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- <title>
- Sep. 04, 1989: Desperate Years
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The 50th Anniversary of World War II
- Sep. 04, 1989 Rock Rolls On:Rolling Stones
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD WAR II, Page 24
- PART 3: Desperate Years
- After conquering Poland, Hitler menaces the rest of Europe.
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Churchill's reply: "We shall never surrender"
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>Exiled Thucydides knew</l>
- <l>All that a speech can say</l>
- <l>About Democracy,</l>
- <l>And what dictators do...</l>
- <l>The habit-forming pain,</l>
- <l>Mismanagement and grief:</l>
- <l>We must suffer them all again.</l>
- </qt>
- <p>-- September 1, 1939, by W.H. Auden
- </p>
- <p> (c) 1940 by W.H. Auden. Reprinted with permission of
- Random House, Inc.
- </p>
- <p> If one man could be singled out as Hitler's most resolute
- and effective antagonist, it was Winston Leonard Spencer
- Churchill. On the day the Germans attacked Poland, he was 64
- years old and had held no Cabinet post in ten years. Yet in all
- the West, his was the voice that had most forcefully denounced
- Hitler, most prophetically warned that Britain must rearm to
- resist him. While Parliament approved the Munich agreement,
- Churchill called it "a total and unmitigated defeat." He said of
- Neville Chamberlain, "In the depths of that dusty soul, there is
- nothing but abject surrender."
- </p>
- <p> Churchill was no hero to the House of Commons, though.
- Conservative regulars mistrusted him for his 20-year defection
- to the Liberals, while liberals blamed him for the ill-fated
- British intervention in Russia in 1918-19. He had a large ego
- and a sharp tongue, and he drank too much brandy, but he also
- had qualities that were to prove indispensable--courage,
- eloquence, energy and a passionate determination to save
- British democracy. No sooner had the Germans invaded Poland
- than Chamberlain reluctantly invited his chief critic to No. 10
- Downing Street and asked him to join the Cabinet; Churchill
- thereupon became First Lord of the Admiralty. "Churchill in the
- Cabinet," Goring said when he heard the news. "That means war is
- really on."
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Chamberlain, Churchill was determined to go on the
- attack and persuaded his Cabinet colleagues to stage a
- spectacular landing in northern Norway. His original scheme was
- to intervene in the Russo-Finnish war, which Stalin had
- launched on Nov. 30, 1939. Finland's well-trained and determined
- army of 300,000 had fought the Red Army to a standstill.
- Churchill's plan was to land a British expeditionary force at
- the northern Norwegian port of Narvik, cut across to the Swedish
- iron mines at Gallivare (which provided Hitler with almost 50%
- of the iron he needed for his war machine), then join the
- Finnish resistance. Before Churchill could get his force under
- way, however, the Soviets overwhelmed the Finns in March 1940.
- </p>
- <p> Still determined to intercept those shipments of Swedish
- iron ore flowing south from Narvik to Hitler, Churchill then
- worked out a plan to lay mines along the Norwegian coast and
- even to seize the main Norwegian ports. That was supposed to
- begin April 8, 1940, but Hitler learned of the plan. British
- troops were already embarked in Scotland when the news came
- that the Germans were moving to land in both Denmark and Norway.
- </p>
- <p> The virtually unopposed conquest of Denmark took only a few
- hours. Casualties on both sides totaled 56. Norway offered
- somewhat more resistance. As a German naval task force steamed
- up the fjord leading to Oslo, the Oscarsborg Fort outside the
- capital opened fire with its turn-of-the-century German cannons
- and sank the heavy cruiser Blucher, killing more than 1,000
- Germans. Among them were Gestapo agents under orders to seize
- King Haakon VII. Reprieved, the 67-year-old King fled northward
- on a railroad train, along with the national gold supply, 23
- tons of it.
- </p>
- <p> Churchill thought Britain's naval superiority would soon
- drive the Germans out of Norway. But though Britain commanded
- the high seas, the Luftwaffe controlled the air. And though
- Britain did land nearly 25,000 Allied troops in Norway, they
- were poorly equipped and had to be evacuated within weeks, as
- were King Haakon, his family and his gold. Said Churchill: "We
- have been completely outwitted."
- </p>
- <p> Hitler had hoped to attack the Low Countries in the fall of
- 1939, as soon as possible after the conquest of Poland, but the
- plan was delayed first by objections from the German generals,
- then by bad weather, then by a bizarre twist of fortune. A
- Luftwaffe major who carried a set of the invasion plans in his
- briefcase was sitting in an officers club in Munster and
- bemoaning the long train trip to a planning conference in
- Cologne the next day; another major, who was getting too old
- for active duty, offered to fly him there so that he could log
- some more cockpit time for himself. The two set off in a new
- Messerschmitt scout plane, got lost in the clouds and
- crash-landed in Belgium. The Belgian authorities thus found
- themselves in possession of the entire German invasion plan--but could not be certain that this was not all a German trick.
- Conversely, Hitler soon learned that the Allies knew of his
- plans--but the furious dictator could not be certain whether
- they knew what they had.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler decided to rethink the whole strategy. The French
- defense was based on the "Maginot Line," a chain of
- fortifications that stretched 200 miles along the frontier from
- Switzerland north as far as Luxembourg. Built at a cost of $200
- million (a substantial sum at a time when a workman earned
- about $3 a day), the Maginot Line was considered invulnerable;
- its strongest outposts bristled with antitank guns, machine guns
- and barbed wire, and boasted concrete walls 10 ft. thick as well
- as supply depots 100 ft. underground. To the north of the
- Ardennes Forest, which was only lightly fortified because the
- French considered it "impenetrable," a "Little Maginot Line"
- guarded the Franco-Belgian border, but the French planned to
- march into neutral Belgium themselves at the first sign of a
- German invasion.
- </p>
- <p> The original German plan was to launch a frontal assault by
- Army Group B on the Low Countries, just as in 1914, with a
- secondary attack in the Ardennes by Army Group A. But General
- Erich von Manstein, chief of staff for Army Group A,
- passionately argued that this would only lead to stalemate in
- northern France, again just as in 1914. By contrast, a strong
- armored offensive right through the supposedly impenetrable
- Ardennes could lead to a breakthrough all the way to the
- English Channel. The Allied armies would be encircled and cut
- off; all France would lie open. Manstein's memorandums never
- reached Hitler, but the two men met at a dinner, and the Fuhrer
- was so impressed by the general's bold plan that he ordered it
- adopted.
- </p>
- <p> And so when 30 divisions smashed into the Low Countries at
- dawn on May 10, 1940, an even larger force of 45 divisions more
- or less vanished into the depths of the Ardennes Forest. The
- Dutch fought bravely, but they were no match for Hitler's
- blitzkrieg with its tanks, dive bombers, paratroops and mobile
- infantry. When the Dutch defenders managed to hold the
- bridgeheads leading to Rotterdam, the second city of the
- Netherlands, Hitler ordered that "this resistance be broken
- speedily." A wave of bombers swept over the city and showered it
- with 2,200-lb. bombs, killing more than 800 people and
- destroying some 25,000 houses in less than 15 minutes.
- </p>
- <p> The French and British had no intention of defending doomed
- Holland, but as they poured into neighboring Belgium, Hitler was
- delighted. The Manstein plan was working perfectly. "When the
- news came through that the enemy was moving forward along the
- whole front, I could have wept for joy," he said later. "They
- had fallen into the trap. It was vital that they believe we were
- sticking to the...old plan, and they had believed it."
- </p>
- <p> The day of the German invasion was also the day the British
- government decided on a new leader. Chamberlain had been too
- cautious, and he was already afflicted by the cancer that would
- kill him in six months. Conservative backbencher Leopold Amery
- threw down a challenge. Invoking the terrible words that Oliver
- Cromwell had used in dissolving Parliament in 1653, he declared,
- "You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing.
- Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of
- God, go!" So many Conservatives then joined in an Opposition
- vote of censure that Chamberlain felt he could not go on, and
- the Conservatives turned to Churchill. He began with a stirring
- pledge: "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and
- sweat. You ask, what is our policy? I will say: It is to wage
- war...with all the strength that God can give us. That is
- our policy."
- </p>
- <p> In the Ardennes Forest the main German force encountered
- only token opposition until it reached the French defenses just
- west of Sedan on the swift-flowing Meuse River. Dive bombers
- soon pounded those defenses into silence, and General Heinz
- Guderian's forces quickly crossed the river. As they pushed
- westward, there was little to stop them. General Erwin Rommel,
- commander of the 7th Panzer Division, saw anarchy all around:
- "Civilians and French troops, their faces distorted with
- terror, lay huddled in the ditches, alongside hedges and in
- every hollow beside the road...Always the same picture, troops
- and civilians in wild flight down both sides of the road...a chaos of guns, tanks and military vehicles of all kinds
- inextricably entangled with horse-drawn refugee carts."
- </p>
- <p> By May 16, in the first week of combat, Guderian's spearhead
- of seven panzer divisions had knocked a hole 60 miles wide in
- the French defenses; by May 20 the Germans had reached the
- cathedral city of Amiens, farther forward than they had gone in
- all World War I; that same day they reached the English Channel
- near Abbeville. The main Anglo-French army in Belgium had been
- cut off. Even before that final encirclement, the new French
- Premier, Paul Reynaud, who was supposed to represent a more
- warlike spirit than the ousted Edouard Daladier, telephoned
- Churchill and said, "We have been defeated. We are beaten. We
- have lost the battle."
- </p>
- <p> Guderian's tanks raced up the coast, seized Boulogne, seized
- Calais, neared Dunkirk, then were ordered to halt. Guderian
- protested but was told that it was Hitler's personal order, an
- important miscalculation that has never been fully explained.
- "The Fuhrer is terribly nervous," Chief of Staff Franz Halder
- wrote in his diary. "Frightened by his own success, he is afraid
- to take any chance and so would rather pull the reins on us."
- </p>
- <p> The British were already thinking about evacuating France,
- and Dunkirk, about 50 miles away, was the only port that
- remained open to them. They hoped to rescue perhaps 45,000 men
- in the two days they estimated they might have left. But
- Guderian's tanks did not move, and more British troops kept
- pouring into Dunkirk. While the Royal Navy sent 165 ships, many
- of which could not enter the shallow harbor, London issued an
- emergency call for everything that could float--yachts,
- fishing boats, excursion steamers, fire-fighting boats, some
- 850 vessels in all. The first 25,000 men reached England by May
- 28, and then the bizarre rescue fleet hurried back for more.
- </p>
- <p> By that time the Luftwaffe was bombing and strafing the
- beach, and Dunkirk was in flames. R.A.F. fighter planes raced
- across the Channel to defend the departing soldiers, who often
- had to stand in water up to their necks while machine-gun
- bullets spattered around them. A paddle-wheel steamer, Fenella,
- took aboard 600 soldiers, then was hit by a bomb. Most of the
- survivors were evacuated onto another paddle steamer, Crested
- Eagle, but a dive bomber set it afire, and most of the men
- aboard perished. A hospital ship marked with large red crosses
- rode at anchor off the beach all one day until a bomb went down
- its funnel and scattered bodies all over the harbor.
- </p>
- <p> For nine days, often under heavy fire, the ships steamed to
- and fro as the great evacuation continued. By June 4, when it
- ended, some 200,000 British troops had been rescued, along with
- about 140,000 Allied forces, mostly French. British losses:
- 40,000 left behind, dead or taken prisoner. To many of the
- French, the evacuation was a British betrayal, a flight, the
- abandonment of an ally. To the British, it was a miracle and
- the only route to national survival.
- </p>
- <p> With 60 remaining divisions, the French tried to form a new
- defensive line along the Somme, but after having lost about 40
- divisions plus almost all British forces, they were seriously
- outnumbered, as well as outgunned and outgeneraled. The Germans
- had not only their panzer units but also 130 infantry
- divisions. On June 7 the French commander Maxime Weygand told
- the government, "The battle of the Somme is lost," and advised
- it to ask for an armistice. Premier Reynaud declared, "We shall
- fight in front of Paris," but the government itself fled to
- Tours and then Bordeaux.
- </p>
- <p> Left behind was an undefended Paris facing the almost
- unthinkable prospect of Nazi occupation. The Parisians responded
- with wild flight. With cars, bicycles, baby carriages, nearly
- 2 million of them (some 65% of the city's population) choked the
- roads to the south. "I fly over the black road of interminable
- treacle that never stops running," author-aviator Antoine de
- Saint-Exupery wrote of watching refugees from his plane. "Where
- are they going? They don't know. They are marching toward a
- ghost terminus which already is no longer an oasis."
- </p>
- <p> The Germans marched into deserted Paris on June 14. Reynaud
- fled to England, leaving the government in the hands of Marshal
- Henri Petain, 84, who was still revered as the man who had
- defended Verdun during World War I under the watchword, "They
- shall not pass." But on June 17 he asked Hitler for an
- armistice. Hardly noticed in the debacle was an appeal from
- London one day later by an obscure French general named Charles
- de Gaulle, who, in a speech that was to become the rallying cry
- for the Resistance, asked all Frenchmen to fight on under his
- leadership: "France has lost a battle! But France has not lost
- the war!"
- </p>
- <p> Hitler's terms seemed mild: Germany would occupy and rule
- the northern half of France and its Atlantic coast; the
- southern half could remain an autonomous state under Petain,
- with its capital in the sleepy resort town of Vichy. But he
- insisted that the armistice be signed in Compiegne, just outside
- Paris, in the same railroad car where Marshal Foch had made the
- Germans sign the armistice in 1918, the site marked by a stone
- tablet placing blame for the war on "the criminal pride of the
- German empire." CBS correspondent William Shirer, who was
- standing nearby, reported that Hitler's face was "afire with
- scorn, anger, hate, revenge, triumph." Once the armistice was
- signed, Hitler had the stone blown up and the train shipped to
- Germany. (After World War II the French replaced the stone and
- restored the train, which stands there in the gloomy forest to
- this day.)
- </p>
- <p> In the last days before the fall of France, Churchill had
- summoned up his most heroic eloquence to rally his beleaguered
- people. "We shall go on to the end," he told Parliament on June
- 4. "We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and
- oceans...we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may
- be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the
- landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the
- streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender."
- And again on June 18: "Let us therefore brace ourselves to our
- duties, and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and
- its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will say, `This
- was their finest hour.'"
- </p>
- <p> Hitler could not believe it. The French had been defeated,
- the war won, and the British must see reason. In a speech to the
- Reichstag, he jeered at the idea of Churchill's fighting on in
- Canada, but he offered to make peace. "I can see no reason why
- this war must go on," he said. Churchill decided not even to
- answer, leaving it to Lord Halifax to declare, "We shall not
- stop fighting until freedom is secure." Hitler was again lying.
- Just three days before his "peace speech" on July 19, he had
- officially told his commanders, "I have decided to prepare a
- landing operation against England."
- </p>
- <p> Operation Sea Lion, it was called, a military feat that
- nobody had accomplished since William the Conqueror in 1066.
- The army's plan called for 90,000 men to storm ashore on a
- front extending 200 miles from Ramsgate to Lyme Bay, to be
- followed by 170,000 more troops within two days. But the navy
- balked. It did not have enough ships for such a broad front, and
- those it did have would be overwhelmed by the stronger British
- fleet. And who had control of the skies? If there was any doubt,
- said Goring, his Luftwaffe could smash the Royal Air Force
- within a few weeks. Hitler thereupon ordered the Luftwaffe "to
- overcome the British air force with all means at its disposal,"
- so that the invasion could begin Sept. 15.
- </p>
- <p> Adlertag (Eagle Day) was Goring's name for the first massive
- bombing raids on Aug. 13. Some 1,500 Luftwaffe warplanes swept
- across R.A.F. airfields in southeast England, badly damaging
- five of them and knocking out one. R.A.F. fighters downed 47 of
- the attackers. The next day the Luftwaffe was back, then the day
- after, and so began the Battle of Britain, the first ever to be
- fought entirely in the skies, anxiously watched by ordinary
- citizens below. Goring had roughly 1,400 bombers and nearly
- 1,000 fighters, the R.A.F. defenders fewer than 900 fighters.
- The opposing planes were roughly equal, the German
- Messerschmitts with a slightly faster rate of climb, the
- British Spitfires and Hurricanes more maneuverable. (The British
- also had some secret weapons: a radar warning system that the
- Germans greatly underestimated, and the Operation Ultra computer
- that broke most German military codes, particularly those of
- the Luftwaffe.) The outnumbered British fought with a kind of
- desperation that inspired Churchill to say of them, "Never in
- the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so
- few."
- </p>
- <p> Here is one of them, Richard Hillary, remembering his first
- kill: "We ran into them at 18,000 ft., 20 yellow-nosed
- Messerschmitt 109s, about 500 ft. above us...Brian Carbury,
- who was leading the section...let go a burst of fire at the
- leading plane. (I) saw the pilot put his machine into a half
- roll and knew that he was mine. Automatically, I kicked the
- rudder to the left to get him at right angles, turned the
- gun-button to FIRE and let go in a 4-sec. burst...He seemed
- to hang motionless; then a jet of red flame shot upward, and he
- spun out of sight...My first emotion was one of
- satisfaction...He was dead, and I was alive; it could so
- easily have been the other way around."
- </p>
- <p> The essential German goal was to knock out the R.A.F., and
- though the Luftwaffe was taking heavy losses, so were the
- defenders and their bases. Then there occurred another one of
- those almost accidental twists. Two German bombers on their way
- to attack aircraft factories at Rochester strayed over central
- London and dropped their bombs on the hitherto unattacked
- capital. Churchill promptly ordered several retaliatory raids on
- Berlin. Hitler, unaware of his increasing success against the
- R.A.F. installations, made the mistake of ordering further
- retaliations against London. And so, while the R.A.F. won a
- vital reprieve, the citizens of London had to undergo the
- blitz, the greatest bombardment any city until then had ever
- suffered.
- </p>
- <p> Goring himself watched from the heights of France's Cape
- Gris-Nez as the first armada of 300 bombers and 650 escorting
- fighters set out for London on Sept. 7. They concentrated on the
- densely populated East End and the Thames docks--killing some
- 300 civilians and seriously injuring 1,300--and when it ended
- Goring telephoned his wife to say "London is in flames." Nor was
- London the only target. The Luftwaffe subsequently pounded
- Liverpool, Birmingham, Coventry, Bristol.
- </p>
- <p> Just as Hitler had thought that Britain would give up after
- the fall of France, he now thought that nightly bombing would
- make the English rise in revolt against Churchill's pursuit of
- the war. (It was a miscalculation that the Allies were to
- repeat in their subsequent bombing of German cities.) Londoners
- instead took pride in their ability to endure the blitz, to
- spend long hours in the subway bomb shelters, to put out the
- fires and go on with their lives. "I saw many flags flying from
- staffs," Edward R. Murrow reported to America one night over CBS
- radio. "No one told these people to put out the flag. They
- simply feel like flying the Union Jack...No flag up there
- was white."
- </p>
- <p> The R.A.F. not only shot down many of the German bombers but
- also kept smashing the German invasion fleet being assembled in
- France. On one September night 84 barges were hit. Hitler was
- finally convinced. On Sept. 17 he formally decided "to postpone
- Sea Lion indefinitely." But the Battle of Britain went on.
- Between July and November, the Germans lost 1,733 aircraft, the
- British 915. Though the blitz continued until the following
- spring, costing about 30,000 lives in London alone, the
- essential result was that for the first time, Hitler's military
- power had been beaten back.
- </p>
- <p> If the German navy was unable to achieve an invasion of
- England, though, it seriously threatened to starve the embattled
- island by cutting its lifelines to the west. Britain needed to
- import by sea nearly a million tons of supplies every week--food and fuel as well as weapons. For this it required the
- services of some 3,000 merchant ships, and in this summer of
- 1940, Admiral Karl Donitz's submarine fleet not only acquired
- access to the Atlantic at the captured French naval base in
- Lorient but also started a lethal new tactic known as wolf
- packs. Instead of one lone U-boat sniping at an Allied convoy,
- three or more subs would attack simultaneously from different
- directions. On the night of Sept. 21, for example, a wolf pack
- attacked a convoy of 41 ships and sank twelve; the following
- month, in two successive nights, wolf packs torpedoed 32 out of
- 84 ships--without any German losses. "The only thing that
- ever really frightened me during the war," Churchill wrote
- later, "was the U-boat peril."
- </p>
- <p> There had never been any period of "phony war" during what
- came to be known as the Battle of the Atlantic. Though Donitz's
- undersea fleet was small--his 56 U-boats in 1939 included
- only 22 large oceangoing craft--the submarines not only
- torpedoed without warning but also seeded Britain's sea-lanes
- with thousands of magnetic mines. In the first four months of
- the war, the Germans sank 215 ships (748,000 tons); by the
- following spring the toll was 460. One sub even slipped into
- the supposedly impregnable Scottish base at Scapa Flow and
- torpedoed the battleship Royal Oak, with a loss of 833 lives.
- </p>
- <p> Only in surface combat could the Royal Navy claim that
- Britain still ruled the waves. One of Germany's pocket
- battleships, the Graf Spee, sank nine British vessels (with no
- loss of lives), but three cruisers finally trapped it off the
- coast of Uruguay. Though the four ships' gun duel was a draw,
- the damaged Graf Spee finally took refuge in Montevideo. To
- avoid capture, the captain scuttled his ship; then he committed
- suicide. Germany's last hope for a warship that could fight off
- British attackers was the 42,000-ton, 30-knot battleship
- Bismarck, which put to sea in March 1941 with eight 15-in. guns
- and six aircraft. In its first encounter with British pursuers,
- it blew up the battleship Hood, killing 1,416 crewmen. But a
- British seaplane managed to torpedo the Bismarck and cripple
- its steering gear; that enabled other warships to close in and
- sink it.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler had yet other resources, or so he thought. Italy,
- still considered one of the great powers, had finally joined
- the war in the last days of the fall of France. Mussolini had
- achieved almost no success in his effort to grab a piece of
- southeastern France, failing to get more than a couple of miles
- into the playgrounds of the Riviera. But he had nearly half a
- million Italian and colonial troops in northern and eastern
- Africa, which he hoped to make part of a new Roman empire.
- </p>
- <p> Assuming that the British would be fully occupied at home,
- Mussolini sent some 80,000 men from Libya across the border into
- Egypt to threaten British control of the Suez Canal. The
- British, outnumbered nearly 3 to 1, counterattacked, and most of
- the ill-equipped Italians promptly surrendered. The British
- could probably have captured all of eastern North Africa, but
- Churchill instead withdrew much of his force to help defend
- Greece, which Mussolini had vainly tried to conquer the
- previous fall. Hitler sent one of his ablest tank commanders,
- General Rommel, to rescue the Italians in North Africa, and "the
- Desert Fox" soon pushed the weakened British back into Egypt.
- </p>
- <p> In the Balkans, meanwhile, a British-backed coup overthrew
- the pro-German government of Yugoslavia in March 1941. Hitler
- was so angered that he decided almost overnight to invade, and
- he conquered his prey in about a week. While he was at it, he
- took over the bungled Italian invasion of Greece and subdued
- that country in less than a month. Of the 62,000 men Churchill
- had rashly sent to Greece, fewer than 20,000 were ultimately
- evacuated; the rest were killed or captured.
- </p>
- <p> And so, in May 1941, Hitler stood master of Europe. It was
- an incredible achievement. Less than ten years before, he had
- tricked and blustered his way into the leadership of a
- penniless and disarmed nation. Now, from the Pyrenees to the
- Arctic Circle, from Brittany to Warsaw to Crete, this
- ex-corporal ruled virtually unchallenged over more of Europe
- than any man had governed since the days of the Roman Empire.
- And his friends and allies ruled in Moscow, Tokyo, Rome, Madrid.
- His only remaining enemy, Britain, was badly mauled and begging
- the U.S. for supplies.
- </p>
- <p> But the U.S. remained stoutly neutral, isolationist. Though
- most Americans favored the British, polls consistently showed
- that 75% to 80% strongly opposed U.S. involvement in the war.
- The U.S. did appropriate $13 billion in Lend-Lease aid to
- Britain in 1941, but when Churchill asked for 50 obsolete World
- War I destroyers to replace those lost in the Battle of
- Britain, he had to sign over Western Hemisphere bases in
- exchange. Besides, the U.S. was embarrassingly weak, boasting
- an Army of barely three divisions and an Air Force with just
- over 300 fighters.
- </p>
- <p> In Hitler's moment of supreme triumph, in the spring of
- 1941, he boldly made his supreme error, the error that was to
- destroy him. He decided to invade Soviet Russia. Exactly why he
- made this catastrophic miscalculation will never be known for
- sure. In part it was ideology. He had begun his political
- career by attacking the Bolsheviks, and he dreamed of Germany's
- finding Lebensraum by colonizing the vast lands to the east. He
- had written in Mein Kampf: "When we speak of new territory in
- Europe today, we must think principally of Russia and her border
- vassal states. Destiny itself seems to wish to point out the way
- to us here..."
- </p>
- <p> In part, too, it was a matter of paranoia. Hitler suspected
- that Churchill fought on largely because he hoped to inveigle
- Stalin into joining him. And Hitler was himself so treacherous
- that he could not believe Stalin was not planning to betray
- him. Stalin intensified those suspicions by his own
- aggressiveness. On virtually the day the Germans occupied Paris,
- the Soviets seized the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and
- Estonia. A few weeks after that, they demanded and got Rumania
- to give up its provinces of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina.
- Hitler saw this as a threat to his access to Rumania's rich oil
- fields, but for the time being he was too preoccupied to
- counterattack. And then Hitler finally became a victim of his
- own successes. He could not believe that backward Russia, which
- had had trouble subduing Finland, could resist the invincible
- Wehrmacht.
- </p>
- <p> Even before the Battle of Britain, Hitler wanted his
- generals to start planning an invasion of Russia in the fall of
- 1940. They managed to talk him into delaying until the
- following May. Germany signed a trade agreement with the
- U.S.S.R. as late as January 1941, but a month earlier Hitler had
- told his commanders, "The German armed forces must be prepared
- to crush Soviet Russia in a quick campaign." The battle plan
- called for some 148 divisions--more than 3 million men--to
- attack in three main drives along a 1,000-mile front. One army
- group would strike northward, toward Leningrad; another army
- group from the Warsaw area would move north of the Pripet
- Marshes toward Moscow, which Hitler planned to level and leave
- forever uninhabitable; the southernmost group, from Rumania,
- would storm across the Ukraine toward Kiev and Stalingrad.
- "Operation Barbarossa" would smash Russia within six months.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast to France, where the Germans had surprised
- everyone by being relatively "correct," the conquest of Russia
- was to be even more ruthless than that of Poland. "This
- struggle is one of ideologies and racial differences," Hitler
- told his generals, "and will have to be conducted with
- unprecedented, unmerciful and unrelenting harshness. All
- officers will have to rid themselves of obsolete ideologies."
- More specifically, Hitler announced that he was assigning
- Heinrich Himmler, head of the dreaded SS, to carry out "special
- tasks" in the "liquidation" of all "commissars," meaning anyone
- in a leadership position. Beyond that, Hitler planned to plunder
- the conquered land of its resources and food. "This year,
- between 20 and 30 million persons will die of hunger in Russia,"
- Goring casually observed. "Perhaps it is well that it should be
- so, for certain nations must be decimated."
- </p>
- <p> Hitler's impulsive attack on Yugoslavia had delayed his
- invasion of Russia by a month--which was to become critically
- important when the first snows began to fall. But the Germans
- expected little trouble when they rescheduled Operation
- Barbarossa for June 22.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all the German troop movements, despite sharp words
- between the two regimes, the supposedly crafty and suspicious
- Stalin foresaw nothing. The very night before the attack,
- Foreign Minister V.M. Molotov called in the German ambassador,
- Count Friedrich von der Schulenberg, and said the Soviets were
- "unable to understand the reasons for Germany's
- dissatisfaction." Schulenberg said he would try to find out. A
- few hours later, at dawn, he returned to the Kremlin with a
- message from Berlin. It accused the Soviets of violating the
- Nazi-Soviet pact, massing their troops and planning a surprise
- attack on Germany. "The Fuhrer," it concluded, "has therefore
- ordered the German armed forces to oppose this threat with all
- the means at their disposal." When Schulenberg finished
- reading, the amazed Molotov said, "It is war. Do you believe
- that we deserved that?"
- </p>
- <p> Even as he spoke, German artillery had already started
- firing, and tanks were rolling eastward. For a time, everything
- went as Hitler planned. The Red Army was caught by surprise,
- and hundreds of thousands of soldiers fell prisoner. Within
- three weeks the German line had moved forward some 400 miles,
- to Smolensk and almost to Leningrad. But with the central army
- group in striking distance of Moscow, Hitler delayed its
- advance to concentrate on capturing the industrial and
- agricultural resources of the Ukraine, and it was not until
- October that he began a new drive on the capital. And the
- Soviets proved tougher than expected. The Germans originally
- estimated Soviet strength at about 200 divisions; Moscow
- eventually fielded nearly 400 on the Western front--roughly
- 6 million men.
- </p>
- <p> And cold rain began falling. "The infantryman slithers in
- the mud, while many teams of horses are needed to drag each gun
- forward," one German general recounted. "All wheeled vehicles
- sink up to their axles in slime." The first snow fell on Oct. 6.
- A month later, the temperatures fell below zero. Tank engines
- began to freeze. The troops, who had been issued no winter
- clothing, suffered frostbite.
- </p>
- <p> On Dec. 1 Hitler ordered the start of an all-out drive on
- Moscow, which the Wehrmacht now surrounded on three sides, only
- 20 to 30 miles outside the city. One infantry unit got as far as
- the suburb of Khimki, from which the Germans could actually see
- the towers of the Kremlin, but that was as far as they could go
- before Soviet tanks drove them out again. And all along the
- front, the Soviet defenders held fast. Then, on Dec. 6, the
- Soviets somehow produced 100 new divisions and launched a
- counteroffensive that sent the Germans reeling back 50 miles by
- the end of the month. Moscow was saved.
- </p>
- <p> Back in Berlin, the Nazi authorities were fretting over
- another problem. In the early years of Nazism, one of Hitler's
- goals had been to harass Germany's half a million Jews into
- leaving. Now he was planning a more extreme policy: rounding up
- and killing every Jew in all of German-occupied Europe.
- Himmler's special commandos had shot tens of thousands of Jews
- in Poland, but the Nazis sought more efficient methods.
- Himmler's deputy, Reinhard Heydrich, summoned representatives of
- all major government departments to the Berlin suburb of Wannsee
- to inform them of what he called "the final solution." This
- required the creation of six giant extermination camps in
- Poland: Auschwitz, Treblinka, Maidanek, Chelmno, Belzec,
- Sobibor. The Wannsee conference was called for Dec. 9 but had to
- be put off for six weeks because of the extraordinary news from
- the Pacific. On Dec. 7 the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor.
- </p>
- <p> One of the few men overjoyed by that news was Churchill. "So
- we had won after all," he thought on hearing it. "How long the
- war would last or in what fashion it would end no man could
- tell, nor did I at this moment care. Once again in our long
- island history, we should emerge, however mauled or mutilated,
- safe and victorious."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-