Nein!: Standing up to Hitler 1935–1944

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Nein!: Standing up to Hitler 1935–1944
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Copyright





William Collins



An imprint of HarperCollins

Publishers



1 London Bridge Street



London SE1 9GF





WilliamCollinsBooks.com





This eBook first published in Great Britain by William Collins in 2018



Copyright © Paddy and Jane Ashdown Partnership 2018



The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work



A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library



All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.



Source ISBN: 9780008257040



Ebook Edition © October 2018 ISBN: 9780008257057



Version: 2018-08-28







Dedication





To Hans Oster,

preux chevalier





Contents







Cover











Title Page











Copyright











Dedication











List of Illustrations











Epigraphs









Introduction







Main Dramatis Personae








Map: Berlin’s administrative district








Map: Germany, 1944








Prologue








1 Carl Goerdeler








2 Ludwig Beck








3 Wilhelm Canaris








4 Madeleine and Paul








5 Germany in the Shadow of War








6 The Emissaries








7 ‘All Our Lovely Plans’








8 March Madness








9 The March to War








10 Switzerland








11 Halina








12

Sitzkrieg








13 Warnings and Premonitions








14 Felix and Sealion








15 The Red Three








16 Belgrade and Barbarossa








17 General Winter








18 The Great God of Prague








19 Rebound








20 Codes and Contacts








21 Of Spies and Spy Chiefs








22 Mistake, Misjudgement, Misfire








23 The Worm Turns








24 The End of Dora








25 Enter Stauffenberg








26 Valkyrie and Tehran








27 Disappointment, Disruption, Desperation








28 The Tip of the Spear








29 Thursday, 20 July 1944








30 Calvary








31 Epilogue








32 After Lives








Afterword: Cock-up or Conspiracy?








Reader’s Note








Picture Section








Acknowledgements








Bibliography








Notes








Index










Also by Paddy Ashdown












About the Author












About the Publisher











Illustrations





Carl Goerdeler.

(Papers of Arthur Primrose Young, Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick: MSS.242/X/GO/3)



Wilhelm Canaris.

(Popperfoto/Getty Images)



Ludwig Beck.

(Ullstein bild Dtl: Getty Images)



Henning von Tresckow.

(Ullstein bild Dtl: Getty Images)



Hans Oster.

(AfZ: NL Hans Bernd Gisevius/6.7)



Erwin von Lahousen.

(ÖNB)



Hans Bernd Gisevius.

(SZ Photo/Süddeutsche Zeitung)



Robert Vansittart.

(Scherl/Süddeutsche Zeitung Photo)



Stewart Menzies and his wife Pamela.

(Evening Standard/Stringer/Hulton Archive: Getty Images)



Neville Chamberlain on his return from Munich, September 1938.

(Keystone/Stringer/Hulton Archive: Getty Images)



Paul Thümmel, Agent A54.

(UtCon Collection/Alamy Stock Photo)



Madeleine Bihet-Richou.



Ursula Hamburger (‘Sonja’).



Ursula with her children, Nina, Micha and Peter Beurton.

(Courtesy of Michael Hamburger and Peter Beurton)



Leon ‘Len’ Beurton.

(Courtesy of Peter Beurton)



Halina Szymańska.

(Courtesy of Marysia Akehurst)



Alexander Foote.

(CRIA/Jay Robert Nash Collection)



Rachel Duebendorfer.

(The National Archives, ref. KV2/1619)



Allen Dulles.

(NARA 306-PS-59-17740)



Rudolf Roessler.

(CRIA/Jay Robert Nash Collection)



Sándor Radó with his Geopress staff.



Sándor and Helene Radó with their two sons, June 1941.

(Bundesarchiv, Berlin-Lichterfelde)



‘De Favoriet’, the Jelineks’ shop in The Hague, c. 1939.



Bernhard Mayr von Baldegg, Alfred Rosenberg and Max Waibel.



The Wolfsschanze map room after Stauffenberg’s failed assassination attempt, 20 July 1944.

(Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group: Getty Images)



Stauffenberg, Puttkamer, Bodenschatz, Hitler, Keitel, 15 July 1944.

(Photo12/UIG via Getty Images)



Goerdeler on trial.

(Keystone/Hulton Archive: Getty Images)



The Tirpitzufer, c.1939.



‘La Taupinière’, c. 1937.

 



Alexander Foote’s flat in Lausanne.



Halina Szymańska’s fake French passport.



Foote’s radio.



Station Maude, Olga and Edmond Hamel’s radio.



Halina Szymańska’s false passport.

(Courtesy of Marysia Akehurst)



The Radó family’s apartment building at 113, rue de Lausanne in Geneva.

(Bundesarchiv, Berlin-Lichterfelde)



The Hamels’ radio shop in the Geneva suburb of Carouge, c.1939.

(Bundesarchiv, Berlin-Lichterfelde)







Epigraphs





Defenceless under the night



Our world in stupor lies;



Yet, dotted everywhere,



Ironic points of light



Flash out wherever the just



Exchange their messages:



May I, composed like them



Of Eros and of dust,



Beleaguered by the same



Negation and despair,



Show an affirming flame.





From W.H. Auden, ‘September 1, 1939’






‘The only salvation for the honest man is the conviction that the wicked are prepared for any evil … It is worse than blindness to trust a man who has hell in his heart and chaos in his head. If nothing awaits you but disaster and suffering, at least make the choice that is noble and honourable and that will provide some consolation and comfort if things turn out poorly.’



Baron vom Stein, urging Friedrich Wilhelm III to oppose Napoleon in 1808







Introduction





This book is about those at the very top of Hitler’s Germany who tried to prevent the Second World War, made repeated attempts to kill him, did all they could to ensure his defeat, worked for an early peace with the Western Allies, and ultimately died terribly for their cause.



Most of my books have been about individual events, or people. The canvas of this one, by contrast, encompasses every sector of German society during the war; international statesmanship – or lack of it – in capitals from Berlin, to London, to Washington, to Moscow; battles fought from the shores of the Volga to the shadow of the Pyrenees; and spy rings plying their trade in Geneva, Zürich, Paris, Amsterdam, Istanbul and beyond.



Now that I have written it, I am a little surprised to find that a work I thought would tell the history of the Second World War through different eyes turns out also to be a story on the subject to which I return again and again: how human beings behave when we are faced with the challenges of war – and especially how, when confronted by great evil and personal jeopardy, we decide between submission and resistance: between loyalty and betrayal.



Is it ever possible to be both traitor and patriot? Is it treachery to betray your state if to do otherwise is to betray your humanity? Even if treachery changes nothing, must you still risk being a traitor in the face of great evil, if that is the only way to lighten the guilt that will fall on your children and your future countrymen? How do people make these choices? How do they behave after they have made them?



Dietrich Bonhoeffer – himself one of those murdered for his role in the anti-Hitler resistance – said: ‘Responsible action takes place in the sphere of relativity, completely shrouded in the twilight that the historical situation casts upon good and evil. It takes place in the midst of the countless perspectives from which every phenomenon is seen. Responsible action must decide not just between right and wrong, but between right and right and wrong and wrong.’



So it is, exactly, here. There are no blacks and whites, just choices between blacker blacks and whiter whites. There are no triumphal personal qualities, and no triumphant outcomes. Just flawed individuals who, at a time of what Bonhoeffer referred to as ‘moral twilight’, felt compelled to do the right thing as they saw it. That is a lesser triumph than we might wish for in dangerous times, but it was then – and is now – probably the only triumph we can reasonably expect.



This story is, at its heart, a tragedy. Like all great tragedies it involves personal flaws, the misjudgements of the mighty, and a malevolent fate. There is individual pity and suffering, and a deal of personal stupidity, here.



But – and herein lies the history – since these were human beings of consequence, their personal decisions affected lives and events far beyond their circle and their time.



The two central historical questions posed by this book are stark: did the Second World War have to happen? And if it did, did it have to end with a peace which enslaved Eastern Europe?



My purpose is not to provide definitive answers, but rather to present some facts which are not generally known – or at least not taken account of – and place these against the conventional view of the origins, progress and outcomes of World War II.



In reading this book you may be struck, as I was in writing it, by the similarities between what happened in the build-up to World War II and the age in which we now live. Then as now, nationalism and protectionism were on the rise, and democracies were seen to have failed; people hungered for the government of strong men; those who suffered most from the pain of economic collapse felt alienated and turned towards simplistic solutions and strident voices; public institutions, conventional politics and the old establishments were everywhere mistrusted and disbelieved; compromise was out of fashion; the centre collapsed in favour of the extremes; the normal order of things didn’t function; change – even revolution – was more appealing than the status quo, and ‘fake news’ built around the convincing untruth carried more weight in the public discourse than rational arguments and provable facts.



Painting a lie on the side of a bus and driving it around the country would have seemed perfectly normal in those days.



Nevertheless, I have found myself inspired in writing this story. It has proved to me that, even in such terrible times, there were some who were prepared to stand up against the age, even when their cause was hopeless, and even at the cost of their lives.



I hope that you will find that inspiration here, too.







Main Dramatis Personae





Anulow, Leonid Abramovitsch – Alias ‘Kolja’ – Soviet ‘Rezident’ in Switzerland before Radó



Attolico, Bernardo – Italian ambassador in Berlin



Bartik, Major Josef – Head of Czech intelligence 1938



Beck, General Ludwig – Chief of staff of the German army until dismissed by Hitler in 1938. The army leader of the anti-Hitler plot



Bell, George – Anglican theologian and bishop of Chichester



Beneš, Edvard – Czech president 1935–38



Beurton, Leon Charles – Known as Len. Friend of Alexander Foote. Radio operator Dora Ring



Bihet-Richou, Madeleine – Lover of Erwin Lahousen. French secret services



Blomberg, Field Marshal Werner von – Commander-in-chief of the German army until dismissed by Hitler in 1938



Bock, Field Marshal Fedor von – Von Tresckow’s uncle. Commander of Army Group Centre



Bolli, Margrit – Alias ‘Rosy’.

Rote Drei

 radio operator



Bonhoeffer, Dietrich – Theologian, German pastor and key plotter



Bonhoeffer, Dr Karl – Father of Dietrich. Took part in the September 1938 plot



Bosch, Robert – German industrialist. Founder of the Bosch industrial empire. Supporter of Goerdeler



Brauchitsch, Field Marshal Walther von – Commander-in-chief of the German army up to the defeat at Moscow in 1941



Cadogan, Sir Alexander – Head of the British Foreign Office



Canaris, Erika – Wife of Wilhelm



Canaris, Wilhelm – Head of the German Abwehr until his dismissal in 1944



Chojnacki, Captain Sczcęsny – Polish intelligence spy-master based in Switzerland



Ciano, Galeazzo – Italian foreign minister



Colvin, Ian – Central European correspondent of the London

News Chronicle

. Arranged von Kleist-Schmenzin’s visit to Britain in 1938



Daladier, Édouard – French prime minister



Dansey, Sir Claude – Deputy head of MI6 and founder of the ‘Z Organisation’. Known as ‘Colonel Z’



Dohnányi, Hans von – Lawyer in the Abwehr and a key conspirator



Donovan, Major General William ‘Wild Bill’ – Head of the US intelligence agency (OSS)



Duebendorfer, Rachel – Alias ‘Sissy’. ‘Dora Ring’ agent



Dulles, Allen – OSS representative in Bern



Eden, Anthony – British foreign secretary



Farrell, Victor – MI6 head in Geneva



Fellgiebel, General Fritz Erich (known as Erich) – Chief of the German army’s Signal Establishment and a key plotter



Foote, Alexander – Alias ‘Jim’. Radio operator, ‘Dora Ring’



Franck, Aloïs – Paul Thümmel’s Czech spy-handler



François-Poncet, André – French ambassador in Berlin at the time of Munich



Fritsch, Colonel General Werner von – Commander-in-chief of the German army until his dismissal on trumped-up charges of homosexuality in January 1938



Gabčik, Josef – Operation Anthropoid Czech agent



Gersdorff, Rudolf-Christoph von – Henning von Tresckow’s staff officer; volunteered to assassinate Hitler by suicide bombing on 21 March 1943



Gibson, Colonel Harold ‘Gibby’ – Head of the MI6 station in Prague



Gisevius, Hans Bernd – The ‘eternal plotter’ in the Abwehr. Key early conspirator and Canaris’s conduit to Halina Szymańska



Goerdeler, Anneliese – Carl Goerdeler’s wife



Goerdeler, Carl – Key early plotter. Ex-mayor of Leipzig



Groscurth, Lieutenant Colonel Helmuth – Canaris’s liaison officer with the army at Zossen



Guisan, General André – Head of the Swiss army



Haeften, Lieutenant Werner von – Von Stauffenberg’s adjutant



Halder, Colonel General Franz – German chief of staff under von Brauchitsch



Halifax, Lord Edward – British foreign secretary under Chamberlain and a key appeaser



Hamburger, Ursula –

Née

 Kuczynski. Code name ‘Sonja’. Soviet spy who arrived in Switzerland in 1936



Hamel, Olga and Edmond – ‘Dora Ring’ radio operators



Hassell, Ulrich von – German ambassador in Italy before the war. Liaison between Beck and Goerdeler



Hausamann, Captain Hans – Founder of the Büro Ha, a private intelligence bureau in Switzerland



Heinz, Lieutenant-Colonel Friedrich – Leader of the commando who were to kill Hitler in 1938



Henderson, Sir Nevile – British ambassador in Berlin before 1939



Hoare, Sir Samuel, MP – One of Chamberlain’s leading appeasement supporters



Hohenlohe von Langenberg, Prince Maximilian Egon – Freelance spy. Friend of Dulles, Canaris and Himmler



Jelinek, Charles and Antoinette – Owners of ‘De Favoriet’ bric-à-brac shop in The Hague



Keitel, Field Marshal Wilhelm – Chief of the German armed forces high command



Kleist-Schmenzin, Ewald von – German emissary of the opposition to Hitler; saw Churchill in London in August 1938



Kluge, Field Marshal Günther von – Commander of Army Group Centre. Reluctant plotter



Kordt, Erich – Head of Ribbentrop’s office in Berlin



Kordt, Theo – Brother of Erich. Official at the German embassy in London



Kubiš, Jan – Operation Anthropoid Czech agent



Lahousen, Major General Erwin von – Head of the Austrian Abwehr and then senior officer in the German Abwehr. Close to Canaris and a key plotter. Lover of Madeleine Bihet-Richou



Manstein, Field Marshal Erich von – Commander of Army Group South and mastermind of the Kursk offensive



March, Juan – Mallorcan businessman and prime mover in Spain – contact of Canaris and MI6



Masson, Roger – Head of Swiss intelligence



Mayr von Baldegg, Captain Bernhard – Staff member of Swiss army intelligence; Waibel’s deputy head



Menzies, Sir Stewart – Head of MI6



Mertz von Quirnheim, Colonel Albrecht – Friend of Stauffenberg; involved in the 20 July 1944 plot



Moltke, Count Helmuth von – Founder of the ‘Kreisau Circle’



Morávec, Colonel František – Head of the Czech intelligence service

 



Morávek, Václav – Resistance leader in Prague



Mueller, Josef – Canaris’s spy in the Vatican



Navarre, Henri – Madeleine Bihet-Richou’s French intelligence ‘handler’



Niemöller, Martin – Anti-Hitler Lutheran pastor



Olbricht, General Friedrich – Key plotter. Involved in the 20 July coup



Oster, Colonel Hans – ‘Managing director’ of the attempted 1938 coup. Head of Z Section in the Tirpitzufer



Pannwitz, Heinz – SD officer in charge of finding the ‘Dora Ring’



Payne Best, Captain Sigismund – MI6 officer captured at Venlo



Puenter, Dr Otto – ‘Dora’ agent – also in touch with MI6



Radó, Sándor – Head of the ‘Dora’ spy network<