“Don’t you threaten me! Mutiny, and I’ll see you rotting in jail!” Goerdeler wasn’t planning to give an inch.
Rommel’s eyes flashed angrily. “You’re a puppet running a fake paper government. You had better realize who you’re dealing with, and understand that
I
run this army. Not you, not some paper-shuffling group of bureaucrats without a government. You’re nothing without me and my army, and you had damned well better remember it.”
Von Reinhardt winced a little at Rommel’s bluntness, and wished he could teach the man greater subtlety. Everything he was saying was true, of course, but it was impolitic. Rommel’s army needed a civilian government for its legitimacy, and Germany would require a functioning new administration to replace the old. The two men needed each other, but neither seemed able to settle for less than complete power.
“They will obey lawful orders,” Goerdeler said, but his voice was less strong. “No man is indispensable. Not even the Desert Fox.”
Rommel smiled, but only with his mouth. He could recognize that he now had his opponent in retreat. “Chancellor, you can speak the words, but remember that it is I whom you expect to perform the dirty work. You want me to lead this army into war against our own countrymen, for Germans to kill Germans. You want me to kill Germans to achieve your objectives. Well, I won’t, if it can possibly be helped. If the Nazis can be removed from power by peaceful or diplomatic means, then I don’t have to kill as many Germans.”
“I expect you to obey lawful orders and work alongside our allies!” Goerdeler responded. “You cannot let the murderous Nazi scum escape their just punishments!”
“And how many others shall I punish on the way?” asked Rommel. It was time for the coup de grâce. Clearly he held the victory in his hands. “Chancellor, let’s get this straight between us. This army is mine. It’s not yours. It goes where I want it to go, it fights whom I want it to fight. I command this army by virtue of the loyalty of its soldiers to me. Not to you, not to the paper government you represent, but to me. I will lead this army as I see fit. If you want others to see you as technically in control of the army, I don’t object, but understand me very clearly. I give the orders.”
Goerdeler looked ready to fire the Desert Fox on the spot, but he paused. It was obvious that Rommel was not bluffing. “I see,” he said, the coldness in his voice echoing Rommel’s. “So you are, after all, the megalomaniac we all feared you would be. When Speidel first recruited you, there was a deep disagreement as to whether you would be part of a democratic government, or
whether you would turn yourself into another tin-pot dictator. You have shown your true colors today, and I will remember it.” He stood up to leave. The Desert Fox remained seated.
Von Reinhardt stood up. He could not leave this dangerous breach untouched. “Chancellor,” von Reinhardt interjected, urgency in his voice. “I beg you to think carefully before you speak or act. Field Marshal Rommel is not a new dictator in the making, and doesn’t wish to be. He’s right that you can’t ask this army to make war against its own fatherland. It’s not just the field marshal, it’s the soldiers as well. They didn’t sign on for this. Can you truly expect them to shoulder the burden of killing their countrymen and fellow soldiers?”
Von Reinhardt could see the chancellor thinking, calming down. Goerdeler was a good politician. He understood the realities of power, and he understood the political necessity of getting along with his own opposition. He and Rommel could fight—would fight—but at the end, they had to present a solid front together for the sake of their mutual objective. It was easier for Goerdeler to see this than Rommel. Von Reinhardt resumed his persuasion, ignoring the pain that threatened to clamp his chest in a fiery vise.
“We must get this war over with quickly, or else the Soviets will take over everything. There is the old Russian story of the sled being pursued by wolves. In the bargain I made, I threw some food off the back to slow down the wolves, but all I could do was slow them down a little. They must be stopped. Let the field marshal stop them. Other things can wait, and it will be different when you occupy Berlin.”
Goerdeler looked at von Reinhardt closely, seeing more of him than before. He grunted, and shook his head slowly from side to side. “I don’t see that you’ve left me much choice. Very well—for now. But I warn you. Both of you. The crimes of the Nazi government are much larger than either of you imagine. If you let the leaders get away, the outcry of the world will do more damage to Germany than would a military offensive.” He turned and left.
Von Reinhardt sat down again, slowly so as to minimize the pain in his chest.
“A good job,” Rommel said. “You handled him well.”
Von Reinhardt nodded his acknowledgment. “He has a point, of course, as you no doubt know,” he observed.
“Yes, I know. I’ve heard some of the stories. I’m sure they’re exaggerated like all rumors, but if the stories are even fractionally true, it’s terrible. I’d like to bring those responsible to justice as much as anyone,” Rommel replied. “But I have to address first things first.”
Von Reinhardt had heard the stories, too. Some of them were so outrageous, so enormous, it was hard to conceive how they possibly could be true. But even if they were only partly true, it would be bad enough.
That, however,
is a matter for another day,
the intelligence officer thought. For now, the issue was ending the civil war as quickly and as bloodlessly as possible.
“Now let’s talk about you making an approach to Himmler,” Rommel said. The two men leaned forward and began to plan.