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Target Hitler: The Plots to Kill Adolf Hitler [Hardcover]

James P. Duffy (Author), Vincent L. Ricci (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0275940373 978-0275940379 August 30, 1992 First
The infamous reign of Adolf Hitler occurred half a century ago, but how he managed to escape so many attempts on his life remains a mystery. Target Hitler addresses the subject anew and is the only book for general audiences which recounts this fascinating topic in depth. Duffy and Ricci have pulled together the known and hitherto unknown facts about the German resistance to create an absorbing tale. Although many Germans harbored deep hatred for the Nazis and risked their lives trying to topple the regime, most of these would-be assassins were forgotten or slighted in the history of that period. The authors wish to right that wrong. This eminently readable narrative concentrates on the efforts of a group of conspirators within the German army who first began to plot against Hitler in the fall of 1938, and whose story culminates in the famous July 1944 bombing. Bound together by their religious beliefs and a determination to rid their homeland of the Nazi scourge, some of these men were generals, one a field marshal. It is intriguing to think how the course of world history would have been altered had these men accomplished their mission. That fate denied such an outcome is tragic. But now, at least the bravery of those who tried to rid the world of the horror Hitler inflicted will be remembered as the heroes they are.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“This clear and well-written introductory review of the resistance in Nazi Germany, drawn from a small selection of German (translated) and English secondary works, is for general readers and public libraries.”–Library Journal

About the Author

JAMES P. DUFFY is a writer and lecturer. A life-long interest in military history led him to this, his sixth book. Previous books include Hitler Slept Late and Other Blunders That Cost Him the War (Praeger, 1991).

VINCENT L. RICCI graduated from Syracuse University with a degree in journalism. Retired, he currently resides in Scarsdale, New York.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger Publishers; First edition (August 30, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0275940373
  • ISBN-13: 978-0275940379
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,376,591 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars really interesting and important, December 22, 1999
This review is from: Target Hitler: The Plots to Kill Adolf Hitler (Hardcover)
Most books about the Third Reich mention the von Stauffenberg plot (sometimes called the General's Plot) against Hitler, and a few allude to "other" plots, but Target Hitler attempts to provide a history of not only the General's Plot, but the other serious (and sometimes tragically comic) plots against Hitler. Contrary to some other writings on the subject, Duffy & Ricci assert that Rommel was not a conspirator in the Stauffenberg scheme, but simply one of the many officers who chose to remain silent about the plot, waiting for the risks to be taken by others.

There were plots discussed here that were completely new to me, such as the bomb that appears to have been planted with Himmler's active assistance -- though it is unclear whether this was an internal power struggle of Himmler to replace Hitler, or an attempt to produce a plot for propaganda purposes, for which it was well used.

There are tragicomic efforts here, such as Maurice Bavaud's. Bavaud was an anti-Communist Swiss seminary student who sought to assassinate Hitler for cozying up to the Communists -- and thought he was going to succeed using a .25 pocket pistol, which even Bavaud knew was only accurate enough with this gun to kill Hitler if he could get with 25 feet of his target! Unfortunately, Hitler walked down the wrong side of the street in Munich in commemoration of the Beer Hall Putsch.

Duffy & Ricci also demonstrate that, contrary to the view taken by some other historians, the General's Plot was not simply the result of the German officer corps attempting to save their own necks once the war was lost, but the last in a long series of efforts made before the war to remove Hitler from power, out of opposition to the immorality of National Socialist Party rule. Much of the opposition was founded on the belief that Hitler's actions in provoking wars, passing of the Nuremburg laws, and other such actions against the Jews, were contrary to Christianity. Especially among the military and diplomatic opposition, this Christian basis to opposition to Hitler created a serious problem, because of a profound reluctance to commit murder, even of someone such as Hitler. Eventually, as the nature of the brutality of the Nazi policies became impossible to miss, the major plotters, such as von Stauffenberg, overcame their reluctance. The plot to depose Hitler became a plot to assassinate.

After the war, many officers sought to find protection in the argument, "I was only following orders." Duffy & Ricci provide an example of the traditional German military view with a quote from General Beck's memorandum of July 16, 1938:

"Vital decisions for the future of the nation are at stake. History will indict these commanders [who blindly follow Hitler's orders] of blood guilt if, in the light of their professional and political knowledge, they do not obey the dictates of their conscience. A soldier's duty to obey ends when his knowledge, his conscience, and his sense of responsibility forbid him to carry out a certain order."

There were many officers in the German military who, because they had sworn a personal oath of loyalty to Hitler in the early days of the National Socialist government of Germany, were reluctant to directly participate in the plot against Hitler -- but were ready to help as soon as Hitler was dead.

There were other factions as well, including labor leaders not already incarcerated, and various Social Democrats. While they and the aristocratic conservative elements that made up the plot were not able to completely agree on what the new Germany should be, they were able to reach agreement that Hitler had to be removed, one way or another.

The courage of many of the conspirators is astonishing. Duffy & Ricci recount a number of instances where high officers put plastic explosive charges in their pockets, started the fuses, then attempted to get close enough to Hitler to grab hold. Other generals attempted to enter Hitler's presence while armed, in the hopes of getting at least one lethal wound inflicted on Hitler before being killed themselves.

Hitler's luck is also astonishing. Plot after plot were foiled by Hitler's habit of changing plans and schedules at the last moment. The General's Plot, however, failed because many elements in the plot failed to take action immediately after the bomb went off -- and in failing to take action, provided enough time for Hitler loyalists to mobilize.

One annoying error is that throughout the book the military intelligence organization, which was a center of the conspiracy against Hitler, even going so far as to give military intelligence ID cards to Berlin Jews, to enable them to leave the country safely posing as military intelligence officers, is consistently misspelled as "Abwer" instead of "Abwehr." Since the authors have relied heavily on memoirs of survivors of the plots, this error is all the more mystifying.

The book concludes with a description of what finally happened to the major participants in the General's Plot. The courage of these people, confronting the Nazi People's Court, destroyed whatever propaganda value these trials might have had. As Field Marshal Erwin von Witzleben told Judge Freisler, "You can hand us over to the executioner, but in three months' time this outraged and suffering people will call you to account and drag you alive through the mud of the streets."

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Was Hitler protected by the hand of Providence?, November 13, 2007
This review is from: Target Hitler: The Plots to Kill Adolf Hitler (Hardcover)
This book is amazing read for everyone interested in the little known and mysterious folds of Hitler's life. Mr Duffy presents at least 25 attempts to kill Hitler that had been made before the well known Stauffenberg plot of July 1944. I was surprised to learn that attempts against Hitler's life were made even in the early 1920s, that many individuals made desperate trials and paid with their lives and that even Himmler may be the mastermind behind a bomb explosion in Munich which missed Hitler only for a few minutes. The Stauffenberg affair is also analysed in a simple but terrific way, with all the interesting details. The author also gives some clues of how Hitler managed to escape death so many times and one of this is surely his love for the unpredictable: "Most assassination plots relied on Hitler's adherence to a predetermined agenda, but the assassins were invariably thwarted by Hitler's practice of avoiding routine or established schedules in his travels. Hitler's policy was to live his life "irregularly", as he put it. "Walk, drive and travel at irregular times and unexpectedly" was his personal formula for security against assassins". Some times though, he was saved just from his intuition, when he apparently sensed that something was wrong with the attitude of officers who met or invited him. The author's conclusion is very realistic and interesting: "Was Providence really on Hitler's side, as he so often claimed? In truth the answer is simple. The men who plotted the destruction of the Nazi government were simply not revolutionaries. They were not assassins. Many of them were too deeply religious to act in a manner required to bring down a bloodthirsty tyrannical government. Such an act requires men who can become as bloodthirsty as their opponents". No maps or photographs are included in the book. There are also some annoying and persistent errors, like spelling Abwehr as Abwer, or Speidel as Spiedel etc. but this is a minor problem which does not damage the excellent value of this book.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I swear by God this holy oath, that I will render to Adolf Hitler, Fuehrer of the German Reich and people, Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, unconditional obedience, and that I am ready, as a brave soldier, to risk my life at any time for this oath. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
coup plans, assault squad, personal oath, grenadier divisions
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Chief of Staff, Adolf Hitler, General Beck, Wolf's Lair, Replacement Army, Hans Oster, Army Group Center, Foreign Ministry, General Olbricht, East Prussia, Great Britain, Military Governor, Georg Elser, Nazi Party, Hans Gisevius, Admiral Canaris, Field Marshal Kluge, High Command, City Commandant, Father Leiber, General Witzleben, Mertz von Quirnheim, War Ministry, British Prime Minister, General Haider
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