The Plots Against Hitler

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The Plots Against Hitler Page 53

by Danny Orbach


  betrayals, 233–34

  confusion on assassination success, 214, 215–16, 218, 219, 220, 221–22, 223, 225–26, 227, 228, 230–31, 232, 233

  confusion on coup, 216, 217–29, 230–35

  countercoup and, 226

  end in Berlin, 235–37

  escape from Wolf’s Lair and, 214–15, 218

  failure reasons (summary), 238–40, 282

  in France and, 218, 220–21, 222, 228–30, 234–35, 240, 288, 353 n60

  Hitler/views and, 215, 216–17, 230–31, 238

  Hitler’s radio message, 237–38

  measuring strengths/weaknesses overview, 287–89

  messages from resistance leaders, 223–25, 227

  Nazi firing squad and, 237

  Nazi leaders infighting, 217

  single bomb use and, 213, 282

  Stauffenberg’s execution, 237

  Stauffenberg’s injury, 236

  See also specific individuals

  resistance movements/assassination and coup plot (Stauffenberg, July 20, 1944) consequences

  Allied forces and, 265

  arrests, interrogation, torture, 243, 244–46, 251–52, 261, 263

  bodies exhumed/burned, 244

  family members of conspirators and, 251–52, 264–65

  firing squad/executions, 237, 243, 258

  hangings of conspirators, 250, 251, 254, 258, 264

  interrogation strategy, 245

  lawyers for conspirators and, 248, 255, 356–57 n19

  Nazis’ arrests of potential subversives and, 252

  Nazis finding Kaiser’s diary, 244

  Nazis obtaining information/destroying movement, 241, 243, 244, 245, 251, 255, 263–64

  suicides/attempted suicides, 242–44, 245, 258–60, 264

  trials/humiliation of conspirators, 246–51, 255, 261–62

  verdicts and, 249–50, 251, 254, 258, 262, 264

  See also specific individuals

  resistance movements/assassination plot (plane bomb/1943)

  failure/retrieving bombs, 139–40

  making bombs/delivering, 137, 138–39

  planning, 134–37

  resistance movements/assassination plots

  assassination decision/reasoning, xv, 181–87

  eastern front possibilities, 115–16

  Hammerstein’s plan and, 87–88

  luck/randomness and, 282

  measuring strengths/weaknesses and, 282–83

  1941 in Paris and, 111–13, 115, 116

  origins, 14, 15

  revolutionary autarky measurement and, 283

  suicide bombing attempt (1943), 139–42

  See also Elser, Georg; resistance movements/Berlin network

  resistance movements/Berlin and eastern front network

  alliance, 116

  arrests, 142

  assassination attempt/plane bomb, 133–40

  assassination/coup sequence and, 132, 136

  assassination possibilities, 115–16

  brokers/connectors and, 116–17, 285–86, 325 n3

  control and, 286–87

  coup plans/roles (1942), 133–34

  measuring strengths/weaknesses overview, 285–87

  member squabbles, 135–36, 286–87

  revolutionary autarky and, 285–86

  security and, 286

  See also specific individuals

  resistance movements/Berlin network

  arrests/seizure of documents (1943), 142, 158–59

  Beck recruitment and, 29–31, 34, 36

  Britain’s importance/negotiations and, 39–43, 47, 83, 92–93

  connectors and, 283

  control and, 283

  coup “plans” (late 1941) and, 110

  decision on necessity of assassination (1942), 113

  dependence on outsiders (summary), 283–85

  documenting Nazi crimes/planned use, 49, 80–81

  end/reasons, 60–61

  expansion/atrocities in Poland and, 88–89

  formation, 20–31

  German nationalism/territory and, 42–43, 83, 84, 101

  Gestapo and, 25–26

  growth during first two years of war, 98–99

  Hitler’s war victories and, 97–98

  hopes on Halder and, 37–39

  individual functions, 26–27

  labor leaders/workers and, 82–83

  measuring strengths/weaknesses overview, 283–85

  Moltke’s group/Kreisau Circle and, 108

  Nazi persecution of Jews and, 20, 21, 29, 75, 104

  Nazi raids/arrests (1942–1943), 142, 158–59

  network-analysis theory and, 24–27

  planning/proposals for Germany’s future, 100–106, 109, 110

  problems in 1940, 96–97

  radio stations/broadcasts and, 52–53

  repeat attempt of 1938 revolt, 90–91

  revolutionary autarky and, 283–85

  security and, 283

  situation in 1940, 93–94

  social “islands” and, 25–26, 304 n20

  social to conspiratorial network change, 26

  SS kidnapping British agents and, 92–93

  Tresckow visiting, 130

  weaknesses summary, 44

  See also Jewish persecution; specific individuals

  resistance movements/Berlin network 1938 coup plans

  critical tasks/military numbers, 52

  Czechoslovakia issue and, 36, 38–39, 40–41

  description, 49–53

  Hitler’s fate and, 49, 50, 52

  police and, 51, 52

  regime after coup and, 48–49, 53

  timing, 36, 37, 38

  resistance movements/network-analysis theory

  “clique,” 24–25

  compartmentalization, 25

  “connectors,” 27

  division of labor and, 25

  recruitment and, 25–26

  revolutionary mutation/examples, 25, 26, 28, 34, 36, 78, 112, 117, 119–20, 175, 281

  social “islands,” 25–26, 304 n20

  “viral effect” (recruitment), 98–99

  revolutionary autarky

  defined, 283

  See also specific resistance movements

  revolutionary mutation/examples, 25, 26, 28, 34, 36, 78, 112, 117, 119–20, 175, 281

  Reynaud, Paul, 97

  Reynolds, Nicholas, 92, 182

  Ribbentrop, Joachim von

  associates, 51

  Czechoslovakia and, 39

  Hitler/Hitler’s orders and, 28, 114–15, 123, 217

  position, 28

  Ringshausen, Gerhard, 286

  Roeder, Manfred, 158–59

  Roettger (hangman), 250

  Röhm Putsch, 217

  See also Night of the Long Knives

  Rommel, Erwin

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 258–59

  wounded, 208

  Lucie-Maria (wife), 259

  motives for resistance and, 268

  resistance and, 201–2, 208, 268

  World War II/Africa Corps, 177–78, 201

  Roon, Ger van, 189

  Rosenstock, Eugen, 107

  Rothfels, Hans, xii

  Rothmund, Heinrich, 156–57

  Rundstedt, Gerd von, 122, 123, 246

  S

  SA (Storm Troopers)

  description/pro-Hitler actions, 6

  Hitler’s actions against, 9–10, 11

  kidnappings/torture by, 11

  Sachsenhausen concentration camp, 52, 62, 73, 76, 261, 264

  Schacht, Hjalmar

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 264

  after coup (1938), 45

  background, 39

  resistance and, 39, 43, 45, 48, 60, 91

  Schellenberg, Walter, 92

  Scheurig, Bodo, 242

  Schlabrendorff, Fabian von

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 241, 243, 245, 261, 264, 265

  background, 1
18

  on Kleist, 273

  resistance and assassination/coup plans and, 87, 118–19, 128, 133, 134, 137–40, 141, 276

  as resistance “broker,” 118–19, 128, 130, 131–32, 133, 179, 183, 273, 287

  torture/remaining silent, 261, 265

  Tresckow and, 118–19, 121, 128, 132, 134, 241, 243

  Schleicher, Kurt von, 10

  Schmidhuber, Wilhelm, 147, 158

  Schmidt, Otto, 16–17

  Schmidt, Paul, 217

  Schmundt (Hitler’s adjutant), 140–41, 215

  Schneersohn, Joseph Yitzchak, Rabbi (Lubavitcher Rebbe), 146–47, 149

  Schulenburg, Ehrengard von der, 193

  Schulenburg, Friedrich-Werner von der

  Germany’s invasion of Soviet Union and, 114–15

  position, 114

  Schulenburg, Fritz von der

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 250

  arrest/release, 142, 179

  Charlotte (wife), 171

  Jews and, 78

  resistance and assassination/coup plans, 78, 88–89, 111, 185, 227

  Schulze-Bernett, Walter, 149

  Schuschnigg, Kurt von, 264–65

  Schwarzel, Helene, 254–55

  Schwerin von Schwanenfeld, Ulrich Wilhelm, Count

  Poland atrocities/effects, 112

  resistance and, 112, 217–18

  trial/execution, 250, 251

  as would-be assassin, 112

  Seppl, Bayern (Bavarian Joe), 17

  Shirer, William, 46–47, 53–54, 56

  shirt of Nessus myth, 242

  Skinner, Quentin, 269

  Skorzeny, Otto, 231, 237, 243

  Smid, Marikje, 151

  Social Democratic Party

  destruction by Hitler, 5, 6

  general strike (1920) and, 5

  January 1933 situation, 1

  social “islands” of resistance movements, 25–26, 304 n20

  Solmitz, Luise, 2, 3

  Soviet Union

  Germany/Czechoslovakia and, 39

  nonaggression pact with Germany, 83–84, 115, 123

  Soviet Union/Germany’s invasion

  Commissar Order/license for atrocities, 121–22

  description/atrocities and effects on resistance, 122–28, 131, 138–39, 148, 173–74, 328 n11

  German failure/deaths, 127–28, 132–33, 134, 175, 200, 202

  massacres of Jewish people/effects on resistance, 51, 123–25, 126, 131, 148, 173, 328 n11

  plans/communications on, 114–15

  prevention attempts, 121–22

  Speidel, Hans

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 265

  resistance/coup and, 197–98, 221, 233

  SS (Schutzstaffel)

  Abwehr and, 158, 159

  description, 10

  power beginnings and, 10

  terror on Germans, 11–12

  SS Athenia sinking, 85

  Stahlberg, Alexander, 119, 128, 131

  Stalin, Joseph, 4–5, 123

  Stampfer, Friedrich, 5

  Stauffenberg, Alexander von, 161

  Stauffenberg, Alfred von, Count, 161

  Stauffenberg, Berthold von

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 244–45

  as anti-Hitler/anti-Nazi, 161, 194

  assassination/coup attempt (1944) and, 217–18

  childhood, 161, 162–63, 164, 165

  Claus relationship and, 161, 162, 164, 168, 178–79, 194, 217–18

  Stefan George and, 164–65, 169–70

  Stauffenberg, Caroline von, Countess, 161, 163, 178

  Stauffenberg, Claus von

  body exhumed/burned, 244

  changing views of Hitler, 164, 165–66, 168, 170, 171–72, 173, 174–76

  death/firing squad, 237

  descriptions, 159, 167, 169, 170, 172, 194, 206, 293, 343 n20

  as father/husband, 169

  George circle and, 169

  hospitalization/visitors, 160, 178–80

  injuries/disabilities, 160, 178, 238

  Jews and, 168–69, 171, 173, 174–75

  joining army/military career and, 166, 167, 170, 171–78, 206

  recovering from injuries, 180, 188

  resistance/revolutionary mutation and, 175–77

  “Secret Germany” and, 164–65, 170, 175

  See also resistance movements/assassination and coup plot (Stauffenberg, July 20, 1944)

  Stauffenberg, Claus von/childhood

  architecture and, 162

  birth, 161

  description/health issues, 162, 166

  dreams/aspirations of, 161–62

  Great War and, 162–64

  literary circle (Stefan George), 164–65

  music and, 161

  “oath” against Hitler, 165–66

  parents/brothers and, 161

  poetry and, 161

  Stauffenberg, Claus von, resistance and assassination/Valkyrie attempts

  “Appeal to the German People, An,” 198–99

  assassination as suicide bombing, 195, 203

  assassination/coup decision (spring 1944), 204–5

  assassination question and, 183, 185, 337–38 n37

  Communist underground and, 207, 288

  control and, 288–89

  coup explanations to German people and, 198–200

  death/firing squad, 237

  finding assassin, 194

  Hitler’s headquarters, East Prussia and, 198

  hopes on Rommel and, 201–2

  individuals/positions in new government, 198

  key individuals, 197

  measuring strengths/weaknesses overview, 287–89

  motives for resistance and, 268–69, 271

  Olbricht’s Valkyrie II orders and, 196–97, 202

  operational difficulties (summary), 202–3

  other resistance members/groups and, 188–89

  planning assassination/coup, 195–206, 239

  planning effects on resistance fighters, 206

  plans for military tribunals after coup, 197

  plans for possible civil war, 200–201

  recruitment to resistance, 159, 179–80

  as resistance leader, 180, 188, 190, 191–93, 287

  resistance veterans/rivalries and, 192–93

  revolutionary autarky and, 288

  security risks/failures and, 206–7, 288, 347 n58

  security/secrecy and, 190–92, 193–94, 196, 197, 344 n28

  sniper plan, 204

  Stauffenberg as would-be assassin/access to Hitler, 206, 207–8

  Stauffenberg’s assassination attempts (July 11 and 15, 1944), 207–8

  uniform demonstration event and, 195, 203–4

  Valkyrie code name/meaning, 196

  volunteers to type coup plans, 193–94

  Western Allies relations and, 201

  as “wheel conspiracy,” 191–92, 287–89

  See also resistance movements/assassination and coup plot (Stauffenberg, July 20, 1944)

  Stauffenberg, Nina von

  arrest/imprisonment, 251–52, 266

  children and, 251, 266

  Constanze (daughter) and, 266

  husband and, 169, 172, 178, 180, 205, 251

  Stern, Frank, 238, 239

  Stevens, Richard, 92–93, 264–65

  Stieff, Helmuth

  after assassination/coup attempts (1944), 247, 249–50

 

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