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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 134

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  ended, Goebbels’ flunkies served lunch. The family came out of the bunker,

  and while Magda clucked disapprovingly he described to his spellbound youngsters

  everything he had seen. He told them proudly that their city was now the most

  heavily bombed city in the world.35

  The next American raid, by six hundred bombers on the eighth, killed only fortynine

  Germans and twelve foreigners, and left a mere 1,500 homeless.36 Altogether

  however the enemy air raids had now killed 116,000 Germans, Goebbels confidentially

  recorded.37 He was impatient for the Vergeltung to begin. Hitler had ordered Speer to

  have the V-weapons ready by April 15 but Speer, it seemed, was recovering from

  depression in a clinic. Goebbels sent Naumann to visit him. Speer pleaded for a

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 815

  further postponement. ‘Fourteen days won’t bake the cakes any better,’ snorted

  Goebbels; he suspected that Speer was getting cold feet about reprisals.38

  WHEN Goebbels arrived back at the Berghof at nine P.M. on March 13, Hitler flattered

  him by meeting him at the door. Over dinner they debated why the British were still

  refusing to heed the bolshevik peril. This had been the subject of Goebbels’ most

  recent leader article in Das Reich..39 ‘Without doubt,’ observed Goebbels afterwards,

  ‘history will see Churchill … as the gravedigger of the British empire. With his

  shortsighted, vindictive policies he has manœuvered Britain into a blind alley, with

  no way out.’

  It snowed heavily all day. Up in Eva Braun’s quarters the two men watched the

  Kodachrome home movies that she had made in 1939 and 1942. The minister noted

  silently how much Hitler had changed since then. He was stooped and aging, but his

  confidence in Field Marshal Rommel was still unalloyed. After lunch the next day he

  told Goebbels that he longed for the invasion to come so that he could make a clean

  sweep in the west and then settle Stalin’s hash as well. He was even toying with the

  idea of weakening the west deliberately in order to lure the Allies in. Goebbels did

  not like that at all.40 Hearing rumours two weeks later that Hitler was indeed pulling

  two S.S. divisions out of France, he sent Colonel Martin down to the Berghof to find

  out, determined not to allow it to happen.41

  March 1944 brought a decisive downturn in the German public’s morale. The

  failure of the submarine war, the lack of reprisals, and the shrinking Reich frontiers

  all gave the lie to Goebbels’ public assurances.42 Colonel Martin returned from

  Berchtesgaden quoting General Jodl as stating that if the Allied invasion succeeded

  they had lost the war.43 Tempers in the ministry frayed. After one row, Gutterer

  snappily advised the minister to recommend a political end to the war before the

  Reich itself was destroyed. That afternoon Gutterer reappeared with Dr Hermann

  Muhs, the former Staatssekretär in the ministry of church affairs, and repeated the

  treasonable advice. The worst of it was, Goebbels knew they were right. ‘Your proposals

  are out of line,’ he retorted, and told them to clear out—‘I don’t want to see

  816 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  you again.’44 Lying, he told Hitler that Gutterer was unwell, and started rumours

  that he was involved in a newsprint-purchasing scandal.45 In a little ceremony on

  Gutterer’s birthday he formally replaced him as Staatssekretär by Werner Naumann,

  a truly meteoric rise for his young bureau chief who was at that time still only thirtyfour.

  46

  Premonitions of death occurred to Goebbels. ‘I want to be buried in some open

  space in Berlin,’ he decided.47 The clock was already ticking. He had ordered the

  cable radio network to provide a running commentary to city dwellers during air

  raids. Insidious as a Chinese torture, the hollow tick of a radio clock now separated

  the air raid bulletins.48 It got on the strongest nerves and Goebbels replaced it with a

  melodious four-note jingle which he composed himself.

  On April 1, 1944 Hitler appointed him City President of Greater Berlin.49 He

  moved the office to the corner of Lietzenburger and Emser Strasse, and—in line

  with total war—reduced its payroll immediately from six hundred to fifty.50 Vested

  already with sweeping powers over life and death as Defence Commissioner, he authorized

  other gauleiters to execute looters after air raids and to publicize those

  executions immediately.51

  On the eve of Hitler’s birthday he wrote him a fawning letter (‘How often has your

  struggle been fraught with the same hazards as today’) and broadcast a eulogy contrasting

  him with the ‘parliamentary mayflies’ among their enemies.52 ‘From the first

  day of this war to this very hour there has not been, despite all the enemy’s vile

  calumnies, one single case where a soldier has broken the oath sworn to his Führer

  by laying down his arms; nor one workman who has betrayed his trust to the Führer

  by stopping work. We know that our enemies abroad cannot understand this fact and

  attribute it to brute force.’53 He closed by predicting, ‘He, and not his adversaries,

  will be the man of the century.’ His call to the Berghof at two minutes past midnight

  was, said Hitler, the first to reach him. He wished him ‘at least thirty’ happy returns.

  As he drove out to Lanke, leaning back into the upholstery of his Mercedes, they

  passed a church with a scorched and tattered swastika newly draped from its ruins.

  ‘It’s the Furtwängler spirit,’ he said: ‘When the going gets tough…!’54

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 817

  The threat of invasion hung over all the Nazi leaders. Hitler admitted that he slept

  only three hours a day. His limbs literally trembled when he speculated on the where

  and when of the invasion.55 Goebbels too was edgy, though for another reason: he

  had to compose a leader article for Das Reich which events might well overtake before

  it appeared two weeks later.56 That Easter weekend the tides were again just

  right. But no invasion came. Hitler reassured Goebbels that Rommel had an old

  score to settle with the British and Americans. ‘So let them come!’ dictated the minister

  in his diary. ‘I am very pleased with the sovereign calm with which the Führer

  faces events.’57 But that very phrase—Hitler’s ‘sovereign calm’—belied his own deeper

  misgivings. The public too was on tenterhooks. ‘The letters I am getting,’ he recorded

  on May 13, ‘talk almost solely about the invasion. People are not only expecting

  but looking forward to it. They’re only afraid that the enemy may not try.’58 As

  April became May, and no invasion came, the S.D. reported that a sense of disappointment

  was setting in.59

  Twice in April and again on May 7 and 8 the American bomber squadrons struck at

  industrial targets in Berlin.60 A thousand pound bomb scarred the Chancellery, but

  life otherwise soon returned to normal. Goebbels remarked privately that General

  Douhet, the much vaunted theorist of air power, had a lot to answer for. ‘First it was

  our airforce generals who thought they could bomb Britain to a pulp, ripe for invasion.

  Now the strategic-bombing wizards are on the other side.’61 As he addressed a

  hundred officers i
n the Throne Room the sirens heralded yet another American visitation,

  and he had to finish his speech (about the inevitability of a German victory) to

  a skeptical audience wedged into the new bunker beneath Wilhelms Platz. In Das

  Reich he again hinted at the coming V-weapons. ‘Terror,’ he wrote, ‘only works when

  it is one-way.’

  Mounds of rubble now choked the centre of his city, a breeding grounds for rats

  which scavenged the flooded cellars for the remains of food or flesh. Typhus cases

  reached epidemic proportions. Goebbels imposed quarantines and compulsory vaccination

  programmes. He found himself suffering outbreaks of perspiration and headaches,

  and one morning in May a red sore appeared on his face. ‘Do you think it

  818 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  might be typhus,’ he asked his one-eyed adjutant Günter Schwägermann. A long

  distance call was placed to Professor Morell in Bavaria. Morell sent round a specialist,

  who diagnosed a simple cold-sore.62

  Recovering out at Lanke with the children, Goebbels watched the frontiers of

  Hitler’s Reich still steadily shrinking. The Crimea was lost, and in Italy the Allies

  broke through at Monte Cassino. Harald Quandt’s commanding officer wrote that

  the young lieutenant was doing well, and the minister sent cigars and cognac down

  to his stepson’s unit.63 Magda had serious complications with her neck glands. She

  saw Morell later in May when she went to spend an evening with Hitler; the doctor

  insisted she must have an operation.64

  THE American airforce had now begun ground-strafing attacks in Germany.65 On Sunday

  May 21, 1944 their fighter planes, flying only a hundred feet up, machine-gunned

  several people in fields and streets.66 (Nazi pilots had enjoyed doing the same in their

  heyday). On the twenty-third Goebbels secured Hitler’s approval for an article encouraging

  the public to lynch such airmen if they fell into their hands.67 At midday on

  May 24 the Americans again bombed Berlin. Coming across a downed American

  bomber pilot, Second-Lieutenant James G. Dennis, that day Goebbels’ propaganda

  director Alfred-Ingemar Berndt drew his revolver and shot him in cold blood.68 As

  Berlin burned, Goebbels began drafting the controversial article.

  It is not provided for in any Article of war [he wrote] that any soldier who

  commits a heinous crime is exempted from punishment by reason of superior

  orders, particularly when such orders flagrantly violate every human ethic and

  every international usage of war.

  He angrily quoted from J.M. Spaight’s book on air power ‘Bombing Vindicated’

  (‘It is not possible to draw a dividing line between the civilian population and the

  combatants’), and from the News Chronicle. ‘We are in favour,’ the liberal London

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 819

  daily newspaper had written, ‘of wiping out every living creature in Germany—

  man, woman, child, bird, and insect.’ The left-wing British novelist H.G. Wells had

  echoed these words, and even the Archbishop of York had officially described the

  bombing of civilians as ‘the lesser evil.’ Goebbels claimed sanctimoniously to have

  abstained from citing these words before lest his public take matters into its own

  hands and ‘do until the pilots … as they have been doing to others.’ Such compunctions

  no longer applied, he now suggested: ‘It is asking too much,’ he wrote, ‘to expect us

  to use German troops to protect these child-murderers… Enough is enough.’

  After checking again with Hitler he published the article in the Völkischer Beobachter.69

  It provoked outrage—but also apprehension—in London.70 Ribbentrop had his press

  chief telephone an angry protest to Goebbels. ‘This article,’ the propaganda minister

  retorted, ‘was written at the Führer’s behest.’71

  GOEBBELS had lost his awe of the officer caste ever since reading of how the Spartans

  had born their diminutive and crippled king Agæsilaos joyously into battle on a shield.

  That gave him a hero with whom he could identify. After writing the ‘lynching’ article

  he travelled down to Sonthofen castle—a Nazi indoctrination centre—to speak

  to front-line generals and admirals.72 Himmler had already addressed them, once

  more mentioning his work in killing off the Jews.73 Wearing a dark blue suit, he

  joined Goebbels, wearing the Party’s brown uniform, and the officers for dinner

  afterwards.74 The text of Goebbels’ own pep talk is not preserved. He did not like

  having to make one to officers. ‘I’m just not in the mood,’ he told Lieutenant Oven.

  ‘I’ve tried telling the Führer we’re wasting our time with these people.’ But he found

  himself placed next to the exquisitely named Major-General Hyacinth Count

  Strachwitz, and this officer, wearing the highest medals for valour, partly restored his

  faith in the officer-aristocracy.75

  He returned to Berlin via Augsburg—delivering here another pep-talk, though it

  was hardly needed. Precisely three months after the British bombers had violated

  this city, it was already back to normal.

  820 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  THE evacuation of the Jews from Berlin had dwindled to a trickle, and the Jewish

  problem had all but vanished from his diary. He had put Berndt in charge of an anti-

  Jewish propaganda unit analogous to the old anti-Comintern.76 Other top Nazis still

  wanted to proselytize, taking the anti-Jewish campaign worldwide. Rosenberg suggested

  reinforcing their antisemitic propaganda among prisoners of war and foreign

  labourers.77 Ribbentrop proposed setting up a phony ‘Jewish’ radio station to discredit

  all Jews everywhere; but Goebbels feared it would rebound upon the credibility

  of his own propaganda. Besides, he complained to Hitler, the proposal violated

  the first law of all propaganda, simplicity.78

  Hitler’s occupation of Hungary had brought over seven hundred thousand more

  Jews into the Nazi fold. Goebbels had noted a few days before, ‘We’ll take care they

  don’t abscond.’79 Eichmann extracted three hundred thousand for the Nazi war factories,

  and deported most of the rest to Himmler’s camps.80 Goebbels noted, based

  on his own experience in Berlin, that once the Hungarian government embarked on

  anti-Jewish policies they would find themselves unable to stop.81 There was no going

  back. He advised them to take care to justify their policies in the press.82

  He did not conceal his cynicism about what he meant by ‘justification.’ Speaking to

  two hundred hand-picked German government and business officials in his ministry’s

  Throne Room in June, wearing a sober grey suit and an air of confidentiality, he

  reiterated his propaganda canons: simplicity, constant repetition, and a language capable

  of holding the intellectuals while not losing the common man.83 Nazi propaganda,

  he told this select audience, had only two themes, the dual struggle against

  bolshevism and the Jews. One day, when the great powers met around the conference

  table, the question would arise how all this had come about. With one voice,

 

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