, and was put in charge of the whole problem of forced labor. The Nuremberg International Military Tribunal found him guilty of crimes against humanity because of his ruthless treatment of slave laborers from all occupied countries, and had him hanged. In a number of later entries Goebbels speaks very disparagingly of him. Sauckel was the man who had the sarcophagi of Goethe and Schiller removed from their resting place in the royal mausoleum of Weimar and taken to Jena to an air-raid bunker, and then ordered that the bodies of these two titans of German culture be blown to bits in the event of an American advance into Thuringia. The workers of Jena considered this sacrilege, however, and hid the two coffins. They informed Major William M. Brown, American military governor of Weimar, of what they had done, and Brown ceremoniously brought the remains back to Weimar, where he restored them to their original resting place.] I have ordered an investigation into the nuisance of questionnaires. That has really become a public scandal. One can hardly buy an orange today without answering a questionnaire with the most ludicrous questions. It is high time that this nuisance be stopped. If I succeed in this I shall undoubtedly render a great service on behalf of domestic tranquility. The leadership of the Waffen-SS looks after its members materially and spiritually in a model way. That means, of course, that new conflicts constantly arise between the Waffen-SS and the army, which is very lax in these matters. But, after all, the Waffen-SS cannot stop looking after its troops merely because the Army is inactive in that respect! Quite a number of cases are reported to me that are simply hair-raising. One can hardly put into words what the Army neglects to do in the way of taking care of the troops and supplying them with munitions and weapons. The gentlemen of the OKH are nothing but frustrated German National or People's party bureaucrats. If National Socialism hadn't come they would in all likelihood sit somewhere in an inconspicuous place as obscure attorneys or ward heelers for the bourgeois parties. Now they are show-offs pretending to be top brass hats. They are entirely unfit for any leadership role, especially because they have no initiative and cannot improvise. Their chief task consists in creating difficulties for people who do something and who know something. But the SS won't have anybody scratch the butter off its bread, and that is fine. . .. [Goebbels here refers to the fact that many of the older officers had taken their discharge at the end of World War I, since Germany was permitted to have only a professional army of 100,000 men, and found berths as attorneys or low-ranking officials of the ultra-conservative German National party and of the late Gustav StresemaruVs People's party. Goebbels despised bourgeois society, and felt much closer to the Communists than to former members of the defunct middle-class and conservative parties.] The London press has started a major press campaign against Bulgaria, especially on the question of whether Bulgaria wants to attack Turkey. That, of course, is utter nonsense; nevertheless London tries thereby to torpedo King Boris's trip to Germany. King Boris expressed the wish of talking with me at leisure. I visited him at Bellevue Castle where he is residing for a few days. Our talk, which was really to take up only twenty minutes, stretched out for more than two hours. The King is extraordinarily charming and has returned from the Fuehrer full of new ideas, suggestions and initiatives. The Fuehrer has this time given him a complete briefing on all matters that concern him. Boris is an impassioned devotee of Hitler's genius as a leader; he really looks upon him as a sort of emissary of God. He shows the greatest understanding for my work. He follows what I do with such alert interest that I am simply surprised at what he knows and what he asks about. My articles in the Reich are part of his required reading. Yes, he told me he even uses the arguments advanced in these articles in all his diplomatic negotiations. He is full of admiration for the sensitiveness of our psychological approach in leading the German people which, he claims, differs most strikingly from that of World War I. He is a real people's king. He describes to me how he travels incognito through Bulgarian villages to learn about the sentiment of the people. Undoubtedly sentiment was pro-Russian even a short time ago, but under the impact of the presence of German troops it has veered over noticeably to our side. The King has observed marked friendliness to Germany even in such sections of the country as were hitherto known for their pro-Russian sympathies. He is very happy that the Fuehrer does not expect more of him than that he be a stabilizing factor in the Balkans. The Fuehrer is showing himself extremely liberal toward Bulgaria. Bulgaria, after all, cannot easily take an active part in the war, since it has almost never lived in peace throughout its young national history. It can, however, supply auxiliary troops here and there, as indeed it has done, for example, in Serbia. For this we can only be thankful to the King. Bulgaria's national aspirations have for the most part been satisfied. The King, of course, is not thinking of fighting Turkey.... It is truly astonishing with what love and devotion he stands behind the Fuehrer. If all our allies were like that, we could be satisfied. The King has made intensive studies about German morale and is very well satisfied by the results. He knows conditions exactly as they were during World War I and realizes that they are in sharpest contrast with those of today. He is surprised at the quiet composure, especially of the Berlin population, and praises it highly. It was late in the night when we parted from each other in the most cordial spirit. One cannot but find this king sympathetic. If all heads of states in Europe were as open-minded and ready to support the New Order, hardly an obstacle could be placed in the way of the future Europe. [The reader will no doubt be struck, as this editor was, by Goeb-bels's complete reversal of opinion regarding Czar Boris of Bulgaria. In his diary entry for January 25, 1942, he describes him as a "sly, crafty fellow** who was "playing a double-faced game.** The reader is again referred to the Boris-Von Hassell conversation recorded in the Von Hassell Diaries.] March 29, 1942 The English are continuing their infamous and infernal campaign against Czar Boris, claiming he had mobilized in order to take a hand in the campaign in the East. Not a word of this is true. On the contrary, as I gather from a confidential report, the situation in Bulgaria is quite muddled. It isn't at all true that only elements friendly to the Axis are dominant there. There are also quite a number of pro-Russians, besides Free Masons, who are by no means ready to yield the field without challenge and resistance. Czar Boris has a lot of difficulties to overcome before he can bring the political situation at home into a state of absolute balance. In any case the English are groping in the dark completely if they believe the Bulgarians will attack Turkey. As a matter of fact they don't seem really to believe it themselves, but merely claim it. The Bolshevizing process to which England is now subjected is gradually extending to the United States. While this is happening only very slowly, it is nevertheless quite visible to the eye of any informed person and is continuing with frightening consistency. If this war lasts much longer, certainly the prophecy of the Fuehrer will be fulfilled according to which the states that have sicked Bolshevism on to us will themselves be devoured by it. There are rumors that P6tain wants to take Laval back into his government. Of course these rumors are as yet entirely unconfirmed. In any case Petain had a secret talk with Laval, the results of which are as yet unknown. [Pierre Laval, Premier of France in the days shortly before Nazi accession to power in Germany in 1933, became Minister for Foreign Affairs in P&ain's collaborationist cabinet of 1940, but soon had a quarrel with the chief of state whose functions he was trying gradually to take over. In 1942 P6tain invited him to join the cabinet again, this time as Premier. Laval accepted. He was found guilty of treason by a Paris court in 1946 and, after trying in vain to commit suicide by swallowing poison, was executed by a firing squad in Fresnes Prison on October 15, 1945.] Our navy journals have asked me to let them have my editorials a little sooner. They are published in all the navy papers. The members of the Navy are extremely interested in them and agree with them completely. I am happy that my editorials are held in such high esteem by the fighting forces. It proves that I have found a method of argumentation that is very effective both at home and at the front For the first time the Wehrmacht communique points out that winter may be regarded as having ended. When I hear this sentence I grow quite hot under the collar, so excited am I. Just to think of what this winter brought us in the way of sacrifices, worries, and spiritual and material torment! How long have we waited for this hour! Now it has come at last. March 30, 1942 MacArthur is being praised more and more in the United States like a general of the movies. I am having this gentleman taken down a few pegs in our propaganda services. The Americans are trying to blow him up into the greatest general of this war. After all, he has in reality nothing to show in the way of heroic deeds or achievements except his relatively brief resistance on Corregidor. Imagine what the Americans would do if they had a Dietl or a Rommel! This shows how modest we really are in our propaganda. Cripps is hoping for success in India within about a fortnight. He is proceeding rather cleverly, and there is danger that he may actually succeed in attaching India once more to England's apron strings. He still has some resistance to overcome, but one never knows to what extent English pounds sterling are brought into play at the decisive hour. I therefore order our propaganda to be reversed somewhat; namely, to the effect that the German people won't be greatly disappointed if a compromise is worked out in India. This Sunday is thoroughly spoiled by an exceptionally heavy air raid by the RAF on Luebeck. In the morning I had already received a very alarming report from our propaganda office there, which I at first assumed to be exaggerated. In the course of the evening, however, I was informed of the seriousness of the situation by a long-distance call from Kaufmann. Kaufmann believes that no German city has ever before been attacked so severely from the air. Conditions in Luebeck are in part chaotic. Kaufmann took a hand with great energy and started the necessary rescue measures, but he isn't being given the proper support from Berlin. [Karl Kaufmann, one of the Nazi Old Guard, was Gauleiter of the Hamburg area which included the Hanseatic City of Luebeck.] Immediately after that the Fuehrer called me from GHQ and was very much put out about the negligence of the Ministry of the Interior, which did not even succeed in calling the departmental heads together on Sunday evening to discuss the necessary relief measures. The Fuehrer therefore took the matter of caring for bomb-damaged areas out of the hands of the Ministry of the Interior and transferred blanket powers to me. ... By midnight everything was arranged that could possibly be done. The Ministry of the Interior has once again fizzled out completely. But that's okay with me. In that way I at least have been given plenary powers to do something without being constantly hindered by the bureaucracy. [This was probably one of Goebbels's happiest days of the year. Dr. Wilhelm Frick, as already pointed out, was his "bete noire''' in the Nazi hierarchy. Goebbels now not only received additional plenary powers—and no Nazi was hungrier for power than was the little doctor—but the man from whom this particular power was taken was none other than Dr. Frick.] March 31, 1942 The situation at Luebeck is anything but pleasant. I telephoned several times to Kaufmann, who gave me a picture of the destruction. Eighty per cent of the old part of the city must be considered lost. Stupendous numbers of works of art have fallen victim to the British craze for destruction.... April 1942 ELEVEN HUNDRED NORSE CLERICS RESIGN IN PROTEST AGAINST QUISLING RULE. GENERAL MARSHALL AND HARRY HOPKINS CONFER IN LONDON WITH BRITISH OFFICIALS. JAPANESE OVERRUN BATAAN. JAPANESE TROOPS LAND ON CEBU, P.I. QUISLING ASSUMES CONTROL OF NORWAY'S CHURCHES. LAVAL RETURNS TO POWER AS FRENCH PREMIER. RUNDSTEDT ASSUMES COMMAND OF GERMAN DEFENSES ALONG ENTIRE ATLANTIC COAST. AMBASSADOR LEAHY RECALLED FROM VICHY. JAPANESE MAINLAND BOMBED FOR FIRST TIME. GENERAL GIRAUD ESCAPES FROM GERMAN PRISON CAMP. STALIN ASSERTS SOVIET UNION HAS NO TERRITORIAL AMBITIONS IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES. GERMANS SLAY EIGHTEEN NORWEGIAN HOSTAGES. HITLER AND MUSSOLINI CONFER AT SALZBURG. April 1, 1942 Commander Endrass has failed to return from a mission. The German submarine force has thereby lost one of its ablest commanders and I a good, sympathetic, charming acquaintance with whom I was on most cordial terms. I still think with sorrow of the splendid evening I spent with Endrass at Schwanenwerder. All this young blood must now be shed for the Fatherland. War is a negative selection. It would be much better if a couple of hundred idle plutocrats at home had to walk the plank [verschuett gingeri]. As it is, however, the very best that we have are lost to us. [Schwanenwerder is a charming island in the Wannsee, a lake between Berlin and Potsdam on which thousands of Berliners spent their Sundays. Goebbels had a swanky home on Schwanenwerder, which is connected with the mainland by a small bridge. The Goebbels house was destroyed completely by Anglo-American air action. Besides his official Berlin residence, next to the American Embassy, Goebbels also had another country home; namely, in Lanke, a village about twenty-five miles north of the capital.] , 179 We shall naturally prepare much better for the next winter than we did for the last. The difficulties of the past winter were owing mainly to the fact that we had had no real experience in an eastern campaign. Now, however, we know the difficulties that confront us, and we shall take the necessary countermeasures in the course of the summer and early autumn. I cannot imagine that Churchill expected a real operational success at St. Nazaire. He owed an offensive undertaking of some sort to the man on the street and started it, although most serious sacrifices were involved, in order to make it a propaganda affair. As the English were chased home, however, with bloody heads (in so far as they got home at all) it is to be assumed that Mister Churchill will think twice in the future before he goes on such ventures. I have received a report on the internal situation in Hungary according to which that country is in the midst of a sort of state crisis. Kallay, the new Prime Minister, has long been known as hostile to Germany. Also, he was involved in rather shady deals when he was Minister of Agriculture. Bardossy resigned, as I suspected right away, because he violently opposed the appointment of the Regent's son as Deputy Regent. Young Horthy is a pronounced friend of the Jews and does not want to have much to do with the Axis Powers. . . . [Dr. Miklos Kallay de Nagy K£116 was Hungarian Prime Minister from 1942-44, after having served as Minister of Agriculture in the Fascist cabinet of Goemboes from 1932-35. He was arrested and sent to Dachau concentration camp in 1944.] Fortunately we never had any illusions about the Hungarians, so that now we are not disappointed. We shall be on the lookout so no harm can be done. . . . There certainly can no longer be any talk of a comradeship in arms, about which the Hungarians love to prate in their official speeches and when they extend their personal greetings officially. It is small comfort for me that everything I proposed in time is now being done somewhat too late. Just as it was with the collection of woollen goods, so it is now with man power. Now suddenly all influential officials are much more open- minded regarding the question of drafting women for labor. The Russian civilian population, too, is to be drafted on a very large scale for work in Germany. That means, of course, they must be fed better than the Russian prisoners thus far. Also, of course, they must be given certain privileges, as their performance will otherwise not be satisfactory. Winkler gave me a report on the movie situation. A number of personnel questions have to be discussed. The Finance Ministry is trying to soak us with new taxes, so that it will hardly be possible to build up any capital reserves for tasks after the war. But Winkler is himself a pretty shrewd financier, who knows more about these things than the bu-reauracy of the Finance Ministry. He has already found a way out that is extraordinarily clever and original and will no doubt bring him success. [Dr. Hermann Winkler, a German industrialist, had been a democratic member of the Prussian diet, but in 1933 became a Nazi. He assisted in the Nazification of German newspapers, acting as a go-between for the publishers and the Propaganda Ministry. Later Goebbels entrusted him with many of the financial deals of his ministry, especially those having to do with the motion-picture industry which, it will be remembered, was taken over entirely by Goebbels on behalf of the Reich. See the diary of January 22, 1942. As this entry shows, Goebbels did not hesitate to cheat even the Finance Ministry when it was a question of saving his "empire."] April 2, 1942 Fortunately the destruction of works of art in Luebeck has not quite reached the proportions we at first feared. St Mary's Church has been destroyed completely, and with it also the great organ, the altars, and the famous painting, "Dance of Death." Only the little tabernacle and two paintings by Overbeck were salvaged from this church. Nothing could be saved from St. Peter's Church. The Cathedral has been destroyed; only the altar by Memling and the "Cross of Triumph" by Bern Notker could be saved. St. Jacob's Church, St. Catherine's Church, and St. Ann's Museum are unharmed, and the City Library and the Archives have been saved. The Hospital of the Holy Ghost also remained unscathed. The Burg Gate and the Holsten Gate are still standing. St. Aegidia Church is only slightly damaged. The most important big patrician houses have all been destroyed. [Prewar Luebeck, especially the medieval central part, was one of the most interesting cities in northern Germany. It abounded in priceless artistic and historical monuments. Its wealth stemmed from the time of the Hanseatic League.] We received a secret report from the United States to the effect that eyewitnesses claim an extraordinarily bad situation obtains in the Soviet Union. Stalin is hardly able to master the food problem. Morale has sunk far below zero. The Soviet system can continue to maintain itself only by terrorism. I don't believe this report is too pessimistic. Roosevelt has thought up a new Christian propaganda for the Easter holidays. He compares the road of the vanquished peoples in Europe to the road to Golgotha, and claims that he of all people has been divinely ordained to protect Christianity against neo-paganism—this, of course, with the aid of the exceptionally Christian Soviets, who have distinguished themselves in the past by their religious fanaticism! We must not place too great hopes on developments in France. I consider the French people sick and worm-eaten. Nothing noteworthy in the way of positive contributions for the reconstruction of Europe is to be expected from them. .. . Once more it has been proven that the Fuehrer's policy toward France has been absolutely right. One must put the Frenchmen on ice. As soon as one flatters them, they misinterpret it. The more you keep them on tenterhooks, the sooner they are inclined to come down a peg. April 3, 1942 Observers in the United States report that there isn't the slightest enthusiasm for the war. Roosevelt has not succeeded in interesting the broad masses at all. . . . Roosevelt announced at a press conference that he intended to engender enthusiasm by military parades. He might just as well have elephants march through the streets. The Ministry of Justice is extremely nonplused and offended that Freisler is to be eliminated from conducting the Grynzpan trial and that Thierack is to take his place. Gutter-er so informed Schlegelberger, who immediately protested to the Fuehrer. But the Fuehrer's answer was "no." The Fuehrer stuck to his decision. This means we shall be in charge of the political side of the trial while Thierack is responsible for the legal. In normal times, of course, the two undersecretaries of the Ministry of Justice would have to resign in view of such a decision. It would be most desirable that they did, but they aren't thinking of it. [Roland Freisler, a former Communist turned Nazi, developed into a pedantic bureaucrat as long as he held the office of undersecretary in the Ministry of Justice. That's why Hitler declined to appoint him special judge for the trial of Herschel Grynzpan, who in Paris shot and killed Herr vom Rath of the German Embassy (see diary entry of February 11, 1942). Instead, Hitler appointed Otto Georg Thierack, president of the star chamber People's Court (Volksgerichtshof). Later Thierack was appointed Minister of Justice (see March 20, 1942) and Freisler became president of the People's Court He now became extremely radical again and not only railroaded his victims without even listening to them, but shouted and ranted at them in the most undignified manner. A newsreel of his behavior in court was shown in Nuremberg during the war crimes trial of major Nazis and generally disgusted the listeners from many countries who attended.] April 4, 1942 The English claim they dropped one thousand-pound bombs on Luebeck. The damage done there is indeed enormous. I am shown a newsreel of the destruction. It is horrible. One can well imagine how such an awful bombardment affects the population. Thank God, it is a case of North German population, which, on the whole, is much tougher than the South German or the Southeast German population. Nevertheless it can't be overlooked that English air raids have increased in scope and importance, and that if they can be continued for weeks along these lines, they might quite conceivably have a demoralizing effect on the German population. April 5, 1942 The Foreign Office still opposes publishing an item about the torpedoing of Norwegian ships that tried to go from Sweden to England. The Foreign Office claims several things are cooking with Sweden. Negotiations are under way whose effect will be to make Swedish policy bind itself one way or the other. The Swedes seriously intend to resist actively in the event of a British attack on Sweden. It remains to be seen whether they will actually do it. In any case they are today trying to give us that impression. Consequently it is extraordinarily difficult to report officially on the insolence inherent in the fact that the Swedes want to surrender the Norwegian ships under their control to the English. I now consider it necessary to let the German public know the reasons for the daily and nightly air raids on Malta. Otherwise they will get the wrong impression from the reports about them recurring in every OKW communiqu6. We should frankly tell the German people that we aren't interested in conquering Malta, but merely in interfering as far as possible with the supply lines for North Africa. And that's the truth too. [German radio listeners used to poke fun at the daily-recurring sentence in the military communique, "Malta was attacked from the air.** No damage was ever indicated, and no explanation offered why the seemingly resultless bombardments continued.] Dorothy Thompson delivered an absolutely insane speech against Hitler. It is humiliating and irritating that such foolish wenches [so dumme Frauenzimmer], whose brains can consist only of straw, have the right to speak at all in public against a historic figure of the greatness of the Fuehrer. [Dorothy Thompson was a thorn in the flesh of the Nazis as she was one of very few American columnists who really knew Germany and the German language and mentality. She had studied at Vienna University and was chief of the Central European Service of the Philadelphia Ledger and New York Evening Post, with headquarters at Berlin, from 1924-28.] I am having lots of work preparing the Grynzpan trial. The Ministry of Justice has deemed it proper to furnish the defendant, the Jew Grynzpan, the argument of Article 175. [See note under February 25, 1942.] Grynzpan until now had always claimed, and rightly so, that he had not even known the Counsellor of Legation whom he shot. Now there is in existence some sort of anonymous letter by a Jewish refugee, which leaves open the likelihood of homosexual intercourse between Grynzpan and vom Rath. It is an absurd, typically Jewish claim. The Ministry of Justice, howev- er, did not hesitate to incorporate this claim in the indictment and to send the indictment to the defendant. This shows again how foolishly our legal experts have acted in this case, and how shortsighted it is to entrust any political matter whatsoever to the jurists. I proposed to the Fuehrer that he forbid visits of German soldiers to the Pope. This series of visits has really become a public danger. The Pope, of course, embraces every opportunity to receive German soldiers in order to impress them with the whole pomp of the Vatican's ceremony. Besides, the present Pope is clever enough to use these things for obvious propaganda. He speaks German fluently and his entire bearing naturally creates the desired impression with naive soldiers, and especially officers. That's why this evil must be stopped. My campaign against blackmarketeering is also very favorably received by the people. Here, too, the people demand that the proclamation of principles be brought into agreement with the behavior of the politically prominent. (This is a jibe at such men as Goering, Frick, many of the Gauleiters, Raeder, Brauchitsch, and others who were living, or at least reported to be living, a life of luxury (chiefly due to black marketeer-ing) while the whole nation was constantly pulling its belt tighter. Goebbels loved to pose as the friend of the common man, but in reality lived quite as well as other topnotchers of the regime.] April 6, 1942 The propaganda by Bose, which is conducted and guided from here, is gradually getting on the nerves of the British. In their radio broadcasts they blame me especially for Bose's activity. It is evident that the English—and their history proves it—always look for a scapegoat when their imperial policies, founded as they are on cynicism and brutality, encounter difficulties. The Indians would be complete idiots if they allowed themselves to be influenced by empty British phrases. ... Gandhi has broken into print. He published an interview against British exploitation, but can offer nothing as a coun-termeasure except passive resistance, which naturally can't cause the English much trouble. Gandhi's policies have thus far brought nothing but misfortune to India. Had these four hundred and fifty millions of people been led by an energetic nationalist, Indian politics, and especially the Indian freedom movement, would undoubtedly be further along than they are today. [Mahatma Mohandas K. Gandhi, born 1869, devoted his life to achieving the independence of India, chiefly by passive resistance.] The Americans and the British are trying hard to interpret my last article as a sign that I am alarmed about morale inside Germany. But they are not having much luck with it as far as the public is concerned.... Nations which survived World War I and are now at the point of pulling through the second don't care at all for diplomatic intrigues and misleading propaganda. They want to know exactly what's what and what's likely to be. That's the main reason why my articles are so fascinating both for the German and the international readers. They state bluntly what we mean and talk a language that isn't otherwise customary in political circles. AH die more does such language have a right to be heard. With Lieutenant Colonel Martin, who visited me for two days in my country home, I canvassed the possibilities of camouflaging our impending offensive. Unfortunately the eyes of all international observers are turned in the direction of the southern sector of our Eastern Front, in other words, to the very point where the first offensive action is to take place. The task of German propaganda will therefore consist of focusing international attention on either the central or northern front. It remains to be seen what chances we shall have for so doing. We have already published a number o~ articles in military periodicals pointing out that possession of the capital is always the determining factor in war, but the opposition thus far hasn't bitten. I am now going to try to send Dr. Kriegk of the Nach-tausgabe, a journalist well known in Germany, to the central Eastern Front for a week and after that dispatch him to Portugal with exact instructions. He is there to attempt to divert attention into another direction by spreading rumors. I don't know yet whether he will succeed, but in any case Kriegk is talkative enough to carry out a task of this kind with a certain degree of virtuosity. [Dr. Otto Kriegk, political commentator for Alfred Hugenberg's daily Nachtausgabe (Night Edition), a boulevard sheet with conservative tendencies, was a loud-mouthed, boisterous, bulky newsman whom most American correspondents in Berlin knew but did not take seriously. He had been political adviser to Hugenberg when the latter was still chairman of the German-National party, but became an ardent Nazi after 1933. The sequal to this Goebbels venture in propaganda is recorded in the entries for May 20 and 21, 1942.] April 7, 1942 From Lisbon we had news via Sweden that the internal situation in the Soviet Union is desperate. Hunger is rampant to a degree that the human imagination cannot conceive. If Stalin doesn't soon achieve military successes on a huge scale, the Soviet system is doomed to collapse. While I don't judge the situation to be so dramatic as it is here represented, there is no doubt some truth to this analysis. April 8, 1942 I complained to the OKW about the OKM's exceptionally poor reporting on the British attack on St. Nazaire. The OKM missed the bus here completely. . . . The OKM is laying down its own independent news policy. Only Raeder knows everything that is happening within the Navy. The Fuehrer gets to know only part of it and others only a small part. That won't do. I am going to report on this to the Fuehrer with the approval of the OKW. [Grand Admiral Erich Raeder, born April 24, 1876, was a tar of the old school. He did not believe in new-fangled publicity methods of the sort Goebbels favored. Raeder received a sentence of life imprisonment from the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945. The OKM {Oberkommando der Marine) was the Supreme Command of the Navy.] The news policy of the Foreign Office also leaves much to be desired. You can't base news policies on diplomatic viewpoints. It is simply unbearable that one's own people alone in all the world know nothing about the success of military undertakings carried out by their soldiers. A drastic example of this is the sinking of Norwegian ships in the service of the English, which left Sweden and had a great number torpedoed in the Skagerrak. The Foreign Office still sits on this news and won't even condescend to publish a perfectly neutral item. Meanwhile even the last Bantu Negro knows what really happened. The German people alone are not in the know. By that sort of policy we are fairly compelling the German public to listen to foreign and enemy broadcasts! [listening to foreign radio stations was punishable by death.] I have received a report by General von Falkenhausen concerning conditions in Belgium. ... In my opinion Falkenhausen is not quite up to his tasks. What we need there is an energetic and uncompromising National Socialist. The politico-military situation, however, for the moment forbids the conversion of the military administration of Belgium into a civilian commissariat. [General Alexander von Falkenhausen, born 1878, was Military Commander of Belgium, but was dismissed by Hitler in 1944. He was arrested by the Gestapo after the July 20, 1944, attempt on the Fuehrer's fife, but was liberated at the end of the war. Until 1938 he had been military adviser to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.] [Lord] Halifax as former Viceroy of India spoke on the Indian question at a dinner in New York. He took up the various proposals hitherto made for the solution of this problem, turned against the parties, declared that there was hardly a possibility of solution left, and voiced the opinion that England should establish direct connection with the Indian people, bypassing the parties. As is customary with him, he clothed this rigorous and brutal plan in humane and religious phrases. It is quite clear what he intends. He wants to subdue the Indian people and at the same time make himself the mouthpiece for the Indian cause. The Japanese Ambassador, who is about to go from Kuibyshev to Japan on leave, has given an interview about conditions in the Soviet Union. The picture drawn by him seems to be quite true. He declared that the Russians are living under the most primitive conditions, are feeding solely on bread and pickles, but are nevertheless remaining firm and tough and confident of victory. All difficulties of daily life were overcome with the centuries-old philosophy of nichevo. [The name of the Japanese Ambassador to Russia was General Yoshitsugu Tatekawa, born 1880, and educated at the Japanese Military Staff College. In 1932 he had been military representative at the League of Nations in Geneva. He had also been chief of staff of the Japanese General Staff Office.] According to a report by Lippert, a pretty desperate situation exists in Greece. The food situation has developed into a real catastrophe. Untold men and women are dying of hunger. The Italians have taken rigorous possession of the country and the Germans are only running about as fifth wheels to the cart. We are surely making great sacrifices for the Axis friendship of our southern ally. The Greeks can hardly understand why we Germans are so liberal. They meet the Italians with open disgust and even contempt, and are more and more disposed to transfer that contempt also to us as the allies of the Italians. We are in no position at present to make any moral conquests in Greece. [Julius Lippert was formerly mayor of Berlin but had a row with Albert Speer about Berlin's building program and was deposed by Hitler. Later he became an officer in the Army.] Prostitution in Berlin is causing us many a headache these days. During a raid we found that 15 per cent of all women arrested had VD, most of them even syphilis. We must certainly do something now about it. In the long run we cannot possibly avoid setting up a "red-light district" in the Reich capital similar to those in Hamburg, Nuremberg, and other large cities. You simply cannot organize and administer a city of four millions in accordance with conceptions of bourgeois morals. I spend the evening making a first draft of my speech for the Fuehrer's birthday. I work on it with special care, because I believe it will be especially important this year. ... It will surely help to strengthen love and confidence in the Fuehrer throughout the entire nation. The Fuehrer is and always will be the central and focal point of our national life. Around him are centered the hopes of the entire people. As long as he is in our midst in good health, nobody need worry about Germany's fate. [Hitler was born April 20, 1889, at Braunau-on-the-Inn, Austria.] April 9, 1942 American Secretary of the Navy Knox who, it will be remembered, before the outbreak of the conflict opened his trap rather widely [der ja das Maul ein bischen sehr voll nahm], has now suddenly become extraordinarily reserved and modest. In general one can note that the Americans are trying hard gradually to prepare their people for the seriousness of the war and the consequences resulting therefrom. Public opinion in the United States has become essentially more skeptical. The masses of the people have become greatly disillusioned. I find it necessary to start a new campaign for greater politeness in public life. Our propaganda thus far has not had the desired result. On the streets, in the buses and streetcars, in restaurants and theaters, extremely coarse language [ein Sauherdentori] has gradually become a habit It jars the nerves and cannot be tolerated any longer. April 11,1942 A black day for the enemy side. The Americans must admit they have evacuated Bataan. They now have nothing more to defend in the Philippines except Corregidor.... The whole United States is in a dither. The hero's halo they gave MacArthur is fading. We are naturally going to seize upon this opportunity. This big shot, whom New York only a few days ago still tried to sell as the outstanding genius of the century, will now be unmasked completely by our propaganda. I have received confidential information to the effect that the Pope has appealed to the Spanish bishops under all circumstances to see to it that Spain stays out of the war. He supports his argument with humanitarian phrases. In reality he thereby gives expression to his enmity for the Axis. It is clear nonsense for a spiritual and ecclesiastical power to meddle so much in political and military questions. After the war we shall have to see to it that as far as our country is concerned at least, such attempts at interference are rendered impossible. A new, heavy conflict with the OKH has started. The successor of Colonel Hesse, Lieutenant Colonel Schwadtlo-Gesterding, had Lieutenant Mansfeldt, in private life public-relations man for I.G. Farben, deliver a speech to the PK men which is just about the limit. According to that speech, the army reporters may report only about the Army. If they see anything in any theater of war that has been done or carried out by some other element of the Wehrmacht, they are shamefully to be silent about it.... [Colonel Hesse, Lieutenant Colonel Schwadtlo-Gesterding, and Lieutenant Mansfeldt were in the public-relations department of the Supreme Army Command. PK stands for Propaganda-Kompagnie. The PKs {Propaganda-Kompagnien) were military companies of newsmen. That is, men with journalistic training, instead of becoming combat soldiers, were drafted as soldiers of the pen, and as such were under the same commands as the rest of the Army. They could be sent to any combat area on orders, unlike the American war correspondent who decided for himself to what extent he was willing to risk his life. Many publishing houses—most of them belonged to the Nazi party—welcomed the arrangement because they had to pay no salaries to the PKs and because civilian pensions were not due the widows and next of kin in the event of death. Such families merely received the regular military pensions.] I shall now become energetic and demand that the OKH remove the two officers at once, because I have no intention of bothering with nitwits in the difficult task of collaboration between the Propaganda Ministry and the various departments of the Wehrmacht. I shall require that hereafter only specially selected propagandists be placed in key positions since otherwise I cannot guarantee success for our common endeavor. April 12, 1942 Before his departure, he [Cripps] admonished the Indian population to hold itself in readiness for its fight for liberation—a thing that it will undoubtedly do, but in quite a different sense from what Mr. Cripps had in mind Taken by and large, the failure of British diplomacy in India is an eloquent sign of the increasingly critical developments within the empire itself. As a result pessimism in England is growing from hour to hour. One even has the impression of a Parliamentary and Party "Daemmerung." [This refers to the Goetterdaemmerung, or twilight of the gods, which plays such a role in Wagnerian opera.] April 13, 1942 India is still in the forefront of the international situation. The British are now making an earnest attempt to unload the blame for the breakdown of negotiations on the Indians themselves. That is childish and ludicrous, but corresponds exactly to the British character, which never finds fault with itself but always with others. London declares pompously that the mission of Cripps has not been a failure. The gods only know where one can find any success. In the United States they still haven't got over the heavy loss of materiel and prestige occasioned by the fall of Bataan. American pride and national sensitiveness received a heavy blow. The Jews acted somewhat prematurely when they inflated movie hero MacArthur into a great general. You don't get to be a great general by letting pedestrians wear your picture in their buttonholes—you have to achieve a couple of victories. MacArthur can hardly produce any. The Fuehrer approved my speech for his birthday without a single change and feels very happy about it. He especially liked the parallel I drew with the critical time of the Seven Years* War. My article against the "War of Paper" also received his complete approval. [The Seven Years' War was fought by Prussia and Austria from 1756-63. Prussia under Frederick the Great won, and Austria under Maria Theresa had to cede Silesia.] I am of the opinion that existing evils within the Reich cannot be removed merely by propaganda and enlightenment. We must put more blood into our propaganda. I am going to try that for the first time in connection with our campaign for greater politeness. This propaganda venture is to be given red substance by calling upon the public to help actively. I shall offer prizes, for instance, for the most polite traffic officer, the most polite official at the ration centers, the most polite waiter, et cetera. I shall make larger sums of money available for this campaign. Possibly the first prize will be a present of 1,000 marks cash. The public itself is to be the judge. By this method I hope to achieve more tangible results than by mere exhortations. April 14, 1942 In the near future we intend to offer the Eastern Front a large amount of mosquito netting. The mosquito plague was simply unbearable for the soldiers during the past summer. The OKW has already made some preparations along that line, but after my experiences in connection with supplying the troops with winter clothing I don't pay much attention to that. I am therefore having this matter looked into carefully, and if, as far as any human being can foresee, the measures undertaken are not sufficient, we shall help once again by a popular campaign. The Wehrmacht is not in a position to carry through such improvisations. The Grynzpan trial is now to start in the middle of May. I still have a few preparations to make. Preparations by the Department of Justice are in some respects not very clever psychologically. Thus, for instance, the problem of homosexuality, which really isn't under discussion, has been drawn into the trial procedure, and the question of Jewish evacuations is also to be dealt with publicly. I think this is about as bungling as possible. ... I shall see to it that these two sets of questions are not raised in court at all. All the other preparations were made in accordance with my directives and, if carried out, will undoubtedly make the trial a perfect success. Gluttony in foreign missions is creating a lot of bad blood. Thus a reception was recently held in the Croatian Legation during which a thousand of our people prominent in state, Party, and Wehrmacht filled their bellies. This is such an unworthy and shameless behavior that something has to be done against it. I demanded of the Foreign Office that it reduce the rations for the diplomats, and especially cut the allocation of gasoline down drastically, since a situation has developed whereby certain diplomats get themselves "gasoline sweethearts" with whom they go on excursions on Sundays out into God's free nature. That naturally causes severe criticism by the public. The diplomats should adjust themselves to the general usages of the country. They have no right to live the lives of drones at our expense, especially not when they are diplomats representing powers that are on terms of friendship with us and are fighting the war on our side. [Diplomats at the German capital were given much better gasoline, food, clothing, and liquor rations than German citizens.] The Americans launched a naval building program via the neutral press that is nothing short of grotesque. But we know what we are to think of American statistics. The Americans are trying to impress world public opinion by their fantastic figures. The course of the war thus far has shown convincingly what there is behind it! Churchill delivered his speech in the House in the course of the afternoon... . His language is exceptionally modest. After all, he has nothing outstanding to report in the way of successes, but plenty of setbacks, defeats, and reverses. Nevertheless I don't believe that English morale is in any way rotten at the core. The English can stand a lot of beating before they become rebellious and notice things. Churchill certainly is the mouthpiece of the English people in so far as his imperturbability and his bragging are concerned. The Japanese Ambassador in Kuibyshev, Tatekawa, who has returned to Tokyo, has made very favorable statements about internal conditions within the Soviet Union. These reports have been written for a definite purpose and therefore don't offend us. The Japanese have a couple of things under their hat for the coming summer. They must create an alibi for themselves. They are following a very logical policy and diplomacy. That was proven by the example of America. One need have no doubts whatsoever concerning the fidelity of Japan toward her allies. If once in a while they make detours, this is done for tactical reasons only. April 15, 1942 The Japanese Ambassador in Kuibyshev, Tatekawa, . . . made too much noise about conditions inside the Soviet Union. Our Ambassador Ott objected, and as a result the Japanese Foreign Office censured him and called him to order. [The Nazis were always very quick in protesting through their envoys against anything that did not meet with their pleasure. In this case the task of making the protest devolved upon General Eugen Ott, the German Ambassador in Tokyo.] Almost no hopes are entertained [by the United States] regarding Corregidor. The Americans, too, admit they can hold out for only a few days more. The situation there must be simply horrible. Meanwhile General MacArthur sits in Australia and issues fervent appeals to his troops—a thing that is possible only in America. With us stones would be thrown at a general of that sort Interrogations of English prisoners of war at St. Nazaire indicate that our propaganda in England has been more effective than we imagined. The English pay more attention, however, to news than to argument. I conclude from this that all our foreign-language broadcasts, but especially those beamed to England, must be changed fundamentally. Times are no longer suited for long discussions. Just as during the fight of the National Socialist movement against the Republic there was a stage when the handbill was no longer effective because it was outmoded, so there is a stage now when argumentation is no longer effective. I slant our foreign-language broadcasting services chiefly in the direction of news, but see to it that the proper tendency is mixed into the news items. I have received an exhaustive report about internal conditions in Sweden. Sentiment for the Reich has decreased rather than improved. I believe the chief reason for this is our weak diplomacy. Of course it can't be denied that events in Norway are having considerable effect upon Swedish sentiment. The Church fight started by Terboven and Quisling seems as superfluous to me as a goiter. The English intended establishing a connection with the eastern theater of war via Sweden. But the Swedes are determined to oppose by force of arms anybody who attacks their territory. At least that's what they say today. It would have been better if we had also taken Sweden during our campaign in the north. This state has no right to national existence anyway. The situation in Vichy has now been clarified so far as to show that in all likelihood Laval will enter the government in a few days as Prime Minister. This is a tremendous advantage for us, and for that reason it causes alarm in London and in Washington In any case a France under Laval, even though this French politician is personally most unsympathetic, is far more acceptable than a France of attentisme, with which you never know where you are at. [PStain followed a policy of what the French call attentisme —something like the American "watchful waiting."] Herr von Neurath visited me and told me how he is now living. He feels rather shelved at a time when he enjoys the best of health. His attitude toward the Fuehrer is most loyal. All in all Hen* von Neurath is a gentleman, who has never been guilty of any incorrectness or disloyalty toward the Fuehrer. The next time I report to the Fuehrer I shall tell him about this visit. Maybe the Fuehrer will see a new possibility for making use of Herr von Neurath. [Baron Konstantin von Neurath and especially his wife were exceedingly ambitious to play a top role. After Hitler deposed Von Neurath as Foreign Minister to make room for the more robust Joachim von Ribbentrop, Von Neurath accepted the post of Protector of Bohemia-Moravia. Here, too, he proved ineffective and was replaced by Reinhard Heydrich, "The Hingman." (See diary entry for February 15, 1942.) But apparently v on Neurath was still hankering after office.] Viktor Lutze visited me and did a lot of complaining. He is an unfortunate character. Everywhere he offends, everywhere he criticizes and gripes. The work nearest at hand he doesn't do; instead he is busy with all sorts of nonsense that has no relation to the war at all. Everywhere he senses filth and treachery, everywhere he feels that his SA has been put in the shade, and that he, personally, is out in the cold. But meanwhile he arranges for meeting Gauleiter Wagner, whom we have fired, keeps up his personal contact with Brauchit-sch, et cetera. I hardly think he can be helped. Naturally I once more appealed most emphatically to him. He realizes that the course he is pursuing is the wrong one; but heaven alone knows how long the effect of my admonitions will last. It is too bad about this old, doughty Party comrade and disciple of the Fuehrer. He has got into the wrong hands, and doesn't possess sufficient intelligence and strength of character to withstand baleful suggestions. I shall keep him under further observation. [Josef Wagner (1899-1945) was Gauleiter and governor of Silesia until 1942, when he was dismissed by Hitler. He was at that time also Price Commissioner. He was not regarded as radical enough by the Fuehrer. Wagner was executed early in 1945 for complicity in the plot to remove Hitler. Von Hassell speaks favorably of him in his Diaries. Wagner, incidentally, was the only former Gauleiter who was purged with thousands of others, chiefly Wehrmacht people and noblemen and their families, after the unsuccessful attempt on Hitler's life on July 20, 1944.] April 16, 1942 Laval's appointment as Prime Minister is the principal theme of the Anglo-American press. Our enemies realize that important consequences may result from this change in the course of French politics. That's why Laval is being insulted and called the worst possible names. He is called the Quisling of France, traitor to the Anglo-American cause, and the like. Anger in the United States and England is very great Roosevelt delivered a speech in which he said the war was likely to last two or three years. Nevertheless he still believes firmly in victory. His arguments to prove it are very thin and without substance. Easter transportation is described as nothing short of horrible. My decree had no real effect because the railway administration did everything possible to annul it quietly. Conditions in the trains simply baffled description. It is high time that the top man in the Transportation Ministry be changed. Old Mr. Dorpmueller has neither the technical nor personal qualifications to master the problems of our communications and transportation. [Dr. Julius Dorpmueller, Minister of Communications and Transportation (Reichsverkehrsminister) , was retained by Hitler even though he was not a Nazi, because of his unusual knowledge of railroading. It is therefore surprising for Goebbels to claim that Dorpmueller lacked the technical qualifications for his job. What probably irked Goebbels much more was the fact that a key position like this was not in the hands of a dyed-in-the-wool Party member. Dorpmueller was a holdover from the Bruening and Papen cabinets. At private parties he often made fun of Nazi leaders. Early in the Nazi regime a gang of radical Nazis, at the instigation of Goebbels, made a protest march to Dorpmueller's offices, demanding his resignation. Hitler, however, stepped in and insisted on retaining his Transportation Minister, who, as head of the German railways, could boast of being the largest single employer of labor in Europe.] April 17, 1942 Our arms and munitions situation is exceptionally strained. Undoubtedly, however, the same thing prevails on the other side. Nevertheless there is cause for some alarm. Unfortunately much was neglected on this sector. We took the matter of arms and munitions production far too lightly and now have to pay for it. The United States has already cut off its charities for France. There are pious Christians for you! They sing anthems when they want to subjugate small peoples, but the moment something doesn't quite suit them they throw their Christianity and their Bible overboard, and revert to their aboriginal instincts of a hyena-like greed for booty. I had a long talk with the director of the Ministry of Justice, to whom I made clear that Justice has the task, especially during a war, to serve the leaders of the people and not vice versa. The Ministry of Justice regrets very much not having closer contact with the political leaders during the war, especially with the Fuehrer. I indicated my willingness to establish this contact I shall now direct my attention more to the administration of law. Criticism alone won't change anything; one must attempt to get along with the existing forces, as they cannot be changed anyway In any case the gentlemen of the Ministry of Justice are quite willing and ready to follow a legal course that will tie them in more with the people; they must merely be told what is wanted, and I shall certainly do this aplenty. [By a legal course that will tie them in more with tne people" Goebbels really means mob justice. He consistently advocated a justice based on the "healthy common sense" (gesunden Menschenverstand) of the people. Instigated by Party headquarters, Nazis would often march to a courthouse and demand "justice.'! I also had a long talk with Dr. Ley. He reported about his impressions on sentiment among the people and showed he had pretty strong illusions of which I cured him effectively. Dr. Ley hasn't the faintest inkling of what's happening among the people, although he is constantly on the go traveling around among plants and factories. He pursues a policy of self-deception which, if it became general, would someday bitterly avenge itself. I consider it my duty to open his eyes, and do this very successfully. He also told me a lot of details about Party happenings, especially the case of the demoted Gauleiter Josef Wagner, which was handled entirely wrong when it reached the Reich Investigation and Arbitration Committee. Reich Justice Buch judges matters of this kind according to purely juridical viewpoints. This, however, was an eminently political question. No wonder the Fuehrer was in a rage about the verdict and expressed his determination not to take it into account in any way! That's right. Why should the Fuehrer, as the Party's leader of the German people, bother about the Investigation and Arbitration Committee! Judges are everywhere the same, whether they are active in the state or in Party life! A jurist seems predestined to falsify and channel in the wrong direction every case that is perfectly clear and open and shut. [The Reich Investigation and Arbitration Committee was an organization of the Party and handled cases of Party members only. It had a presiding judge, Walter Buch, like any other court. Ordinarily Hitler respected its findings, but not in the case t>f Gauleiter Wagner, whose exact offense is not revealed by Goebbels. Goebbels had no respect for law of any kind, as this day's entry clearly shows.] April 18, 1942 The guessing game in London and Washington concerning the pending appointment of Laval continues. Laval is developing into the most sensational and mysterious personality of present-day international politics. The enemy powers worry more and more about him. They already have visions of the French Fleet operating in the Mediterranean with the Italian and the German fleets. They see Malta and Alexandria lost, et cetera. Also, the appointment of Rundstedt as supreme commander in the West elicits great interest. It has become known to the enemy only now. [The name of Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt will always be associated with the "Battle of the Bulge," also known as the "Rundstedt offensive," in December 1944. It was one of the greatest surprise movements of World War II. In an interview with American and British war correspondents in May 1945, the captured field marshal denied that he was the author of the offensive. He said he acted on higher orders and tried to make the best of it. Lack of gasoline for the tanks, he said, was one principal reason for its collapse.] I received a report written by the former United States Ambassador in Moscow Davies, entitled, "What we did not know about Russia." This report is extraordinarily favorable to the Soviet Union. Davies has a very high opinion of the ability of the Bolsheviks to resist. The Bolshevik leaders, headed by Stalin, are described as true friends of the people. Obviously Potemkin villages were shown this gentleman. [Joseph E. Davies, former chairman of the United States Federal Trade Commission, was Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. from 1936-38, from where he was transferred to Belgium, and later to the State Department. At this time he was charged with carrying a special letter to Stalin from President Roosevelt. This episode was dramatized in the much-discussed motion picture, Mission to Moscow. The expression, "to show a Potemkin village," refers to an episode during the reign of Czarina Catherine II. When she visited the Crimea in 1787, the governor general for the southern Russian provinces, Prince Gregory Potemkin, had fake villages, complete with happy dancing villagers, erected along the way, thereby greatly impressing the Empress as to his achievements.] The Daily Express has published a report on sentiment in the United States. According to it, people in the United States are at present anything but friendly to England. England is blamed for having let the United States slide into this war. The British correspondent states with resignation that one can hardly discover a single friend of England in the United States. I believe, on the whole, that is true. The Americans will be hopping mad at the British who concocted this soup and now ask the Americans to eat it. I am taking no notice in the German propaganda of these controversies between England and America. They should develop of themselves. Magda [Goebbels] visited a hospital in the course of the afternoon. Unfortunately conditions in this hospital are none too good. The head physician seems not to be able to handle the wounded right, so their morale is pretty low. I am going to take a hand there and see that things are changed. The wounded have a right to proper treatment not only in a physical but also a psychological way. April 19, 1942 At the northern end of the central Eastern Front we have noted a curious Bolshevik loud-speaker propaganda: The Bolsheviks announced that they would attack in four days. Once before the enemy made known his intentions in a similar manner and then actually launched the attack. One just doesn't know what to make of this queer conception of propaganda. For the enemy the net result was that his losses were all the greater. Lieutenant Colonel Martin reported information reaching him from officer levels on the Eastern Front. It appears that my articles in the Reich are at present the most desired material for discussion on the entire front. Officers and soldiers agree that my articles point up the situation with rare realism and that the impression is as though I were there among the soldiers to record their sentiments so accurately and clearly. This is very encouraging proof to me of the close contact existing between our ministry and the front. It shows that we are not surrounded by a Chinese wall but, on the contrary, know exactly what's what, where the shoe pinches our soldiers, and what must be said to them so that they won't lose confidence in the leadership of the Reich and the state. From the interior of the country I have received similar reports. It fills one with joy at so critical a time still to have the ear of the people. Americans are insolent toward the French. They declare that Leahy will be withdrawn for good. [Sumner] Welles has handed the press representatives a communiqu6 that fairly bristles with insults and threatens the French in so provocative a manner that he himself must realize only little can be achieved thereby. The Frenchmen would have to be real eunuchs if they even considered such hold-up threats. [Admiral Wm. D. Leahy was at that time American Ambassador to the Vichy Government.] A merry fight has broken out in Australia about MacAr-thur's jurisdiction. The Americans would like to give him the supreme command without any strings attached, but the Australians don't seem very much inclined to approve. It appears they have seen through this American general with his somewhat unmilitary propaganda methods. Anyway, the political and military prestige of the Americans has sunk very low. You just can't conduct war with nice words alone. You must be able to record victories, and the Americans at present have exceptionally little to offer. I had a little set-to with Gauleiter Buerckel who is again trying to push his plan for creating a new cultural office and not to place it under the jurisdiction of the Reich propaganda office. I won't permit that. Such a procedure is absolutely senseless, especially now in wartime, when there is such a chronic lack of man power. [Joseph Buerckel was Gauleiter for the Saar region, which the Nazis renamed Gau Westmark] Mutschmann is having a fight with the mayor of Dresden, who is pursuing plans of his own about the theater. I am going to order him and Mayor Nieland to come to me and will give both a piece of my mind. [Martin Mutschmann was Gauleiter of Saxony.] Thank God, it now develops that the OKH has made proper preparations for mosquito netting and scarves for the coming summer period in the East. At least in this matter they have learned something from their failures last winter. April 20, 1942 All signs indicate that the American public is extremely disappointed at the course of the war thus far. It had expected much more from what Mr. Knox advertised a few months ago as the "beginning of the shooting war." The Americans are therefore bragging about millions of soldiers whom they are training by all rules of the book for every theater of war. It would be better if some tens of thousands of these soldiers were already in the theaters of war where the war is actually being waged, and not on alleged training fields where you merely practice playing at war. The French Cabinet shift still elicits great interest in the world. We continue to maintain reservations. The Americans have come somewhat to their senses. They are going to leave Leahy in Vichy after all. The reason assigned is that his wife has fallen ill. Plutocratic governments must have an excuse for everything; be it ever so rotten, it is advanced anyway. [As a matter of fact Admiral Leahy's wife was gravely ill at the time and died soon thereafter. The admiral returned to America June 1, 1942.] The most recent act of sabotage [in France] against a German military train which resulted in several deaths will be punished with severe reprisals. The number of people to be shot will be doubled, and over a thousand Communists and Jews will be put into freight cars and shipped East. There they will soon cease to see any fun in disturbing Germany's policies for order in Europe. Gandhi gave an interview in which he once again urged non-resistance. He is a fool whose policies seem merely calculated to drag India further and further into misfortune. The birthday of the Fuehrer . . . was celebrated in the late afternoon by an impressive demonstration in Berlin Philharmonic Hall. All who have rank or power in the state, the Party, and the Wehrmacht, were assembled there. The remainder of Philharmonic Hall was reserved for soldiers, the wounded, and munitions workers. It was a very dignified and solemn occasion. The celebration began with the air from the suite in D-Major by Bach. My speech ... met with great approval.... In the evening Goering, too, issued a birthday proclamation to the German people in which he paid tribute to the personality of the Fuehrer in very dignified language. Unfortunately my health at present is none too good. The eczema caused by nerves is giving me a good deal of trouble. I r»haJJ have to relax for two or three weeks to recover. How happy we may all be that winter is now finally over! The worst worries it brought are now past. That doesn't m?Ln that we are without worries, but the sun is brightening up the approaches sufficiently so that we can again consider where we are standing and whither we are going. Soon we shall have to move into new land in our military activity. For a moment we shrink back and once more calculate the dangers and risks involved. But experience teaches that once the first step—which is always the hardest—has been taken, the second and third follow automatically and after that the march into the future develops automatically. April 21, 1942 The military commander in France has adopted more stringent measures on account of the railway sabotage of the sixteenth instant. Thirty hostages (Jews and persons close to the perpetrators) are to be shot instead of the twenty originally intended. If the perpetrators are not caught within three days, an additional eighty are to be shot and a thousand Jews and Communists (instead of the five hundred originally intended) are to be deported eastward. The English are at present in a very difficult position from a military viewpoint. The Bolsheviks are demanding more of them than they are at present ready or even able to give. So they must do a lot of bragging. They thereby cause us a certain embarrassment since we consider it more purposeful not to deny the crazily exaggerated successes of the British air raids. The German people, of course, are quite aware of the "efficacy" of these air attacks. When, for example, the English claim they destroyed and ruined the Ruhr region almost completely, everybody knows this is a stupid and obvious lie with which to impress the Bolsheviks. When, on the other hand, our exceedingly heavy air raids on Malta are represented by the English as fun for the Maltese population, that merely bears evidence to the cynicism with which the London plutocrats fight their war. We have received the report of a deserter from Leningrad, according to which conditions there must be simply catastrophic. Even though there may be some exaggerations, it seems, nevertheless, that the food situation in this city of millions cries to high heaven. The deserter claimed more than a million people had already died of hunger. That may not be true, but nevertheless tens and hundreds of thousands of human beings are living there in direst and most unbearable distress. The deserter claimed that a great part of the population was now feeding on so-called human flesh jelly made of the flesh of dead or fallen citizens and soldiers. The whole report is so revolting that it makes one's stomach turn to read it. April 22, 1942 The DeGaullists and Communists claim—and they aren't entirely wrong either—that Laval was involved in former French corruption scandals and is not qualified to represent France in the New Europe. But that is a matter of indifference to us. We could hardly find a better man than Laval for our policies. ... We shall probably have to pay Laval something in case he fulfills the hopes we placed in him. But first it is up to him to show what he can do. During the night a new and fatal attempt was made on the life of a German soldier in Paris. The reprisals are very severe. Ten hostages are shot, five hundred Communists, DeGaullists and Jews are shipped to an eastern labor camp, the curfew hour is set much earlier, and theaters, places of amusement, and movie houses are closed altogether. I am insistent that at last we publish in advance the names of all hostages who are to be shot (die schussreif sind). By doing so we will at least ensure that the relatives and friends who usually stem from the same circles as the perpetrators get busy and try at least to find the perpetrator. The military commander in Paris is quite ready to adopt my suggestion. For the present, however, he has no hostages, and will first have to look around for some. Marshall and Hopkins, who have returned to the United States, fairly outdo each other bragging. They issue insane figures about production, and claim that within three months activities will have begun on the continent. The only thing they were still worried about was the scarcity of shipping space. I see in these Anglo-American threats nothing but an attempt to frighten us. By telling such tall tales they would like to induce us to leave as many troops as possible in the West. They think they are thereby making an effective contribution to the Bolshevik war. That, of course, is a calculation which they made without consulting us. We shall determine for ourselves what we need for the West; indeed the Fuehrer has already determined this long since. No changes need be made in this respect. Enough is concentrated there to beat back immediately any Anglo-American attempts to gain a foothold on the continent. - Willkie wants to take control of the Republican party. For the present he has been given the bum's rush [Vorlaeufig wird er mit Glanz und Glorie abgeblitzt]. No doubt this corruptible character has lost all credit with the Republican voters. [The fact that Wendell Willkie stemmed from German origins but nevertheless fought the Nazis meant but one thing to a man of Goebbels's character: Willkie must be a "corruptible character" whom the Allies bought!] April 23, 1942 Neutral reporters indicate that London is full of rumors about invasions in both directions. Churchill is certainly thinking up measures of desperation in order to stir up the English public. All reports from the United States agree that there isn't a spark of enthusiasm for war discernible there. That explains why Willkie in the Republican committee meeting demanded a more aggressive policy. We have received amazing reports about conditions in Kuibyshev. Hell has broken loose there. One can understand, of course, that Stalin is having most serious difficulties about food. The loss of the Ukraine cannot be dismissed simply with a wave of the hand. While the disaster resulting from this loss will have its full impact only later, it is nevertheless inescapable. It is reported from the United States that the Americans have declared our patents void \fuer vogelfrei erklaert ha-ben]. That fits their mentality exactly. I have the impression anyway that the Americans participate in a European war every quarter century in order to be able to take for themselves as cheaply and easily as possible whatever cultural work has been done in Europe. The American continent is hardly in a position to bring forth anything of its own in the cultural realm. It is dependent upon imports from Europe, and as the Americans are so crazy about money they naturally like to take possession of the results of our creative and inventive labors as far as possible without paying for them. The Metropolitan Opera has been closed. And that happens in a country that has only a single opera and whose leadership is insolent enough to wage war on behalf of a European culture allegedly threatenened by us! It surely is a crazy world in which we are living. That a man like Willkie today has the possibility in America of inciting to war even more violently than Roosevelt is a further sign of the moral decadence of America. I suppose it is chiefly due to Jewish leadership. Former Democratic Reichstag Deputy Lemmer, who is now a foreign correspondent in Berlin, accompanied Oshima on a trip to the southeast. He gave us a detailed report from which we gather that Oshima spoke extremely eloquently in favor of the Axis policies. He behaved very cleverly and tactfully. He made no bones about his opinions, especially not about being pro-German, and thereby achieved great successes both in Bucharest and Budapest. At the moment Oshima is engaged in clearing away a large number of misunderstandings prevalent in Tokyo about conditions inside Germany. Oshima is really one of the most successful champions of Axis policies. A monument ought later to be erected in his honor in Germany. To this man we chiefly owe the fact that Japan took a hand in the present conflict. [Ernst Lemmer during the Nazi regime was correspondent for Hungarian and Swiss newspapers. He is now co-chairman with Jakob Kaiser of the Christian-Democratic Union party of Berlin.] My articles are described as being exceptionally effective. The article about the "War of Paper" has indeed wrought a veritable miracle. My definition of griping as the "bowel movement of the soul"—so I am informed by the SD service— has already become a household word in the entire nation, Sweden and Switzerland still haven't formally joined the International Moving Picture Association. I am now having these two states boycotted by not supplying them with raw material. They will soon begin to feel the effects of their acting in such an aloof way. Italian films in Germany are netting the Italians much more money than our German films net us in Italy. That fact is gradually causing us some foreign-exchange difficulties. The UFA has worked up a new export plan whereby we can gradually lay our hands on the entire Italian movie export in Europe. I hope the Italians fall for it [The UFA, Germany's largest motion-picture concern, is fully explained in a note in entry of March 5, 1943.] Gauleiter Grohe of Cologne reported to me about the sentiment in the western provinces. He has taken over his new duties as Reich Defense Commissar and with them a great responsibility. Sentiment, he says, is absolutely consolidated and unified. Even the British air raids were unable to change the attitude of the population much. Groh6 declared—and undoubtedly he is absolutely right in this—that the unfavorable reports on morale sent to Berlin do not correspond to the facts. People who wrote them did not have the ability to estimate sentiment correctly. His estimate of morale there just about corresponds to my own experience. [Joseph Grohe\ Gauleiter of Cologne, was a loud-mouthed Old Guard Nazi who placarded all Cologne only a few days before the victorious entry of the American troops with posters, admonishing every inhabitant of the ancient city on the Rhine to remain at his post, come what might. This appeal to heroism did not hinder him from leading the procession of Nazi officeholders who crossed the Rhine in a panic as the Americans drew near, thus abandoning the city to its fate and leaving it without an administration.] April 24, 1942 The number of [Russian] deserters is on the increase although the Bolsheviks have heard from the population and escaped prisoners about executions, exposure to freezing, and bad treatment in the PW camps and are therefore afraid of German imprisonment. The Bolsheviks made clever use of such information. For instance, they gathered together soldiers who had returned from German imprisonment in schools where they were briefly indoctrinated and then divided among various troop elements to deliver lectures about the cruel treatment of prisoners by the Germans. Instructions have now been issued by us for better treatment of Soviet prisoners and for differentiation in the treatment of deserters and of real prisoners. It is clear that Churchill is once again playing an extraordinarily insolent and impudent game. He can dare play it only with the English population. We would have to beware of doing anything like it to the German people. For instance, if in the autumn of 1940 we had advertised an invasion of the British Isles with so much noise and publicity even though it was not planned and could not be executed, without afterward starting it, that would have been nothing short of disastrous for our propaganda. The British can do a thing like that. The British people are like children and in addition have the limitless patience of sheep. They stand for having the invasion theme played again and again without compelling Churchill to make good. Unfortunately we were somewhat behind the times in connection with the English undertaking at Boulogne. The reason, of course, was because the motorcycle rider who was to bring the report to the Army Group command point had an accident. As a result the English had a few hours' handi- cap, and experience shows that whoever speaks the first word to the world is always right. [British Commandos on April 22 raided Boulogne, withdrawing after a two-hour foray. It was intended as a foray only, but the Goebbels Ministry tried to blow it up into a major defeat—the repressing of an attempted major invasion.] I have received statistics about the number of Jews in the American radio, movies, and press. The percentage is truly terrifying. The Jews are 100 per cent in control of the film, and 90 to 95 per cent of the press and radio. That fact explains the confused spiritual conduct of the war by the enemy. The Jews aren't always so clever as they would like themselves to believe. Whenever they are in danger they prove to be the stupidest devils. To put a damper on public indignation Roosevelt has announced he intended to tax war profits very highly. On the other hand dividends are declared by the American munitions industry that simply make your hair stand on end. Our prognosis regarding this war is surely right. It is being conducted by the capitalists of all countries against the German social commonwealth. Were the latter—as is not to be presumed—to lose the war, the world would relapse into darkest social reaction. Dorpmueller during his conversation with Gutterer was insolent about me. This old man, to whom we owe the fact that transport difficulties during the past winter almost got the better of us and who in 1933 was accepted into our regime only as a gesture of grace and charity, now dares to eet fresh \pampi?] shortly before reaching retirement age. But I shall finish him off all right. The Fuehrer telephoned me from GHQ. He has now at last decided to deliver a speech, already planned for some time, before the Reichstag concerning the situation and all the conclusions which he must draw from it. We deliberate as to which day would be most suitable for this session of the Reichstag and agree that it is to be called for 3 p.m. next Sunday. I immediately made the necessary preparations and am very happy that the Fuehrer is now to come to Berlin for a few days. He gave me an exceptionally optimistic picture of the situation along the various fronts. He himself is in the best of health. Naturally we cannot go into details over the telephone because there is always the danger of someone listening in. I am always happy when the Fuehrer is in Berlin because I can then have several long talks with him. The evening brought me a lot of work accumulated during the afternoon. All you need to do is to leave your desk a few hours and when you return you find it snowed under. I hope at the end of the coming week to be able to go to Lanke to relax for a short time. That is absolutely necessary. The condition of my health leaves much to be desired at present, and I believe I shall need health more than anything else during the difficult months ahead. April 25,1942 The Japanese Ambassador in Kuibyshev, General Tateka-wa, now reports somewhat differently about internal conditions in the Soviet Union. It appears that rose-tinted spectacles were put on him in Kuibyshev and have now been taken off again in Tokyo. In the United States they are continuing to bore at the British world empire. Roosevelt makes no bones about his appetite for India. The Indians in a bellicose declaration turn against these American attempts at penetration. Our Admiralty has energetically denied the allegation that the air defense had not functioned properly during the last raid on Kiel, in the course of which several battleships and the Monte Sarmiento were seriously damaged. This denial by the naval command is not very convincing. The leadership of the German Navy isn't what it ought to be. There is too much praying going on there and too little work. [This is ft jibe at Grand Admiral Erich Raeder ("Papa Erich") who was a stanch Protestant.] Field Marshal General von Mackensen again pleaded with me that I lift the ban on the Christian weekly, The Best Friend. I have sent repeated warnings to this weekly, but in view of the delicate character of this request I shall refer the whole matter to the Fuehrer at the next possible opportunity. I had a long talk with Governor General Dr. Frank. He described conditions in the General Government. These are extremely complicated. Dr. Frank and his collaborators have succeeded absolutely in balancing the budget of the General Government. He is already squeezing all sorts of money out of there. The food situation, too, has been brought into equilibrium. . . . Frank is .convinced that much more could be got out of the General Government. Unfortunately we lack man power everywhere for carrying out tasks like these. He must get along with a minimum of help. [Hanns Frank, Governor General of Occupied Poland, was another of Hitler's earliest adherents. In fact, he defended Hitler during the numerous political trials in which the Nazi chieftain became involved in the days of the Weimar Republic. Hitler at first rewarded him by making him Reich's Leader of the Legal Profession and president of a newly founded Academy of Law. While Governor General of Poland he acted like an oriental potentate. He wrote some sixty volumes of diary which proved most incriminating for him during the Nuremberg War Criminals Trial. He was hanged for his atrocities committed on Jews.] An article appeared in the Nationalzeitung of Bern [Switzerland] written by the publisher ... in which he pointed out that it is owing chiefly to the arguments which I have kept repeating over and over again that of all nations the German people has the most realistic attitude toward the war. He is quite right about that! The inhabitants of the Ukraine were more than inclined at the beginning to regard the Fuehrer as the savior of Europe and to welcome the German Wehrmacht most cordially. This attitude has changed completely in the course of months. We have hit the Russians, and especially the Ukrainians, too hard on the head with our manner of dealing with them. A clout on the head is not always a convincing argument—and that goes, too, for the Ukrainians and Russians. In the course of the evening we had a little party at home and I had an opportunity to speak at length and alone to the daughter of the Duce and wife of the Italian Foreign Minister, Countess Ciano. In contrast to previous visits, she impressed me this time as exceptionally serious and earnest. She is extremely intelligent and when one talks to her at length, she reveals herself as the real daughter of her father. I explained our standpoint in appraising the over-all situa- tion. From her replies I gathered that the Italians are placing all their hopes in the success of our impending summer offensive. As things stand, the Italians cannot be expected to last through an endless continuation of the war. Not that they have become tired of the war, but the difficulties and worries of war naturally grow at a much faster pace with them than with us. April 26, 1942 The British are publicizing their last air raid on Rostock in the grand manner. It has been, it must be admitted, pretty disastrous. The anti-aircraft didn't function properly so that the damage to public buildings was more extensive than in all other English air raids since Luebeck. I sent a couple of robust journalists into occupied France with an assignment to give proper journalistic treatment to undertakings similar to that of Boulogne. Our reporting hitherto has been too dry and therefore could not compete with the flowery reports of Reuters. To impress the English you must represent an undertaking like that more like a sports event. You must not limit yourself to a mere rehearsal of facts but must complement the data by details to which the English and especially the Americans are known to be very susceptible. It appears that British air raids on German cities are not taken so seriously by the Bolsheviks as the English would like. They have now chosen the expression "to luebeck" in place of the expression "to coventrize" invented by us. We are going to do everything possible to prevent this expression from being used in international terminology. An English periodical, The Empire Review, has given expression to deepest pessimism on the part of the British Empire politicians. The low morale and even the actual collapse of the British world empire are described in so drastic a manner as to leave nothing to be desired. We ourselves could not give better expression to it. One almost has the impression that the writer of the article cleverly put together the ideas laid down in my Reich articles. All Reich departments affected are now in favor of new regulations for the employment of labor from the East. In the long run we cannot solicit additional workers from the East if we treat them like animals within the Reich. They must, after all, receive enough food and clothing so that they will at least retain their capacity for work. Everybody is now in complete agreement about this. The Fuehrer arrived in Berlin at noon. I immediately had a talk with him. He looks wonderfully healthy and is in the best spiritual and physical condition. However, he is in extremely bad humor about the poor anti-aircraft defense at Rostock which caused him no end of worry. The Luftwaffe wasn't adequately prepared and for this reason alone the damage to the Heinkel works was made possible. [The Heinkel factories at Rostock and Travemuende were among the most important airplane producers in Germany.] In addition, the Fuehrer is in a black rage about the escape of the French General Giraud, whom we still haven't succeeded in recapturing. He agrees that the press take a hand in the search for him, and offers a reward of 100,000 marks for his capture. Anybody who extends aid and protection to him is to be punished by death. Giraud is an extraordinarily dangerous French general. [General Henri Giraud fooled the Germans twice. During World War I he managed to escape, and he duplicated this feat in 1942. He had been captured rather by accident in 1940, and had refused to give his word of honor that he would not try to make his getaway. After his escape he was appointed Commander in Chief of the French forces in North Africa. He and General de Gaulle did not get along very well, however, and he later resigned, delivering a farewell message to his troops on April 15, 1944. President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill tried hard to bring about a reconciliation of the two French leaders, but failed.] If he succeeds in fleeing to England, he will surely replace General de Gaulle, who is of weak spiritual and moral caliber. This would be very embarrassing, for the French Emigre movement suffers at present, thank God, from not having any real head. General Giraud succeeded in escaping from German imprisonment once before, in World War I. He refused to give his word of honor not to escape. That ought to have been double reason for the guards to keep a most careful eye on him, but this seems not to have been the case, for otherwise he could not have escaped. That's what put the Fuehrer in such a bad temper, and rightly so. Let's hope that Giraud will yet be recaptured. One report via Vichy claims that he has already escaped over the Swiss border. This report, however, is as yet unconfirmed. The building activities of the Navy do not meet with the approval of the Fuehrer. For a long time he has demanded that the "Strength-through-Joy" steamers be converted into airplane carriers. The Navy declined, claiming this was impossible, whereas the Americans and English are now carrying out such rebuilding with playful ease. Anyway, the Navy is about as unmodern as can be. It has no leadership of any caliber, and therefore does not exhaust the possibilities that present themselves. The inventions, too, that are offered the Navy are used only sparingly. [The "Strength-through-Joy" movement was a subdivision of Dr. Robert Ley's German Labor Front. It tried to provide cheap summer and winter vacations for the industrial population, and built a series of one-class steamers for this purpose. There were regular excursions to Norway in summer, and to Madeira in the winter.] In this connection the Fuehrer expressed the opinion that the state should buy up every invention even though it cannot be used for the moment. Inventions must never be sold to foreign countries. Bad experiences in World War I ought really to deter us from irresponsible treatment of German inventive genius. The tank was invented by a German-Austrian, but was then sold to England because there was no interest in it in Germany. The state must be much more careful in this matter. But just as you cannot expect a cow to lay eggs, so you cannot expect a bureaucrat to look after the interests of the state properly in such matters. In judging our possibilities [for an offensive in the East] the Fuehrer is exceptionally optimistic. He has received reports about internal conditions in the Soviet Union that are said to be very depressing. They have nothing to eat, they live from hand to mouth, and the population feeds on bread and pickles. The equipment of the soldiers is said to be the poorest imaginable. There are heaps of examples and proofs of widespread eating of human flesh not only by the Bolshevik Army, but also by the civilian population. . . . As things now stand the offensive can begin in the not-too- far-distant future. Possibly the weather god is anxious to make amends for some of the things he did to us. An extended chapter of our talk is devoted by the Fuehrer to the vegetarian question. He believes more than ever that meat-eating is harmful to humanity. Of course he knows that during the war we cannot completely upset our food system. After the war, however, he intends to tackle this problem also. Maybe he is right. Certainly the arguments that he adduces in favor of his standpoint are very compelling. It is actually true that the great majority of humanity is living a vegetarian life and that the animals that live on plants have much greater powers of resistance than those that feed on meat. It is furthermore a very characteristic thing that the human being, generally speaking, eats only the meat of such animals as themselves feed on plants and not on such as feed on meat. The dominating thought with the Fuehrer is his joy at the majestic coming of spring. He tells me that never before in all his life has he awaited it with such fervor. During the coming years, he doesn't want to see any snow at all; snow has become physically repulsive to him which I can well understand. As regards the French the Fuehrer is of the opinion, now as before, that we shall never come to a friendly agreement with them. The talk about collaboration is intended for the moment only. He wants to see deeds first and not words. However the war ends, France will have to pay dearly, for she caused and started it. She is now being thrown back to her borders of a.d. 1500. This means that Burgundy will again become part of the Reich. We shall thereby win a province that so far as beauty and wealth are concerned compares more than favorably with any other German province. [Hitler was one of those pan-Germans who regarded it as axiomatic that France and Germany were "hereditary enemies" (Erbfeinde) and who despised the Briand-Stresemann policy of rapprochement. The plan for annexing Burgundy will probably be news for most readers. This editor does not recall seeing any reference to it elsewhere.] April 27, 1942 Last night the heaviest air attack hitherto launched again had the seaport of Rostock as its objective. Tremendous damage is reported. During the morning hours no exact estimate can be made, as all long-distance communication with Rostock has been interrupted. But reports from all sides agree that Gauleiter Hildebrandt initiated rescue measures in a model manner and is master of the situation.... Seventy per cent of all houses in the center of Rostock are said to have been destroyed. [Friedrich Hildebrandt was Gauleiter for Mecklenburg.] I now consider it absolutely essential that we continue with our rigorous reprisal raids. I also agree that not much is to be accomplished with raids on munitions centers. Like the English, we must attack centers of culture, especially such as have only little anti-aircraft. Such centers should be attacked two or three times in succession and leveled to the ground; then the English probably will no longer find pleasure in trying to frighten us by their terror attacks. London continues to harp on the theme of invasion, but no longer with the same pep and enthusiasm as last week. Our reaction to it has already taken effect. The English have got cold feet. We continue to act insolently and arrogantly and thereby spoil for the English their intended effect of a war of nerves. It is reported that the English have already stationed demolition squads in the Caucasus. That's exactly like them! They have proven themselves throughout the world as great destroyers of other people's property. History would lose its meaning if the Englishmen were not beaten decisively in this war. At noon I had lunch with the Fuehrer. He is very angry about the latest English attack on Rostock. But he also gave me a few figures about our attack on Bath, according to which ours on Bath must have been much more extensive than the English raid on Rostock. The Fuehrer declared that he would repeat these raids night after night until the English were sick and tired of terror attacks. He shares my opinion absolutely that cultural centers, bathing resorts, and civilian cities must be attacked now; there the psychological effect is much stronger, and at the present moment psychological effect is the most important thing. The munitions industry, he said, cannot be interfered with effectively by air raids. We learned that lesson during our raids on English armament centers in the autumn of 1940, and had a similar experience when, vice versa, the English attacked German munitions plants. Usually the prescribed targets are not hit; often the fliers unload their bombs on fields camouflaged re the foundation of public life, as is here demonstrated. ... I have received detailed reports from various sections. It appears that even more bombs were dropped on the workers' quarters, especially Wedding, than in the government section, although this looks like a heap of rubble. We must now face the problem of evacuation to emergency quarters. About 400,000 people in Berlin are without shelter. Some are lodged in municipal emergency quarters, others must spend their nights in subway tunnels. But I hope in two or three days to solve this problem also. The first trains of homeless people left the city. But the Berliners for the present refuse to make much use of them. Everybody wants to stay here to save the things most needed and to await further developments. This morning no papers appeared. I am doing everything possible to see to it that at least a few newspapers make their appearance on the streets. The papers with an out-of-town circulation, especially, must resume publication because of the effect on foreign countries. The Deutscher Verlag remained unhurt, thank God, so that we can have most of the Berlin dailies printed there.-Papers appearing twice daily must be reorganized on a once-a-day basis [The Deutscher Verlag was Berlin's largest publishing house and commercial printing plant. It was for generations the property of the Ullstein family and had the official name of Ullstein Verlag until the Nazis is pursuance of their anti-Semitic policies compelled the Ullstein Brothers to sell out for a song. The name was then changed to Deutscher Verlag.] As I learned from an over-all report, the potato situation in the Reich is not so serious as to prevent us in an exceptional case like this from making a special allotment. I also ordered that the Berliners get fifty grams of meat additional per week. Ten cigarettes are distributed to everybody, also some other delicacies. If everybody gets something into his stomach, and is given something to stimulate nerves strained to the breaking point, that helps a lot all along the line. On orders of the Fuehrer I am now to organize an air-raid inspection service based on my experience in Berlin. The inspectors are to travel to all regions in which air raids have not yet taken place and to test the anti-aircraft facilities. This air-raid inspection is to be under my chairmanship and is to have authority to issue orders. I consider this inspection extremely important.... The noon news report pictures the situation in Berlin as still very serious. .. . Contrary to expectations the number of people killed is, thank God, quite low. During the first air raid we registered 1,500 and during the second about 1,200 dead. I attribute these low figures chiefly to my evacuation measures, to farsighted emergency measures, and to the circumspection of the Berlin population.... There is no dearth of food, but for the present we are unable to deliver it. The problem of people without shelter is naturally a pressing one, for it is hard to manage a great mass of people without a roof over their heads. The Fuehrer ordered the Reich Chancellery to be opened to shelterless people. I issued similar instructions about my residence in the Hermann Goering Street. Of course this is hardly usable, as it is still partly filled with water, has no heating, and taps that give no water. For the present, therefore, we shall have to make a great number of people spend their nights in the subway. But the Berlin population is very patient about it... What the enemy press is writing about the raids on Berlin simply can't be beaten for impudence. Their triumphant tone is enough to make one go mad. ... Joined to their reports is an ultimatum to the German people to the effect that the end of the Reich capital will have come unless it offers to capitulate. Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin allegedly are to meet soon to launch this ultimatum. The enemy now places his hopes chiefly in the breakdown of our morale. In an appeal to the Berliners I call their attention to what is at stake and what must be proven these days. Not only the German people but all foreign countries are looking to developments in Berlin with bated breath. Some foreign newspapers have expressed undisguised approval of the morale shown by the Berliners during these exceedingly heavy air raids. Compared with all these problems, of what importance is the speech that the English King delivered in Parliament? It is as inane as can be and bubbles over with childish phrases. England, he maintains, has won victory with the aid of God. He lavishes special praise on Stalin, the murderer of the Czars. He praises the successes attained by English arms, but forgets to add that it was the weapons of air pirates operating chiefly with block busters to destroy dwellings. He feigns hypocritical sympathy with hungry India, and for the rest entrusts England's cause to God. This cheap, bigoted hypocrisy really makes one's blood boil. After a short alert in the evening which, however, was not followed by a raid, I was able at last to make a tour of some of the destroyed sections of the city. I drove via the Tlergarten, Zoo, Knie, and Kaiserdamm. What I saw was truly shattering. The whole Tiergarten quarter is destroyed, likewise the section around the Zoo. While the outer facades of the great representative edifices are still standing, everything on the inside is burned to the ground. This is true especially of the buildings all about the Zoo—Ufa Palace, Gloria Palace, Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Romanisches Caf6, et cetera. The Kurfuersten-damm looks terrible, not to speak of the Knie. Here you see nothing but remnants of walls and debris. Along the Kaiserdamm everything is still on fire but the fire department hopes to master the situation in the course of the night. Groups of people scamper across the streets like veritable ghosts. Your heart turns in your body as you go through these parts. How beautiful Berlin was at one time and how run-down and woebegone it now looks! But of what avail are all sorrow and pain? They won't change conditions. This war must be seen through. It is better that our workers crawl into cellars than that they be sent to Siberia as slave labor. Every decent German realizes this.... Arriving in Schwanenwerder about midnight, we seem to be transported into a paradise. Here everything seems as though we were at peace. The house is delightfully warm. I can wash again, take a bath; telephone and radio are funo tioning; in short, for a few hours I enjoy a happiness which I thought I no longer deserved. It is not hard to imagine what thoughts keep stirring. I worked for one more hour and then fell into a deep, dreamless sleep. When I awoke, the whole tragedy of the hard-hit city was again on my mind. I shall leave nothing undone to insure a halfway decent life for the unfortunate people who were stricken by this catastrophe. November 26, 1943 The English are achieving nothing with their attempts to unload the responsibility for air warfare on us. Everybody in Germany knows that the English started it and that the blood guilt falls on them. The English now openly admit the terroristic intentions underlying their air raids. They talk with brutal cynicism about the block busters that were at work on the capital and that will continue to come. In the early afternoon I visited the Reich Chancellery. It looks terrible. All the rooms that were formerly so beautiful and so dear to us are now destroyed, either burned out or full of water. My heart turned in my body when I saw all that has been destroyed here by air raids. During lunch in the Reich Chancellery I had a talk with Lammers. He wants to have his main headquarters in the Fuehrer's bunker in the Reich Chancellery. I think he's right. According to a directive by the Fuehrer, the ministries and other highest offices of the Reich are to remain in Berlin just as long as possible. I regard this directive as extremely effective psychologically. I have no intention of leaving Berlin anyway. I shall stay here as long as there is even the remnant of a wall. Difficulties have arisen over the fact that homeless people have been lodged in the bunkers of the chancellery, but I hope soon to transfer them to other quarters. The aspect of the Wilhelmplatz has already undergone quite a change. The fires are out, the atmosphere is clear, smoke has disappeared. There is no blaze left to extinguish. In short, although one sees the bare ruins of buildings projecting into the air, the most serious catastrophe has already been overcome. It is remarkable how fast everything goes. I thought it would take weeks; in reality only two days were needed. I have now installed the air inspections for other air gaus, as ordered by the Fuehrer. The Fuehrer will give me extensive plenary powers, including the right to issue orders. Advice alone won't do. At last I have got the Fuehrer to the point that we may give two types of air alert in Berlin: one a genuine alert, when bomber formations are on their way here, the other a mere warning in the case of a few nuisance planes. That is necessary, for I don't want to throw a city of four-and-a-half millions into a panic every night merely because of two Mosquitoes. While the Fuehrer has given his permission for this differentiation between types of alerts for Berlin only, I hope this method can be applied soon in other gaus also. In future the broadcasting stations are no longer to interrupt their programs when nuisance planes appear; they are to do it only when large bomber formations fly into the Reich. In the evening the situation at first appeared somewhat critical. .. . Fires have started again in many places, so that Berlin is ablaze. I instructed Helldorf to resume fire fighting energetically. As soon as phosphorus dries, it begins to ignite again I arranged with Bormann and Ley for political leaders from other gaus to be placed at my disposal in large numbers, for I must now and then replace my own officials, especially the Kreisleiters, as they will otherwise collapse physically. Again and again I receive reports about the increasing seriousness of the situation in France. Many people even claim an uprising will take place there sooner or later. I don't believe, however, that things are so critical as represented. November 27, 1943 Last night it was Frankfurt's turn to suffer fairly heavy attacks. The damage is not too bad, except for cultural monuments. Thus, for instance, the Goethe House has been hit. One's feelings are already so blunted by air raids that this hardly seems like sacrilege. There's nothing one can do about it anyway! Air raids hang over us like fate. As a marginal note it may be recorded that the Duce is suddenly singing a Socialist song. He has installed an Italian Social Republic, as he calls his new Fascist State. I don't believe much will result from it. Fascism is compromised too badly to put a social-revolutionary movement on its feet. As regards our situation in the East, the enemy credits us with more than we really have. Our difficulties there are enormous, chiefly because of the weather. Our attack did not really get under way. It got stuck, as it were, in the mud. We had expected so much of it, and so little came of it We are having a streak of bad luck this year that is simply unique. All one can do is to hope that it may before long change over into an equally enduring streak of good luck. During the last ten days, thank God, our casualties have not been too high. They totaled 6,473 killed in action, among them 180 officers; 26,000 wounded; 3,800 missing. That is bearable. On the other hand sickness has increased, and above all the troops have reached a new low physically and spiritually because of our continuous retreats. They must be given a rest and an opportunity for recreation to recuperate. In the morning I undertook an extended trip through the damaged areas of Berlin. Sometimes I'd like to close my eyes so as not to see all this horror. The diplomatic quarter along the Tiergarten looks like one gigantic heap of rubble. One can hardly pass through the streets, as they are covered with debris. The rubble of the Rheingold is just being blasted. I have to wait here because the streets were being roped off. The Berliners gather around my car. I am amazed at their excellent spirit. Nobody cries, nobody complains. People slap me on the back familiarly, give me good advice, prevent me from continuing because, as they put it, nothing must happen to me since I am still very much needed. In short, the morale shown here by the Berlin population is simply magnificent. [Soon after the Nazis came into power they started a special section along the Tiergarten as a diplomatic quarter and gradually eased various foreign missions that had hitherto been scattered all over the city out of their buildings and persuaded them to go to the new section. That made it much simpler for the Gestapo to check on the coming and going of visitors. The Rheingold was a famous wine restaurant near the Potsdamer Platz.] Letters addressed to me breathe a very resolute and manly spirit. Berlin is appealed to with the slogan, "Persevere and don't give in!" That isn't necessary, for we won't do that anyway. My articles are praised most warmly, especially by soldiers at the front. Now it's the turn of the front to encourage the people at home. It does this very eloquently. Only the complaints about the Etappe continue. The Fuehrer is now determined to do some general housecleaning in the Etappe. He ordered the Wehrmacht to release at least a million soldiers from the Etappe for combat duty. I don't believe the Wehrmacht can do it, but it will nevertheless manage to squeeze out a certain number. If I were the Fuehrer, I would appoint a man of caliber and make him responsible for this work. I believe if he had full powers and were a real man, he would perform the miracle of getting the million combat soldiers out of the Wehrmacht itself. At noon I had a long talk with Speer. The beating Berlin took has shaken Speer considerably. Even though industrial plants were not hit very badly, nevertheless irreplaceable values have been destroyed. He is somewhat skeptical about our prospects in air warfare, especially since reprisals can begin only in March. The zero hour is being postponed again and again. That's the terror of terrors. If we could at least strike at the English soon! But look where you will, no such possibility is discernible. Schaub took me through the private apartments of the Fuehrer. These have been completely destroyed. It makes me sad to find these rooms, in which we enjoyed so many hours of spiritual uplift, in such a condition. With Naumann and Schaub I then took another trip through the damaged areas. We also stopped at some soup kitchens. I inquired into even the smallest details. The people show a touching devotion. The misery that meets my eyes is indescribable. My heart is convulsed at the sights. But we must grit our teeth. Sometimes I have the impression that the Berliners are almost in a religious trance. Women come up to me and lay their hands on me in blessing, imploring God to preserve me. All that is very touching. But then I am doing everything I can for the people. The meals are everywhere praised as excellent. People without shelter are gradually being provided quarters. People are weighed down with sor- row about loved ones who fell, but they are getting over it. The attitude and morale of the population are exemplary. We shall never lose the war for reasons of morale. I took several women from the soup kitchens with me and had them driven to the east side, where they could not get with normal transportation facilities. They are more than happy. Show these people small favors, and you can wrap them around your finger. I can hardly believe that this city started a revolution in November 1918. It would never have happened under my leadership. Work and nothing but work is piled on me in my office. In addition I must write my speech for the Sunday demonstration of the Hitler Youth as quickly as possible. I am going to say some pointed things in it about England. This time I'm going to draw on my lexicon of abuse. I must use a hard-boiled, invidious language in dealing with England. That's the kind of talk the people want to hear today. The Ministry has become a bit more livable again. The windows have either been pasted over with paper, or cardboard has replaced glass. But at least the rooms are warm again so that one can work. In the early evening attention was naturally focused on the question of a possible air raid. At first it looked as though everything was to be perfectly harmless, and as though only nuisance planes were to fly over us. Then a stronger formation started after all for Frankfurt-on-Main and we received news that this city would be attacked again. But that was merely a camouflage maneuver. The English turned off from Frankfurt unnoticed and sneaked over the Thuringian Forest toward Berlin. In Berlin the question was first raised whether any alert should be sounded at all, as it was thought mere nuisance planes were approaching. Suddenly, however, we noted that a major attack was again in the offing. It had merely been camouflaged cleverly to mislead our pursuit planes. The starry sky is clear so that the pursuit planes, if they were here, could take a hand splendidly. They did arrive at the last moment, thank God. And then things started. Once again a major attack descended upon the Reich capital. This time it wasn't so much the center of the city that was the target as it was the suburbs of Wedding and Reinickendorf, and chiefly the large munitions plants in Reinickendorf. Some of the main traffic crossings in the center of the city also took a beating, among them the Spittelmarkt and the Gendarmenmarkt. But the important thing was the damage to industry. The news that the Alkett plant was on fire was especially depressing. Alkett is our most important factory for the production of fieldpieces. There we produce one half of our entire output of these guns, amounting to 200 pieces. That must not be lost. In agreement with the Fuehrer I order that the fire department companies be concentrated on Alkett, but they arrive a bit too late. For hours we discuss the question as to whether the Alkett factory can be saved. I send Helldorf there. Companies of the fire department and of auxiliary troops are hurried out to Alkett. Nevertheless they cannot prevent the assembly hall from burning to the ground. That is a heavy blow. The Fuehrer, too, is very much depressed. [Reinickendorf is a borough of Berlin now in the French sector of occupation.! I then drove quickly to the Deutsches Theater and the Kammerspiele, which are also on fire. We did succeed in so localizing the fires that the theaters on the whole remain more or less intact. Unfortunately I had to withdraw the fire fighters from the theaters at a critical moment and send them to Alkett to the big industrial plants. Nevertheless we are able to save the theaters. [The Deutsches Theatre and the Kammerspiele were contiguous and before the Nazi regime belonged to Max Reinhardt.] The scenes at the Gendarmenmarkt are gruesome. All around it whole rows of houses are ablaze. The State Playhouse alone is still undamaged. But how much longer? I fear its days, too, are numbered, if enemy air raids continue. [The Gendarmenmarkt was one of the most artistic squares in Berlin. In the center stood the Staatstheater, or State Playhouse, a beautiful building constructed by the famous architect of Frederick the Great, Schinkel. It was flanked on one side by the Garrison Church and on the other by the French Church, erected by French Huguenots. Along its sides were chiefly the offices of the clothing trade.] Back to the bunker at the Wilhelmplatz. The situation has become even more alarming in that one industrial plant after another has been set on fire. The main damage, however, is at Alkett! ... The sky above Berlin is bloody, deep red, and of an awesome beauty. I just can't stand looking at it. ... It seems as though all the elements of fate and nature have conspired against us to create difficulties. If only frost were to set in, so that our tanks might move again in the East! Profound peace prevails in Schwanenwerder. I had only a brief, restless sleep. What a life we are leading! Who could have prophesied that at our cradle! I don't believe anyone can lead a more dramatic and nerve-racking life. Nevertheless it has great and impelling impulses. One must throw oneself into this life with abandon both to taste it to the full and to help shape it. Later generations will not only admire us but be jealous that life entrusted us with such tremendous tasks. November 28, 1943 The British are greatly overestimating the damage done to Berlin. Naturally it is terrible, but there is no question of 25 per cent of the capital no longer existing. The English naturally want to furnish their public a propaganda morsel. I have every reason to want them to believe this and therefore forbid any denial. The sooner London is convinced that there is nothing left of Berlin, the sooner will they stop their air offensive against the Reich capital. ... This time the munitions industry was especially hard hit. The Alkett works received a blow from which they won't recover easily. At Alkett 80 per cent of our fieldpieces were produced, of which there will now be a shortage. At Borsig's also tremendous destruction took place. It must be remembered that Borsig produces a large percentage of our gun output and has 18,000 employees. Naturally everything is being done to get munitions production started again. But that is more easily said than done. .. . In the evening the so-called "Calais Soldiers Broadcast," which evidently originates in England and uses the same wave length as Radio Station Deutschland when the latter is cut out during air raids, gave us something to worry about. The station does a very clever job of propaganda and from what is put on the air one can gather that the English know exactly what they have destroyed in Berlin and what not. Ellgerin was given special orders by me to find substitute quarters and shelters for the homeless. Ellgerin has had a vast amount of experience in this matter in the west. He promised to see to it that within twenty-four hours at the latest everybody would have at least a roof over his head. It's high time that the people get out of the subway tunnels, for that's no way to live. Communicable diseases start there; possibly they are even breeding places for political decadence. This won't do at all. [Ellgerin is not identified more closely in the diaries.] At noon I and my collaborators addressed the Reich Cabinet. . . . The Cabinet was extremely interested and for the first time in its history broke into applause at the end of my talk. London reports that more than a million people met their death in Berlin. That, of course, is arrant nonsense, for the number of fatal casualties owing to three heavy air raids totals between three and four thousand. But I don't issue a denial of these exaggerations. The sooner the English believe there's no life left in Berlin, the better for us. The Soviets are outdoing themselves in their demand for unconditional Genr.an surrender. They ask us for 1,600,000,-000 gold marks as reparations and declare quite insolently that they don't want this sum paid them in cash, but instead want all of Germany's production facilities plus the workers surrendered to them. We would rather defend the last remnants of our walls than accede to such a mad demand. The English are already giving hypocritical support to these insane Soviet demands. They naturally would like to use this occasion to sell out the entire German future. The English would then not have to bother any longer about Europe, at least as they see it. The most surprising thing about the whole matter is that nobody in England seems to recognize that once the Soviet Union is in Europe, it will be a much more dangerous opponent of the British Empire. There was a tempest in the teapot in the Hungarian Parliament. The representative of the Small Peasants' party delivered a speech in which he protested vigorously against Hungary's participation in the war and berated the Reich. This speech is really the climax in meanness to an ally. But one must not take the Hungarians too seriously. They have lost their nerve arid are acting crazily. November 29, 1943 We spent a quiet evening. That was balm for the wounds of the Reich capital. I started early from Schwanenwerder for the Hitler Youth demonstration in Steglitz. ... Fortunately the Titania Palace is undamaged, so that our meeting for the Hitler Youth and their parents could be held there. Axmann avaited me. As we eiter the movie hall, earsplitting applause greets me. Never before have I seen the Berlin public so receptive to a message as now.... My address seemed as if made to order. The public broke into stormy applause at every sentence with a punch. ... I believe this speech will make a very deep impression not only on the German people but on the entire world. I am very happy that I spoke, despite the objections that were raised. The right word spoken at the right time sometimes achieves miracles. [Steglitz is a borough of Berlin now in the American occupation sector. The Titania Palast, one of Berlin's largest motion-picture houses, is now a Red Cross recreation center for American occupation forces. Also, as Philharmonic Hall was burned to the ground, the concerts of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra are now given there.] The Berlin munition industry is still in bad shape. Alkett is almost completely destroyed, and, worst of all, valuable and virtually irreplaceable tools and machines have been put out of commission. The English aimed so accurately that one might think spies had pointed their way It's surprising that the theaters and movie houses have opened their doors again and that the people fairly stream into them. There are queues before all the motion-picture houses. People crave recreation after the grueling days and nights of the past week. They want solace for their souls.... I drove to Reinickendorf and Wedding. At the Gartenplatz I took part in the feeding of the public. The men and women workers received me with an enthusiasm that is as unbelievable as it is indescribable. This section of Wedding, all around Acker Street, was at one time full of Reds. I should never have thought it possible that such a transformation of spirit and viewpoint could take place. . . . I had to eat with the people and was lifted onto a box to talk to them. I delivered a very earthy and slangy speech which won the hearts of the workers. Everybody accosted me with "Du" and called me by my first name. The people wanted to carry me on their shoulders across the Platz and I had difficulty preventing it. Women embraced me. I had to give my autograph. Cigarettes were distributed and I smoked one with them. In short, people were in as high spirits as at a carnival. Naturally the destruction is enormous, but in so far as the people themselves are involved, they take it with the best of humor. They are firmly convinced that we shall be able to overcome the difficulties. They have only praise for the measures thus far taken. Wedding itself is for the most part a shambles. The same goes for Reinickendorf. I took leave of the people. There were deeply touching scenes. One women had given birth to a child during an air raid two or three days ago; nevertheless she insisted on getting up when she heard I had come, dressed, and hurried to the Platz. We can never lose this war because of defective morale. I discussed at length with Dr. Ley how we can get back to work the men who have not yet returned to their factories. We shall have to do something to stimulate their return. We want especially to give cigarettes and liquor to workers who return on time, and beyond that to appeal to their sense of duty, which is by no means a thankless labor in the case of Berlin workers. Work must be resumed as quickly as possible. Also, the workers must help to clear away the rubble. They must not leave that to the soldiers, who know nothing whatever about the plants, and possibly are destroying more than they are putting in order.... The Berliner will stand on his head for a cigarette! I was called by the Fuehrer's GHQ. The Fuehrer and all his collaborators are enthusiastic about my speech and in full agreement with it. They characterize Berlin as a combat company that is doing its duty with the finest esprit de corps. The Fuehrer has issued a decree to the Wehrmacht for bringing order into conditions in the Etappe. I place this decree chiefly on the credit side of my ledger, for my incessant appeals to the Fuehrer contributed essentially to its being issued. November 30, 1943 London replied to my speech in the Titania Palace with an outburst of anger. The fact, especially, that I described the English aviators as cowards has made the blood of the English propagandists boil. A typically English thing is happening in London in that & prayer racket for India has been scheduled. The bishops and priests have been mobilized for it. They are to address fervent prayers to God to let the Indians have the food that the English have stolen from them! Exposes about the Duce and his entourage written by Professor Preziosi were submitted to me. They are very depressing. Despite his grave debacle the Duce has learned nothing. He is still surrounded by traitors, former Free Masons and Jew-lovers who give him entirely wrong advice. His son Vittorio is playing a pretty loathsome role, not so much because of his lack of character as because of his stupidity. It is nauseating to read these reports. The Duce has learned nothing and forgotten nothing. My visit to Wedding has had a tremendous effect on the working-class population there. Veritable legends about it are spread throughout the northern and eastern quarters of the city. We make no mention of it in the press; it is much better that propaganda by word of mouth do its work. I discuss a number of personnel questions with Bormann. Bormann, too, is worried about German foreign policy. Rib-bentrop is too rigid to be able to spin his web in this difficult war situation. But I don't believe the Fuehrer is ready to part company with his Foreign Minister. Yet Ribbentrop would not be able to negotiate either with London or with Moscow were such an eventuality to arise. Both sides consider him too heavily compromised. Bormann expressed himself as very much concerned over the war in general. It is so hard to get the Fuehrer to make any decision, and of course we can't win the war with morale alone; we must have arms and man power. Our arms production, however, is being destroyed by enemy air raids to a very noticeable degree. December 1943 ROOSEVELT, CHURCHILL, STALIN, CONFER FOUR DAYS AT TEHERAN. ALLIED RAIDS ON SOLINGEN, BERLIN, LEIPZIG, SOFIA, EMDEN, AUGSBURG, INNSBRUCK, BREMEN, FRANKFURT-ON-MAIN, MANNHEIM, LUDWIGSHAFEN, AND SOUTHWEST GERMANY. YUGOSLAV PARTISANS FORBID KING PETER TO RETURN. TURKISH PRESIDENT INONU CONFERS THREE DAYS AT CAIRO WITH ROOSEVELT AND CHURCHILL. RUSSIANS HALT GERMAN COUNTEROFFENSIVE IN KIEV AREA. CHURCHILL ILL WITH PNEUMONIA. EISENHOWER NAMED SUPREME COMMANDER FOR INVASION OF WESTERN EUROPE. RUSSIANS CUT GERMAN SUPPLY LINE LINKING VITEBSK AND POLOTSK. BATTLESHIP SCHARN-HORST SUNK OFF NORTH CAPE, NORWAY, RUSSIANS RECAPTURE ZHITOMIR. RUSSIAN ARMIES IN UKRAINE ROUT TWENTY-TWO GERMAN DIVISIONS. Recapitulation of events between December 1 and 4,1943 There is a gap of only three days at this point in the diaries, but for a proper understanding of what follows it is necessary to remember that on December 1, 1943, President Roosevelt, Generalissimo Stalin, and Prime Minister Churchill completed a four-day conference in Teheran. Also, there was another terrific air raid on Berlin on December 2. December 4, 1943 A speech delivered in London by Smuts is truly sensational. He declared that the Reich would disappear from the map for a long time. That's nothing new to us. Then, however, he continued with observations that must be taken more seriously, to the effect that the Soviets would become the masters of Europe. The Russian colossus would dominate the entire European continent. England would come out of this war with honor and glory but poor as a beggar. The United States would in large measure be the heir to the British Empire. England would no longer have much to say in Europe since the Soviet Union would take its place. [Field Marshal Jan Christiaan Smuts, born 1870, is Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa.] I received a detailed report about the situation in the East from Major Voss, who for more than a year has been on duty on the Eastern Front at various command points. Passing over many things already known to me, the essential thing appeared to be Major Voss's emphasis on the fact that we made a big mistake in not evacuating the male population in time from regions about to be abandoned. During their advance the Soviets immediately recruited this male population for their troops. Most men were not even given uniforms but are merely wearing a red armband. In this way Stalin secured some 400,000 to 500,0000 soldiers for himself in a very simple way. As long as we left the male population directly behind the front lines, the danger of Partisan formations could not be eliminated. Major Voss's report seemed so important to me that I shall send it as an item of information to the Fuehrer. Incidentally, the information which I send to the Fuehrer always attracts extraordinary attention at GHQ and much use is made of it. Usually the Fuehrer takes the reports I send him to the staff conference to bring them to the knowledge of his generals. Our hate propaganda against England is falling on most fertile soil with the German people. My speech in the Titania Palace is regarded as one of the most effective that ever issued from the mouth of a German during this war. In Italy the enemy has started new assaults on our front. They have succeeded here and there in making inroads. But considerable reserves of ours are on the march, so that people in the Fuehrer's GHQ don't worry about further developments. The operations are chiefly under Jodl's command. But Jodl does not seem to me any too competent for evaluating a critical military situation. He has so often been wrong in his prognoses that personally I am unable to drop my worries about the southern Italian front. December 5, 1943 We have received a valuable report via Lisbon about the domestic situation in England. According to it the fear of German retaliation is almost indescribable, especially in the English capital. The English have a bad conscience. According to the English yellow press, the conference of the Big Three is to decide on military plans of great magnitude against Germany. The Anglo-Americans have asked Stalin for airports within the territory of the Soviet Union so as to be able to bombard Germany from the east also. Churchill again intends to cede all of eastern Germany to the Poles as an equivalent for the Soviets' laying claim to eastern Poland. I can hardly imagine that the leading English statesmen are so stupid and shortsighted as to put that sort of estimate on Bolshevism. Stalin won't think of fulfilling obligations entered upon with England and America. In the margin I may note that the French press took sharp issue with Smuts because he claimed that France has lost her position as a Great Power. Rediess, head of the higher SS and police in Norway, has visited the Fuehrer to report on the Oslo students. The Fuehrer was somewhat put out—and rightly so—that this question was handled with a sledge hammer. The Fuehrer is also skeptical about the success to be expected. Undoubtedly it would have been possible to achieve an essentially greater effect with less effort, for there are only a couple of dozen rebels among the Oslo students who could have been arrested without the public noticing it. Most decidedly it was a big mistake to arrest all students of Oslo. Terboven is especially to be blamed for not having informed the Fuehrer before acting. The whole affair would have run an entirely different course had he done so. The Swedish Government has protested to us because of the arrest of the Oslo students. At the Fuehrer's orders this protest is to be answered by Ribbentrop in the sharpest language. Naturally we can't beat a retreat on this Oslo student question now. But it would have been better to think matters over before rather than after. Unfortunately the air raid on Leipzig last night was exceedingly severe and fateful. The city was not prepared for so massive an attempt at terrorization. The fire department was not adequate. As a result whole rows of houses went up in smoke. The center of the city was especially hard hit. Almost all public buildings, theaters, the university, the Supreme Court, exhibition halls, et cetera have either been completely destroyed or seriously damaged. ... About 150,000 to 200,000 people are without shelter. [Leipzig was the seat of the German Reichsgericht, or Supreme Court. It was famed the world over for its annual fairs, for which it had built an imposing series of exhibition halls. Johann Sebastian Bach was choirmaster and organist at the Thomaskirche, or Church of St. Thomas from 1723 to his death in 1750.] December 6, 1943 The conference in Teheran has become quite mysterious. The enemy has so far refrained from issuing any sort of informative communique about it, so that we are still groping in the dark. . . . There are a number of conjectures, however, about the Teheran show which contradict each other and therefore have no political value. In the spring, after the German cities have been reduced to ruins, the English allegedly want to start the invasion. Of course chills run down their backs even at the use of this word. They want, above all, to intensify their air offensive against us during January because that is the coldest month and it is expected that air raids will then affect German morale more adversely. In the evening it is claimed that an editorial committee has been appointed in Teheran to compose an appeal to the German people. But that appeal is not forthcoming! At any rate, we have already taken massive countermeasures in our propaganda against such an appeal. If it should actually come, it will find us by no means unprepared. The German people will surely treat it as a scrap of paper that has no political significance. In Sweden and Finland the turmoil about the Oslo students continues. Ribbentrop received the Swedish Charge d'Af-faires in Berlin and gave him a very juicy and cutting reply to the Swedish demarche. His reply summarizes all the reasons why it ill becomes the Swedes to raise an accusing finger in this matter. Nevertheless the whole Oslo affair stinks. The Fuehrer, too, is quite angry about the way it was handled. He received two representatives of Terboven and gave them an energetic scolding. Terboven has once more behaved like a bull in a china shop. Himmler is furious about the effects of Terboven's action. He was going to enlist about 40,000 to 60,000 volunteers in Norway during the coming months. Prospects for this seemed to be excellent. By Terboven's stupid action a good part of the plan has fallen in the water. Here you can see again what dire consequences result if everybody does as he pleases. It was Terboven's duty to seek the Fuehrer's advice in this matter; the Fuehrer would surely have absolutely forbidden the coupe planned by him. December 7, 1943 In the morning we were still ignorant of what happened at Teheran. . . . Everybody is tense and full of expectation. As a result there is very little news, because the entire world news machinery is geared to the Teheran communiqu6. ... In the evening the long-awaited communique was at last issued. It is neither flesh nor fowl. There is no talk whatever about any appeal to the German people. ... One might expect that a little more would result from three days of conference, but apparently Stalin could not agree to the plans of Churchill and Roosevelt. Stalin was undoubtedly the guiding spirit of the Teheran Conference. It is like a fist in the eye when they talk of democracy, freedom of peoples, and elimination of intolerance and slavery in a document bearing his signature. ... I believe that the plan for an appeal to the German people was dropped mainly because of our anticipatory propaganda. ... I regard this communique as a complete German victory. In the evening I telephoned my commentary on the Teheran Conference to the Fuehrer. He expressed complete agreement with it. He, too, is of the opinion that the communique reveals anything but success. We can publish it almost verbatim in the German press; it contains nothing dangerous to us. ... I imagine that our seed is at last beginning to sprout. If things develop further like that, we may yet find ourselves facing undreamed-of changes in the general situation this winter. Goering traveled west on orders of the Fuehrer to prepare a retaliatory blow against England. We need about 200 heavy four-motored planes for it. They are to fly to England twice in the course of one night and strike a heavy blow against the British capital. Naturally we cannot repeat such an assault as often as we would like, but it will give the English something to think about. I expect great psychological results from it. I now hope to reach an agreement with Rosenberg about the question of press management in the occupied eastern areas. Rosenberg's collaborators complain bitterly that it is impossible to work with him because he is too rigid. They say he has an inferiority complex in regard to me, which leads to a number of differences for which there is no real reason. Reuter reports that Count Ciano has been executed. Unfortunately this report does not correspond with the facts. The great task of the hour is to see to it that law and order prevail in the occupied areas. In Copenhagen, for instance, a German soldier was shot. The military levied a penalty of two million marks on the city. That's an effective method of punishment. You have to grab the Danes by their purse strings. They are most touchy there. The English are waging war in Italy very effectively. It is by no means true that they lack combat experience. On the contrary, they are making the cleverest use of every advantage. Their most striking advantage is their superiority in the air. Every day they lay a curtain of bombs on us in numbers hitherto unknown in this war. In southern Italy one can speak of materiel battles comparable to those of World War I in the West. December 8, 1943 The enemy press naturally accompanies the conference of Teheran and the communiqu6 with the obligatory anthems of jubilation. . .. When Reuter declares that the communique is tantamount to a military death sentence for the Axis, the obvious reply is that military verdicts of death are written not in conferences but on the field of battle. . .. It was to be expected that the communiqud would be characterized as the "Magna Carta of the Twentieth Century." The whole world is to be reorganized for centuries to come. But who still cares about these phrases and subterfuges? To me it seems much more important that even the English admit that Stalin undoubtedly dominated the x confer-ence. ... The English journalists claim that Stalin had grown very gray and that there were deep furrows of worry on his brow. That is easily understandable. The German press and radio go after the Teheran Conference communique in a big way. Our reply is biting and insolent; we empty buckets of irony and derision over the conference. Our sarcasm is superior and I must say German propaganda has reached the very heights of what can be achieved in publicity. At noon I addressed a meeting in celebration of the Day of the German Railway Man at the People's Theater. . . . Even as I stepped on the stage a veritable hurricane of applause greeted me, such as I experienced only in the time of our struggle for power. Every point made by me evokes an enthusiastic echo from the railway workers. The spirit is an excellent one, and in no respect inferior to that of the recent Hitler Youth demonstration in the Titania Palace in Steglitz. The people were simply mad with enthusiasm when I pointed out what the enemy intended to do against German war morale in the way of propaganda. December 9, 1943 A pompous, phrase-laden communique has been issued about Roosevelt's and Churchill's meeting with Inonu in Cairo. No doubt the Turks were willing to stand for this communique only because they wanted to camouflage some- what their opposition to the Anglo-American demands. It is quite obvious Turkey shows no inclination whatever to enter the war in favor of England or the United States, not to speak of the Soviet Union. But the enemy is still not giving up hope. [General Ismet Inonu succeeded the late Mustapha Kemal Ataturk, founder of the modern Turkish State, on November 11, 1938, as Chief of State.] The second front has now been graciously announced as due within three months, and Churchill declared before his old regiment in North Africa that the year 1944 would bring the decision. We look forward to it with great confidence, for we shall beat the English and Americans back when they attempt an invasion. A serious epidemic of influenza has broken out in England. The King, too, is ill. How wonderful if the epidemic were to prove fatal! That would suit us exactly. But that's too good to be true. The Japanese celebrated the beginning of the third year of war. Tojo delivered a speech about Japanese successes to date and also predicted the decision for 1944. I can only warn him about fixing dates. We had some very bad experiences along that line during this war. How badly we are doing our political job in the East can be seen from the fact that Rosenberg has still not carried out the Fuehrer's order to transfer the propaganda there to us. He is doing everything he can to sabotage and torpedo it. I don't understand how the Fuehrer can leave such an obstreperous nincompoop in his job. If I were in his place, I would clear the boards in a hurry. Rosenberg has done more harm than good, not only in the East but also in the realm of politics generally. It is high time for a showdown. Lammers, at my request, reported the situation regarding the propaganda department in Paris to the Fuehrer and told him about Ribbentrop's attempt to take it out of my hands via the OKW. The Fuehrer was in a rage and turned against Ribbentrop, using very harsh and insulting expressions. The Fuehrer described the report given me by Ribbentrop through Minister Ritter as absolutely untrue and mendacious. The Fuehrer was very much excited during this talk and told Von Ribbentrop he would not stand for his coming to him again in private on such matters. He decided that for the present everything should remain as it is until I've had an opportunity to present the case to the Fuehrer. One can see how unscrupulously Ribbentrop is wont to proceed in such matters and how little true comradeship he shows a colleague. If Ribbentrop is as clever in his foreign policy as he is toward his colleagues in matters of domestic politics, I can well understand why we don't achieve any notable successes in our dealings with foreign nations. [The entry for December 9, 1943, was the last found among the Goebbels papers. It is a rather curious fact that the outstanding impression gained from this last entry is that of the jealousy and disunity among Hitler's top leaders.] Summary: 1943-1945 When Joseph Goebbels dictated these last surviving diary entries in December of 1943, the tide of war had already turned against the Germans. In the east the Wehrmacht had suffered crucial defeat at Stalingrad during the previous winter, and by the end of 1943 the Russians had advanced hundreds of miles on the central and southern parts of the front, with Smolensk and Kiev once again in their hands. Rommel had been driven out of Africa, the Allies had taken Sicily and landed at Salerno, and in December the front ran across the Italian peninsula from Cassino to Ortona, with Rome less than a hundred miles to the north. Mussolini had been thrown out of office and imprisoned, then rescued by Otto Skorzeng and brought to Germany, after which the Fuehrer, loyal at least to the Duce, had installed him as a puppet ruler of northern Italy. And from the air, night after night the Royal Air Force was raining fire and death on the Fatherland, and already much of Berlin, Hamburg and other German cities lay in ruins. The war, however, was far from finished. Southern Italy was the Allies' only toehold on the European mainland. In France, the Low Countries and the Balkans, the Nazi grip was unbroken. Festung Europa, as German-occupied Europe was then often called, was still virtually intact, and would remain so until the summer of 1944. In accordance with those circumstances, the Teheran discussions among Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin and their staffs— the principal subject of Goebbels's last entries—were primarily concerned with military planning. The Anglo-American landing on the French Atlantic coast was scheduled for May of 1944, in conjunction with a simultaneous Russian offensive. An Allied assault in southern France was also envisaged, as well as aid to the partisans in Yugoslavia. Victory ap- peared probable although still distant, and there was some talk of the political problems that would follow peace, including the treatment of Germany, but this was exploratory and vague. The military decisions, of course, had to be kept secret, and it was hardly surprising that the official Teheran communique was not very revealing, as the diary entry for December 7th indicates. Since Goebbels was the Nazi leader most responsible for civilian morale and the "home front" in general, he eyed the communique closely for evidences of propaganda directed at the German people. Relieved to find none, he called it "a complete German victory," and in his speculations on possible disagreement between Stalin and the two western leaders can already be perceived the last desperate hope that sustained him in the dark days to come: the hope that Russia and the western allies would have a falling-out and that Nazi Germany could be saved from such a split. But the time for explicit articulation of this thought had not yet come. In December of 1943, Goebbels, and the Third Reich of which he was a part, had almost a year and a half of life remaining. This time may conveniently be divided into three periods: the six months from December, 1943, to June, 1944, during which the Wehrmacht suffered continuing but not critical reverses; the ensuing nine months, in the course of which the Germans were driven out of the countries they had occupied and the Allied armies on both the western and* eastern fronts drove deep into Germany; and the final month of April, 1945, at the end of which the Reich crashed in smoking ruins and Goebbels and his master took their own lives as the Russians approached the Fuehrerbunker in the heart of Berlin. 1 During the early months of 1944, Germany was fighting a war on four fronts. There were defensive campaigns on the ground in Russia and Italy and in the air over Germany, and there was offensive U-boat warfare on the high seas, chiefly in the Atlantic Ocean. In Russia the central part of the German front held well, but in the north the Red Army lifted the siege of Leningrad and drove westward to the Estonian border, while to the south it pushed the Wehrmacht back from the Dnieper to the Dniester and entered Bessarabia and the southwestern part of what had been Poland. In Italy, Fieldmarshal Kesselring was conducting a skillful defensive campaign. General Alexander's attempt in January to dislodge the Germans by landing in their rear at Anzio was unsuccessful, Cassino was a difficult obstacle, and not until May were the Allies able to resume their northward march. Heavy air attacks over Germany continued through the winter, but in the spring there was some respite as the Allied air forces shifted the focus of their operations to the bridges and railways of northwestern France and Belgium in preparation for the landings in Normandy. At sea the U-boat attack had been blunted in 1943 by radar, sonar, long-range aircraft and other new measures of convoy defense, and it never again achieved significant success. If the German military record was pretty bleak compared to the halcyon days of 1940 and 1941, still it included nothing half so bad as the 1943 disasters at Stalingrad and in Africa and Italy, and it presented Goebbels with no new propaganda problems. He had already hit upon the major themes that he thought best calculated to stifle defeatism and maintain morale under the impact of bad news. Perhaps the most important of these was the propaganda device described 2 as "strength through fear," by which descriptions of the terrible consequences of defeat were used to maintain the people's will to resist. Another main theme was retaliation (Vergeltung) —predictions that the day would soon come when the enemy would "pay the bill" for the havoc he was wreaking in Germany. The factual basis for these premises was the development of secret weapons, the existence of which was of course only hinted at in the propaganda. Throughout the summer and fall of 1943 "retaliation" was much emphasized, but delays in the production of the new weapons caused Goebbels early in 1944 to issue a directive to play down this theme until the means of fulfillment were at hand. What was actually happening on the foreign and home fronts during the first half of 1944 was bad enough, but the bleak present was less important than the ominous future. These months were dominated by the looming Allied attack on the European mainland, which many knew and all sensed to be imminent. When and where would the blow fall? What would be its consequences? For Goebbels, as for the others in high places, this was the great question and major problem of the dav. His attitude toward it, however, was extraordinarily ambivalent: in one breath he would welcome the prospect of an Allied landing as offering opportunity for a decisive German victory, and in the next he would portray it as the start of "two-front war," a development that had been fatal in the First World War and was equally beyond the countrv's capacity in 1944. Semmler's diary entry for April 10, 1944, is indicative of Goebbels's dilemma: *Tbe question whether the Allied invasion in the West is coming or not dominates all political and military discussion here. "Goebbels is afraid that the Allies dare not make the attempt yet. If so, that would mean for us many months of endless, weary waiting which would test our strength beyond endurance. Our war potential cannot now be increased, it can only decline. Every new air raid makes the petrol position worse. "Goebbels considers that our only way out of the present dilemma is for invasion in the West to be attempted and successfully repulsed, and for the Western Allies then to decide that they will give up the bloody contest. If there should be a long struggle on the invasion coast, we would only have a reasonable chance of victory if the gigantic losses in the East can be checked. In other words, as Goebbels said in an internal conference, we must find ways of ending the war with the Soviet Union." To end the war by making peace with one \A the major enemies, and then make common cause aeainst the others! This now became the dominant obiective of Goebbels's advice to Hitler. Only two days after the "internal conference" described above, Goebbels embodied bis '.lews in a memorandum, the text of which apparently did not survive the war but which is described at length by Semmler: "In the last few days Goebbels has written a forty-paee memorandum, which is to be sent to the Fuehrer this morning. It constitutes a first-class sensation. It starts off by declaring that, on present prospects, military victory is out of the question. The war on two fronts is such a drain on our strength that already the date can be foreseen when we shall be exhausted. It is therefore vitally necessary to stop the war on one front as soon as possible. "For the sake of Western culture, the memorandum goes on, it would be worth trying to come to an arrangement with the Western Powers, which might stop the war in the West and leave us with the strength to beat the Soviets. But in present circumstances it seems out of the question to bring Churchill and Roosevelt round to such a change of policy. As the whole existence of the Reich and of 80 million Germans is at stake, we must not let our ideological dogmas lead us into ruin. We must overcome all the scruples and prejudices that have so far held us back and try to get agreement with Russia. Stalin's whole attitude is anti-British and—because of the Far Eastern position—anti-American. It should therefore be not impossible to make common cause with him against the Western Powers." To implement this diplomatic strategy, Goebbels proposed first that Ribbentrop should be dismissed as Foreign Minister since he was "the man responsible for our isolation abroad" and therefore "the worst possible man to take charge of this new development in our foreign policy." Thereafter, the Japanese, who were at war with Britain and the United States but not with the Soviet Union, should be used as the channel to convey to the Russians a "concrete offer" under which Finland, northern Norway, the Baltic States, eastern Poland, Rumania, Bulgaria and Greece would all be "alloted to the Soviet sphere of influence." But April passed with no response from Hitler. On May 2nd, when Goebbels visited the Fuehrer's headquarters, he discovered that Martin Bormann had held the memorandum on his "in" tray, unwilling to take the responsibility of passing it on to Hitler. Goebbels then realized, according to Semm-ler, that "in the circle around Hitler, which is dominated by Bormann, the war situation is still regarded with irresponsible optimism." Thus provoked, Goebbels began with great caution to probe the possibility of organizing a group of high officials (including Albert Speer) of greater acumen and realism to counter the influence of Ribbentrop and Bormann. Although Hitler saw Goebbels' memorandum on May 2nd, he apparently expressed no opinion at that time and on June 5th, Goebbels went to visit Hitler at the Obersalzberg, hoping that the document would finally come up for discussion. But he had been there only a few hours when news came of the Allied landings in Normandy, and the memorandum was forgotten. Goebbels was informed of the Allied landings by a telephone call from Semmler at four in the morning. His first reaction was one of relief: "Thank God, at last. This is the final round." His feelings of excitement were confirmed by Hitler's assurance that there was a good prospect of throwing, the invaders back into the sea, in which event, Goebbels thought, "the next two weeks will decide the war." But while the invasion was contained in Normandy for some weeks, it was not repulsed, and Goebbels's euphoria soon vanished. He found comfort, however, in the advent—at long last—of the "retaliation" weapons, in the form of the pilot-less, jet-propelled flying bombs, well remembered by those in London during the summer of 1944 as "buzz-bombs." From Goebbels's standpoint, the initial question was what they should be called for domestic propaganda purposes. A member of his staff, one Schwaarz van Berch, suggested that they be called "V-weapons" (V-Waffen, standing for Vergeltung) and that further developments be foretold by calling the buzz-bombs "V-l." Hitler personally approved this solution. Goebbels handled the propaganda aspect of the V-weapons with great skill. At the outset he discouraged exaggerated accounts of their success in order to avoid subsequent letdown should they not prove effective. Then, without endeavoring to specify the destructive effects of the new weapons, he stressed the "paralyzing feeling of horror" that they were arousing in England. In fact, the direct effect of the flying bombs was not of great moment, but the Allied leaders became aware that Goebbels had used the new weapons to great advantage in bolstering domestic morale, and in September of 1944, Eisenhower turned some of his forces into the Pas de Calais, from where the bombs were being launched, not only to remove the annoyance caused in London, "but also to deny to the enemy the propaganda value which he enjoyed on the home front and in the army from the attacks on London and talk of new weapons which would •decide the war.' " After the launching sites were overrun, the flying bombs were relegated to a minor role in the German propaganda scheme. About six weeks after the Allies landed in Normandy, the invasion and the V-weapons alike were overshadowed by the attempt on Hitler's life, known in history as the "20th of July plot." News that there had been an explosion at the Fuehrer's headquarters at Rastenburg in East Prussia reached Goebbels soon after noon, followed by further word that Hitler had survived. Events now so transpired that Goebbels, as the senior Nazi official in Berlin, was able to play a key role in crushing the revolt. The would-be killer of Hitler, Colonel Klaus von Stauffenberg, left Rastenburg convinced that he had succeeded in his mission, and he sc informed his fellow-conspirators in Berlin. One of these was the military commandant of Berlin, General Paul von Hase, who, at about four in the afternoon, ordered his troops to occupy and seal off the part of Berlin where most of the government buildings were located. The officers of these units were told that Hitler was dead and that the occupation of the government quarter was necessary in order to maintain order. But one of the lieutenants, an ardent Nazi, doubted the authenticity of the report and succeeded in telephoning Goebbels, who of course denied the report of Hitler's death and denounced the military occupation of his ministry building as treasonable. The lieutenant then persuaded his batallion commander, Major Otto Remer, to go to Goebbels's office for further information. The conspiracy was poorly organized, and its members had neglected to cut the telephone lines between Rastenburg and the ministries in Berlin. When Remer arrived, Goebbels was able to get Hitler on the telephone, and the Fuehrer now assured Reiner that the-plot had failed, promoted him to colonel, and directed him to put himself under Goebbels* orders and use his troops to suppress the revolt. The immediate consequences were the collapse of the conspiracy and the arrest and execution of its leading members. Heinrich Himmler, head of the German secret police, came at once to Berlin, and he and Goebbels together conducted the initial interrogations that disclosed the dimensions of the plot. Shortly after midnight Hitler himself made a short statement on the radio, in which he assured the German people that he was "unhurt and well,*' denounced the plot as "a crime unparalleled in German history" and threatened dire vengeance against the perpetrators. Despite his shaken condition, Hitler was shrewd enough not to depress public morale by undermining its confidence in its leaders or the Army as a whole; the conspiracy had been on the part of "a small clique** of officers who had "nothing in common with the spirit of the German Wehrmacht and, above all, none with the German people." It was an effective utterance, in sharp contrast to the ranting address made the following day by Robert Ley, leader of the Nazi Labor Front, in which Ley put the blame on "blue-blood" aristocrats combined in an "international plot" with Jews and "Russian Bolsheviks"— a speech described by Semmler as full of the "crassest idiocies." The Propaganda Ministry's instructions to the German press, on the morning following the event, borrowed Hitler's reference to a "small clique" and then struck an affirmative note: "Out of the outraged and clamoring feeling of the German people and its embattled soldiers ... there must and will come a blessing on our battle and a greater strength for it ... a new wave of resolve and inner confidence will seize the German people." Goebbels himself set off for Rasten-burg, where he arrived on the morning of July 22nd. The security precautions had been tightened, and even Goebbels was searched before being admitted to Hitler's presence. He found his Fuehrer physically and nervously shaken, and he took advantage of the occasion to urge a reorganization of the government and his own promotion to leadership of "a mighty effort to regain the military and political initiative" by waging "total war." Goebbels left Rastenburg confident that he had won Hitler to his way of thinking and, returning to Berlin by train, told his staff: "If I had received these powers when I wanted them so badly, victory would be in our pockets today, and the war would probably be over. But it takes a bomb under his arse to make Hitler see reason." Meanwhile, Heinrich Himmler had been singing the same tune, and it was Himmler and Goebbels who profited most, in a hierarchic sense, from the affair of July 20th. Himmler was made Commander of the Home Army (replacing General Fritz Fromm, who had played a double game during the revolt), while Goebbels was given the title of "Reich Plenipotentiary for Total War," with general responsibility for leadership of the home front; Hitler's decree charged him "to sec to it that all public activities are in tune with the aim of total mobilization" and "to re-examine the whole State administration . .. with the purpose of freeing a maximum of manpower" for military service. The significance of the plot and its aftermath were the subject of a major radio address that Goebbels delivered on July 26th. Once again the conspirators were described as a "small clique,** and the Army as a whole was cleared of guilt. Indeed, the Army itself had smashed the plot, and therefore "no soldier and no officer need feel ashamed to wear the same uniform as was worn by these gamblers who were unfit to wear it." Another theme borrowed from Hitler's speech was the "hand of Providence"; Hitler's escape was a miracle and proved that "fate has taken the Fuehrer under its benign protection in this tragic hour because it wants to keep him for a great future.'* Now the people must put forth even greater efforts, and the Fuehrer in his wisdom had entrusted Goebbels with the leadership in this task. The V-l flying bombs had upset "the entire enemy defense system,*' even more terrible new weapons would soon be at hand and thus "the war will be given a new aspect and the enemies' shouts of triumph will stick in their throats." This reorganization and revitalization of the war effort "is the balance sheet of July 20th," and "the German people have better grounds to be satisfied with it than its enemies." It was a remarkably skillful and eloquent speech, and it was the prelude to a great burst of activity for Goebbels in his new role. After July 21st, Hitler's voice was heard in public but once again, and Goebbels virtually replaced him as the visible and audible leader of the Third Reich. The Fatherland was in dire straits and in desperate need of whatever strengthening, moral and material, Goebbels could provide. In France the Allies were breaking out of the Normandy bridgehead, landing in southern France and commencing the great drive that carried them, six weeks later, to the very borders of Germany. Rome had fallen to the enemy early in June; by the end of August, Alexander's forces were north of Florence. On the eastern front the Russians had attacked at the time of the Normandy landings; in June and July, Finland and Rumania were knocked out of the war and Soviet troops were at the gates of Warsaw and deep in the Balkans. Toward the end of the summer, heavy bombing of German cities was resumed, and the transportation situation grew increasingly critical. If not a miracle, it was and remains a mystery that the Third Reich remained intact and continued to resist fiercely throughout the winter of 1944-45, when the prospects of survival, let alone victory, appeared virtually hopeless. The credit for this extraordinary national intransigence, if credit it be, should probably go primarly to three men: Albert Speer, who kept the machinery running; Heinrich Himmler, who kept the people in a state of terrified obedience; and Joseph Goebbels, who kept alive the flickers of hope. But despite his new title and enormous ambition and energy, Goebbels was no economic wizard, and his actions as "Plenipotentiary for Total War" were at best a mixture of a little wisdom and considerable folly. He raised the maximum age of women liable for war work, ordered that domestic servants be dispensed with and drafted for war industry, suppressed cultural life and ceremonial events and established a minimum sixty-hour work week. Most of this was sensible enough, but some of the directives were so poorly administered that there were grotesque consequences, such as the rehiring of Goebbels's own domestic servants to work in the household of the German Minister in Copenhagen. Much worse, with Goebbels's support, local Nazi officials began to call up industrial workers for service in the new "people** (Volksgrenadier) divisions, with what Speer regarded as major disruptive effects on the armaments industry. But in the field of propaganda Goebbels never lost his touch, and as the German military situation darkened, he exhibited great imagination and ingenuity in finding the silver lining that warranted continued resistance. He was extraordi- narily adept at seemingly favorable comparisons; if the enemy "are superior through the wealth of their supplies, we through our national character and morale, toughness and power of resistance" are "the first people of the world** and "quite invincible." When the western Allies reached the German frontier, this was not only a danger but also an advantage: "Our defense on inner lines saves us from almost insoluble difficulties." The German cause was righteous, and history showed that a courageous people could never be overcome by "crude force," for "at the decisive moment that power of Providence which remains inexplicable to man interferes in time." And around the corner waited the Utopia of peace. If only Germany could survive this "last test of nerves and strength," then the war would end and all would behold "an august and fine peace into which we shall step from the bloody world of war." In mid-December the Wehrmacht launched in the Ardennes its last major offensive and precipitated what the western Allies called the "Battle of the Bulge." No military analyst, Goebbels swallowed with pleasure Hitler's optimistic predictions and told his staff that the enemy would be driven into the sea. Publicly he was more cautious, speaking of "the slow, but definite restoration of German military power of defense and attack." But even before Christmas he became aware that the offensive was a failure. At about this time Goebbels appears to have abandoned hope that the war could be brought to a successful conclusion, and there were no subsequent military developments that gave any cause for hope. The Russians overran East Prussia and advanced to the Oder, less than seventy miles from Berlin. The western Allies resumed the offensive in February, and in March they were across the Rhine and driving toward the Elbe. Still Goebbels the propagandist kept his nerve. The balance sheet remained even, he proclaimed, for although the military aspects of the situation were all in the enemy's favor, "as far as the political aspects are concerned, they can be entered nearly exclusively to our credit and on the enemy's debit side." Thus bad military news was turned into good political news: 'The enemies have no joint war aims in common, and the greater their military success, the more they will realize their lack and the artificiality of their unnatural condition.* This was the "splitting" theme in its latest guise. Meanwhile, Hitler had abandoned his Rastenburg headquarters in the face of the oncoming Russian tide, and after the Ardennes failure, he returned to the Chancellery in Berlin. Goebbels had found the Fuehrer's silence and remoteness extremely awkward, as giving rise to rumors that he was unwell or even dead. Finally on January 30, 1945 (the twelfth anniversary of his designation as Chancellor), Hitler spoke on the German radio—for the last time. He made numerous references to "the Almighty," vowed that National Socialist Germany would never be lured into surrender by "empty phrases of the Wilsonian type" and presented Goebbels with another title, designating him "Defender of Berlin." As the end approached, Goebbels stood higher than ever in the Fuehrer's favor. On January 12th, Hitler had made one of his infrequent departures from the Chancellery in order to pay a social call at the Goebbels's home. Pouring his own tea from a thermos bottle, the Fuehrer chatted amiably with the family, describing his plans for the rebuilding of Berlin and reminiscing about the old days. Frau Goebbels, who still worshipped Hitler, was proud indeed and commented complacently that "he wouldn't have gone to the Goerings." But it was the last idyllic note, for the Third Reich was crashing on its leaders' heads. Early in February one of Goebbels's assistants, Wilfrid von Oven, noted that: "The Minister has come to the conclusion that it is now definitely too late to exploit a discord between the Allies to our advantage." Things had gone too far, and "no favorable or even tolerable end of the war could be achieved." Therefore: "We have no alternative but to perish decently, in order to give posterity an example and prove that nothing has been left untried to save Germany, and with it Europe, from Bolshevization." To fight to the end and set an example for posterity! This was, for Goebbels, the great purpose of the few remaining months of his life, and no one can gainsay his fortitude. He drove his staff harder than ever, rushed from bombed city to bombed city to show himself and conferred with Himmler on reconstruction of the Cabinet. In February the terrible Allied raid on Dresden threw him into a paroxysm of grief and rage, and a few days later he proposed to Hitler that, by way of response, Germany should denounce the Geneva Conventions and leave the populace free to wreak vengeance on captured enemy air crews. Hitler approved but Semmler secretly leaked information of the plan to a foreign journalist, and threats of reprisal from London led to its abandonment. Meanwhile, Adolph Hitler was holed up in the Chancellery, suffering an advancing state of personal disintegration and spending ever-increasing time below ground in the Fuehrer-bunker. Instead of visiting bombed areas, he would daydream with Speer over architectural plans for the Austrian city of Linz, where he had passed his boyhood. When Goebbels sent hifn a collection of photographs of destroyed and damaged monuments and buildings, it was returned by Bormann with a note saying that "the Fuehrer did not wish to be worried with such irrelevant matters." Despite Hitler's failure and debilities, Goebbels's devotion to him never flagged, and as the end approached, the bond between the two men was stronger than ever. Throughout March, Hitler's circle was absorbed with the question of whether to remain in Berlin or move to a safer location in the rapidly dwindling Reich. It was apparent that soon the western Allies and the Russians would meet and split Germany, and Goering and others urged Hitler to move back to the Obersalzberg and try to hold out in a Bavarian "redoubt." Goebbels, however, thought that the end should come in Berlin, and he reminded Hitter that when the latter had taken the oath as Chancellor on January 30, 1933, he vowed to Goebbels that: "We will never leave this building again of our own free will. No power in the world can ever force us to abandon our position." Late in March, Goebbels told his staff that Hitler had decided to remain in Berlin until the end, and from then on his prime concern—ever the propagandist—was how the end should be "staged" and how it would appear to posterity. Toward the end of February, Goebbels suggested to his wife that their six children should leave Berlin and make their way westward toward the British troops advancing into northern Germany. "They would do nothing to you," he told her. Magda Goebbels, however, would not hear of it, and others who made similar proposals to her, including Albert Speer and Goebbels's deputy Werner Naumann, found her equally obstinate; she would stay with her husband and share his fate. At about the same time, she and Joseph must have discussed the idea of mutual suicide and the killing of their children. On February 25th, Semmler learned that Magda had obtained from Hitler's personal physician, Dr. Theodor Morell, enough poison for herself and the children. Semmler's diary entry for that date continues: "In the evening nowadays she often comes into our room and opens her heart to us. I feel sorry for her. She sees her future quite clearly. She admits she is afraid of death, and she knows it is drawing closer every day. She does not like talking to her husband about these things. He has enough to do looking after his own sanity. Today she said that she had managed to attain some sort of composure about her end, but she still could not bear the thought of ending the lives of her children. When I put my six children to bed in the evening, four-year-old Heide, five-year-old Hedda, seven-year-old Holly, nine-year-old Helmuth, ten-year-old Hilde and twelve-year-old Helga, and when I think that in a few weeks' time I may have to kill these innocent creatures, I go nearly crazy with grief and pain. I am always wondering how I actually will do it when the time comes. I cannot talk about it with my husband any more. He would never forgive me for weakening his resistance. As long as he can go on fighting, he thinks all is not lost.' " Goebbels knew well enough that all was lost, but he still refused to acknowledge it openly. He was enraged by reports that white flags were being hung out in the towns approached by enemy troops, and on April 5th he declared that "if a single white flag is hoisted in a Berlin street, I shall not hesitate to have the whole street and all its inhabitants blown up." A week later there was a last flicker of desperate hope when the news of Franklin Roosevelt's death reached Berlin. For a few hours Goebbels completely lost touch with reality. In the presence of his staff, he telephoned to Hitler: "My Fuehrer, I congratulate you. Fate has laid low your greatest enemy. God has not abandoned us. ... Death, which the enemy aimed at you in 1939 and 1944, 8 has now struck down our most dangerous enemy. A miracle has happened. . . . This is like the death of the Empress Elizabeth in the Seven Years' War." 4 Hitler and Goebbels then speculated on the prospects for American policy under Truman who, they hoped, might be "a much more moderate man," and Goebbels subsequently instructed his staff that the German press should write about Truman "objectively and neutrally" so as not to "irritate" him. But for Roosevelt, de mortuis nihil nisi malum; he would go down in history as the great instigator of world war and "as the President who finally succeeded in bringing his greatest opponent, the Bolshevik Soviet Union, to power." It was the last echo of the "splitting" theme. But the euphoria soon passed as it became apparent that Roosevelt's death brought no sign of division or weakening in the enemy camp. Still the "little Doctor" did not crack, and on April 17th he was able to encourage a staff conference with the information that many journalists were leaving the Ministry to join the forces defending Berlin. 5 April 20th was Adolf Hitler's fifty-sixth birthday, and on the preceding evening Goebbels delivered his last radio broadcast. "I may have spoken in a happier or perhaps a less happy hour," he began, "but never before have matters been on the razor edge as they are today. Never before has the German people had to defend its bare life under such enormous dangers and, by a last all-out effort, make sure that the Reich does not break apart. This is not the time to celebrate the Fuehrer's birthday with the usual words or to express our traditional good wishes to him. I have shared joy and sorrow with the Fuehrer ... and I still stand at his side and am convinced that fate will, after this last hard test, award the laurel wreath to him and his people." But events had outstripped all possibility of invention of means to victory, and Goebbels could only say that "the war is approaching its end," which was obviously true, and predict that within a few years "Germany will blossom as never before." Only the Fuehrer could show the way: "May God give him strength and preserve him from all dangers." And then in conclusion, veiled but unmistakable, came the true explanation of what was to be the nature of the victory: "In the midst of peril Germany celebrates her greatest triumph. If history tells of this country that its people never abandoned their leader and that their leader never abandoned his country, that will be victory." Posterity was thus made the theme of the finale, with overtones of Valhalla. Hitler, for his part, celebrated his birthday by emerging briefly from the bunker to review a group of Hitler Youth assembled in the Chancellery garden and to decorate them for their bravery in the defense of Berlin. Then he held a staff conference, at the conclusion of which Hermann Goer-ing took leave of his Fuehrer and departed for the south. A general exodus of Berlin officials now began; most of them headed south, but some went northwest toward Schleswig, where Admiral Karl Donitz, Commander-in-Chief of what was left of the German Navy, had established his headquarters at Plon. Hitler had not as yet announced his personal intentions, but on April 22nd, after a staff conference at which he flew into a paroxysm of rage and general denunciation, he declared that anyone might leave the bunker and go where he wished but that he, Hitler, would remain in Berlin and meet his end there. The protestations, in person or by phone, of Bormann, Keitel, Donitz, Ribbentrop, Himmler and others were useless. Finally he sent for the Goebbels family, and late that afternoon Joseph, Magda and the six children drove from their home to the Fuehrerbunker, where they were to spend the last week of their lives. 6 Goebbels's public tongue had been stilled but not his pen, and it was in the bunker, on April 24th, that he wrote his last proclamation to the people of Berlin. The war, in his eyes, had become a crusade to save Europe from the Bolshevist Mongols: "I need not stress particularly that it is and will remain i our ardently desired aim to free Berlin from the Bolshevik enemy of the world and to preserve it from annihilation. Bolshevism in the Reich capital—this would mean a terror without end. I am convinced that the leadership and the people of the Reich capital will succeed in their common efforts to throw back the new onslaught of the Mongols. Important forces for the support of the defenders of Berlin are about to be led against it. Until they arrive, we will have to pull together all our strength and courage, in order to resist the enemy. Our hearts must not waver and not tremble. It must be our pride and our ambition to break the Bolshevist mass onslaught which is surging from the East against the heart-land of Europe at the walls of the Reich capital." Meanwhile, Goering, at the Obersalzberg, had been told of Hitler's decision to stay in Berlin. Assuming this meant that Hitler was or soon would be incapable of exercising leadership, Goering sent a telegram announcing his intention, unless instructed to the contrary within a few hours, to take over "total leadership of the Reich" in accordance with Hitler's 1941 decree designating Goering as his successor. But when the message arrived at the Berlin bunker, Hitler was enraged and ordered Goering to resign from all his offices. A few days later, on April 28th, word reached the bunker that Heinrich Himmler had been conducting peace negotiations with the Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte. Hitler's anger was even greater at this act of treachery, for Goering had long since been discredited, while Himmler— der treue Heinrich — was a trusted ally. Now he, too, was dismissed and ordered to be arrested. And so at the end only Goebbels and Bor-mann remained of the erstwhile Nazi paladins. With the Russians in the outskirts and fighting their way toward the center of the city, it had become all but impossible to move into or out of Berlin, and Hitler and his party in the bunker were virtually isolated, although telephone and telegraph communication was maintained. On April 26th, however, two adventurous souls succeded in entering Berlin and reaching the bunker: General Robert Ritter von Greim, whom Hitler had summoned in order to designate him as Goering's successor in command of the Luftwaffe, and the famous woman test pilot, Hanna Reitsch. Even more remarkable, they succeeded in flying out of the city on the morning of April 28th, carrying letters from the inhabitants of the bunker, including two from Joseph and Magda to the latter's son by a previous marriage, Harald Quandt, who was a prisoner-of-war in England, These letters have survived, and Magda's words convey something of what life in the Fuehrer-bunker was like for the Goebbels family: "My darling son, "It is six days by now that we have been in the Fuehrer-bunker, all of us, Papa, your small brother, your five little sisters and I, so as to give our Nationalist Socialist life the only possible and honourable end. "I don't know whether this letter will ever reach you, but perhaps there is a human soul after all, enabling me to send you these, my last greetings. I want you to know that it was against Papa's will that I have decided to stay with him, and that even last Sunday the Fiiehrer still wished to help us to get out of here. But you know your mother, we have the same blood, and for me there was no other choice. Our glorious ideas are coming to an end, and with them everything beautiful and admirable and noble and good I have known in my life. The world to come after the Fuehrer and after National Socialism will not be worth living in, and that is why I have taken the children along with me. They are too good for the sort of life to come after us, and a merciful God will understand my reasons for sparing them that sort of life. . . . "The children are wonderful. Without anyone to help them they look after themselves in these more than primitive circumstances. Whether or not they have to sleep on the floor, whether or not they can wash themselves, or have something to eat there is never a word of complaint from them and they never cry. Artillery bombardment shakes the Bunker, and whenever that happens, the bigger children look after the smaller ones; and, incidentally, their presence here is a blessing if only for the fact that from time to time they make the Fuehrer smile. "Last night the Fuehrer took his own Party badge and pinned it on me. It made me very proud and happy. May God give me the strength for my last and most difficult duty. There is only one thing we want now, to be true to death to the Fuehrer and to finish our lives with him. And in a way, this is a blessing of fate we never dared to hope for "My darling son, live for Germany!" Joseph's letter to his stepson was less personal and more than a little grandiloquent: "We are shut away in the Fuehrerbunker next to the Reich Chancellery, fighting for our lives and our honour. God alone knows how this struggle will end, but I do know that, alive or dead, we shall not leave the Bunker unless we can leave it honourably.. .. "In future you should recognise one duty only: to be worthy of the great sacrifice that we are determined to make. I know you will be worthy, but do not be led astray by the unrest which will spread now all over the world. One day the untruths will collapse under their own weight, and truth will once more rise supreme. The time will come again when Germany will face the world unsullied, as spotless as our own faith and purpose have always been. "Good-bye, my son Harald. It is in God's hands whether we are ever to meet again. If this will never be, you can be proud of belonging to a family which, in these dark days, stood by the Fuehrer and remained loyal to hkn with its last breath, and faithful to his great and sacred cause." After the departure of von Greim, Hitler turned to the two things that remained to be done before his planned suicide: his marriage to Eva Braun, and the composition of his political and personal testaments. A civil officer was necessary to perform the marriage ceremony, and Goebbels was able to find a minor city functionary, one Walter Wagner, who came to the bunker early on April 29th and officiated. Goebbels and Bonnann witnessed the marriage certificate, and after the event Magda was invited to join the select group that drank champagne and reminisced with the Fuehrer about happier times, when Hitler had been best man at the Goebbels's wedding in 1931. The Fuehrer did not prolong these festivities but retired to dictate his wills. The personal will explained his decision to many Eva Braun and their plans for simultaneous suicide, left his paintings for the establishment of a gallery in Linz and named Bormann as his executor. The political testament opened with a general defense of his career and went on to designate his successors and to name a new cabinet. With Goering and Himmler expelled and in disgrace, the list of candidates for the top jobs was limited. To everyone's surprise, Admiral Doenitz was designated Chief of State and Supreme Commander of the Wehrmacht. Goebbels was named Reich Chancellor and Bormann Chancellor of the Nazi Party. In conclusion Hitler admonished those favored with high office to carry on the Nazi policies and traditions and "above all else, uphold the racial laws in all their severity, and mercilessly resist the universal poisoner of all nations, international Jewry." The wills were signed early in the morning of April 29th, and arrangments were made for the transmission of copies to Doenitz and others. Hitler then retired to rest, but Goebbels now set about the composition of an "Appendix" to Hitler's testament, in order to explain his own refusal to act as Reich Chancellor and his decision to take his family with him to the grave: "The Fuehrer has ordered me, should the defense of the Reich capital collapse, to leave Berlin and to take part as a leading member in a government appointed by him. "For the first time in my life I must categorically refuse to obey an order of the Fuehrer. My wife and children join me in this refusal. Otherwise—quite apart from the fact that feelings of humanity and loyalty forbid us to abandon the Fuehrer in his hour of greatest need—I should appear for the rest of my life as a dishonourable traitor and common scoundrel, and should lose my own self-respect together with the respect of my fellow citizens; a respect I should need in any further attempt to shape the future of the German nation and State. "In the delirium of treachery which surrounds the Fuehrer in these most critical days of the war, there must be someone at least who will stay with him unconditionally until death, even if this conflicts with the formal and (in a materia] sense) entirely justifiable order which he has given in his political testament. •*In doing this, I believe that I am doing the best service I can to the future of the German people. In the hard times to come, examples will be more important than men. Men will always be found to lead the nation forward into freedom; but a reconstruction of our national life would be impossible unless developed on the basis of clear and obvious example. "For this reason, together with my wife, and on behalf of my children, who are too young to speak for themselves, but who would unreservedly agree with this decision if they were old enough, I express an unalterable resolution not to leave the Reich capital, even if it falls, but rather, at the side of the Fuehrer, to end a life which will have no further value to me if I cannot spend it in the service of the Fuehrer, and by his side." In the afternoon of April 30th Hitler and Eva Braun retired to their rooms, where Hitler shot himself through the head and Eva swallowed poison. In accordance with Hitler's instructions, the bodies were carried outside the bunker, doused with gasoline and burned in the presence of Goebbels, Bormann and Hitler's SS adjutants and other assistants. That night the new Reich and Party Chancellors conferred with a few of the remaining residents of the bunker including General Hans Krebs, the acting Chief of Staff of the Army. It was decided to send an emissary to Marshal Zhukov, the commander of the Russian troops in Berlin, to propose a truce. Krebs himself undertook the mission and succeeded in making contact with Zhukov, who showed no interest in an armistice on any basis other than unconditional surrender. Krebs returned with this discouraging reply at about noon on May 1st. Bormann and most of the others then set about planning an escape. But for the Goebbels family, the end was at hand. First the children were poisoned in their sleep. Then, at about eight in the evening, Joseph and Magda walked up the steps and stood outside the entrance to the bunker. As Magda swallowed her poison, Joseph shot her through the head. He then bit his own capsule and shot himself. His adjutant, Guenther Schwaegermaun, poured gasoline over the bodies and set them alight. The adjutant and all the others in the bunker shortly made their escape, and the cremation was incomplete. The bodies were still recognizable on the next day, when the Russians reached the bunker. What was done with them is unknown here. Footnotes 1. The materials for reconstruction of Goebbels's attitudes and activities during these last sixteen months are not plentiful. There are, of course, the transcripts of his broadcasts and press conferences and various official decrees and documents emanating from his ministry or otherwise concerning him. For Goebbels's personal behavior, the best source is the diary of his press officer, Rudolf Semmler, published in 1947 under the title Goebbels — The Man Next to Hitler. There is valuable material in Bramsted, Goebbels and National Socialist Propaganda 1925-1945 (1965), and some additional eye-witness accounts in the biographies Dr. Goebbels by Roger Manvell and Heinrich Fraenkel (1960) and Evil Genius: The Story of Joseph Goebbels by Erich Ebermayer and Hans-Otto Meissner (1953). Other details concerning the last days in the Fuehrerbunker, based on the interrogation of survivors, may be found in Trevor-Roper, The Last Days of Hitler (1946), Musmanno, Ten Days to Die (1950), and Gerhard Boldt, Die Letzten Tage der Reichskanzlei (1947). There are useful references to Goebbels in various memoirs of leading Nazis, such as those recently published by Albert Speer under the title Inside the Third Reich (1970). 2. By British counter-propaganda, as noted in a portion of Goebbels's diary entry for December 12, 1942. This and other extracts from the unpublished parts of the diary are quoted in Bramsted's book, cited in footnote 1. 3. The references are to the assassination attempts at Munich in 1939 and at Rastenburg in 1944. 4. The reference is to the death of the Empress Elizabeth of Russia in 1762, which ended the Seven Years' War at a time when Prussia, under Frederick the Great, was in mortal peril. Her successor, Peter III, who greatly admired Frederick, then made a peace offer. 5. Among those who thus took their departure was Semmler, and the entry for April 17th is the last in his diary, which he entrusted to his wife, who was leaving Berlin for Munich. 6. Goebbels's mother and sister had left Berlin a few days before and made their way safely to Icking, near Munich. —Brigadier General Telford Taylor New York City FULL INFORMATION ABOUT THE MOST IMPORTANT ENTRIES WILL BE FOUND WHERE ITEM FIRST OCCURS IN TEXT. Abetz, Madame, 382 Abetz, Otto, 46-7, 22$ Abyssinia, Africa, 521 Africa, North, 46, 70, 78, 184, 213. 269, 291, 316, 340, 349, 355, 358, 375, 376, 388, 397, 404, 405, 426, 430, 444, 497, 510, 524, 542, 615, 619; French, 265, 267, 287; Rommel, 48-9, 64, 263, 285, 286, 287, 338, 340, 364, 395, 414, 418 Albania, 486 Alexander, Field Marshal Sir Harold, 263, 443, 619, 626 Alexandria, Egypt, 199 Alfleri, Dino, 74, 469, 472, 536 Algiers, Africa, 337, 341 Alkett industrial plant, Berlin, 601, 602, 604 Alsace, France, 225 Altona, Germany, 455 Amann, Max, 68, 261, 564 Anatolia, Turkey, 583 Anderson, General, U.S.A., 281 Ankara, Turkey, 120, 148, 256, 257, 441, 553, 563, 583 Antonescu, Ion, 31, 97, 160, 254, 309, 369, 376, 540 Antonescu, Mihai, 98, 254, 383, 487, 540, 558 Antwerp, Belgium, 356, 364 Anzio, Italy, 619 Apennine Mountains, Italy, 485, 506 Arabs, 577; delegation, London, 69 Aranha, Oswaldo, 167 Argentina, 49, 52, 57, 231, 268 Armjansk, Crimea, 556 Arnim, General Juergen von, 282, 340, 393 Asia, East, 46, 52, 62, 70, 72, 82, 114, 127, 160, 168, 171, 229, 234, 250, 390 Associated Press, 11, 22, 32, 251 Athens, Greece, 70 Atlantic Ocean, 56, 115, 618; northern, 543 Atlantic Wall (Siegfried Line), 88, 377, 405 Attlee, Clement Richard, 277, 425 Auchinleck, Sir Claude J. E., 78 Augsburg, Germany, 608 August Wnhehn (German prince), 408 Australia, 57, 84, 124, 137, 139, 143, 148. 159, 160, 169, 171, 194, 201, 237, 239 Austria, 66, 141-2, 478, S41, 554; Anschluss, 66, 117, 144, 402; Aus-tro-German-Italian alliance, 461 Axman, Arthur, 281, 604 Azores, Portuguese islands, 551 Bach, Johann Sebastian, 611 Backe, Herbert, 251, 255, 362, 409, 440 Bad Nauheim, Germany, 34, 250 Badoglio, Marshal Pietro, 476, 503, 506, 518, 540, 542, 546, 551, 577; Italian capitulation, 479-80, 485, 493, 496, 499, 507, 510, 521, 529; Italian revolution, 456, 457-69 passim. See also Italy Bali, Netherlands Indies, 76, 118 Balkans, 63, 174, 391, 419, 486, 487, 519, 524, 573, 617, 626 Baltic States, 133, 146, 308, 574, 621 Balzer, Major, 371 Bamberg, Bavaria, 19, 21 B&rdossy (Hungarian statesman), 180 Bari, Italy, 557 Bartlett, Vernon, 166 Bastianini, Giuseppe, 383 Bataan, P. I., 179, 190, 192 Bath, England, 201, 216 Battle of the Bulge, 627 Bavaria, 89, 356, 434 Beaverbrook, Lord, 76, 84, 545, 549 641 Index Belgium, 56, 188, 238, 617, 619 Belgorod, U.S.S.R., 289, 291, 474 Bellazzo, Italy, 530 Benes, Eduard, 427, 450, 451, 557 Bengasi, Libya, 69, 73 Berch, SchwaarzVan, 622 Berchtesgaden, Bavaria, 55, 148, 294, 366 Berggraf, Dr. Eivind Josef, 64, 128 Berk, Schwarz von, 522 Berlin, 13, 68, 71, 73, 77, 85, 91, 102, 147, 161, 189, 207, 209, 239, 257, 264, 275, 276, 291, 312, 317, 324, 325, 333, 341, 343, 348, 367, 417, 435, 447, 456, 473, 476, 496, 502, 515, 537, 552, 555, 557, 562, 572, 582, 632, 633; air raids, 302-4, 310, 314, 315, 346, 475, 490, 508, 585, 586, 602, 603, 604-6, 608; buildings damaged, 596, 617; church conflict, 140; Gendarmenmarkt, 601; hotels and restaurants, 360, 589, 590, 598; Leopold Palace, 26, 31; Lustgarten, 224; Philharmonic Orchestra, 32, 123, 604; Ploetzensee penitentiary, 508; "Red Berlin," 21; St. Hed-wig*s Church, 303, 320; St. Hed-wig's Hospital, 371; Sports Palace, 24, 73, 550; theaters, 28, 168, 303, 601, 604; Tiergarten, 595, 598; Wertheim's Department Store, 26; Wilhelmplatz, 26, 579, 586, 588, 592, 596, 601; Wintergarten, 413 Bernadatte, Count Folke, 633 Berndt, Alfred Ingomar, 251, 281, 284-5, 286, 309, 340, 368, 374, 434, 471-2 Berning, Bishop of Osnabrueck, 163 Bertram, Cardinal Adolf, 420, 429 Bessarabia, Rumania, 290, 308, 619 Best, Dr. Karl Rudolf, 478, 534 Bettany (Reuter correspondent), 431 Bhatta, Pandit K. A., 125 Bismarck, Prince Otto von, 579, 591 Bismarck (warship), 93 Bismarck Sea, New Guinea, 306, 311 Bizerte, Tunis, 393, 394, 397, 404 Blomberg, Field Marshal Werner von, 286, 349 Blum, Leon, 110, 111, 113, 355 Bochum, Germany, 363, 442, 550 Bock, Fedor von, 38, 532 Bodenschatz, General Karl, 315, 316, 326 Bohle, Ernst Wilhelm, 305 Bolsheviks. See Soviet Russia Bonnet, Georges, 92, 93, 243 Bonnier (Swedish newspaper proprietor), 66 Bordeaux, France, 459 Boris, King of Bulgaria, 37, 38, 58, 174, 175, 360, 454, 487, 497, 500 Bormann, Martin, 35, 51, 99, 100, 115, 149, 297, 311, 318, 321, 344, 345, 407, 409, 457, 463, 466, 523, 564, 597, 606-7, 621, 622, 629, 632, 635, 636, 637 Borsig industrial plant, Berlin, 602 Bose, Subhas Chandra, 125, 126, 130, 143, 166, 185, 241 Bottai, Giuseppe, 328, 472 Bouhler, Philip, 320, 321, 413 Boulogne, France, 208, 209 Bracken, Brendan, 436, 475 Brandenburg, Germany, 308; Arado factory, 439 Brauchitsch, Field Marshal Walther von, 38, 42, 54, 55, 83, 157, 164, 185, 1%, 342, 407, 532 Braun, Eva, 635, 637 Braunau-on-the-Inn, Austria, 413 Brazil, 111, 167 Bremen, Germany, 233, 264, 551, 552, 576, 608; daylight raid, 350, 398 Brenner Pass, Austria-Italy, 361, 461, 496, 529 Breslau, Germany, 584, 585, 592 Brest, France, 76, 93, 98 Brest-Litovsk, Treaty of, 591 Briand-Stresemann policy, 215 Brjansk, USSR., 249, 476 Brown, Major William M., 173 Bruening, Chancellor Heinrich, 117, 247 Buch, Judge Walter, 198-9, 261 Bucharest, Rumania, HI Budapest, Hungary, 82 Buenos Aires, Argentina, 26S Buerckel, Joseph, 39, 201 Bulgaria, 58, 174, 621 Burgundy, France, 215, 434, 442 Burma, 43, 124, 126, 229, 234; Road, 129 Busch, Field Marshal General Ernst, 38, 532 Buzz-bombs, 622 Cairo, Egypt, 278, 552, 563, 574, 583, 608, 614; conference, 566 Calabria, Italy, 474, 477, 483, 489 Calcutta, India, 143 Canada, 107, 265, 272, 343 643 Canaris, Admiral Wilhelm, 53, 54, 59, 60, 358, 364, 443 Canterbury, England, 264 Canterbury, Archbishop of. See William Temple Caribbean Sea, 171 Caruso, Enrico, 85 Casablanca, Morocco, 263-4; conference, 289, 358, 361, 447 Cassino, Italy, 617, 619 Casualties: air attacks on Germany, 144; Antwerp, 363; Berlin, 303, 346, 594-5, 603; Dieppe, 343; East-era campaign, 131, 517, 554; freezing to death, 82, 131; German, in the East, 131; horses, 136; Italy, 269; Kassel, 555; Kiel, 224, 428; Paris, 132; Rostock, 224 Catherine II (Russian empress), 200 Caucasus, U.S.S.R., 157, 216, 257, 264, 289, 552 Cavallero, Count Ugo, 505 Cebu, P.I., 179 Cerff, Karl, 439 Ceylon, 159 Chamberlain, Neville, 167, 169, 427, 569 Charlemagne, King of the Franks (742-814), 402 Charles I (Hungarian emperor), 82 Charles Edward, Duke of Coburg-Gotha, 28, 373, 408 Chateaubriant, Alfonse de\ 547 Chiang Kai-shek, Generalissimo, 188, 229, 552 Chile. 52, 127 China, 142 Christiansen, General Friedrich, 391-2 Churchill, Winston, 56, 57, 87, 90, 125, 138, 164, 166, 180, 205, 213, 260, 279, 282, 448, 477, 491, 522, 536, 552; anti-Churchill Party, 96-7; Atlantic Charter, 304, 545; "Blood, Sweat, and Tears," 106; conferences, 42, 265, 284, 289, 361, 393, 447, 594, 608, 610, 612, 614, 617; Cripps, Sir Stafford, 90, 94, 96-7, 110, 112, 124, 137, 139; English government, 52, 69, 82, 84, 127, 253, 468, 545, 549; Hitler, 71, 98, 536; Italy, 452, 479, 508, 510; Mussolini, Benito, 528, 529; North Africa, 46, 267; speeches, 61, 64, 72-3, 106, 107-8, 120, 169, 172, 194, 208, 238, 247, 441, 468, 522, 542, 550, 570; Stalin, Josef, 480, 553; war aims, 365, 48&-9 Ciano, Count Galeazzo, 29, 266, 282-3, 287, 290, 322, 456, 464, 468, 481, 530, 539^*0, 541, 557, 569, 613 Ciano, Countess Edda, 36, 211, 233, 527, 528, 530, 538-9, 540-1, 557 Ciechanowskl, Jan, 357 Clark, General Mark, 513 Clausewitz, Carl von, 501 Cologne, Germany, 13, 144, 221, 264, 273, 394, 452, 476-7, 583; cathedral, 557 Constantinople, Turkey, 360 Continental-Gesellschaft, Paris, 245 Copenhagen, Denmark, 478, 613 Coral Sea, 238, 239 Corregidor, P.I, 176, 190, 194, 227, 236-7 Corsica, France, 476, 485, 489, 551 Coventry, England, 229 Crefeld, Germany, 18 Crimea, U.S.S.R., 157, 552, 556 Cripps, Sir Stafford, 76, 92, 94, 115, 121, 143, 158, 169, 328; Churchill, Winston, 90, 94, 96-7, 110, 112, 124, 137, 139; India, 40, 91, 125, 138, 139, 177, 191, 234 Croatia, 62, 378, 391, 423, 484, 486 Czechoslovakia, 45, 104, 109, 512, 569; Slovenes, 519 Dahlen Forest Cemetery, 312 Daladier, Edouard, 109, 110, 113, 355, 427, 569 D*Albert, Eugen, 280 Dalmatia, province, Yugoslavia, 63,. 484, 517 Danzig, state, Europe, 264, 309 Darlan, Jean Louis, 264, 266, 269, 276, 289, 390 Darmstadt, Germany, 543 Dart*, Walther, 165, 251, 255, 257, 342, 440 Davies, Joseph E., 199, 393, 432, 447 De Bono, Emilio Giuseppe Gaspari Giovanni, 472 De Gaulle, General Charles, 128, 213, 234, 264, 266, 267, 355, 390, 577 Demyansk, U.S.S.R., 291 Denmark, 433, 478, 567 Derna, Libya, 76 Desna, river, U.S.S.R., 525 De Valera, Eamon, 67, 133, 452 De Vecchi, Count Cesare Maria, 472 Index Dieppe, France, 265, 343 Died, Colonel-General Eduard, 38, 97, 343, 493-4, 496 Dietrich, General Joseph (Sepp), 38, 56-7, 63, 323-4, 337, 347, 379, 567, 569 Dietrich, Dr. Otto, 48, 344, 457, 497, 516, 520, 534, 581 Diewerge (member of Goebbels's staff), 93 Dirksen, Ella von, 50 Dirksen, Herbert von, 50 Dnepropetovsk, Ukraine, 551 Dnieper, river, U.S.S.R., 488, 525, 542, 545, 551, 556, 561, 619 Dodecanese, islands, 443 Doenitz, Grand Admiral Karl, 273, 290, 316, 320, 325, 351, 463, 490, 498, 524, 632, 636 Don Basin, U.S.S.R., 284 Donetz, U.S.S.R., 227, 478 Doriot, Jacques, 267 Dorpmueller, Dr. Julius, 197, 209, 218 Dortmund, Germany, 363, 393, 394, 442, 446, 448 Dresden, Germany, 202, 270, 456, 628 Drottntnghobn (ship), 34 Duce. See Mussolini Duesseldorf, Germany, 16, 264, 363, 552, 557 Duesterberg, Colonel Theodor, 338 Duisburg, Germany, 336, 341, 424 Dunkirk, France, 279 Eden, Anthony, 42-3, 141, 239-40, 285-6, 291, 336, 357, 370, 374, 491, 522, 536, 551, 563, 566, 573, 574, 583 Eder Dam, Germany, 393, 430 Eher Verlag (publishing house), 68 Eigruber, August, 384, 486 Einsiedel, Count Otto von, 578 Einstein, Professor Albert, 422 Eire, 133, 452 Eisenhower, General Dwight D., 263, 479, 608, 623 El Alamein, North Africa, 263, 327 Elberfeld, Germany, 13, 16, 371 Emden, Germany, 476, 547, 608 Endrass, Commander, 179 England, 19, 80, 234, 306-7, 518, 570, 580, 600, 609, 621; air warfare, 108, 177, 183, 204, 207, 212, 224-5, 256, 269, 291, 311-2, 331, 332, 336, 338, 356, 359, 360, 361, 382, 426, 430, 431, 435, 442, 444, 446, 448, 450, 454, 471, 489, 490, 561, 595, 600, 602; Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, 85, 86; Australia, 57, 160; blockade, 70, 89; Bolshevism, 90, 115, 121, 137, 175, 295; British Eighth Army, 263, 290, 355, 513; Churchill, Winston, 71, 93-4, 477; Commandos, 124, 209, 343; Cripps, Sir Stafford, 94; espionage, 221; Foreign Office, 85; France, 132, 136, 197, 199; German reprisal raids, 216, 220, 228, 229, 231, 246, 315, 525, 567, 599, 613; government, 72, 127, 158; Hitler, Adolf, 55; India, 143, 169, 188, 191, 545, 606; Ireland, 67; Italy, 430, 458-9, 483, 485, 487, 492, 495, 503, 504, 507, 508, 517, 520, 543, 548, 558, 563, 581, 584, 613; Japan, 46, 120; Jews, 141, 377, 401, 423, 575-6; lend-lease, 282; Madagascar, 236, 240; Mediterranean Fleet, 473; morale, 110, 117, 125, 194, 550, 554, 571; North African campaign, 48, 52, 64, 70, 78, 278, 285, 286, 293, 327, 356, 363-4, 370-1, 372, 375, 380-1, 397, 404, 418, 422, 425, 444, 577; peace, 537; postwar, 357, 522; propaganda, 116, 163, 166, 167, 169, 195, 251, 258, 267, 328, 329, 566, 571, 609; reparations, 575; Royal Air Force, 617; Secret Service, 103, 120; shipping, 309, 524; second front, 127, 253, 256, 339, 343, 349, 391, 488, 615; Soviet Russia, 263, 552, 574, 603; submarine warfare, 273, 343; Thailand, 61; United States, 106, 200, 256; war: aims, 108, 365; declaration, 77; industries, 214, 279; prisoners, 272, 429; world domination, 90, 96, 212, 240 English Channel, 93, 98, 100 Essen, Germany, 125, 264, 311, 334, 336, 341, 352, 359, 361, 365, 469, 516; air raid damage, 362-3 Esser, Hermann, 21, 357, 358, 521, 534 Estonia, Europe, 289, 618 Eurasia (Europe and Asia), 165 Falkenhausen, General Alexander von, 188 Farinacci, Roberto, 453, 456, 457, 459, 464-5, 469, 484 645 Fasch, Karl, 303 Fastov, U.S.S.R., 567 Faulhabcr, Cardinal Michael too, 227, 420 Feder, Gottfried, 21 Federzoni, Luigi, 472 Ferdinand, King of Bulgaria, 28, 58 Filoff, Bogdan, 497 Finland, 65, 70, 222, 291, 293, 371, 385-6, 474, 493, 494, 522, 567, 574, 612, 621, 626 Fischer, Dr. Erich, 119, 445 Flensburg, Germany, 218, 264, 434 Florian, Fricdrich Karl, 259, 338, 350, 547, 557 Foggia, Italian airport, 548 Foreign Press Association, 29, 31, 263 France, 53, 182, 198, 201, 333, 349, 394, 430, 576, 597, 610, 617, 619; air raids, 145, 315; Army of Occupation, 105; colonies, 282; De Gaulle, Genera], 266-7; England, 132, 136, 197; fleet, 46, 76, 199, 265; German-French relations, 46, 49, 92-3, 101, 123, 130, 134, 202, 215, 225, 547; German propaganda, 212; German reprisals, 202, 203, 204-5, 231, 237, 238, 244; Laval, Pierre, 195, 197, 199, 204, 580; Martinique, 240; motion pictures, 242, 245, 251; National Liberation, Committee of, 452; occupied areas, 124, 172, 212. 249, 434, 442; resistance movement, 128. See also Vichy Franco Bah amende, Francisco, 76-7, 106, 138, 243, 253, 265, 287, 299, 348, 393, 469, 480, 548, 572; revolution, 444 Frank, Dr. Hanns, 211, 318, 396, 411, 437, 445 Frank, Karl Hermann, 450-1, 534 Frankfort-on-Main, Germany, 551, 597, 600, 608 Frankfurt-on-Oder, Germany, 355 Frederick n (German emperor), 192, 420 Frederick Wilhelm III (King of Prussia), 30 Frederick Wilhelm, German Crown Prince, 28, 59 Freilassing, Germany, 366 Freisler, Roland, 183 Fresnes Prison, France, 176 Frick, Dr. Wilhelm, 22, 39, 92, 165, 177, 185, 273, 342, 345, 406, 410, 413, 420, 422, 450, 475, 531, 532, 585 Friedrichs, General, 590 Frisch, Colonel-General Werner von, 55, 321 Fritzsche, Hans, 107, 350, 438 Froelich, Professor Carl, 307-8 Froram, Colonel General Fritz, 38, 313-4, 318, 319, 323, 625 Fuehrer. See Hitler Fulda Bishops' Conference, 420 Funk, Walter, 51, 97-8, 301, 310, 333, 344, 345, 346, 366, 406, 439 Gabes, Tunisia. 340, 355 Gafsa. Tunisia, 349 Galen, Bishop Count Clemens von, 163 Galicia, Spain, 244 Gamelin, General Maurice Gustave, 111, 113, 355 Gandhi, Mahatma Mohandas K., 185, 202, 306 Garda Lake, Italy, 484 Gaza, Major, 582 Gelsenkirchen, Germany, 552 General Electric Company (German), 427 General Motors of New York, 50 Geneva, Switzerland, 378 Genghis Khan (Mongol conqueror, 1167-1227), 378 Genoa, Italy, 459 George VI (King of England), 595, 615 Gerecke, Chaplain Henry F., 321 Gerhardinger (artist), 410 Gernant (official of Propaganda Ministry), 478 Gibraltar, Spain, 287 Gienanth, Herr von, 349, 430 Giesler, Paul, 273, 357, 358, 396 Gigli, Beniamino, 85 Giraud, General Henri Honored 179, 213-4, 217, 228, 234, 236, 238, 244, 266, 289, 291, 337, 355 Glasmeier, Dr. Heinrich, 80-1, 575 Gneisenau (warship), 93, 98 Goebbels, Fritz (father), 12, 13 Goebbels, Hans (brother), 14 Goebbels, Konrad (brother), 14 Goebbels, Magda Quandt (wife), 17, 23, 28, 114, 200, 218, 292, 347, 434, 504, 587, 590, 628, 629-30, 634-5, 637 Goebbels, Maria (sister), 14 Index Goebbels, Maria Odenhausen (mother), 12, 13, 68, 587 Goebbels (Paul) Joseph: ambition, 13, 36, 37, 626; amours, 17-9; apostasy, 14, 17; attitude toward fellow men, 17; birth, 12; dema-goguery, 22; dogs, tribute to, 17; education, 12-3; eloquence, gift of, 13; German psychology, understanding of, 21, 113, 136, 141, 167, 621-2; handwriting, 20; health, 37, 39, 203, 210, 237, 239, 366, 367, 369, 371-2, 376, 384-5, 396-7, 409, 435, 545; Hitler, adoration of, 14-6, 19-20; living standards, 27-9; parliamentarian, 21; power, lust for, 36; power exerted, 36; prevarication, 25; propaganda skill, 22, 68, 105, 619, 622, 626, 629; radicalism, 19, 21, 38, 39; realism, 39; royalty and aristocracy, hatred of, 37; showmanship, 24-5; spellbinder, 24, 25; suicide, 637; vanity, 37; vituperation, 14, 21, 35; Venetian Night Ball, 30; wishful thinker, 39; work, glutton for, 20, 36; writer, 13, 617 Goebbels children, 15, 23-4, 114, 159, 248, 288, 417-8, 504, 587, 629-30, 634-5, 637 Goebbels-Strasser duumvirate, 21 Goemboes (Hungarian statesman), 180 Goering, Emmy (Mrs. Hermann), 537 Goering, Hermann, 22, 23, 35, 51, 59, 69, 149, 162, 163, 185, 218, 219, 284, 296, 310, 318, 321, 323, 331, 334, 344-5, 346, 366, 379, 396, 409, 434, 441, 442, 458, 463, 494, 502, 537, 613, 628, 632, 633, 636; co-workers, 165-6, 296-302, 344, 360, 366, 419; lethargy, 311, 378-9, 439, 454; Luftwaffe, 40-1, 262, 303, 313, 314, 315-6, 317, 324, 326, 360, 440, 4%, 576-7; Opera Ball, 28, 29; speeches, 203, 220, 221, 432, 437, 451, 549, 567-8; Speer, Professor Albert, 292, 294 ? 302, 383 Goerlitzer, Arthur, 333, 589 Grandi, Dino, 456, 464, 468, 472, 527, 569 Graz, Styria, Austria, 142, 143 Graziani, General Rodoifo, 538, 546 Greece, 70, 189, 542, 621 Greim, General Robert Rftter ▼on, 633, 635 Greiner (Ministerial Director), 466 Greiser, Arthur, 273, 396, 411, 437 Greven, Herr (of Propaganda Ministry), 245, 251 Grohe, Joseph, 207, 273, 476-7, 532, 557 Grynzpan, Herschel, 92, 93, 183, 184, 193, 243 GuarigJia, RarTaele, 466 Guderian, Colonel General Heinz, 38, 310, 314, 320, 467 Guertner, Dr. Franz, 148-9, 154, 534 Gustaf V (King of Sweden), 65 Gustaf Adolf, Crown Prince, 65 Gutterer, Leopold, 44, 209, 248, 276, 588 Gzhatsk, USSR., 291 Haakon VTI (King of Norway), 79, 235 Hacha, Emil, 45 Hadamovsky, Eugen, 123, 277, 449 Hagen, Germany, 551 Hague. See Netherlands Haider, Colonel General Franz, 38, 288, 565 Halifax, Viscount, 148, 188 Halle\ Germany, 302 Hamburg, Germany, 233, 452, 456, 503, 559, 589, 591, 592; air raids, 454-5, 471, 617 Hammzsch, Dr. Martin, 271 Hamsun, Knut, 172, 432-3 Hanover, Germany, 275, 461, 537, 542. 551, 559, 560 Hapsburg, (battleship), 82 Harlan, Professor Viet, 307 Hartenstein, Commander, 171 Harzburg, Germany, 325 Hase, General Paul von, 623 Hattingen, Ruhr Valley. 13 Hauptmann, Gerhart, 145 Haushofer, Professor, 100 Heinkel airplane factories, 213 Helldorf, Count Wolf Heinrich von, 342, 343, 597, 601 Helsinki, Finland, 290, 291, 385, 567 Henri I (Saxon king, 876-936), 402 Hermann, Lieutenant Colonel, 97 Hess, Rudolf, 18, 30, 72, 99, 100, 164, 321, 522, 537 Hesse, Colonel, 190-1 Hewel (Ambassador), 497 647 Hewel. Walter, 327 Heydrich, Rcinhard, 45, 80, 104, 105. 196, 227, 263. 335, 450, 451, 534 Hlerl. Konstantin, 342 Hildcbrandt. Fricdrich. 216, 225 Hilgcnfcldt, Erich, 161 Himmlcr, Heinrich. 35, 135, 284, 301, 321, 345. 402, 419, 448, 457, 462, 465, 475, 565, 623. 625, 626, 628, 632, 633, 636; German Army, 565; Ooebbels, 498; International Bible Students, 470-1; Italy, northern, 492; Norway, 612 Hindenburg, President Paul von, 105, 117, 149, 163-491, 530 Hinkel, Hans, 80, 89. 115. 120-1 Hippler (employee in Propaganda Ministry). 251 Hiroshima, Japan, 161 Hitler, Adolph, 41. 46-7, 53, 68, 69, 148, 149, 226, 234, 237, 271, 289, 291, 311, 344, 345, 354, 376, 383, 389, 450, 520, 549. 554, 621; air raids, 212, 216, 434, 454, 597; assassination attempted, 53, 109, 120, 122, 314, 623; birthday celebrations. 189, 192, 203, 359, 381, 631; Bulgaria, 174; cabinet, 22, 43, 66, 491; chancelleries, 51, 321; church question, 163, 420-1; Churchill, Winston, 71, 98; coworkers and personnel, 35, 88, 93. 100. 154. 177, 183, 197, 198-9, 211, 247-8, 255, 260, 262, 266, 274, 297-302, 318, 330, 347. 379, 398, 407-15, 417-8, 475, 531-7, 615-6; decrees, 119-20, 256; France, 134, 149-50, 213, 215, 244, 261; Goebbels, 14-6, 19-20. 36, 160, 210, 541; health, 150-1, 192. 298-9, 322-3, 353, 369, 396, 440, 523, 556; Italy, 73, 282-3, 287, 476, 480-6, 492, 498, 528; Jewish pogroms, 92-3, 101, 159, 283-4, 386, 423; marriage, 635; Mussolini, 156, 179, 231, 355, 356. 361, 452, 456, 458-70, 472-3, 501, 505. 508, 509, 511, 527-8, 529, 531, 538-41; Oslo students, 610-1; propaganda, 112, 228, 33*40, 426, 431, 612; putsch (1923), 21, 93, 97; quoted, 55, 171; Seehaus Service, 59, 61; speeches, 11, 13, 15, 16, 19, 25, 42, 73, 74, 82, 94, 95, 146-7, 209, 217, 218, 220, 221, 223, 242, 264, 276-7, 349, 492, 494, 495-6, 498, 499, 501, 562, 564, 566, 568, 570, 572, 575, 584, 585, 628; suicide, 637; vegetarianism, 215; war problems and strategy, 117, 205, 314-26, 331, 337, 340, 352, 360, 384, 394-6, 400, 405, 414-5, 478, 524-6; Wehrmacht, 155, 599, 606; wills, 635-6 Hoare, Sir Samuel John Gurney, 307 Hofer, Franz, 486, 508, 569 Hoffmann, Albert, 446 Holland. See Netherlands Hoi stein, Baron Fricdrich von, 466 Hong Kong, China, 141 Hoover, Herbert, 13 Hopkins, Harry, 39, 179, 205 Hore-Belisha, Leslie, 91, 97 Horthy de Nagybanya, Nicholas, 82, 112, 356, 369, 376, 377, 395, 401, 540; son, 82, 112, 180 Huetepohl, Professor, 371 Hugenberg, Alfred, 186, 255, 307, 491 Hull, Cordell, 96, 107, 551, 573 Humbert (Umberto), Crown Prince of Italy, 464, 499, 516. 546, 558 Hungary, 83, 131, 139, 180, 249-50, 356, 361, 376, 377-8, 400, 401, 493, 571, 603 Hunke (German official), 338 Hussein, Haj Amin el, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, 69 L G. Farben (Interessen Gemein-schaft Farben), 190 India, 124, 126, 147, 159, 210, 234, 242, 518, 571, 595; Cripps, Sir Stafford, 40. 91, 125, 138, 139, 177, 191, 234; England, 143, 169, 185, 188, 191, 545, 606; Gandhi, 185, 202 Innsbruck, Austria, 608 Inonu, General Ismet, 360, 608, 615 International Chamber of Commerce, 30 Iran (Persia), 243 Ireland, 67, 133, 253, 258 Isonzo battle (1917), 48 Italy, 39, 52, 90, 125, 127, 211-2, 257, 284, 400, 412, 436, 452, 455, 524, 554, 609-10, 618, 619; capitulation, 479-86, 491, 492-3, 494-5, 496-501, 506-7, 509, 521, 522, 528, 539; Croatia, 62, 378, 391; fascism, 85, 322, 328, 375, 444, 477, 507, 510, Index Italy (continued) 515-7, 529, 530, 538, 542, 560, 569, 582; fleet, 287, 476, 485, 522; Free Italy, 167; gauleiters, 73; German-Italian relations, 98, lit, 120, 156, 231, 312, 316, 401, 415, 416, 449, 502, 537, 546, 580-1; Jews, 274; Luftwaffe, 164; Mussolini, 290, 304, 395, 453, 496-7, 501, 505-6; North African campaign, 269, 287, 340, 364, 370-1, 404-5, 418-9, 432; revolution, 455, 456, 457-70, 472-3; United States, 167, 430, 505, 543, 563, 584 Jagow, Hans Georg von, 407 Japan, 52, 70, 81, 90, 147, 171, 621; air raids, 356, 382, 412; aspirations, 159; Australia, 137-8, 142-3, 160; diplomacy, 102, 194; England, 46, 120, 473; German-Japanese relations, 91, 94, 107, 207, 401, 537; Italy, capitulation, 493, 504-5, 511; losses, 306, 311, 518-9; occupation tactics, 390-1; politics, 232-3, 242; propaganda, 76, 78; Thailand, 43, 61; Three-Power pact, 120, 506, 507; victories, 118, 126, 127, 160, 234, 236-7, 238, 268, 615; war, declaration of, 246, 381; "Yellow Peril," 62, 136, 139, 141 Java, Dutch East Indies, 124, 126, 130, 136-7, 143 Java Sea, battle of, 76 Jena, Germany, 173 Jerusalem, Palestine, 283 Jeschonnek, General Hans, 316 Jodl, Colonel General Alfred, 218, 237, 261, 297, 411, 462, 499, 513, 520, 534, 609 Johst, Hanns, 540 Jordana y Souza, Francisco Gomez, 233, 374, 375 Josias, Prince of Waldeck and Pyr-mont, 558 Joyce, William B. (Lord Haw Haw), 258 Jury, Dr. Hugo, 384 Kaiser, Jakob, 207 Kalinin, Michael Ivanovich, 266 Kallay de Nagy KaU6, Miklos, 124. 180, 361, 540 Kaltenbrunner, Ernst, 335 Karlsbad, Germany, 37 Kassel, Germany, 555, 558, 559, 564 Kasserine Pass, Tunisia, 290 Katyn, Poland, 356, 357, 368, 372, 373, 376, 377, 383, 388, 389, 391, 397, 411, 434, 548 Kaufmann, Karl, 14, 177, 178, 471, 514 Kehrein (Berlin precinct boss), 280 Keitel, Field Marshal Wilhelm, 51, 164, 297, 314, 318, 319, 324, 330, 344, 345, 411, 462, 463, 498, 515, 534, 537, 550, 575, 576, 632 Keller, Helen, 27 Kernel Ataturk, Mustapha, 615 Kempten, Germany, 97 Kerch Peninsula, U.S.S.R., 227, 241, 243, 244, 246, 253, 259 Kesselring, Field Marshal Albert, 295, 340, 459, 461, 485, 499, 515, 517, 532, 619 Kharkov, USSR., 78, 227, 246, 259, 262, 264, 289, 291, 347-8, 370, 379-80, 474 Khun, Bel a, 82 Kiel, Germany, 210, 224, 246, 356, 428, 434 Kiev, USSR., 368, 545, 550, 552, 560, 567, 571, 572, 608, 617 Killinger, Manfred Freiherr von, 254 Kivimaaki, Toivo Mikael, 291 Kleffens, Eelco Nicholaas van, 109 Kleist, General Ludwig Ewald von, 288, 389, 532 Klitzsch, Dr. Ludwig, 307 Kluge, Field Marshal Guenther von, 371, 532 Knothe (employee in Propaganda Ministry), 63 Knox, Frank E., 39, 70, 81, 107, 189, 306, 423, 510 Koch, Erich, 229, 230, 273, 275, 371, 389 Koenigsberg, Germany, 483 Koenigstein (fortress), 228 Konotop, U.S.S.R., 477-8 Konoye, Prince Fumimaro, 143, 232 Konstantinovka, U.S.S.R., 477 Kramatorskaja, U.S.S.R., 477 Krasnogorod, U.S.S.R., 289 Krauss, Clemens, 358 Krebs, General Hans, 637 Kreis, Wilhelm, 417 Kreuger (Swedish newspaper proprietor), 66 Kriegel (artist), 411 Kriegk, Dr. Otto, 186-7, 252, 254 649 KrosJgk, Count Lutz von Schwerin, 118, 334 Krupp, Alfred, 363 Krupp, Bertha, 363 Krupp von Borden und Halback, Gustav, 28, 363 Krupp plant, Essen, 334, 350, 363, 394, 469 Kuban, USSR., 394 Kube, Wilhelm, 523, 547 Kuechler, Georg von, 38, 532 Kuehlmann, Baron Richard von, 591 Kuibyshev, U.S.S.R., 147, 188, 194, 206, 210, 447 Kursk, USSR., 289, 396, 455, 474 Kurusu, Saburu, 102 Kyrill, Prince (Bulgaria), 497 LaGuardia, Fiorello H., 38b Lammers, Hans Helnrich, 50, 51, 71, 92, 297, 300, 321, 340, 342, 344, 345, 346, 520, 596, 615 Landsberg, Bavaria, 72 Lange, Vice-president Reichsbank, 575 Lanke, Germany, 179, 210, 231, 237, 248, 435, 504, 578, 587 Lanz works, Mannheim, 519 Lapland, 517 Lapper, Dr., 425, 560 Latvia, Europe, 289 Lauterbacher, Hartmann, 559, 560 Laval, Pierre, 176, 179, 195, 197, 199, 204, 225, 228, 266, 267, 547, 580, 584 Leahy, Admiral William D. t 179, 201, 202 Leander, Zarah, 261-2 Lebanon, Asia, 577, 579 Le Havre, France, 124 Leipzig, Germany, 608, 611; fair, 91, 611 Lemmer, Ernst, 206 Leningrad, U.S.S.R., 157, 204, 526, 618 Leros, Dodecanese Islands, 581 Leverkusen, Germany, 558 Ley, Dr. Robert, 14, 51, 119, 156, 198, 230, 232, 301, 304, 310, 311, 333, 338, 344, 345, 346, 361, 366, 378, 406, 407, 439, 440, 509, 516, 533, 583, 587, 588-9, 597, 605, 624; German Labor Front, 99-100, 214 Libya, Africa, 46, 227 Lidice, Czechoslovakia, 105, 263 Liebeneiner, Professor Wolfgang, 307 Lille, France, 227 Linz, Austria, 413, 486, 537, 629 Lippert, Julius, 189 Lisbon, Portugal, 34, 187, 250, 252, 573, 610 List, Wilhelm Walter, 38, 532 Lithuania, 290 Litvinov, Maxim Maximovich, 553 Locarno Conference, 14 Lochner, Louis P., 250 London, 52, 57, 70, 73, 85, 104, 125, 126, 127, 129, 145, 172, 174, 205, 216, 228, 276, 337, 350, 389, 394, 404, 436, 440, 525, 549, 622, 623, 629. See also England Lorraine, France, 225 Louis Ferdinand (German prince), 28 Lublin, Poland, 170, 445 Ludwig, Emil, 288 Ludwigshafen, Germany, 552, 608 Luebeck, Germany, 177, 183, 212, 220, 233, 246; art works destroyed, 181 Luftwaffe, 172, 213, 227, 229, 246, 264, 270, 312, 352, 363, 369, 387, 426, 430, 435, 485, 492, 577, 591; Goering, Hermann, 164, 261-2, 303, 313, 314, 315-6, 316-7, 324, 326, 360, 362, 440, 495, 577 Lutze, Frau Paula, 325, 398, 407, 536 Lutze, Viktor, 71, 196, 325, 394, 396, 397-8, 407, 409 MacArthur, General Douglas, 124, 169, 171, 176, 190, 192, 194, 201, 237, 311 Mackensen, Field Marshal August von, 145, 155, 162, 210, 453, 485 Mackensen, Hans Georg von, 453, 461, 466 Madagascar, Africa, 227, 236, 238, 240 Maddalena, island, Italy, 505 Madeira, island, Portugal, 214 Madrid, Spain, 253, 547 Mafalda, Princess (wife of Philip of Hesse), 464, 497, 500, 540 Maginot Line, 88, 377 Maikop oil field, U.S.S.R., 264, 289 Maisky, Ivan Michaelovich, 553 Makejewka, U.S.S.R., 477 Malaya, Netherlands East Indies, 137 Malta, island, Mediterranean, 184, 199, 204, 522 Index Manchukuo, Asia, 44 Mandalay, Burma, 227, 234 Mannerheim, Field Marshal Gustav Emil, 494 Mannheim, Germany, 543, 583, 608 Mansfeldt, Lieutenant, 190-1 Manstein, Field Marshal Fritz Erich yon, 38, 298, 330, 337, 389, 532, 565 Mareth Line, Tunisia, 327, 338, 340, 355 Maria Theresa, Archduchess of Austria, 192 Marshall, General George C, 39, 179, 205 Marshall and Gilbert Islands, Pacific Ocean, 552 Martin, Lieutenant Colonel, 43, 47, 186, 201, 284, 370, 435 Martini, General, 370 Martinique, West Indies, 240 Meckel, Commander, 351 Mediterranean Sea, 199, 444, 489, 524 Meissner, Dr. Otto, 321 Melitopol, U.S.S.R., 567 Menemendoglu, Numan, 563, 566* 574 Menzel, Director, Ministry of Education, 438 Messerschmitt airplane works, 386 Mia, Princess (of Italy), 540 Michoff, Bulgarian War Minister, 497 Mihai (Michael) (King of Rumania b. 1921), 98 Mikolajczyk (Premier of Polish Gov-ernment-in-Exile), 452 Milan, Italy, 569, 580 Milch, Field Marshal Erhard, 360, 362, 367, 369, 383, 435, 567 Minsk, U.S.S.R., 523 Mississippi River, 227 Moabit, Berlin, 587 Model, Colonel General Walther von, 560-1 Moehne Dam, Germany, 393, 430 Moelders, Werner, 128-9; forged letter, 135, 145, 155, 162 Molotov, Vyachvslav Mikhailovich, 43, 222, 235, 551 Monte Carlo, Monaco, 459 Montgomery, Field Marshal Sir Bernard Law, 263, 277, 278, 327, 355 Mook, Hubertus Johannes van, 139 Morell, Professor Theodor, 353, 366, 396, 528, 630 Morgenthau, Henry, 474 Morocco, Africa, 287 Moscow, U.S.S.R., 42-3, 83, 95, 116, 121, 157, 243, 257, 284, 336, 350, 356, 387, 389, 443, 445, 450, 514, 543, 548, 549, 571, 576, 580; Conference, 552, 553, 555-*, 557, 564, 566, 573, 574, 575; Free Germany Committee, 298, 455, 542-3, 579; Pan-Slav Congress, 419. See also Soviet Russia Muehlheim, Germany, 144 Muenster, Germany, 129,551,552 Muenzenberg, Willy, 443 Munich, Germany, 13, 14, 16, 20, 93, 118, 14J, 264, 273, 320, 331, 336, 408, 410, 459, 476, 505, 506, 515, 562; air raids, 329, 353; Fueh-rerbau, 569; Loewenbrau Beer Cellar, 564, 566, 570 Murr, Wilhelm, 330 Mushanoff, Nikola, 454 Mussert, Anton, 266 Mussolini, Benito, 46, 63, 74, 241, 266, 321-2, 328, 329, 345, 400, 427, 453, 499-500, 532-3, 560, 582, 606; Ciano, Count, 282-3, 290, 322; Ciano, Edda, 527, 538-9, 540-1, 557; Fascist party, 510, 569, 598; German visit, 510-3; Hitler, Adolf, 156, 179, 231, 355, 356, 361, 452, 456, 457-69, 472-3, 501, 527-8; 529-31, 538-41; imprisonment, 521, 529, 617; Italy, capitulation, 480, 483-4, 491, 493, 495, 527; morale, 379, 395, 415; orders of the day, 304, 378, 510-1, 512; rescue, 476, 503, 505-8, 514, 617; resignation, 456, 457-70, 472, 496; return to Italy, 546-7; Rommel, Erwin, 415, 418; speeches, 169, 269, 271, 515-6, 518 Mussolini, Edda. fee Countess Ciano Mussolini, Rachele, 530 Mussolini, Vito, 283 Mussolini, Vittorio, 484, 509, 530, 606 Mustafa el Nahas Pasha, 76, 86, 170 Mutschmann, Martin, 202, 270 Naples, Italy, 356, 492, 543, 551 Naumann, Dr. Werner, 142, 327, 367, 369, 379, 419, 439, 481, 498, 542, 581, 599, 630 Nedic, General Milutin, 524-5 Nehring, General Walter, 281 Nelson, Donald M., 285, 571 651 Netherlands 56, 66, 103, 105, 109, 136-7. 236, 266, 320, 391, 405, 478, 487, 534, 555, 617 Neurath, Baron Konstantin von, 45, 104-5, 196, 408, 450, 491 New York, 510 Nleland, Mayor of Dresden, 202 Nielsen-Reyes, Frederico, 35 Niemoller, Pastor Martin, 145 Nietzsche. Friedrich Wilhelm, 44 Noethling (profiteer), 342, 343 Nomura, Admiral Kichisaburo, 102 Normandy, France, 619, 622, 623, 626 North Cape, Norway, 608 Norway, 63, 64, 68, 79, 97, 99, 129, 195, 214, 235, 407, 432, 437, 474, 512, 567, 610, 612, 621; ships torpedoed, 183, 187-8 Norway, Bishop of. See Dr. B. J. Berggraf Norwich, England, 229, 231 Nostradamus (Michel de Notre- dame), 251 Novara (cruiser), 82 Novorossiisk, USSR., 264, 394, 476, 512 Nuremberg, Germany, 21, 72, 183, 264, 326; International Military Tribunal (1946), 67, 105, 172, 183, 187, 211, 295, 321, 363, 384 Obersaizberg, Germany, 219, 225, 282, 292, 294, 303, 304, 344, 345, 358, 361, 366, 369, 376, 377, 378, 383, 384, 395, 415, 440, 442, 622, 629, 633 Oberursel, war prisoners' camp, 278 Oldenburg, Germany, 247, 24$ Opel, Wilhelm von, 50 Oran, Algiers, 263 Orel, U.S.S.R., 474 Ortona, Italy, 617 Oshima, General Hirosi, 141, 206 Oslo, Norway, 68, 129, 343; student affair, 610-1, 612 Ostia, Italy, 465 Ostwall (East Wall), 88 Otranto, Straits of, Italy, 82 Ott, General Eugen, 194 Oven, Wilfrid von, 628 Pacific Ocean, 81, 268 Palemborg, Sumatra, 76 Palermo, Sicily, 393, 452 Palestine, Asia, 447 Paltzo, Joachim, 230 Papen, Franz von, 24, 117, 120, 122, 148, 161, 441, 491, 566, 583 Paris, France, 105, 123, 130, 136, 145, 204, 241, 244, 247, 267, 316, 320, 547, 575, 576, 615; air raida, 130, 132, 138, 149 Paulus, Field Marshal Friedrich von, 289, 298, 324, 543, 579 Pavelic, Ante (Poglavnik of Croatia), 62-3, 391, 484, 486 Pavlograd, U.S.S.R., 289 Pavolini, Alessandro, 449, 484, 510, 514, 538 Peacock Island, Wannsee, 30 Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 34, 42, 272 Pcenetnuende, Baltic Sea, 489 Peipus, lake, U.S.S.R., 525 Peloponnesus, Greece, 443 Perekop, Crimea, 552, 556 Petain, Marshal Henri Philippe, 46, 53, 76, 113, 130, 136, 176, 195, 265, 269, 277, 356, 580, 584 Peter II (King of Yugoslavia), 60S Petzke (Nazi), 341, 476, 592 Philip, Prince of Hesse, 464, 483. See also Princess Mafalda Pius XII, Pope, 185, 190, 266, 274, 279, 292, 304, 320, 341, 455, 461, 566 Planck, Professor Max, 422 Plauen, Germany, 15 Ploesti oil fields, Rumania, 475 Poland, 55, 56, 66, 90, 112, 170, 244, 272, 277, 291, 308, 318, 368, 370, 377, 390, 427, 445, 574, 610; Gov- ernment-in-Exile, 304, 305, 350, 356, 373, 388, 393, 436, 452, 619, 621; mass graves, 357. See also Katyn Polish Corridor, 396 Polotsk, U.S.S.R., 608 Polverelli, Gaetano, 473 Popitz, Dr. Johannes, 534-5 Portugal, 34. 144, 187, 248, 254, 237, 308, 341, 551, 572 Posen, Poland, 273, 437, 564, 567 Posse, Hans, 271 Potemkin, Prince Gregory, 200 Potsdam, Germany, 30, 421, 585, 590 Prague, Czechoslovakia, 35, 104 Preysing, Bishop Count Konrad von, 113, 140 Preziosi, Professor Gabriele 582, 606 Primo de Rivera, Miguel, 466 Prince Eugen (warship), 93, 98 Index Prittwftz, von (attache), 103 Prussia, 24; East, 43, 308, 627 Quandt, Harald (son of Magda Gocbbels), 23, 114, 633 Quebec Conference, 474, 475 Quedlinburg, Lower Saxony, 402 Quisling, Vldkum, 76, 79, 81, 98, 128, 179, 195, 235, 368 Raeder, Grand Admiral Erich, 185, 187, 210, 273, 321, 342, 351 Rahn, Dr. Rudolf, 479, 483 Rainer, Dr. Friedrich, 486-7, 508, 569 Ramsauer, Professor Karl, 427-8, 438 Rangoon, Burma, 77, 124, 137 Rap alio, Treaty of, 512, 565 Rastenburg, Germany, 88, 471, 481, 542, 623, 628 Rath, Ernst von, 93, 183, 184 Rathenau, Walter von, 565 Raubal, Angela, 271 Rauschnlng, Herman, 396 Recklinghausen, Germany, 18 Rediess (head of SS in Norway), 610 Reggio Calabria, Italy, 394 Reichenau, Field Marshal General Ton, 55-6, 164 Reifenstahl, Lenl, 280 Reinhardt, Fritz, 118, 334 Reinhardt, Max, 601 ReinJckendorf, Berlin suburb, 600-1, 604 Reitsch, Hanna, 633 Remarque, Erich Maria, 45 Remer, Otto, 623 Renthe-Fink, Dr., 478 Reuter News Agency, 73, 88, 129, 172, 212, 292, 388, 456, 507, 613 Reventlow, Count Ernst von, 585 Reynaud, Paul, 355 Rheydt, Rhineland, 12, 13, 15, 476, 547; Castle, 259 Rhineland, 308 Ribbentrop, Joachim von, 105, 109, 196, 243, 254, 325, 338, 408, 448, 458, 463, 464, 498, 565, 606, 610, 612, 616, 621, 622, 632; France, 576; Italy, 321; Soviet Russia, 397; Spain, 299-300; Vatican seizure, 460 Rlcci, Renato, 484 Rintelen, General Enno von, 279, 485 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 57; Pan-American Conference for Foreign Ministers, 43, 49, 52 Riom trial, 76, 110, 113 Ritter, Julius, 549, 615 Rocco, Guido, 466 Roehm, Ernst, 35, 57, 71, 491; Roehm plot, 406 Roever, Carl, 239; Gauleiter of Oldenburg, 247-8, 259 Rome, Italy, 247. 274, 321, 375, 459, 473, 474, 476, 485, 493, 494, 499, 502, 504, 512, 538, 626; aid raid, 452; Holy Roman Empire, 402 Rommel, Field Marshal Erwin, 38, 48-9, 52, 57, 69, 73, 76, 85, 227, 235, 277, 278, 281, 284, 286, 290, 293, 322, 388-9, 393, 405, 437, 462, 463, 467, 532, 551; North African campaign, 48-9, 64, 263, 285, 287, 295, 308-9, 327, 329, 331, 338, 340, 364, 395, 414-5, 418, 617 Roosevelt, Anna Eleanor (Mrs. Franklin D.), 272 Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 40, 49, 52, 56, 84, 87, 140, 148, 167, 172, 199, 206, 209, 210, 260, 268, 276, 282, 292, 356, 370, 382, 431, 450, 452, 474, 477, 480, 552, 553, 554, 595, 617; Atlantic Charter, 304, 545; conferences, 42, 284, 289, 361, 373, 429, 447, 594, 608, 612, 614, 617; De Gaulle, General, 128, 213; death, 630-1; Molotov agreement, 265; speeches, 60-1, 81, 107, 117, 182, 197, 222, 225, 570-1. See also United States Rosenberg, Alfred, 67, 85, 100, 256, 270, 293, 299, 319, 339, 4J2, 427, 523, 547; eastern areas, 70-1, 230, 242, 371, 411-2, 581, 613, 615; religious intolerance, 87, 256, 270 Ross, Colin, 351 Rosslawl, U.S.S.R., 249, 476 Rostock, Germany, 212, 215-6, 220, 225, 227, 233. 246 Rostov, U.S.S.R., 264, 347 Rothschild, British MP., 285 Ruebenach, Eltz von, 408, 491 Ruhr region, Germany, 13, 204, 346, 393, 430, 448, 550, 584 Rumania, 31, 97. 160. 253-4, 383, 400, 487, 493. 571. 621, 626; oil fields, 364 Rundstedt, Field Marshal Gerd von, 56, 179, 199, 561 Russia. See Soviet Russia 653 Rutt, Bemhard, 342, 406, 422, 425 Rytl, Risto, 290, 291, 293, 494 Rzhev, U.S.S.R., 291, 306 Saar region, renamed Gau West-mark, 201 St. Lawrence River, North America, 227 St. Nazalre, France, 125, 180, 187, 394; war prisoners' camp, 195 Salamaua, New Guinea, 124, 518 Salazar, Antonio de Olivelra, 308, 572.. Salerno, Italy, 476, 505, 508, 510, 511, 513, 515, 516, 520, 532, 617 Salzburg, Austria, 179, 351 Saporose, Eastern Front, 482 Saracoglu, Skukri, 148, 246 Sardinia, Italy, 364, 443, 485, 4S9, 522 Saukel Fritz, 172-3, 318, 333, 338, 365, 366-7, 384, 387, 549 Savoy, House of (Italian royal family), 37, 511, 513, 516, 533, 546 Saxony, Germany, 114, 559 Schach, Gerhard, 240-1, 302, 310, 329, 586 Schacht, Dr. Hjalmar, 98, 325 Schamhorst (warship), 93, 98, 608 Schaub, Julius, 151, 442, 586, 599 Schaumburg-Lippe, Prince Stephan, 399 Scherff, Lieutenant Colonel Walter, 234, 261 Scherl Verlag, publishing house, 254 Scheuch, General Heinrich, 581 Schinkel, Karl Friedrich, 601 Schirach, Baldur von, 144, 145, 281, 347, 358, 384, 407 Schlrmeister, M. A. von, 286, 544 Schlegelberger, Franz, 154 Schleicher, Kurt von, 149 Schlessman (Deputy Gauleiter of Essen), 352, 361 Schlieffen, Count Alfred von, 479 Schloesser, Rainer, 359 Schmidt, Colonel General, 414 Schmundt, Major General Rudolf, 53, 55, 61, 160-1, 261, 298, 325, 481, 501 Schroeder, Baron von, 117 Schwanenwerder, Wannsee (Goeb- bels's villa), 29, 179, 233, 286, 587, 595-6, 602, 604 Scorza, Carlo, 415, 464-5, 472 Schulenbarg, Count Friedrich Werner von der, 103 Schulz-Dornburg, Rudolf, 80, 81 Schuschnigg, Chancellor Kurt von, 66, 402 Schwadtlo-Gesterding, Lieutenant Colonel, 190, 191 Schwaegermaun, Guenther, 637 Schwarz, Xaver, 119, 564 Schwede, Franz, 408 Schweinfurt, Germany, 551 Schwerin-Krosigk, Lutz von, 408 Seeckt, Colonel-General Hans von, 325 Seehaus, Wannsee, 53-4 Segerstedt, Torgny Karl, 65 Seiffert (official in Research Office), 221 Seldte, Franz, 338, 413, 533 Sell, Kurt, 249 Semmler, Dr. Rudolf, 34, 620, 621, 622, 624, 629 Serbia, area, Yugoslavia, 174, 524 Severith (official in Research Office), 221 Seville, Spain, 307 Seydlitz, General Friedrich Wilhelm von, 543, 579, 591 Seyss-Inquart, Artur, 66, 80, 105, 309, 312, 320, 478, 534, 554-5 Sforza, Count Carlo, 167, 551, 567, 577-8 Shigemitsu, Mamoru, 381-2 Sicily, Italy, 364, 423, 443, 452, 453, 455, 462, 473, 474, 488-9, 518, 522, 571, 617 Siebert (president, German Academy), 271 Siegfried Line (Westfall), 88, 377, 405 Siemens, Werner von, 28 Sikorski, General Wladyslaw, 452 Silesia, Germany-Poland, 308; Lower, 274; Upper, 54 Silex, Dr. Karl, 367 Sinclair, Sir Archibald, 332 Singapore, British Malaya, 76, 84, 91, 93, 95, 98, 106 Skagerrak, Norway-Denmark, 187 Skoda Works, Pilsen, 426-7 Skorzeng, Otto, 617 Slavyansk, U.S.S.R., 477 Smolensk, U.S.S.R., 357, 476, 545, 572, 617 Smuts, Field Marshal Jan Christiaan, 608, 609, 610 Index Sofia, Bulgaria, 454, 497, 5S£ 582, 608 Solingen, Germany, 608 Sonnemann-Goering, Emmy (Mrs. Hermann Goering), 537 Sorpe Dam, Germany, 394, 430 South America, 109, 111, 127, 231 Soviet Russia, 19, 53, 78, 83-4, 147, 164, 166, 208, 235, 258, 329, 348, 358, 370, 376, 491, 519, 538, 571, 579, 580, 608-9, 610, 617, 618, 620; bolshevism, 19, 52, 69, 101, 628; British-Soviet relations, 83-4, 96, 137, 203, 212; casualties and losses, 247, 337, 352, 445, 554; claims, 179, 290, 308, 552, 555; Davies, J. E., 199, 393, 432, 447; Eurasia, 165; Finland, 386; German-Soviet relations, 55, 64, 67, 103, 150, 211, 223, 280, 308, 319, 335, 365, 368, 396, 397, 403, 431; internal situation, 187, 210, 509; Japan, 381; Kremlin, 400, 509; morale, 182, 188, 214; Poland, 291, 304, 305, 350, 357, 370, 393-4, 427; see also Katyn; propaganda, 200, 240, 241, 304, 419, 509; reparations, 584, 603; reserves, 320, 488; second front, 292, 552; separate peace, 132, 161, 263, 267, 475, 573, 574; Turkey, 615; Ukraine, 550; United States, 116, 328, 429, 552, 553-4, 555-6, 573, 574; victories, 114, 136, 289-90, 332, 474, 476, 477, 517, 550, 551 Spain, 76, 98, 101, 138, 144, 190, 287, 299, 341, 356, 374, 444, 480 Speer, Professor Albert, 37, 51, 119, 189, 301, 307, 313, 315, 323, 345, 346, 366. 384, 410, 439, 462, 463, 477, 561, 599, 622, 626, 629-30; Goering, Hermann, 292, 294, 302, 326, 344, 383-4, 435; munitions, 323, 441, 469, 519, 549, 561 Spellman, Francis, Cardinal, 292, 307 Sperrle, Field Marshal Hugo, 313 Spezia, port, Italy, 485 Spitzbergen, island, Arctic, 246 Splett, Dr., 311 Stalin, Josef, 40, 43, 103, 108, 114, 115, 179, 182, 187, 199, 206, 264, 290, 331, 393, 397, 399, 450, 455, 480, 488, 518, 536, 542-3, 618; conferences, 373, 429, 447, 551, 554, 555-6, 608, 610, 612, 614, 617; Europe, bolshevization, 121, 139, 306; second front, 573, 574; speeches, 116, 229, 564. See also Soviet Russia Stalin Line, 88 Stalingrad, U.S.S.R., 44, 264, 281, 282, 284, 286, 289, 359, 403, 419, 422, 432, 446, 521, 543, 617, 619 Stalino, U.S.S.R., 474 Standley, Ambassador William H., 291, 328 Stauffenberg, Colonel Klaus von, 623 Stauss, Emil Georg von, 271 Steengracht von Moyland, Baron Gustav Adolf, 448 Steglitz, borough of Berlin, 604, 614 Stennes, Walter, 324 Stephan, Werner, 48 Stettin, Germany, 128, 163 Stettinius, Edward R., 290, 546 Stockholm, Sweden, 62, 283 Strasbourg, France, 476 Strasser, Gregor, 14, 20-1, 406 Strasser, Otto, 35 Strauss, Richard, 145 Streccius, General, 144, 155 Streicher, Julius, 14, 16, 21, 58 Stresemann, Gustav, 14, 173 Student, Colonel General Kurt, 505 Stuelpnagel, General Heinrich von, 122, 130 Stuelpnagel, General Otto von, 122, 130 Stumm, Baron Braun von, 229 Stuttgart, Germany, 16, 476 Sudetenland, Germany, 109 Sufler, Ramon Serrano, 265, 374 Surabaya, Java, Netherlands Indies, 76 Susac, Yugoslavia, 63 Sweden, 48, 277, 283, 306, 376, 433, 443; German-Swedish relations, 65- 6, 195, 270, 277, 381, 387, 474, 494, 505; motion pictures, 207, 305-6; Norwegian ships torpedoed, 183- 4, 187 Switzerland, 48, 207, 237, 238, 277, 402, 429, 443 Taganrog, U.S.S.R., 347, 474 Talleyrand-Perigord, Charles Maurice de, 407 Tangier, Africa, 87-8 Tar an to, Italy, 394 Tasslnari, Giuseppe, 505 Tatekawa, General Yoshitsugn, 188, 194, 210 655 Teheran, Iran, 608; Big Three Conference, 610, 611, 612, 614, 617 Temple, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, 57, 76, 116 Terboven, Joseph, 63-4, 68, 195, 334, 343, 383, 407, 436, 534, 610, 612 Tergensee, Germany, 585 Thailand, Asia, 43, 61 Thierack, Otto Georg, 154, 183, 268, 440, 508, 534 Thompson, Dorothy, 184, 292 Thomsen, Hans, 327 Thuringian Forest, Germany, 600 Tobruk, Libya, 263 Todenhofer (Goebbels's handy man), 309 Todt, Dr. Fritz, 88, 89, 93, 94-5, 102, 119, 489 Togo, Shigenori, 46 Tojo, General Hideki, 142-3, 232, 242, 615 Tokyo, Japan, 78, 159, 194, 210, 267, 381; air raid (U.S.), 382 Toulon, France, 265, 552 Toulouse, France, 459 Travemuende, Germany, 213 Trevor-Roper (writer), 353 Tripoli, Libya, 290 Truman, Harry S., 631 Tschammer und Osten, Hans von, 408 Tuchachevsky, Marshal Mikhail Nik-olaevich, 399 Tunisia, Africa, 272, 274, 281, 293, 295, 321-2, 359, 368, 393, 394-5, 397, 406, 409, 416, 426, 429, 436, 437, 441, 448; American troops, 267, 290, 311. 350, 355, 430-1; England, 370-1, 372, 375, 380-1, 388, 404, 422, 425; prisoners, 356, 418-9, 432; Rommel, Erwin, 308-9, 327, 329, 331, 340, 363-4, 414-5 Turin, Italy, 269 Turkey, 148, 174, 246, 257, 329, 364, 401, 443, 563, 574, 614-5; Papen, Franz von, 116, 117, 149, 441, 566, 583 Tyrol, Austria, 461, 486, 500, 506, 507 Udet, General Ernst, 360, 440 UFA. See Universal Film Aktienge- seLischaft Uibernither, Dr. Siegfried, 143, 384 Ukraine, USSR., 91, 133, 153, 206, 211, 229, 273, 275, 280, 312, 425, 512, 550, 608 Ullstein Publishing House, 351, 593 Umberto. See Humbert United Press, 96, 250, 328 United States, 44-5, 52, 61, 84, 109, 134, 165, 186, 210, 252, 258, 306, 337, 357, 388, 433, 520, 526, 580, 609, 615, 621; air warfare, 356, 382, 394, 398, 412, 428, 431, 475, 548, 560; armament production, 39, 52, 79, 121, 193-4, 202, 214, 285, 427, 448, 546; Australia, 84; bol-shevlsm, 90, 158, 175; Churchill, Winston, 110, 120; Corregidor, 236-7; correspondents interned, 34, 250, 253; England, 106, 200, 256; European invasion, 339, 349, 391; France, 128, 197, 198, 199, 201; imperialism, 240, 250; India, 210; Ireland, 67, 133; Italy, 167, 430, 483, 485, 505, 507, 510, 543, 563, 584; Japan, 46, 62, 70, 118, 272; Jews, 373, 575-6; lend-lease, 265, 282, 291, 546; MacArthur, Douglas, 176, 190, 192; morale, 182, 206, 554; North African campaign, 263, 267, 293, 356, 363-4, 397, 418-9, 425; Pacific Fleet, 69, 81; prisoners, 278-9, 356; propaganda, 169, 189-90, 220, 232, 246, 249, 251, 328, 329, 370; Russia, 116, 328, 455, 552, 553, 556, 573, 574; second front, 126-7, 253; shipping, 260, 309, 524; South America, 49, 127; submarine attacks, 171, 273; unconditional surrender, 40, 167, 290, 375, 448; war, declaration, 34, 42, 246 Universal Film Aktiengesellschaft, 207, 254, 307; Ufa Palace, Berlin, 595 Vansittart, Sir Robert Gilbert, 110, 161, 166, 258-9, 385 Vargas, Getulio Dornelles, 167 Vatican, 274, 292, 341, 450, 460, 468, 498; air attack, 566, 579 Venetia (Venice), Italy, 500, 506, 507, 533, 581 Vichy, France, 49, 51, 53, 130, 134, 136, 195, 202, 225, 238, 337, 507 Victor Emmanuel III (King of Italy), 456, 469, 481, 483, 493, 494, 500, 503, 518, 546; abdication, 551, 557, Index Victor Emmanuel III (continued") 558, 566; Badoglio, 458, 460, 542; Mussolini, 463, 464, 476, 515-6, 529, 531, 533, 570; speeches, 504 Vienna, Austria, 144, 170, 326, 347, 358, 413, 537 Vistula, river, Europe, 56 Vitebsk, U.S.S.R., 608 Vlassov, Lieutenant General Andrej Andrejevitch, 370, 390 Voegler, Albert, 412-3 Volpi di Mlsurata, Count Giuseppe, 512 Vdlturno-Calore line, Italy, 551 Voroshilovgorod, U.S.S.R., 289 Voss, Major, 609 Vyazma, U.S.S.R., 291 Vyshinsky, Andrey Januarievich, 553 Waechter, Werner, 133, 145, 224 Waechtler, Gauleiter Bavarian Eastern Mark, 521 Wagner, Adolf, 358 Wagner, Josef, 196, 198, 199, 261 Wagner, Walter, 635 Wake Island, Pacific Ocean, 266 Wallace, Henry A., 344 Wannsee, lake, Germany, 29, 30, 54, 179, 536 Warsaw, Poland, 283, 327, 386, 394, 409, 434, 449 Washington, D.C., U.S.A., 104, 126, 336, 337, 350, 393, 427. See also United States Wavell, Viscount Field Marshal, 84, 125, 247, 452 Wedding, Gustav Friedrich, 587 Wedding, district, Berlin, 587, 588, 593, 600, 604, 606 Wedel, General Hasso von, 535 Wegener, Paul, 398 Weinrich, Karl, 555, 558, 564 Weise, Colonel General, 455 Welles, Sumner, 43, 49, 52, 57, 147, 201, 476, 546 Westphalia, Peace of, 558 White, W. L., 258 White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, 250 Wiener Neustadt, Austria, 338, 341, 556 Wiessee, Bavaria, ^57 Wilhelmina (Queen of the Netherlands), 37, 130 Wilhelmshaven, Germany, 264, 552, 557 Willkie, Wendell, 205, 206, 276 Winkelnkemper, Toni, 383, 438 Winkler, Dr. Hermann, 181, 243, 307 Winnyzja, U.S.S.R., 313, 440 Wirsing, Giselher, 140 Wirth, Dr. Joseph, 565 Witting (Finnish Foreign Minister), 293 Wuorimaa, Aarae, 291 Yamamoto, Count Gombei, 450 Yugoslavia, 551; Partisans, 223, 519, 609, 617 Zaporozhe. U.S.S.R., 551 Zeitzler, General Kurt, 267, 287-8, 293, 297, 314, 318, 323 Zhitomir, U.S.S.R., 552, 608 Zhokov, Field Marshal Grigori Kon- stantinovich, 264, 637 Ziegler, Dr., 14 Zoerner, Ernst, 445 This book made available by the Internet Archive. Table of Contents Title Page Copyright Pages Back Cover