9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Insights into WWII-Related Nazi Politics, December 26, 2007
This review is from: Top Nazi SS General Karl Wolff: The Man Between Hitler and Himmler (Hardcover)
There is much more to this book than the life of Karl Wolff and his successful evasion of blame for participation in the Holocaust. It gives much detail on the behind-the-scenes maneuvering by the Nazis.
Consider the origins of the forcibly-worn Jewish star: "Himmler explained to him [Wolff] why the mark of identification was necessary; it was because the world leader of the Jews, Chaim Weizmann, had called all the Jews on Earth to wage an active fight against National Socialism--that they had to mark them all as enemies of the regime." (p. 328).
Von Lang recounts Hitler's bitter antagonism towards the Catholic Church (p. 223). Himmler called Christianity the biggest plague that had befallen the Germans throughout their history (p. 41). Efforts were made to revive a form of pre-Christian Teutonic spirituality. Meanwhile, Nazi attempts to discredit the Catholic Church had a disturbing similarity to those of today in the USA. They focused on the uncovering and propagandizing of sex scandals within the Church (pp. 36-37). "Concubines (if the biblical naming of them is appropriate here) were the norm among top Nazi officers." (pp. 202-203). "Lutze...maintained that even Himmler had kept a homosexual in a leadership position for years--Gruppenfuhrer Kurt Wittje, sometimes head of the main SS office..." (p. 30)
The betrayal of Poland and other nations to the Soviet Union, culminating at Teheran and Yalta, is sometimes rationalized by the fear of a Soviet-Nazi separate peace if Stalin didn't get his way. Interestingly, details on such a would-be separate peace (pp. 361-371) indicate that all these proposals had occurred well before Teheran. So, if anything, a Soviet-Nazi armistice was largely a spent issue by the time of Teheran. And, of course, the Soviets all along had to fear a western-Nazi separate peace (p. 65, 282).
One of the proposed versions of the Soviet-Nazi separate peace included a protocol for the division of the world into spheres of influence (p. 369). It is sobering to realize that, what Stalin didn't get from the Nazis, he got (albeit in somewhat different form) from the likes of Churchill and Roosevelt, and at the captive-nations' expense.
The planned extermination of the Poles is sometimes denied owing to the lack of written documentation, as is the same regarding the plot to capture the Pope. This proves nothing. Von Lang comments: "That he never gave such an order in writing is not unusual; it was Hitler's practice to order crimes orally, just as he had avoided documenting the responsibility for the murder of the Jews." (p. 224)
The so-called Bavarian redoubt (or "Alpine redoubt") had actually been Hitler's bluff. There were, in the Alps, no prepared positions, no supplies stored, nor any industrial capacity for prolonged warfare. (pp. 343-344)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Top Nazi, January 27, 2011
This review is from: Top Nazi SS General Karl Wolff: The Man Between Hitler and Himmler (Hardcover)
Karl Wolf escaped justice by making a deal with the allies to turn over Italy with a surrender. Hitler would have had him shot If he knew//. Every newsreel footage Ive seen of Himmler the SS Chief, had Karl Wolf walking right behind him . He was Himmlers' number two man thru the whole time. He should have been hung for it. Don't agree with the Nazis or their murderous nature but the SS and miltary had fine uniforms and style. Our miltary has no classy uniforms or pomp like they did.The book is an easy read and well done . A study of an amoral man who needed a job//.
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