Please click the
icon to follow us on Twitter.In 1944,
Lieutenant Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg attempted to assassinate Adolf
Hitler by placing a bomb in the conference room at the East Prussia
command center where Hitler was holding a meeting. The bomb went off and
von Stauffenberg telephoned to his confederates in Berlin that Hitler had
been killed.
The conspirators had planned to stage a coup, using elements of the
skeletal Home Army in Germany, perhaps supported by some of the generals
on the Western Front. However, the would-be putschists in Berlin dithered
for several hours, trying to get confirmation that Hitler was really dead.
They did not seize the government ministries, or the telephone exchanges,
or even the radio stations. When Goebbels was able to confirm that Hitler
was alive and convince the army units in Berlin of this fact, the coup
collapsed in short order. Apparently, all that saved Hitler's life was the
absent-minded placement by his adjutant of the bomb from one side of a
wooden table support to the other. Suppose the bomb had not been moved,
and Hitler had been killed?
". this all presumes the bomb takes Adolph and the
generals can avoid getting the blame for it [the initial reaction at
hitler's HQ was that they had been bombed from the air] 2. there were not
enough SS units in Germany for a countercoup. Those that were there were
in the main older men [police and building guards exempted from military
call=up] and not especially loyal to Himmler. The service more likely to
stage a countercoup would have been the Air Force but Goring was of the
top Nazis the most likely to do a deal with the generals. Goring had
hundreds of thousands of troops in Germany [mostly AAA but inlcuding AF
ground staff and several divisions of paras]. 3. The enemy most likely to
do a deal was Stalin not the West. By July of 1944 Stalin had almost all
of HIS territory back and was quite worried about the West doing a deal
behind his back." - reader's commentsThe conspirators had some
foggy notion that they might be able to surrender to the Allies in the
west, or at least negotiate a withdrawal to Germany's western border,
while continuing to fight defensive battles in the east. Certainly they
had gone much further in sounding out the western commanders about their
attitude to a coup, though in some ways the most forceful member of the
anti-Hitler network involved in the assassination attempt was Major
General Henning von Tresckow of Army Group Center on the Eastern Front.
(They had also attempted covert negotiations with both the Anglo-Americans
and the Russians. They managed to talk to unofficial representatives of
both sides, but without results.)
Objectively speaking, something like this might have been possible. The
military position of Germany in July 1944 was grim. At the beginning of
the month, the Russians had crossed the pre-war eastern border of Poland.
Hitler was having that conference in East Prussia because the Russians
were only about 60 klicks from the province. In the west, the
Anglo-Americans were breaking out of Normandy, and Paris would fall in
August. Still, the Germans were far from beaten. Armaments production, for
instance, peaked in July. In the months before Germany finally
surrendered, they would stabilize the situation more than once, and even
conduct some notable offensives. In other words, they still had something
to bargain with, and both sides knew it.
"Assassinating Hitler would have thrown the Reich
into chaos, with the Wehrmacht and the SS very much at odds. The Eastern
front would probably have held up; the Germans were scared of the Russians
with very good reason. However, the west would probably have collapsed
rapidly, and you might have ended the war with the Western Allies in
Berlin and possibly even east of there. " - reader's commentsThe
problem with this analysis is that Germany still had a lot to bargain with
after the British summer offensive in 1918, too, yet their army and
government collapsed as soon as it became known their diplomats were
treating for an armistice. No one wants to be the last soldier killed in a
war, especially a soldier on the side that is clearly losing. The
provisional government (the uninspiring General Ludwig Beck was to lead
it) would have been unlikely to be able to control the situation. The
Germans armies in the west would probably have simply melted away, rather
than wait for an armistice. The government would not have been able to
gain control in the homeland: Nazi Germany was a party state, one where
the official civil service could do nothing without party cooperation. It
would be possible to overcome the party only with the army, but the Home
Army was barely sufficient to occupy Berlin. Whatever the Germany armies
did in the east, most of them would have been unlikely to follow orders
from Beck's government in Berlin. Many more of the eastern units were SS
after all, and even the regular army types were often committed Nazis. One
suspects that they would have diverted whatever forces they could in order
to take Berlin and reestablish a Nazi government. That government would
then have tried to recoup matters in the west.
"Still, if there's some kind of civil war between
Wehrmacht and SS, that should at least shorten WW2 quite a bit " reader's
commentsActually, I doubt that the conspirators would have been
able to establish even an ephemeral government. It is much more likely
that, if it had been proven that Hitler was dead, the SS units available
in Germany would have taken Berlin. Himmler was actually in contact with
the conspirators, though with Hitler's knowledge and explicit approval.
Though there is no evidence he was a participant, still his behavior
throughout the whole affair was oddly passive. Goering was Hitler's
designated successor, of course. In earlier versions of the plot, Goering
and Himmler were supposed to be assassinated, too. It is easier to image
Goering attempting to negotiate a peace than any other major Nazi. In
1939, remember, he had tried to avert war so he could have peace in which
to give himself up to his private dissipations. However, by 1944 these had
sufficiently debilitated him that it is doubtful he could have made the
succession stick.
"Always considered this... Best of All Possible
Worlds, even with Hitler?" - reader's commentsMy guess is that the
end result of von Stauffenberg's bomb would have been to bring Himmler to
power. (This was a possibility of which the conspirators were aware, and
which apparently stayed their hand at earlier points in the war.) It is
not impossible to imagine Himmler negotiating peace with either east or
west. Of course, it is also not impossible to imagine him using nerve gas
on the eastern front. For that matter, it is not impossible to imagine him
making human sacrifices to Odin under the Brandenberg Gate. Perhaps the
oddest fact about the very odd history of Nazi Germany is that Hitler was
a moderate Nazi. Far more than Goebbels or Roehm, say, he was content to
let civil society be, so long as his primary goals of expansion in the
east and the extermination of the Jews were carried forward. Himmler, in
contrast, may have been the most radical Nazi of them all. The regime he
might have created would not have lasted long, but it would have been
uniquely extreme.