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Doctor Goebbels: His Life & Death

Page 152

by Roger Manvell; Heinrich Fraenkel


  and Otte, Mar 31, 1971; Otte was also interviewed by the Generalanzeiger, Bonn, Jul 11,

  1972: he says they met the rest of the RMVP Prominenz in Hamburg’s five-star Hotel Atlantic.

  36 Inge Haberzettel, op. cit.

  37 JG, ‘Widerstand um jeden Preis,’ in Das Reich, Apr 22, 1945.

  38 The events of Apr 22 are based on the diaries of Koller and Jodl, Apr 22–23; memos of

  Koller and Lieutenant Volck, Apr 25, 1945; interrogations of Keitel, Jodl, Christian, Freytag

  924 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  von Loringhoven, Below, Bernd von Brauchitsch, and the duty stenographers Hagen and

  Herrgesell; and the written testimonies of Keitel, Günsche, Linge, Else Krüger, and Traudl

  Junge (IfZ, Irving collection).

  39 Oven, ‘Apr 22, 1945’; Magda’s silver toilet accessories are much sought-after items on

  the memorabilia auction circuit.

  40 British interrogations of Else Krüger, Sep 19, Mar 27, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  41 Jodl told Russian interrogators on Jun 18, 1945 that it was plain to JG that he neither

  could not should survive the destruction of the Nazi system. Wehrwissenschaftlicher Rundschau,

  1961, 535ff.

  42 Der Panzer-Bär, Apr 23, 1945.

  43 British interrogation of General Eckhard Christian, Oct 15, 1945 (Trevor Roper papers,

  IfZ, Irving collection).

  44 Rach, interview publ. in Pinguin (Rowohlt Verlag, Hamburg) May 1949 (in IfZ archives);

  and Auguste Behrend, ‘Meine Tochter Magda Goebbels,’ in Schwäbische Illustrierte, No.22,

  May 31, 1952.

  45 USFET CIC interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  46 Magda to Harald Quandt, Apr 28, 1945. Interrogation report of Hanna Reitsch, AIU/

  IS/5, British Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee, Oct 5, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers,

  IfZ, Irving collection).

  47 Ebermayer & Meissner, ‘Magda Goebbels sagte: Wir müssen alle sterben,’ in Revue,

  No.26, 1952.

  48 Trevor-Roper’s interrogation of Gebhardt, Mar 27, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection); and USFET MISC special interrogation of SS Hstuf Günther

  Schwägermann, Jun 20, 1946 (ibid; and NA file RG.332, Mis-Y). Ohlendorf confirmed this

  in CSDIC(UK) interrogation report SRGG.1322, Jul 7, 1945.

  49 BBC Monitoring Report, Apr 23 (IWM archives); for ‘Radio Werewolf’s’ similar bulletin

  see NYT, Apr 24, 1945.

  50 News bulletin issued by propaganda officer attached to Army Group Vistula, Apr 23,

  1945: war diary, annexes (NA film T311, roll 170, 2211).

  51 At 9:29 P.M. EST, America. JG had operated more than thirty powerful transmitters,

  which dominated the shortwave bands for twelve years and 24 days; the broadcasts to the

  USA were from 6 P.M. to 1:15 A.M. each night, featuring the antisemitic Robert Best (once a

  P.A. stringer in Vienna), Douglas Chandler (‘Paul Revere’) of Baltimore, Jane Anderson, the

  wisecracking Edward Delaney, and Donald Day. NYT, May 6, 1945.

  52 Traudl Junge, unpubl. MS (IfZ, Irving collection).

  53 Soviet interrogation of SS Stubaf Helmut Kunz, reproduced in Lev Besymenski, Der Tod

  des Adolf Hitler (Hamburg, 1968). The physical data on JG’s children are extracted from the

  autopsies reproduced in this book.

  54 The Göring telegram and Bormann’s handwritten responses were found by a US officer,

  Capt John Bradin, in the bunker in Jul 1945 (IfZ, Irving collection).

  55 Junge, interrogation, Aug 30, 1946, and MS (IfZ, Irving collection).

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 925

  56 Heinz Lorenz, verbatim shorthand notes on Hitler’s final war conferences, first published

  in Der Spiegel, No.3, Jan 10, 1966.—Authenticated by the author’s interview of Lorenz;

  by a letter of Capt H Searle of British intelligence to CI War Room, London, Mar 5, 1946;

  and by CSDIC(WEA) interrogation of Lorenz, Nov 30, 1945 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  57 Interrogation report of Hanna Reitsch, AIU/IS/5, British Intelligence Objectives Sub-

  Committee, Oct 5, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ, Irving collection); and Korf’s interrogation

  of Reitsch, Apr 28, 1945 (Hoover Libr., K Frank Korf papers).

  58 Diary, Nov 2, 1940.

  Goebbels

  59 Traudl Junge MS.

  60 Magda to Harald Quandt, Apr 28, 1945.

  61 Judge Michael A Musmanno’s interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Jan 26, 1948 (transcript

  from Musmanno papers in IfZ, Irving collection).

  62 Lorenz, conference transcript, Apr 27, 1945.

  63 Soviet interrogation of SS Stubaf Helmut Kunz. Kunz, b.1910 in Ettingen, Baden, was in

  May 1945 adjutant of the chief physician of the S.S. Health Dept.

  64 Harald Quandt, now 23, was held prisoner in Egypt from Nov 4, 1944 to Mar 10, 1947.

  He was killed after the war in an automobile accident.

  65 JG to Harald Quandt, Apr 28, 1945. Interrogation report of Hanna Reitsch, AIU/IS/5,

  British Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee, Oct 5, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  66 BBC Monitoring Report, Apr 28, 1:55 P.M. (IWM archives)

  67 USFET MISC special interrogation of SS Hstuf Günther Schwägermann, Jun 20, 1946

  (NA file RG.332, Mis-Y; and Trevor Roper papers, IfZ, Irving collection).

  68 USFET special interrogation of Gerda Christian, Apr 25, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers,

  IfZ, Irving collection; and NA file RG.319, IRR, XE.009487); and BAOR interrogation of

  Nicolaus von Below, Jan 23, 1946 (ibid; and NA file RG.332, Mis-Y).

  69 Adolf Hitler, Political Testament, Apr 28, 1945 (Hoover Libr., special collection.)

  70 This was Gau-Inspekteur Walther Wagner. BAOR interrogation of Nicolaus von Below,

  Jan 23, 1946 (NA file RG.332, Mis-Y; and Trevor Roper papers, IfZ, Irving collection).

  71 USFET CIC interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).

  72 The original wedding certificate, Apr 29, 1945, is in the Hoover Libr., special collection.

  73 British interrogation of Else Krüger, Sep 25, 1945 and USFET interrogation of Gertrud

  Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ, Irving collection).

  74 USFET special interrogation of Gerda Christian, Apr 25, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers,

  IfZ, Irving collection; and NA file RG.319, IRR, XE.009487).

  75 USFET CIC interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection).—General Wilhelm Burgdorf wrote to Schörner on Apr 29, 1945 enclosing

  Hitler’s political testament and confirming that ‘he wrote it today after the crushing

  news of the Reichsführer’s act of disloyalty.’

  76 Diary, Feb 28, Mar 14, 21, 22, 1945.

  926 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  77 USFET CIC interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,

  Irving collection); and Junge, MS.

  78 Cf. BBC Monitoring Report, Apr 29, 1945 (IWM archives)

  79 Der Spiegel, Jan 24, 1951.

  80 CSDIC(WEA) interrogation of Heinz Lorenz, Nov 30, 1945 (Trevor Roper papers,

  IfZ, Irving collection).

  81 Walter Rapp, interrogation of Axmann, Oct 16, 1947 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ, Irving

  collection); author’s interview of Axmann, May 7, 1991.

  82 USFET CIC interrogation of Gertrud Junge, Aug 30, 1946 (Trevor Roper papers, IfZ,
/>
  Irving collection); and Junge, MS.

  83 Author’s interview of Otto Günsche, Mar 20, 1967; report by HQ tailor Willi Müller,

  Nov 9, 1945 (NA file RG.319, IRR, XE.009487).

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 927

  Epilogue: ‘Ever at your Side’

  REICH Chancellor Joseph Goebbels nodded to Otto Günsche, Hitler’s broad-

  Ê Ê Ê Ê shouldered, blond S.S. ‘bulldog,’ to go ahead. Hitler had commanded

  Günsche to ensure that he and Eva were truly dead, and then to cremate their remains.

  They all trooped into Hitler’s private sanctum. The sight of their Führer lifeless,

  the fountainhead until now of their own power and influence, slumped on the

  sofa with blood oozing from his head and mouth, had a numbing effect on them all.

  Eva’s head rested on his shoulder. Ludwig Stumpfegger, Hitler’s wiry young S.S.

  doctor, stooped briefly and confirmed that they were both dead, which relieved

  Günsche of a last distasteful duty with which Hitler had also charged him.1

  While the valet wrapped Hitler’s corpse in a blanket and carried it out with

  Stumpfegger’s assistance, Bormann picked up Eva’s and followed them to the spiral

  staircase with Dr Goebbels a few paces behind. Schwägermann reported the scene

  to Magda. ‘He ought not to have done this to us,’ she wept.2

  Upstairs Russian artillery was bracketing the building. Shrapnel was flying around

  the gardens. Storms of mortar dust and smoke whipped past. The little funeral party

  unceremoniously tipped the Führer’s body into a hollow a few yards from the bunker

  exit where Goebbels remained, taking shelter. Hitler’s corpse lay face upwards

  with Eva’s next to him. A rude gust of wind hoisted her blue dress to reveal her

  garter-belt. Then, sodden down with the gasoline that Günsche and Hitler’s chauffeur

  slopped out of five jerricans, the cloth wrapped itself limply round her limbs.

  Goebbels handed Günsche a match, a lighted rag was tossed onto the bodies, a sheet

  928 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  of flame enveloped the couple and Bormann, Goebbels, Günsche and the doctor

  raised their right arms in a farewell salute.

  Goebbels led the way back down into the underground map room. Günsche and

  Axmann cleaned up in the death chamber. ‘Bormann—Burgdorf—Krebs—Mohnke,’

  Goebbels ordered. ‘Please come to an immediate situation conference.’ (Wilhelm

  Burgdorf had succeeded Schmundt; Krebs had replaced Guderian; Wilhelm Mohnke

  was the citadel’s commandant.)

  Hitler was dead. The Greatest Warlord of All Times had deserted them. For the last

  six years Germany had been a Führer state without a Führer. Now Goebbels was

  Reich chancellor without a Reich. The men clustered round as Goebbels told them

  of Hitler’s testament appointing him.

  The main point on his agenda was to secure Moscow’s formal recognition for his

  new government before the Soviet High Command had crushed his tiny Reich.3

  Together with Martin Bormann he dictated to secretary Gerda Christian a letter

  addressed to the Soviet military commander Marshal Zhukov informing him that the

  Führer was dead and asking on behalf of the new government for an immediate cease

  fire to enable the injured to be evacuated from the chancellery area.4 He detailed

  Krebs, a Russian speaker, to carry this letter to Zhukov’s HQ under a flag of truce.5

  But the preliminaries for this dangerous expedition took longer than planned. Else

  Krüger recalls that a radio signal went first to the Russian command, then a junior

  officer went to inquire if they would receive Krebs. It was close to midnight before

  the general set off, accompanied by a colonel, General Weidling’s chief of staff, in an

  armored car flying a white flag.6

  What was Goebbels’ intent? Krebs’ remarks to the Soviet officers, of which due

  record was taken, show that Goebbels had perceived only one hope for his own

  salvation: if Stalin would cut a deal with him at the expense of his western Allies.

  For several hours there was no word from Krebs. Goebbels and his men hung

  around the bunker’s lowest level drinking endless cups of coffee and knocking back

  tots of schnapps. Goebbels had authorized a mass breakout for that night, and the

  cooks upstairs had packed all their pots and pans in anticipation; but now that Krebs

  GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH 929

  was still absent the cooks had to unpack and prepare more meals. Upstairs meanwhile

  a burial party tried in the darkness to complete the cremation work, but the

  Hitler couple’s corpses were barely charred. They were buried in a shell crater with

  the bodies of their two dogs laid out one layer above them as a decoy. Hitler’s Alsatian

  Blondi had a collar-tag engraved ‘Immer mit dir’—ever at your side.7

  Several efforts were made to persuade the new chancellor even now to spare the

  lives of his six children. Axmann offered to take them out of Berlin. Goebbels went

  through the motions of consulting Magda, but returned and said he did not want the

  children to live to see him branded as a war criminal.8 Hitler’s chauffeur made a

  similar offer. Goebbels told him that if Krebs failed, then his course was clear.9 The

  night passed but General Krebs did not return. Pondering what to do now, Goebbels

  asked Traudl Junge for a copy of Hitler’s testament: but she had destroyed both her

  own shorthand and the remaining carbon copies.10

  At seven-forty the next morning—it was now May 1, 1945—Martin Bormann

  sent a succinct message to Dönitz in Flensburg, northern Germany: ‘Testament in

  force,’ it said. ‘I shall join you as rapidly as possible. My advice is to delay publication

  until then. BORMANN.’11 At about the same time Goebbels was dressing punctiliously

  for this day’s probable meeting with his Maker, choosing his finest underwear, his

  light brown party uniform, dark silk socks, a brown silk necktie clasped with a swastika

  badge, and the special orthopædic shoes.12 The sounds of combat had almost

  died away—it was the Russian labour day.

  TOWARD mid-morning the colonel came back from the Russian HQ, his uniform torn

  by barbed wire. He reported that General Krebs had been conducted to the Eighth

  Guards Army command post on the edge of Tempelhof airfield. The commanding

  officer, General Vassiliy Ivanovich Chuikov had heard him out; but after conferring

  by phone with Marshal Zhukov the Russians had refused to discuss anything but

  unconditional surrender. There could be no talk of a limited armistice. Krebs had

  argued, as instructed, that it was in Stalin’s interest to recognize the new Goebbels

  government at once. General Chuikov had repeated the Soviet refusal. Krebs had

  930 GOEBBELS. MASTERMIND OF THE THIRD REICH

  sent the colonel back to the chancellery with a Soviet signals team to run a field

  telephone line in to the bunker. But the cable had proved too short by several hundred

  yards.13

 

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