Goebbels: A Biography (84 page)

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Authors: Peter Longerich

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For the time being, however, the situation in Berlin settled down again and during the following weeks Berlin was spared further raids.

FURTHER REVERSES ON THE EASTERN AND SOUTHERN FRONTS

In the meantime, after a period of relative calm,
161
the military situation in the east had deteriorated. The Soviet offensive that had developed out of the battle to defend Kursk was achieving its initial successes. Orel, north of Kursk, had to be evacuated on August 5, which Goebbels considered a “great blow to prestige.”
162
On the same day, to the south of the Kursk battlefield Belgorod was reconquered, and the Red Army then moved on to attack Kharkov.
163
Moreover, on August 7 it launched another major offensive around 250 miles further north in the Smolensk area.
164

“We must now start using politics,” wrote Goebbels on August 8. “For there are very obvious contradictions between the plutocratic west and the Bolshevist east,” and they would become very strong in the event of communist successes. But unfortunately “for obvious reasons”—Goebbels meant the negative military situation—they were unable to start seeking a political solution to the war. However, given that he was more and more doubtful about pure military success in the war, he became increasingly preoccupied by the notion of a “political solution.”

On August 9, on a visit to Führer’s headquarters Goebbels learned further details about the situation in Italy. During the course of the conversation Hitler announced that he had no intention of “surrendering [Italy] as a battle zone.” He even wanted to defend Sicily for as long as possible against the superior Allied forces. Goebbels learned that Hitler regarded Badoglio as “nothing but a traitor.” The official explanation for Mussolini’s resignation was completely implausible. Hitler then informed Goebbels “in absolute confidence” that he wanted to arrest the king, “take Badoglio and all his gang into custody,
liberate Il Duce, and then give him and Fascism the opportunity of once more climbing into the saddle and establishing a solid regime.”
165

During the further course of the conversation Goebbels made several suggestions for far-reaching changes of personnel. Wilhelm Frick, who was “too old and worn out,” should be replaced by Wilhelm Stuckart as interior minister and Himmler as police minister. Furthermore, the education minister, Bernhard Rust, should be dismissed and the labor minister, Franz Seldte (“the old slacker”) be replaced by Robert Ley, the head of the German Labor Front. Hitler was “somewhat taken aback” by these “categorical suggestions,” but in general accepted them in a good spirit. On this occasion Goebbels asked Hitler “whom the Führer would replace me with if I was no longer there.” According to Goebbels, the Führer replied that “I was a unique phenomenon of National Socialism, who would be completely irreplaceable”; he did not know “anyone who could take over a fraction of the responsibility that I am now having to carry.” Goebbels was “naturally very proud of this assessment,” although he would have wanted “the organization in which I am working to remain after my own work has finished.” Hitler agreed in principle. Although Goebbels was glad that the offices which he had accumulated over the course of time would remain together over the longer term, he was also concerned, as is clear from his diaries, that a weaker successor would not in fact be able to hold these offices together. In his view his “uniqueness,” which Hitler had once again confirmed to him, made the question of a suitable successor a problem that was virtually insoluble.
166

In the middle of August the Wehrmacht’s situation in Sicily had become so precarious that the troops had to be evacuated over the Strait of Messina. It was successful in transporting over one hundred thousand German and Italian troops with much of their heavy equipment onto the Italian mainland within a week.
167

In the east the Soviet offensive was continuing. A Red Army spearhead deployed against Army Group Center in the Smolensk area succeeded in conquering Spas-Demensk; on August 23 Kharkov was lost to the Red Army’s southern offensive. In his assessments of the military situation on the Eastern Front, Goebbels’s comments during these weeks alternated between being quite pessimistic and cautiously optimistic. As far as his propaganda instructions went, he recommended “muted optimism.”
168

Thus it is clear that in the meantime Goebbels had acquired serious doubts about whether the war could still be won by military means. In recent months there had been an uninterrupted series of defeats and setbacks. He had given up the attempt at “total” mobilization, and his efforts to mobilize the last reserves of the German population through the propaganda motif of an allegedly lethal Jewish threat had failed. He lacked any other promising propaganda themes. The “political solution” to the war was indeed the only way out, and during the coming months he was to pursue this more vigorously.

CHAPTER 27
“I Have No Idea What the Führer’s Going to Do in the End”

The Search for a Way Out

Credit 27.1

A public display of confidence in victory: The propaganda minister receives a group of soldiers from the Cherkasy pocket on March 1, 1944, among them soldiers of the Waffen-SS and the army. From the summer of 1943 onward, Goebbels recognized that Germany could no longer win the war militarily and began to raise with Hitler the possibility of making a separate peace.

On September 3, 1943, British troops landed in Calabria.
1
At first Hitler believed the operation was a diversion and that the real invasion was still to come and would be in western Europe.
2
On September 9 Goebbels noted a “sensational development” that he had learned about the previous day: Badolgio’s signing of the armistice, which had happened on September 3 and initially had been kept secret.
On the same evening Goebbels was summoned by Hitler to his east Prussian headquarters.

When he arrived in the Wolf’s Lair the following morning, he learned that the measures that had been prepared since July for the eventuality of an Italian defection had already been set in motion the previous evening. German troops had moved into north and central Italy as well as into the Italian-occupied territories in Croatia, Greece, and southern France, disarming their former allies. On September 10 a German paratroop division managed to occupy Rome.
3
On the other hand, on the early morning of September 9 American and British forces had begun to land at Salerno with the aim of taking Naples.
4

In view of the situation in the Mediterranean but also on the Eastern Front, Goebbels now decided—as far as can be seen it was his first initiative in this direction—to speak to Hitler about the possibility of ending the war through a political solution. He asked bluntly “whether in the short or the long term something could be arranged with Stalin.” Hitler’s response was negative, in view of the current military situation: “Hitler thinks it’s more likely something could be done with the English than with the Soviets.” Hitler believed that with the permanent seizure of Sicily, Calabria, Sardinia, and Corsica, Britain had already achieved important war aims and would then “possibly be more open to an arrangement.” Goebbels had a different view: “I tend rather to think that Stalin is more approachable, for Stalin is more of an adherent of
Realpolitik
than Churchill.”

Once again Goebbels “strongly” advocated that Hitler should speak to the German people and Hitler finally agreed, although he would have preferred to wait until the situation in Italy had been sorted out. On the following day both of them read through the speech that had been drafted in the meantime, essentially dealing with the situation after Italy’s defection, and it was then broadcast that evening,
5
the first radio address by the dictator in almost six months.

However, as Goebbels well knew, a speech by the dictator was hardly sufficient to repair the damage that had already been done to the Führer’s image. And, what was worse from Goebbels’s point of view, he was not in a position to offer any propaganda alternatives. The military situation and the air raids were depressing; the campaigns
with whose help he had tried, in view of the threat of defeat, to mobilize the last reserves of energy, namely “total war” and Katyn, had failed and the preconditions were lacking for a massive propaganda campaign promising retaliation.

On the evening of September 12 Goebbels learned that in a spectacular operation German commandos had succeeded in freeing Mussolini from the mountain hotel on the Gran Sasso where he had been interned by the Badoglio government. He regarded the new situation with a certain amount of skepticism, however. “So long as Il Duce was not there we had the opportunity of creating a tabula rasa in Italy. […] I had thought that, quite apart from South Tyrol, we might possibly have extended our frontier to the Veneto. If Il Duce once again takes on a political function that will hardly be possible [any longer].”
6

Two days later Mussolini met Hitler in his headquarters. “It is a scene that represents a moving example of loyalty among men and between comrades,” commented Goebbels.
7
But secretly he continued to fear that this male friendship, so impressively demonstrated, could give rise to new difficulties.

In the meantime, the situation around the bridgehead at Salerno had changed completely in favor of the Allies. A German counterattack, from which Goebbels and German propaganda had been expecting great things,
8
had collapsed after only a few days.
9
Goebbels blamed the military’s information policy for the fact that propaganda had been too optimistic about Germany’s chances of success in the Salerno area.
10
“Now the enemy propaganda mob are attacking me and blaming me for this failure in our news policy.”
11
He made comparisons with the similarly overoptimistic news policy pursued in the autumn of 1941 during the initial battles at Stalingrad, as well as over the Battle of El Alamein.
12
According to Goebbels, the incident provoked “a very serious confrontation” with Dietrich and Jodl, whose staff blamed each other.
13
After all, Dietrich had assured him that “such reports would no longer be issued without my express confirmation and approval.”
14

On the following day Goebbels had the opportunity of speaking to Hitler about Dietrich and was convinced that he would immediately be able “to neutralize Dietrich as Reich press chief if I had a position for which I could recommend him. But unfortunately the Führer doesn’t think him capable of taking on any significant role.”
15

On September 22 Goebbels visited Hitler once more in his headquarters. The conversation gave Goebbels completely new insights into the background of the Italian crisis. “I hear from the Führer for the first time that Edda Mussolini isn’t the daughter of his wife Rachele but an illegitimate child of Il Duce whom he adopted during his marriage.” Hitler did not know who the mother of Edda, the wife of Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano, was but believed that “she is the result of a liaison between Il Duce and a Russian Jewess.” The idea had an electrifying effect on Goebbels. “That would explain everything,” he wrote, for Edda had succeeded in achieving a reconciliation between Mussolini and Ciano. “That means that once again the poisonous mushroom is sitting in the middle of the revived Fascist Republican Party.”
16

During dinner, which he ate alone with Hitler, Goebbels returned to the topic he had broached barely a fortnight before: the question of a separate peace. This time he did not mention Stalin as a possible interlocutor but made another suggestion. “I asked the Führer whether he would possibly be prepared to negotiate with Churchill or whether he rejected that idea out of hand.” Hitler replied that as a matter of principle politics should never be determined by “personal issues,” but he did not believe that “negotiations with Churchill could ever lead to a result, because his views are too fixed and opposed to ours and, moreover, he is governed by hatred rather than reason.” He was more inclined to negotiations with Stalin, Goebbels learned, but “he didn’t believe that that would lead to a result because Stalin couldn’t cede what he is demanding in the east.” Goebbels did not give up, arguing that “we must deal with one side or the other. The Reich has never won a two-front war.”

Thus Goebbels was clear about the fact that, with the defection of Italy, the continuing setbacks on the Eastern Front, the anticipated landing in the west and the continual air raids, the gradual dissolution of the Nazi empire was imminent. During the year and a half that were still to go before the end of the Third Reich, the search for a political means of avoiding defeat was one of the questions with which he was most preoccupied.

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