Part One:
September 1939âJune 1941
1
The Polish Crucible
Genghis Khan hunted millions of women and children to their deaths, consciously and with a joyous heart. History sees him only as the great founder of a state.
Hitler, August 1939
On 22 August 1939 Adolf Hitler summoned the German army high command to his southern headquarters in the Bavarian Alps, the Berghof, near Berchtesgaden. The generals and their adjutants tramped past the massed cactus plants in the entrance and assembled in the Great Hall, dominated by a giant globe and vast picture window that looked out towards Austria, now absorbed by the Reich. In his study here, Hitler spent many hours sipping tea and gazing at the rocky flanks of Untersberg Mountain where according to legend the red-bearded German emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, lies entombed, awaiting a wake-up call to rescue Germany in its hour of need. Hitler would attach Barbarossaâs name to the invasion of Russia in June 1941. He should perhaps have recalled that the German emperor had not perished in battle with the infidel, but had drowned while bathing in an Armenian river.
The German top brass had come to hammer out the objectives of Fall WeiĂ (Case White), the plan for the invasion of Poland.1 Against the dazzling background of the Bavarian Alps, Hitler unveiled a dizzying vision of conquest. He informed his generals that German relations with Poland had reached a political nadir. Polish provocation was âunbearableâ â the only solution was the literal destruction of the Polish nation. This meant that the success of Case White depended on waging a new kind of warfare. Germany, Hitler insisted, would not only be asserting its alleged historic rights to the Polish lands â âan extension of our living space in the Eastâ. The task of the German armed forces would be to eliminate a âmortal enemyâ of the German Reich: the Polish elite. Hitler clarified what he meant by this: Polandâs âvital forcesâ (lebendige KrĂ€fte) must be liquidated: âIt is not a question of reaching a specific line or new frontier, but rather the annihilation of the enemy, which must be pursued in ever new ways.â2 Hitlerâs language left no room for ambiguity: âProceed brutally. 80 million people [i.e. Germans] must get what is rightfully theirs.â At a later meeting he hammered home âthere must be no Polish leaders, where Polish leaders exist they must be killed, however harsh that soundsâ.3
According to his diary account of the earlier meeting, German Army General Franz Halder eagerly concurred: âPoland must not only be struck down, but liquidated as quickly as possible.â The Prussian elite relished this new opportunity to smash the hated Poles who all too often had risen from the ashes of defeat. Now they would be finished off once and for all. Hitler and his generals conceived the Polish campaign as a âwar of liquidationâ. Poland would not simply be conquered but destroyed. âHave no pity!â Hitler insisted. Wehrmacht generals like Halder often used words like âliquidationâ and evidently had few misgivings about the âphysical annihilation of the Polish populationâ.
Prussian military doctrine had long demanded âabsolute destructionâ of the enemyâs fighting forces (âbleeding the French whiteâ in 1871), as well as the punitive treatment of enemy culture and civilians. But Hitlerâs new war strategy insisted on unprecedented âharshnessâ. The problem for his generals was not a moral but a practical one. In purely military terms, liquidation of a nationâs âvital forcesâ was time consuming and necessarily meant diverting troops from âZones of Operations and Rear Areasâ. SS Chief Heinrich Himmler and his oleaginous deputy SD head Reinhard Heydrich realised that Hitlerâs âwar of annihilationâ offered astonishing opportunities. The SS would assume responsibility for liquidation, security and âmopping-upâ operations, meaning mass executions â onerous tasks best handled by specialised militias that the SS could readily supply. In return, Himmler would demand an ever expanding share of the political and material rewards of occupation.
The Polish campaign of 1939 would provide Himmler with a breakthrough opportunity to transform the SS into the vanguard force of this new kind of war. The destruction of Poland would begin laying the foundations of an embryonic plan to remould the ethnic map of Europe. Although the Germans would deploy few non-German troops in Poland, the war applied SS doctrine for the first time to actual military practice. To understand Himmlerâs vision of modern racial war, we need to look at the way the destruction of Poland forged the radical ideology of Hitlerâs âpolitical soldiersâ.
SS Chief Heinrich Himmler was notoriously inscrutable. The dutiful son of a reactionary Bavarian schoolmaster, he had missed out on martial glory in the First World War and been educated as an agronomist. He seemed to enemies and friends alike as Sphinx-like but unexceptional, with the manners of a fussy schoolmaster, a plodding pedant obsessed by homeopathic remedies and oddball pseudoscientific fantasies. But this cold-hearted crank transformed Hitlerâs bodyguard, the Schutzstaffel, into a âstate within a stateâ that directly managed the plunder of occupied Europe and the slaughter of millions. Psychological analysis of the âarchitect of genocideâ has generally spawned the most banal speculation; there can be no doubt that loyalty and devotion were at the heart of Himmlerâs self-image and his relationship to Hitler. Hitlerâs craving for dog-like devotion from acolytes like Rudolf Hess is well attested. From the very beginning of his political ascent, he adroitly manipulated rival courtiers who felt obliged to continually reaffirm their devotion. Thanks to his fatherâs assiduous cultivation of the Bavarian royal family, Himmler had developed refined skills as a disciple. He understood from very early on that the frequent affirmation of loyalty was the road to power in Hitlerâs competitive and treacherous court. For Himmler, such devotion was both a psychological need and a vital, thoroughly honed political skill. Hitler rewarded him with a much repeated soubriquet âthe loyal Heinrichâ â which implies that he stood out from even his most sycophantic peers. And Himmler insisted that loyalty became the hallmark of SS ideology.
Himmler was a highly competent organiser and manager. Like Stalin, he made himself master of the card index file. No detail was too trifling. Himmler knew everything about everybody who mattered. He liked to deliver pompous homilies on the black art of political manipulation and fervently believed that the acquisition of power was a conspiratorial skill practised by âwire pullersâ. As âloyal Heinrichâ, the manipulative Himmler put these insights to good use. The Baltic German Felix Kersten, who became Himmlerâs masseur and confidante, was surely right when he called his master a âcrass rationalist coldly taking human instincts into account and using them to his own endsâ.4 Although Himmler presented himself as âloyal Heinrichâ, and evidently derived satisfaction from seeming dutiful, loyalty was a means to an end â one that would serve him very well in the slippery world of Hitlerâs court.
Unlike Hitler and many of the Nazi elite, Himmler had never experienced active service on the front line. This humiliating failure seems to have provoked in him a perverse need to embrace violence as an abstract human quality â one that profoundly shaped his world view. The Germanic or Nordic race, he believed from very early on, possessed a natural right to domination, but this racial privilege was resented and threatened by Jews and âAsiaticâ peoples. This antagonism could only be resolved through bloodshed. In January 1929 Hitler appointed Himmler ReichsfĂŒhrer-SS in charge of his personal bodyguards, the Schutzstaffel. This insignificant âGruppeâ could muster just 280 men when Himmler received his appointment, but he seems to have grasped its potential very quickly. The rapid expansion of the SS is well documented. By the time Hitler seized power in 1933, membership had expanded to more than 50,000. Even more significant than these numbers was Himmlerâs understanding of brand and corporate identity. Drawing on very diverse models such as the Knights Templar, the Order of Jesuits as well as Italian Black Shirts, Himmler fashioned a distinctive paramilitary elite, replete with oaths and slogans, that was avowedly aristocratic. The SS that emerged after 1933 would spawn numerous agencies, militias and pseudo-academies like the Ahnenerbe, all dedicated to a radical refashioning of German imperialism. Himmler forged a political apparatus designed to enforce security on the Home Front and on the frontiers of an expanding imperial domain.
Hitler never sanctioned such profligate ambition. He could not afford to allow a single individual or agency to acquire hegemonic power. The Nazi state has often been viewed as an embattled arena in which highly aggressive power-brokers continuously jostled for favour and power. Hitler frequently handed the same apparently sovereign power to more than one of his paladins. After 1941, for example, the Reich Commissar of Ukraine, the notoriously brutal Erich Koch, waged war on his nominal superior, the âReich Minister for the Occupied Eastern Territoriesâ Alfred Rosenberg. For Hitler, this wasteful duplication of powers was strategic. It allowed him to dominate squabbling competitors who would win or lose according to laws that mimicked the natural âsurvival of the fittestâ. Himmler understood this very well. It was essential that he disguise his master plan for the SS so that he retained his claim to be âloyal Heinrichâ, not a rival. Hitler deftly exploited Himmlerâs anxieties concerning the intentions of his deputy Reinhard Heydrich. But Himmler rarely rose to the bait and took full advantage of the arcane mechanisms of the âChaos Stateâ to pursue his own ends. His first big opportunity came in the summer of 1934.
In the period immediately after the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, Hitler was preoccupied with the thorny matter of the storm troopers (SA) and their ambitious leader Captain Ernst Röhm. A thuggish homosexual, Röhm insisted that his brown-shirted hordes deserved the lionâs share of victory spoils now that Hitler had become Chancellor thanks to their hard work and fearless struggle. Now, the SA leaders insisted, a âSecond Revolutionâ was needed to finish the job and properly âbrownâ Hitlerâs âNew Orderâ. Röhmâs petulant ambition directly threatened the German army, the Reichswehr. He insisted that the SA should be acknowledged as Germanyâs principal armed force. By mid-1934, an indecisive Hitler, possibly unwilling to betray old comrades, had been persuaded to turn against Röhm â and to liquidate the anachronous SA leadership. Himmler had once been Röhmâs deputy â but now he took a leading part in the assault on the SA leadership, the âNight of the Long Knivesâ.5 This notorious purge of troublesome former comrades marked a step change in the political fortunes of Himmler, the SS and Heydrichâs SD. Himmler had both proven himself loyal and demonstrated that the new state depended on his growing security apparatus. The purge liberated the SS and SD from SA control â and simultaneously raised the public standing of the SS. It was after the violent summer of 1934 that the German middle and upper classes began to perceive the SS as a way of reinforcing their status in the New Order. Bright young men flocked to join, bringing with them the aggressive racial ideologies of the German universities. The SS now became an academy of the most reactionary kind as well as a security state within a state.
Himmler and Heydrich both understood that they had to move carefully to tighten their grip on power. They must appear to be the servants of the New Order â not its aspiring masters. The SS brand was âloyaltyâ. It is surprising to discover that Hitler was unsettled by the ferocious bloodletting of the âNight of the Long Knivesâ, and the growing power of the SS disquieted both Hermann Göring and a relic conservative faction led by the Interior Minister, Wilhelm Frick. In the course of the next two years, Himmler cunningly discredited his opponents and cemented his own power. He did this mainly by exploiting the prejudices shared by the Nazi leadership and many ordinary Germans. He assumed that Germans were a superior people, with a natural right to hegemony in Europe and the east. Conquest and settlement of the east was of course a widespread obsession among both conservative Germans and radical nationalists like Hitler. But Himmler had acquired an emotional âEastern obsessionâ in his adolescence and it was he rather than Hitler who made this ultra-imperial aspiration such a pervasive ingredient in National Socialist thinking. Himmlerâs foreign policy â meaning German acquisition of eastern territories â was itself profoundly connected to his domestic thinking. German ethnic rights to natural hegemony were threatened and undermined by the enemy within: the Jews. In SS ideology, Jews, a people without a nation, naturally took on the role of âinternational conspiratorsâ with connections and kin in both Moscow and the capitalist economies. German destiny was, as ever, vulnerable to the mythic âstab in the backâ. Radical imperialism thus depended on scapegoating â and in the National Socialist mind, Slavic peoples, black people, Freemasons and Gypsies (Roma) might all take supporting roles to the Jewish leads. Himmler assiduously cultivated this dual mythology of blood-sanctioned imperialism and its shadow world of internal enemies. Himmlerâs allegedly eccentric fascination with German mythology was not in any sense whimsical; it was a means to reinforce the status of the SS as the standard-bearer and aggressive protector of Germanic values. It was in a sense a âsales campaignâ.6
After the breakthrough of 1934, Himmler played these two chords with monotonous persistence. By representing Germany as an embattled state, he drove home again and again the message that the New Order depended on its security apparatus, the SS. His efforts paid off in May 1936, when Hitler appointed him chief of the German police, thus binding together all the German police agencies under a single banner. Himmler had specified his own job description to Hitler, insisting in a private letter that he was to be âChiefâ not âCommanderâ which implied a more circumscribed role. His appointment as ReichsfĂŒhrer-SS and chief of the German police on 17 June signalled Himmlerâs defeat of his main rivals, above all Interior Minister Frick.7 Heydrich was a cunning negotiator. It was he not his boss who secured the final wording of Hitlerâs decree which referred to the âunified concentration of police responsibilities in the Reichâ, and the responsibilities of the new chief of police as âthe direction and executive authority for all police matters within the competence of the Reich and Prussian ministries of the interiorâ.8
The consequences of Himmlerâs triumph were both organisational and ideological. He welded together all uniformed police into the Order Police (Ordungspolizei) and handed command to SS General Kurt Daluege. He appointed Heydrich chief of the Security Police (Sicherheitspolizei, or Sipo) which took over all detective police, both political and criminal. This administrative reorganisation was an astonishing feat for it yoked together the SS and German police, creating at a stroke the foundations of an SS/police state. Although the Sipo and the SD remained administratively separate, they shared a single head, namely Heydrich â and two years later would be amalgamated under his command as the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA).
To fully appreciate the ideology of th...