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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 132

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  had finished telling them of the battle, every minister and Staatssekretär present gave

  him a standing ovation. The last time that had happened was in 1933 when Hitler

  pulled Germany out of the League of Nations. Going behind Ribbentrop’s back he

  began sending regular commentaries on foreign policy to Hitler.48 His star was in the

  ascendant. He spent all day with Hitler again on December 19.49 ‘I was able to join

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 803

  you at headquarters more frequently than ever this year,’ he wrote him afterwards.

  ‘These visits have given me far more than you, mein Führer, could possibly divine.’50

  A FIFTH raid had hit Berlin with over two thousand tons of bombs on December 2.

  Forty more bombers had been destroyed. Grimly fought and with no quarter given

  on either side, the aerial Battle of Berlin continued all winter. While Goebbels directed

  the city’s civil defence, Magda handled the tide of public queries and complaints.

  Her files contain harrowing letters from mothers robbed of their children,

  and from widows of party ‘martyrs’—she had looked after their needs ever since

  1934; she controlled a small account from which she judiciously dispensed welfare

  (NSV) funds to those in need, often asking local party agencies to make discreet

  inquiries first. (‘Subject frequents pubs and tobacco stores’, she might be told; or

  ‘Miss A— has seven illegitimate children, not just three as she claims’). Her advice

  was always tactful. When women asked whether to baptise their infants Magda, who

  had baptised none of hers, replied quoting Frederick the Great—‘Blessed be each in

  their own way.’ Her replies could be uncompromising too. A Miss Charlotte Goebel,

  who had lost everything in the November air raids and wanted only to return to her

  native—and remote—Danzig was informed: ‘In all such cases where blitz victims

  with employment here have deserted Berlin, Mrs Goebbels has refused any aid whatsoever

  and they have had to return to their workplace in Berlin.’51

  Addressing a youth film festival on November 28 Dr Goebbels warned the britischen

  gentlemen that they would never score an ‘easy, cheap, and totally unmilitary’ victory.

  The British were hoping to win by a war of fire and flame against women and children.

  ‘In the name of the citizens of this capital, and in the name of the entire German

  people, let me give them this reply. Never!’ To rising applause he announced: ‘In

  Germany today there is no more urgent demand than that we pay back the criminals

  on the Thames with added interest for what they have done to us.’ Day and night, he

  promised, this reprisal was being prepared. ‘When one day retribution comes, and

  it’s the British people’s turn to hurt, then we shall weep not one tear for them.’52

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  A few days later he harangued two score German air attachés seated around a long

  table at his ministry; rapping his index finger on the table he taught them about the

  rift that must come between the Allies, and compared Germany’s situation now with

  the Nazi party’s on the eve of power. He invited no discussion afterwards, but silently

  shook each officer’s hand on leaving. ‘You had the feeling,’ wrote one, ‘that

  Mephistopheles himself had just shaken hands with you.’53

  A fifth raid hit Berlin with over two thousand tons of bombs on December 2. Forty

  more bombers were destroyed. Writing in Das Reich Goebbels struck an upbeat note.

  ‘When the skies darken and there is scarcely a gleam of light,’ he wrote, ‘then the

  people’s gaze turns unbidden to the Führer. He is the rock in the surging seas of

  time.’54

  ‘ANYTHING in the air?’ Goebbels would now ask Lieutenant Oven before going to

  bed. If an alert sounded, Oven would let him sleep and dial the minister’s extension,

  2–4, only after the bombers had reached Mecklenburg. ‘About twenty minutes, Herr

  Minister!’ After a while Goebbels would appear in the bunker, immaculately dressed,

  his tie perfectly knotted.

  Göring meanwhile had left for France, sent there by Hitler to prepare revenge

  raids against London. Before he left, he asked Goebbels to find another word for

  catastrophe—it injured his vanity each times he saw convoys of trucks labelled ‘Catastrophe

  Relief’ dashing to the latest bombed city.55

  At Christmas Goebbels did crack, but only briefly. His adjutants had arranged to

  show an American movie at Lanke, but Magda had set up her Christmas tree slap in

  front of the screen. Goebbels threw a tantrum and stormed back to Schwanenwerder,

  thirty-five miles away. Angry and depressed, he sulked there, glowering over a book

  of Schopenhauer throughout the festivities.56 Reviewing the year in his diary he decided

  it had been one run of bad luck after another. The British called again, 656

  bombers this time laden with death and destruction, if not ‘catastrophe,’ even now.

  He reached the command bunker just as the flak batteries opened fire. Afterwards he

  drove over to Neukölln, a working-class district which had been hard hit. The people

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 805

  joked with him, cursed the British, and even shouted Heil Hitler as he left. ‘Who

  ever would have thought that possible of our Neukölln workers,’ he exclaimed to

  Otte.57

  In fact the Allies now discovered that recently captured German prisoners like

  those from the battleship Scharnhorst had more confidence in victory than ever. ‘We

  must win,’ said one, simply, ‘and therefore we shall win.’ One Viennese-born Luftwaffe

  lieutenant called Goebbels’ emphasis on ‘Strength through Fear’ particularly effective.

  58 ‘Butcher’ Harris, as he liked to be known, had under-estimated the Berliners.

  His first twelve raids had killed 5,166 people and destroyed one-fifth of the available

  housing; but Speer’s arms output in Berlin actually increased.59

  Visiting the Wolf’s Lair Goebbels found workers again strengthening the bunkers.

  Sixteen feet of reinforced concrete protected Hitler, three times the thickness of the

  gauleiter’s air raid shelter in Berlin.

  1 Diary, Sep 13. He explained in Das Reich, Sep 19, why ‘JG’ had published no article after

  the Duce’s overthrow. ‘A few spiteful people believed that events … had taken his breath

  away,’ he wrote. ‘There’s probably no need for any further proof now that this was not so.’ In

  his diary on Sep 25, 1943 he added: ‘People now understand why I had to hold my tongue for

  a while.’ In fact he had known nothing of the plans to free Mussolini (NA film T84, roll 265).

  2 SD report Sep 16, 1943 (NA film T175, roll 265, 0456ff.)

  3 RPÄ reports summaried in diary, Sep 17; mail analysis, in Sep 18, 1943.

  4 Kurt Lange, Vice President of Reichsbank, to JG, Mar 16, 1944. The ministry of the

  interior had stated that air raids had destroyed 58,500 residential buildings in Hamburg by

  Nov 1, 1943; Lange gave a figure of 324,351 for the Reich as a whole (ZStA Potsdam,

  Rep.50.01, vol.5).

  5 Diary, Sep 17, 1943.

  6 Ibid., Sep 14, 1943.

  7 Ibid., Sep 21, 23; Milch diary, Sep 20, 1943 (author’s film DI–59).

  8 Unpubl. diary, Sep 18, 19, 21, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 265).
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  9 Ibid., Sep 23; Heinz Linge, Hitler’s appointments register, Sep 22, 1943 (NA film T84,

  roll 387).

  10 Diary, Sep 23, 1943.

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  11 Heinz Linge, Hitler’s appointments register, Oct 26, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 387).

  12 Rosenberg’s note on the meeting, Nov 17 (NA film T120, roll 2474, E255448); Linge,

  op. cit., Nov 17, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 387).

  13 Note by his adjutant, Oct 29, 1943. The three were Countess ‘Sigi’ Welczek, the actress

  Käthe Haack and her daughter.

  14 Interrogation of soldier Kloss, Sep 1, 1944: ‘Goebbels’ Estate on the Bogensee nr Berlin,’

  CSDIC(UK) report SIR.1008 (NA file RG332, Mis Y, box 5; also RG.165, entry 79, box

  773,); and see Oven, 171.

  15 Diary, Sep 21, 1943.

  16 Semler, ‘Oct 15, 1943.’

  17 Speer chronicle, Nov 4, 1943 (IWM file FD.3949/49).

  18 Diary, Sep 2, 1943.

  19 Diary, Nov 2; and police reports by Prince zu Waldeck, HSSuPf., Kassel, Nov 30 and

  Dec 6, 1943 (IfZ, Irving collection).

  20 Diary, Nov 6; Oven, 184f; VB, Nov 7, 1943.

  21 Gutterer MS (Lower Saxony archives, Gutterer papers); and interview, Jun 30, 1993.

  22 Police reports by Prince zu Waldeck, HSSuPf., Kassel, Nov 30 and Dec 6, 1943 (IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  23 Ibid.; and JG diary, Nov 19, 1943.

  24 Ibid., Nov 6, 1943.

  25 Berndt, air war notice No.62, Nov 11, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 322, 1254f).

  26 Ditto (NA film T84, roll 322, 1257ff).

  27 Unpubl. diary, Sep 29, 1943.

  28 Fritzsche testimony, IMT, xvii, 181 (Jun 28, 1946).

  29 Diary, Nov 16, 1943.

  30 Ibid., Nov 16, 1943.

  31 Unpubl. diary, Nov 11, 1943.

  32 Diary, Nov 4, 1943.

  33 Speer chronicle, Nov 4, 1943.

  34 Jodl’s lecture is printed in OKW war diary, vol.iv, 1534ff.

  35 Diary, Nov 8; and Himmler diary, Nov 7 (NA film T84, roll 25). Himmler had telephoned

  JG’s ministry and Bormann several times on Sep 1, 1943, about the gau’s planned

  swoop on defeatists (ibid.)

  36 Unpubl. diary, Nov 16, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 266).

  37 As of Sep 1943. United States Strategic Bombing Survey, A Brief Study of the Effects of Area

  Bombing on Berlin (Washington, DC), No.39, 12a.

  38 Webster & Frankland, vol.ii, 190ff. The average load of each bomber was about 7,500

  lbs.

  39 Semler, ‘Nov 24’; JG diary, Nov 20, 1943.

  40 I rely on Semler, ‘Nov 22, 1943,’ Speer’s chronicle, and other sources.

  41 Diary, Nov 24, 1943.

  42 VB, Nov 24, 1943.

  43 Diary, Nov 25, 1943.

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 807

  44 See SD report, Dec 20, on the Berliners’ morale during and after the Nov 1943 raids

  (NA film T175, roll 265, 1196ff).

  45 Diary, Nov 25; the result was a Führer decree of Dec 22, 1943, setting up a Reich

  Inspectorate for Civil Defence under JG with Gauleiter Albert Hoffmann as his deputy (BA

  file, R.43II/669d; IfZ film MA.795, 4890ff). Hoffmann’s papers are in BA. Under BAOR

  interrogation (032/Case No.0164) Hoffmann said, ‘Goebbels was undoubtedly one of the

  best National Socialist ministers; sober, precise, and very ambitious … [and] remarkably

  industrious and was at all times during the day and night at the disposal of the gauleiters or

  any other important people.’ (NA file RG.332, ETO MIS-Y Sect., box 50).

  46 Diary, Nov 27, 1943.

  47 Unpubl. diary, Nov 28 (NA film T84, roll 266); Oven, ‘Dec 20, 1943,’ 196.

  48 Unpubl. diary, Dec 4, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 266); the British could not get good

  aerial photos that winter (Webster & Frankland, vol.ii, 264).

  49 Diary, Dec 4, 7; on Nov 24, 1943 JG complained to Hitler, ‘Despite the directive you

  have several times issued that matters in dispute were only to be put jointly to you,

  Reichsminister von Ribbentrop has appealed directly to you, mein Führer, without bringing

  me in and with inadequate information on this matter’—namely JG’s propaganda work in

  occupied France (BA file N L.118/106).

  50 Heinz Linge diary, Dec 19, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 387).

  51 JG to Hitler, Dec 1943 (BA file NL.118/106); Oven, ‘Jan 25, 1944’, 208, also draws

  attention to the increasing frequency of JG’s visits to HQ.

  52 ZStA Potsdam, Rep.90, Go 2, Magda Goebbels correspondence with the public, 1933–

  45, vol.2.

  53 JG’s speech, ‘Ganz Deutschland ruft nach Rache!’, inVB, Nov 29; translation of the DAZ

  summary in OSS file 52614; see SD report, Dec 3, 1943, for the public’s reaction (NA film

  T175, roll 265, 1057ff).

  54 Milch diary, Dec 8, 1943; Major (res.) Karl von Winterfeld, report dated Aug 24, 1945,

  in Milch papers (author’s film DI–59).

  55 JG, ‘Die Lehren des Krieges,’ in Das Reich, Dec 5. ‘This,’ commented an OSS report

  from Switzerland on Dec 22, 1943, ‘is Goebbels in his mystic strain. There is no cry of

  victory, but a stress on the uncertainties of war, and the expression of a plaintive hope that

  willpower will win over material force.’ (NA file RG.226, file 58658).

  56 JG to Keitel, Dec 9, 1943 (Hoover Libr., Lerner papers, file S.115). JG had the offending

  word Katastropheneinsatz changed to Soforthilfe.

  57 Selmer, ‘Dec 24, 1943.’

  58 Unpubl. diary, Dec 30, 1943 (NA film T84, roll 266).

  59 CSDIC(UK) survey dated Feb 24, 1944 of German prisoner of war opinion, Nov 1943–

  Jan 1944 (NAS file RG.165, entry 79, box 765; and RG.332, entry ETO, Mis-Y, Sect., box

  11).

  60 Webster & Frankland, vol.ii, 267.—Kurt Lange, vice president of the Reichsbank, told

  JG on Mar 16, 1944 that one third of Berlin’s 200,000 homes had been destroyed or damaged

  (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.50.01, vol.5); for statistics on destruction as of Mar 1944 see

  Gutterer’s file (ZStA Potsdam, Rep.50.01, vol.865).

  808 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  Goebbels

  52: When the Going gets Tough

  We do not know how long this war will last,’ admitted Goebbels in his

  broadcast on the eve of 1944. ‘It would be idle to speculate.’1 To the party

  faithful he dictated a new slogan: ‘Everything is possible in this war except for one

  thing—that we ever capitulate.’2

  On this he and Hitler saw completely eye to eye. During their ten recorded meetings

  during 1944 they never seriously discussed suing for peace. Goebbels invariably

  returned to his ministry with his engines recharged by contact with Hitler. To the

  end of his life he felt totally inferior, even intellectually, to him. ‘My dear Naumann,’

  he would say to his closest aide, ‘Right now I don’t know what the Führer is planning.

  But I am convinced that he will see us through.’3 On this occasion, the first days of

  January 1944, they examined a map of London and picked out the most rewarding

  targets for their rockets and flying bombs. After three undisturbed years, the British

 

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