Himmler's Great Betrayal - Churchill Rejected Peace Overtures In 1944

On August 31, 1944, the head of MI6 forwarded to the prime minister, Winston Churchill, an intercepted coded signal. It was a telegram from the Reichsführer-SS and chief of German police, Heinrich Himmler. The telegram has not survived. But it must have been highly sensitive - in a handwritten reply to the head of MI6, Churchill noted: "Himmler telegram kept and destroyed by me."

Out of some 14,000 decrypts that the British prime minister personally saw, this was the only one he destroyed. And it was the only signal emanating from Himmler.


This tantalising piece of information has been discovered by the research team working on a new documentary on Himmler and his betrayal of Hitler. The story of the betrayal is, in its full extent, largely unknown, but this new evidence suggests that his secret dealings with the allies went much further than is commonly assumed.

Himmler had constructed his own path to power, and built the SS, the organisation he headed, upon unquestioned personal loyalty to the Führer. As the motto of the SS, he had chosen the words: "My honour is loyalty". But it now seems "the loyal Heinrich" (as Himmler was dubbed) was more prepared than any other Nazi leader to engage in mounting betrayal of his leader during the last eight months of the Third Reich.


We can only speculate on the content of the telegram. However, it is plausible to assume it was sent by Himmler to an intermediary who was putting out tentative peace feelers to the British on Himmler's behalf. Churchill, adamantly opposed to any negotations with the Germans, must have been anxious to head off rumours of a German peace with
Britain, as it could jeopardise the vital alliance with the Soviet Union. By destroying the telegram, he was ensuring that the feelers were not pursued and all traces were erased.


This interpretation is hardened by circumstantial evidence. In August 1944 the Japanese had hinted that they were prepared to try to broker a separate peace between
Germany and the Soviet Union. The Japanese ambassador in Berlin put the suggestion directly to Hitler at a meeting early in September. Hitler rejected the idea out of hand.


Himmler was not taken with the notion of overtures to Stalin, but was enough of a realist to see that
Germany could not win the war. On September 12 he, too, met Hitler to discuss peace feelers to Russia or - his plain preference - to Britain. Clearly, he met the same response. Hitler was not interested.


Negotiations, he had always asserted, could be carried out only from a position of strength. He was now planning a last Canute-like attempt to turn the tide of war: an offensive through the
Ardennes to throw the British and Americans "back into the Atlantic", then, with new weapons at his disposal, to attack the Russians.


Himmler realised that discussing possible peace feelers with Hitler was a lost cause. It was the beginning of the parting of the ways between the two men.

 

By the autumn of 1944, the allies were closing in on the Reich's borders to east and west. The end was plainly looming. Unlike Hitler, Himmler was not prepared to go under. On the contrary, he thought of saving his own neck, of life after Hitler, and of leading a post-Hitlerian Reich in the continued fight against Bolshevism. For these ends, he needed a negotiated settlement with the West, and as the August telegram suggests, he was already well on the way to finding an independent path out.

But Hitler still wielded mighty power, so Himmler had to tread with extreme caution. For months he played a double game - openly the "loyal Heinrich", secretly the increasingly desperate seeker of a way to avoid being sucked down in Hitler's self-destruction.


With the failure of the Ardennes offensive in December 1944, Hitler's illusion of victory evaporated. What was left was to fight on to the end. "We'll not capitulate. Never," Hitler stated. "We can go down. But we'll take a world with us."

This self-destructive urge had no resonance with Himmler. By December 1944 a liaison officer under the command of Walter Schellenberg, the head of the SS intelligence service, now confirms that he had learnt from his chief that Himmler was trying to arrange a separate peace deal.


An obvious problem with any deal was Himmler's reputation. To gain credibility with the West, he now tried to show himself in the best possible light. In January 1945, through a Swiss intermediary acting for rabbis in America and Canada, he agreed to the release of 1,400 Jews a month from Theresienstadt in return for $250,000. No money, in fact, changed hands when 1,200 Jews were released in February. But Himmler stipulated that the press in America and Switzerland should report his "humanitarian" gesture.. It was correctly deduced in Washington that he was seeking contact.


But when Hitler learnt of the release of the Jews he was reputedly furious and banned any further releases. By now, Himmler's star was on the wane. He had been given a senior military command in January 1945 and had proved a disaster, withdrawing for much of the time on alleged grounds of illness to an SS hospital north of Berlin. But he continued scheming to engineer his own survival.

 

In one of the most bizarre incidents, he attempted to improve his standing with the western allies by agreeing to a secret rendezvous with a representative of the World Jewish Congress. There he conceded the release of female Jews from Ravensbrück, in direct contravention of Hitler's ban. Between February and April 1945 he had secret meetings with Count Folke Bernadotte, the vice-president of the Swedish Red Cross, which eventually moved to the possibility of a German surrender in the west.


On April 22, in an outburst of hysterical fury, Hitler openly acknowledged that the war was lost and expressed his wish to die in the Reich capital. It eased any sense of betrayal when Himmler met Bernadotte the next evening and asked him to transmit an offer of surrender to the western allies.


On April 28 Hitler was given the news, broadcast by the BBC, that Himmler had proposed unconditional surrender to Britain and America. He exploded at this "most shameful betrayal in human history". Himmler was stripped of all his offices and despised beyond measure by the man he had for so long revered. For Hitler this, of all the treachery he saw surrounding him, was the worst. He began preparations to take his own life. Within two days, he was dead.

 

The BBC Monitoring Report noted the first Allied report of Himmler’s surrender offer April 28, 1945 at 1:55 P.M.  About 5 P.M. Dönitz asked if the OKW was aware of this report.  Himmler denied it, and Schwerin von Krosigk—Ribbentrop’s successor—repeated this in a telegram to Ambassador Stahmer in Tokyo on May 6, 1945.  Precisely how far Himmler did in fact go is uncertain.  Reporting an earlier meeting between him and Count Folke Bernadotte, the British envoy in Stockholm cabled London on April 13 that Himmler had refused to consider a surrender as he was bound by his oath to the Führer, to whom he owed everything and whom he could not desert; Hitler was now interested only in the future architecture of Germany’s cities, according to Himmler.  (The telegram is in British files.)

 


Himmler's Last Days

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Admiral Dönitz inherited for a few days the shreds of power in the Third Reich. He needed no persuasion that Himmler could only be a liability, and rejected his overtures for inclusion in his short-lived cabinet. Himmler, his dreams of continued power shattered, shaved off his moustache, adorned himself with a black eye-patch, put on the uniform of a military police sergeant, and went on the run for a fortnight. After falling into British hands, he killed himself on May 23, 1945, by crushing a cyanide capsule contained in a cavity in his teeth.



Ian Kershaw is professor of modern history at Sheffield University. 






 
Churchill favored executing Hitler

Monday, January 2, 2006

 

LONDON, England (AP) -- British Prime Minister Winston Churchill was determined to have German leader Adolf Hitler executed if he was captured, according to previously secret government documents released Sunday.

 

Other documents released show that Churchill favored letting India's Mahatma Gandhi die if he went on a hunger strike while interned during World War II, and that British troops were told during the war to show respect for the U.S. Army's then-racial segregation practices.

 

At a Cabinet meeting in December 1942, Churchill noted:

"Contemplate that if Hitler falls into our hands we shall certainly put him to death," according to notes taken by Deputy Cabinet Secretary Sir Norman Brook.

 

"This man is the mainspring of evil."

 

The government documents released to the public for the first time Sunday chart Cabinet discussions from 1942-45 over how to deal with senior members of Hitler's Nazi party if they were caught.

 

In April 1945, Home Secretary Herbert Morrison expressed the opinion that a "mock trial" for Nazi leaders would be objectionable: "Better to declare that we shall put them to death," he said.

 

Churchill agreed that a trial for Hitler would be "a farce," but within weeks both the United States and Russia said they favored trying Nazi leaders, and trials were later held at Nuremberg, Germany.

 

Later, Churchill proposed that Britain negotiate what to do with Nazi leaders such as Gestapo head Heinrich Himmler -- who had already sought secret peace talks with Britain -- and then "bump him off later."

 

When Secretary of State for War Sir Peter Grigg objected that activities at concentration camps such as Buchenwald -- which Himmler helped to operate -- did not qualify as war crimes, the prime minister retorted: "Don't quibble: he (Himmler) could be summarily shot, in respect of some of those in the camp."

 

Other papers released Sunday show that Churchill favored letting the Indian peace campaigner Mahatma Gandhi die if he went on a hunger strike while interned during World War II.

 

Britain was unwilling to allow Gandhi to campaign against the war and the British colonial government while India -- a key colony -- was under threat of invasion by the Japanese.

 

Gandhi was held in the Aga Khan's palace in August 1942 after speaking out against India's involvement in the fight against Nazi Germany and demanding civil disobedience.

 

After much discussion, ministers decided in January 1943 that although they could not publicly give in to a hunger strike, they would be willing to release Gandhi on compassionate grounds if he seemed likely to die.

 

Churchill retorted: "I would keep him there (in prison) and let him do as he likes."

 

Gandhi was freed in 1944.



New documents show Himmler offered to free Jews to save self

 


Irving M. Bunim was a visionary lay leader of 20th century Judaism. He fought tirelessly for Torah education in America, and led the effort to save Jews from the Holocaust. The following is a chilling account of Bunim's rescue efforts during World War Two.

The key characters in this story include:

 

·  Yitzhak Sternbuch, a Belgian Jewish businessman

·  Heinrich Himmler, Nazi S.S. Chief

·  Jean-Marie Musy, pro-Nazi former president of Switzerland

·  Rabbi Aharon Kotler, leader of Orthodox Jewry in America during the war years

·  Henry Morgenthau, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury under President Roosevelt

By 1943, all attempts at creating a unified American Jewish Rescue Committee had collapsed. This compelled the Vaad (Bunim's rescue committee) to re-double its efforts, moving toward a daring, desperate mission: negotiating with the Nazis to ransom their Jewish captives...

As Rabbi Eliezer Silver wrote:

We are ready to pay ransom for Jews and deliver them from concentration camps with the help of forged passports. For this purpose we do not hesitate to deal with counterfeiters and passport thieves. We are ready to smuggle Jewish children over the borders, and to engage expert smugglers, rogues whose profession this is. We are ready to smuggle money illegally into enemy territory to bribe those dregs of humanity, the killers of the Jewish people!"

The Vaad activists trembled when they learned that, in 1944, the Nazis were willing to sell their human cargo.

Jean-Marie Musy seemed like the last person to whom Yitzhak Sternbuch might turn [to for help in rescuing Jews]. He was an avowed fascist who had published La Jeune, a notoriously anti-Semitic newspaper... (Yet) in early November, 1944, Musy met with Himmler and brought him the Sternbuchs' initial offer of one million Swiss francs ($250,000) for 600,000 Jews. Himmler replied that he preferred trucks to money. Later that month, however, he made a counter offer: 300,000 Jews for 20 million francs ($5 million). The Sternbuchs knew that Roswell McClelland, the War Refugee Board representative in Switzerland, would never sanction the ransom of Jews. Still, they asked him for WRB money. McClelland refused.

Simultaneously, the Sternbuchs sent Himmler's terms to the Vaad via their secret Polish diplomatic cable. It was the kind of communique Bunim had never dared dream of. The Vaad's executive committee was convened for an emergency meeting. A hush fell across the room when the cable was read aloud. The plan was electrifying: Every month for twenty months, they would pay $250,000 and the Nazis would release 15,000 Jews. It came roughly to $17 a person.

Bunim implored Vaad members, business colleagues and friends, raising funds as quickly as he could. Some refused, saying that they could not give money to Nazis, especially when their own sons were fighting in the war. "This money," one man said sadly, "might buy the gun that kills my child." But Bunim was magnetic, persuasive and successful, convincing people to give more than they might have. Rabbi Joseph Rudman, inspired by Bunim's appeal, emptied his bank account.

"That Friday afternoon," Vaad activist Herman Hollander recalled, "I proposed to my wife that we sell our very comfortable three-story home and give the difference between the mortgage and the selling price to the Vaad Hatzala for the release of the ransomed Jews. My suggestion meant we would have to move into my in-laws' house until we found other accommodations. My wife readily agreed. After my in-laws also consented, we sold our house and gave the money to the Vaad."

SIGNS OF HOPE

In January, 1945, Musy met again with Himmler, who wanted assurances that these negotiations were genuine... He represented Jews of means, Musy told Himmler, but their assets had been tied up and $5 million for ransom was unmanageable. Himmler countered with a more reasonable demand: $1.25 million, to be placed in a Swiss bank. In return, he would authorize the release of all Jews at a rate of 1,200 a week.

On February 5, 1945, as a sign of his good faith, Himmler released 1,210 Jews from Theresienstadt.

There was more. Instead of receiving the remaining $3.75 million, Himmler wanted the influential Jews to create positive reports about the Nazis in the worldwide media. After their losses at Normandy and Stalingrad, the German High Command sought to paint itself in as positive a light as possible, with an eye to the postwar period. Himmler and the Nazis had reeled under negative world opinion after the Auschwitz Protocol, the 1944 report exposing their death camps...

On February 7, 1945, after the safe arrival of the Theresienstadt train. Bunim asked major newspapers, including The New York Times, The New York Sun, and The New York Herald Tribune, to carry the story. They complied, highlighting the story with pictures.

MONEY MATTERS

Yet there was still the issue of raising the ransom money. So the Vaad went to meet the leaders of the Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, to ask for a million-dollar loan.

Rabbi Kotler said that the loan would be put to good use, for Himmler had kept his word: An entire trainload of over 1,200 Jews from Theresienstadt had already been saved.

"Jews?" [Joint president Moe] Leavitt asked contemptuously. "Is that who you think you rescued from Theresienstadt? A lot of them were apostates (Jews who converted away from Judaism). You did not save religious Jews."

Rabbi Kotler could no longer control himself. "Who knows why they did it," he shouted, his face turning red, "or under what circumstances they were compelled to [convert away from Judaism]. They are still Jews, even if they have sinned. It is our obligation to save them!"

Later, Bunim grasped the irony of that moment. An acculturated Jew was writing off scores of apostate Jews, while a great Torah sage was defending them.

Reluctantly, Leavitt agreed to the loan. The sole condition was that the United States government grant the Vaad a license to transfer the funds overseas to Switzerland and then, through their agents, to Himmler. It was a condition which Leavitt felt the Vaad could never meet.

The Vaad quickly accepted Leavitt's terms. "But suppose you cannot get the license," Paul Baerwald, a German-Jewish banker and top Joint official said, wagging his finger. "After all, what you are really asking for is permission to trade with the enemy. The government will ask you what you intend to do with the money. You will tell them and your request will not be granted. Because it is ransom, sending money to Germany in this way!"

"Mr. Baerwald," Bunim answered, "We will get the license. If we have to, we will storm Washington. Rabbi Kotler and all of us will go, and we will use every contact we have. But we will get it..."

THE MORGENTHAU MEETING

The Vaad leaders discussed strategy and used their best Washington contacts. They would go right to the top, to President Roosevelt himself. In February, 1945, with great trepidation, Bunim called the Oval Office for an appointment. He was referred to Henry Morgenthau (Secretary of the Treasury).

Hundreds of thousands of lives depended on government approval to transfer $937,000 to American agents in Switzerland. Morgenthau was their last chance.

Once in Morgenthau's office, Bunim explained the Musy Negotiations. Crisply and articulately, he told the Treasury Secretary what was needed.

Morgenthau's reaction was predictable. "What?" he asked bewildered. "Ransom!" The Secretary's hands sketched large arcs. "Surely you know that the motto of the United States is 'Millions for defense but not one cent for tribute.'" Morgenthau shook his head. "We can't do it."

Bunim usually translated for Rabbi Kotler and Rabbi Kalmanowitz, but this time the Secretary's tone and facial gestures were self-explanatory. Bunim hid his disappointment while he framed a response, but Rabbi Kotler could not hold back his emotions. As he stood shaking, his blue eyes blazed and then he pointed a finger at Morgenthau. "Bunim," he snapped in his rapid-fire Yiddish, his words coming in agitated bursts, "you tell him. Tell him that if he cannot help to rescue his fellow Jews at this time, then he is worth nothing, and his position is worth nothing, because one Jewish life is worth more than all the positions in Washington!"

Although Morgenthau did not understand the words, there was no mistaking the intensity of Rabbi Kotler's fury. After an awkward moment of silence, he asked Bunim to translate.

Sensitive to the protocol involved in speaking to top-level officials, Bunim decided to take the edge off a difficult situation. He cleared his throat and told Morgenthau that Rabbi Kotler had said “Perhaps because of your high office in government you cannot force the issue. But please understand that in this case there are mitigating circumstances. Perhaps something might be worked out.

When Morgenthau looked relieved, Rabbi Kotler realized that his powerful message had not been conveyed accurately. "No, no!" he shouted in Yiddish. "Bunim, tell him exactly what I said!"

Morgenthau looked quizzically from Rabbi Kotler to Bunim.

Bunim paused and exhaled slowly. He knew their chance to save countless Jewish lives had all come down to this moment. It all depended on what he said. He spoke slowly, deliberately, never taking his eyes from Morgenthau's face:

Rabbi Kotler thinks that you may be unwilling to help us because you are afraid of losing your position in the government. He wants you to know that one Jewish life is worth more than any office.”

Morgenthau looked at Rabbi Kotler's fiery stare, Rabbi Kalmanowitz's anguish and Bunim's quiet determination. He put his head down on his desk. Minute after minute went by in the silent room until Bunim began to fear for the Secretary's health.

Finally, Morgenthau looked up and stood before Rabbi Kotler. He looked directly at Rabbi Kotler and asked Bunim to translate. "Tell the Rabbi that I am a Jew," Morgenthau said with great dignity and emotion. "Tell him that I'm willing to give up my life - not just my position - for my people."

Bunim breathed a sigh of relief. It seemed as if the license would be forthcoming. It looked as if thousands of Jews would be spared...

THE END OF THE STORY

The end of this story is sudden and tragic.

Certain Jews, who were opposed to the ransom plan, succeeded in publishing negative press reports about the Musy Negotiations. Then, Kurt Becher, a Nazi officer who faked sympathy and was ostensibly involved in similar negotiations to save Jews, took the press clippings to General Ernst Kaltenbrunner, chief of Reich Security, who in turn showed them to Hitler. Hitler became so enraged that he ordered the cessation of all further releases.

This effectively ended the Musy Negotiations and sealed the fate of thousands of European Jews.

 

LONDON (JTA) -- The chief of the SS sought to win asylum for himself and 200 leading Nazis in the final days of World War II by offering cash and the freedom of 3,500 Jews, according to British intelligence documents released last Friday.

According to the documents, details of which have been held in the secret files of Britain's MI5 intelligence agency, the concentration camp inmates were to be sent to Switzerland in two trainloads. The offer was made by Heinrich Himmler and orchestrated by his intelligence chief, Walter Schellenberg.

But the arrangement was aborted after the first trainload of 1,700 left Germany and Nazi security chief Ernst Kaltenbrunner reported the plan to Adolf Hitler, who ordered it halted immediately.

 

The MI5 file describes secret talks between Himmler and Switzerland during which the SS chief reportedly insisted that Jewish organizations deposit the 5 million Swiss francs in a numbered Swiss bank account.


He said the money would be handed over to the International Red Cross "so that it could be used later as a fund for the relief of the suffering of the German civilian population."


Schellenberg then contacted Gestapo chief Heinrich Müller and the head of the Theresienstadt ghetto, "and, despite countless objections, succeeded in getting the final special train of 17 express coaches with a total of 1,700 Jews from Theresienstadt."


The MI5 report notes that there was widespread panic as the camp inmates were herded on to the train "as they could not believe it was not one of the notorious death trains to Auschwitz."


"Even when it was on its way," added the report, "there was still a large number of mainly older people who could not really believe that they were indeed traveling to freedom."


But the second trainload of 1,800 Jews from Bergen-Belsen failed to leave Germany before the plan was halted.


"Some time after the arrival of the original transport," noted the report, "messages had appeared in a Swiss newspaper that the release of the Jews had gained 200 leading Nazis rights of asylum in Switzerland.


These reports were passed to Kaltenbrunner who, by exercising his prerogative of personal interviews with the Führer, presented them in such a way that he succeeded in stopping the whole transaction.

The file does not indicate whether any top Nazis actually gained asylum or whether any of the ransom was paid in exchange for the lives of the 1,700 Jews.

 

In an effort to negotiate with the Allies the SS offered to exchange Jews for 1,000 trucks. This offer was rejected and as a gesture of good faith the SS allowed a train, containing 1,684 Hungarian Jews to leave Budapest for the safety of Switzerland. The train eventually ended up at the Belsen Concentration Camp near Hanover. There, the Jews were kept for about six months before being allowed to proceed to Switzerland. This must be the only recorded case where the SS actually saved Jews.



In the closing months of the war when it became evident that Germany could not win, Himmler began secret peace negotiations behind Hitler's back. He met several times with Vice President of the Swedish Red Cross, Count Folke Bernadotte. The meetings were initiated by Walther Schellenberg, head of the Foreign Intelligence Service of the RSHA. Himmler used concentration camp inmates as bargaining chips in a bid to save himself. Hitler had ordered that the concentration camp inmates never fall into the hands of the Allies alive. If Germany  falls, all of the concentration camp inmates must be killed. Himmler defied this order and agreed that all the concentration camps would be handed over to the Allies as is. By now Hitler had moved into his underground bunker and his health was deteriorating rapidly. Everyone in the bunker described how terribly ill Hitler looked and by the beginning of April 1945, Himmler (who had not been to the bunker) thought that Hitler could possibly be already dead and even if he were still alive, he would surely die very soon. He met with Bernadotte on April 23 and told him that Hitler was probably dead and it was time to negotiate a full surrender. Himmler's terms were too much for Bernadotte or any of the Allies to accept. He was ready to surrender the German armies to the western Allies but not to the Soviets. The western Allies and Germany would then become partners and defeat Soviet Russia. Himmler's terms were rejected and word of them had reached the press. Soon enough, the story of Himmler's negotiations was made public.

Meanwhile, contrary to Himmler's beliefs, Hitler was very much alive. The Propaganda Ministry picked up a Reuters broadcast that Himmler had been secretly negotiating for peace with the Allies. According to a witness in the bunker, the news struck like a "deathblow" and Hitler "raged like a madman." He could not believe that Himmler betrayed him. Himmler had assumed the powers of the head of state and rendered Hitler powerless. To Hitler this was a stab in the back and what was particularly galling was that it came from his loyal, trusted Himmler. He told the people in the bunker that this was the worst act of treachery that he had ever known. He ordered Himmler's arrest. Since Himmler was not around to be punished, Hitler avenged himself on Hermann Fegelein, who was Himmler's liaison man. Fegelein was forcibly brought to the bunker and shot in the chancellery garden. In his Last Will and Testament, Hitler wrote:

"Before my death, I expel the former Reichsführer of the SS and Minister of the Interior Heinrich Himmler from the party and from all his state offices. Apart altogether from their disloyalty to me, Göring and Himmler have brought irreparable shame on the whole nation by secretly negotiating with the enemy without my knowledge and against my will, and also by illegally attempting to seize control of the State."

 



Count Folke Bernadotte of Wisborg
(January 2, 1895 - September 17, 1948), is noted for his negotiation for the release of prisoners from the German concentration camps in World War II.

 

He was the son of Oscar Bernadotte, Count of Wisborg (formerly Prince Oscar of Sweden) and his wife, née Ebba Henrietta Munck af Fulkila. Oscar, the son of King Oscar II of Sweden and Norway, married without the King's consent in 1888, thereby leaving the royal family, and was (in 1892) given the hereditary title Count of Wisborg by the Grand Duke Adolf of Luxembourg.

 

Bernadotte, while vice-president of the Swedish Red Cross in 1945, attempted to negotiate an armistice between Germany and the Allies. At the very end of the war he received Heinrich Himmler's offer, from April 24th, of Germany's complete surrender to Britain and the United States, provided Germany was allowed to continue resistance against Russia. The offer was passed on to Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Harry S. Truman.

 

Just before the end of World War II he gained much good will leading a rescue operation transporting interned Norwegians, Danes and other inmates from German Concentration Camps to hospitals in Sweden. In the "White Buses" of the Bernadotte-expedition 27,000 persons where liberated, a considerable share of them Jews.

 

On May 20, 1948, Folke Bernadotte was appointed the United Nations' mediator in Palestine. This made him the first official mediator in the history of the world organization. In this capacity, he succeeded in achieving a truce in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and laid the groundwork for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East.

 

He was assassinated, along with UN observer Colonel André Serot, on September 17th in Jerusalem by members of Lehi.


Bernadotte's plan called for the right of Palestinian refugees to return. In particular he claimed that it was unreasonable that Jews with no previous connection with Palestine could enter the country, while Palestinians who had just been forced too flee could not return to their villages. This statement, and also his recommendation that Jerusalem should be placed under effective UN control, provoked immense anger within the Zionist leadership and is believed to have triggered the assassination.

 

 


The
Summit at Gut Hartzwalde

 

Of all the extraordinary "summits" in history, an incontestable place must be given to a two-hour wartime meeting on April 20, 1945 between Heinrich Himmler, the arch-killer of Jews, and Norbert Masur, Swedish representative of the World Jewish Congress. As Allied armies closed in on Nazi redoubts in the spring of 1945, Himmler, aware of Germany's desperate situation (and his own), became more and more receptive to the idea of negotiating the release of the ill and starving in concentration camps such as Ravensbrück. The godfather for that extraordinary meeting was Felix Kersten, Himmler's masseur whose "magical hands" had been indispensable to Himmler since 1939.

 

This was not the first time that Himmler tried to strike a deal behind Hitler's back. Almost a year earlier, Kersten and Walter Schellenberg, the latter since 1944 head of both the SS and Wehrmacht security apparatus, made a proposal to the Allies that Himmler assumed they would not refuse. The aim was audacious and bizarre. As Professor John H. Waller reveals in his 2002 book "The Devil's Doctor: Felix Kersten and the Secret Plot to Turn Himmler," Himmler proposed deposing Hitler. On March 20, 1944 General William J. Donovan, director of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), passed on to President Roosevelt a message from Sweden that Himmler considered ousting Hitler and negotiating peace with the Allies in order to form a united front against the Soviet Union. Roosevelt and Churchill wasted no time rejecting the offer. Time was running out for Nazi leaders. On July 20, 1944 there was an unsuccessful attempt on Hitler's life and the circle of opposition to Hitler was destroyed or under surveillance. Himmler had to watch his every step. There was enough treachery for several Shakespearean dramas.

 

The meeting between Himmler and Masur took place at Gut Hartzwalde, Kersten's estate, not far from the Ravensbrück camp where starving and mutilated women were unaware that Himmler and Masur were meeting to decide their fate. Originally Hillel Storch of the Swedish branch of the Jewish World Congress was to meet with Himmler, but Masur was chosen instead. According to Joseph Kessel in Les Mains de Miracle ("The Miraculous Hands," 1960), Storch feared for his life. He had already lost 17 members of his family in concentration camps. On Thursday, April 19, 1945, after Jewish officials obtained a promise of safe passage, Masur received the long-awaited invitation. Himmler was expecting him that evening. Masur and Kersten left for Berlin on a regularly scheduled flight from Stockholm to Copenhagen, then boarded another plane emblazoned with swastikas, hardly an auspicious symbol, as they flew to Berlin through skies crossed regularly by Allied planes on their bombing missions. Kersten referred to his companion, the visaless Masur, as a "dangerous piece of contraband."

 

This was the historical adventure that Masur has described in a booklet titled Ein Jude Talar Med Himmler ("A Jew Speaks with Himmler," 1945), a rare document still not available in English.

 

"It was a horrifying idea," he wrote a year after the meeting, "that I would be confronted and negotiate with the man responsible for the extermination of millions of Jews." After they circled over roofless Berlin, Masur witnessed the destruction that became more visible as they drove from Tempelhof airport through the city. Kersten's estate was some 30 miles north of Berlin, almost halfway to the hell of Ravensbrück. The Gestapo vehicle drove with its lights dimmed through the ghost-like ruins, past endless piles of rubble, the moonlit scene pierced from time to time by searchlights seeking out Allied bombers. They arrived at the estate before midnight to await Himmler.


A birthday party in a
Berlin bunker delayed the meeting. When Schellenberg arrived the following morning to welcome Masur he explained that it was Hitler's birthday, and Himmler could only come after the party. The meeting, he emphasized, was dangerous for all concerned. Hitler was against the release of any camp inmates and had been enraged the previous fall when Himmler agreed to send 2,700 concentration camp survivors to Switzerland as a gesture of conciliation to the Allies as Germany's war fortunes waned. Before long there was another message from Himmler that he could not come until 2:30 in the morning. They awaited him in candlelight since electricity was cut off as soon as the air-raid sirens sounded. At the stroke of 2:30 Himmler arrived, followed by his aide, Rudolf Brandt. Masur was relieved that he was greeted with a Guten Tag, instead of a Heil Hitler. They all sat down to tea, coffee, sugar, and cakes brought from Sweden, items in short supply in wartime Germany. As Kersten reminisced: "Here round the table at my Hartzwalde house were peacefully seated the representatives of two races who had been at daggers drawn, each regarding the other as its mortal enemy. And this attitude had demanded the sacrifice of millions; the shades of those dead hovered in the background. It was a shattering reflection." No less shattering, to be sure, than the blindness in Kersten's words of equivalence.

 

As Masur described him, Himmler was dressed in a well-fitted uniform, decorations prominently displayed, his manner calm and self-controlled. Masur could not believe that the man in front of him was history's worst mass murderer. Himmler soon launched into a monologue. Like other Nazi leaders whose point of reference was the defeat in World War I, he recalled that he was 14 when that war began and he blamed the Spartacist uprising and Jews for the social upheavals that followed. The Jews were a foreign element, he said, that had been driven out of Germany but always returned. He was always in favor of emigration as a solution but not even countries that claimed to be friends of Jews wanted to accept them. When Masur interjected that it was not customary to expel people from their homes and from a country where they had lived for generations, Himmler argued that it was mainly the eastern Jews who created new problems and that "Jewish masses were infested with severe epidemics." He conflated the conditions in Germany in the 1920s with those that prevailed in the ghettoes and camps that he himself established.

 

Himmler bemoaned his poor image in foreign media, and complained that when Bergen-Belsen and Buchenwald were liberated it provided "mud slinging propaganda," and that when he released 2,700 Jews to go to Switzerland he was accused of doing it to get an alibi. "I do not need an alibi. I have always only done what I have considered necessary for my people, this is my belief." As for the crematoria, these were built because of epidemics in camps, an argument that anticipated that used by Holocaust deniers. [The bodies of the sick were ostensibly burnt in the crematoria in order to prevent the spread of typhus or other infectious diseases. No responsible historian has accepted the Nazi account on this matter.]  He wished that the camps had been called "training camps," rather than concentration camps, since the purpose was to incarcerate and punish criminals. He wanted them to be like Theresienstadt, a community inhabited by Jews who governed themselves. "My friend Heydrich and I wanted all the camps to be patterned this way." He did not say that Theresienstadt was designed for propaganda and that many of its "privileged Jews" ended up in the crematoria of Auschwitz.

 

Masur finally found it difficult to contain himself. He sensed that Himmler's self-pitying pleadings were a sign of weakness and he reminded Himmler of the "gross misdeeds" that were perpetrated in camps. "I could not nor did I want to control my indignation . . . it was a great satisfaction to me to tell him to his face of some of the crimes. . . ." Masur sensed that he was now "the stronger one" and that this enabled him to make the request that all Jews in camps which were close to Scandinavia and Switzerland be evacuated. Supported by Kersten, he asked for the release of all the inmates of Ravensbrück.

 

Himmler conferred with his aides and returned to say that he was willing to release 1,000 women from Ravensbrück, as long as the Jewish women were referred to as Polish. He also agreed to release a certain number of prisoners and hostages in other camps. The meeting lasted two and a half hours. Masur, who had bargained for the lives of Jews with the devil incarnate, wrote proudly that "a free Jewish man was alone with the feared and merciless Chief of Gestapo who had the lives of five million Jews on his conscience." He characterized Himmler as an intelligent and educated man and contrasted Hitler's "idiosyncratic" view of Jews with Himmler's "rationalist" attitude, one that allowed him to bargain for the release of some Jews, a policy Hitler opposed to the end. Still, Masur found no "logic in construction, no grandeur of thought," only "lies and evasions" in Himmler's arguments.

 

In the morning Masur left for Berlin, the road filled with a "stream of human misery. . . . [T]he Germans," he wrote, "finally had a taste of what they had inflicted on other people." He could hear the sound of bombing nearby. Now he saw Berlin in daylight, a "field of ruins of a gigantic proportion." They went to the Swedish legation to meet Count Folke Bernadotte, a Swedish nobleman who had been involved with Kersten and Himmler in earlier releases, such as the freeing of 423 Danish Jews from Theresienstadt on April 14, but he was away. In the meantime, many thousands of prisoners were being marched away from Ravensbrück as the Western and Russian armies were approaching. These cruel evacuations took a terrible toll and hundreds of women died from exhaustion or were shot to death by the accompanying SS. Some were killed by Allied bombs and German civilians. Schellenberg assured Masur that Red Cross transports, the white buses that would eventually take the Ravensbrück inmates to Denmark and Sweden, were being prepared. Masur flew back to Copenhagen, his mission completed. By the time he got to Stockholm, he was informed that Folke Bernadotte succeeded in having the women from Ravensbrück evacuated to Sweden. The Swedish Red Cross was subsequently able to rescue 7,000 women, of whom about half were Jewish. Many were physical wrecks. In Masur's opinion, "only Palestine offered these long-suffering Jews a normal life."

 

"The Memoirs of Felix Kersten" (1947) fills in some gaps in Masur's overly formal account. Kersten, a physiotherapist, who had also treated Rudolf Hess, Robert Ley, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Count Ciano, as well as the Dutch Queen Wilhelmina's husband, realized as he began treating Himmler for painful stomach spasms that his "magic touch" made him indispensable. Kersten, the "Magical Buddha," as Himmler referred to him, found the "recumbent" patient at his weakest. "I used my power over him to save the lives of hundreds, perhaps thousands," he recalled proudly in notes he had hidden in a brick wall. The decorations he received after the war testified to the truthfulness of this, even though his closeness to Nazi party leaders made him suspect in the eyes of many. Kersten's description of Himmler as a "narrow-chested, weak-chinned man . . . with a high-pitched shrill voice, an ingratiating smile and eyes owlishly innocent," a copy of the Koran always at hand, a man who believed himself to be the reincarnation of Henry the Fowler and Genghis Khan, provides us with a unique portrait of the maniacal personality that impressed Masur with his intelligence. Himmler, according to Kersten, accused Göbbels as the one who planned the destruction of European Jewry, a plan that included Hitler's intention of exterminating the Jews of Latin and North America and handing over to the Arabs the task of exterminating Jews in their territories.

 

According to Kersten, Himmler told him: "I want to bury the hatchet between us and the Jews. If I had my own way many things would have been done differently. But I have already explained to you how things developed with us and also what the attitude was of the Jews and of the people abroad." And he added that "the Führer gave me his personal orders to follow the harshest course." Himmler's shared confidences with Kersten included the "blue folder" with Hitler's medical history and plans for a tomb with a hall that was to be over 1,600 feet high and a mile in diameter, that would hold 300,000 people. [Kersten has been proven to be a very reliable recorder of information, and likely reports correctly here as well. ] "Hitler," he said, "was in extremely poor state of health."

Kersten recorded that one of the last conversations he had with Himmler was about a "secret weapon," more powerful than the V-1 and V-2 rockets, that was to end the war. "One or two shots and cities like
New York or London will simply vanish from the earth." He was told of a village built near Auschwitz where the new weapon was tried out. Twenty thousand Jewish men, women, and children were brought to live there. A single shell according to Himmler caused 6,000 degrees of heat and everything and everybody there was burned to ashes. Kersten assumed that the Germans had nearly completed constructing an atomic bomb. [Himmler's startling revelations are unconfirmed.]

 

The publication of Kersten's personal papers, "The Kersten Memoirs" (1956), with an introduction by H.R. Trevor-Roper, sheds additional light on those momentous meetings. Trevor-Roper, while praising Kersten, downplayed the role of Folke Bernadotte. In an essay, "The Strange Case of Himmler's Doctor Felix Kersten and Count Bernadotte" (Commentary, April 1957), Trevor-Roper elaborated on Folke Bernadotte's shortcomings both as a person and a diplomat. He referred to the Himmler-Masur meeting at Gut Hartzwalde as "one of the most ironical incidents in the whole war." From Kersten's personal papers one learns that when Masur arrived at the Tempelhof airport he was saluted by "half a dozen smartly turned-out men with Heil Hitler." It was surely the only time in the history of Nazi Germany that an SS detachment saluted a Jew! According to Kersten, Masur took off his hat and politely said: "Good evening."

 

It remained for one more participant, Walter Schellenberg in his book "The Labyrinth" (1956), to comment on the astounding Himmler-Masur meeting. As one of Kersten's patients (Himmler insisted that all his SS leaders undergo an examination), he said that the gifted masseur could feel nerve complexes with his finger tips and through manipulation increase blood circulation, thus reconditioning the entire nervous system. Schellenberg said that he had indirect contacts with the Russians through Switzerland and Sweden after 1942, was involved in the proposals made by Himmler to the Allies as late as March 1944, and was negotiating with Folke Bernadotte a surrender to General Eisenhower. All these attempts failed to break the fanatical phalanx around Hitler. Schellenberg remembered telling Himmler that there were only two courses open to him. He should confront Hitler and force him to resign or remove him by force. Himmler responded that if he did that Hitler would shoot him out of hand.

 

Fifty-eight years ago this past April, dozens of buses painted white and bearing the emblems of Sweden and the Red Cross left the hell of Ravensbrück for Denmark and eventually Sweden, carrying with them thousands of women of different nationalities. The buses included many Jewish survivors. Eventually, some 13,500 women were released from Ravensbrück, of whom 3,000 were Jewish. In fact, the Swedish white buses left thousands behind. When the Russian troops entered Ravensbrück on April 30, the day that Hitler committed suicide, there were still 23,000 Jewish and non-Jewish women and children in Ravensbrück.


Frank Fox is the author of "God's Eye: Aerial Photography and the Katyn Forest Massacre." 


A Discussion in Zhitomir

In the early days of August 1942, a remarkable discussion took place in Shitomir in Ukraine (then part of the Soviet Union). Partipants included Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, and the head of Office IV of the Reich Central Security Administration (RSHA), Standartenführer Walter Schellenberg, who later, in 1944, was to rise to chief of the SS Security Service (SD). At this meeting, Himmler, who was second only in power (and criminality) to Hitler himself, was discussing Nazi Germany's political and military situation in the third year of war, with Schellenberg, a 32-year-old "rising star" in the SS hierarchy.

They came to the conclusion that Nazi Germany's strategic situation was rapidly deteriorating. Even before the defeats of Stalingrad and El Alamein, they recognized that with the entry of the United States into the war, Nazi Germany no longer had even a chance of victory. Moreover, the battle of Midway Island in June 1942 had demonstrated that Japan would no longer be able to tie down the bulk of U.S. forces in the Pacific theater. Himmler and Schellenberg agreed that Nazi Germany lacked the necessary forces to successfully conduct a two-front war. Therefore, an "alternative solution" had to be considered: A "compromise peace" was to be sought with Great Britain and the United States, in order to be able to pursue the war against Soviet Russia with some prospect of success. Himmler assigned Schellenberg to make secret overtures to the Western powers to that end, extending an offer that in exchange for peace, Nazi Germany would agree to relinquish the territories it had conquered in Western Europe. As a "token of goodwill," Foreign Minister von Ribbentrop was to be dismissed from his post at the end of 1942. And even though in his memoirs, where he reported at length on his Shitomir discussion, Schellenberg does not go into one final aspect, we can presume that both men envisioned the removal of Hitler, because they knew all too well that as long as he remained in power, no separate peace with the Western Powers would be possible.

In spite of the rendezvous at Zithomir, and for all the contact with Western representatives that had been established, Walter Schellenberg recalls in his published memoirs, that he found himself facing the same old problems when it came to Himmler and his attitudes. Himmler listened to Schellenberg's plans, even agreed with them or went along for some time, but ultimately his bond with Hitler remained unbroken, leaving Schellenberg with out a mandate for anything beyond setting up yet another meeting between Himmler and neutral representatives.


Schellenberg recalled Himmler, did not feel he could shoot Hitler, the Führer to whom he had pledged allegiance; he could not poison him, nor could he arrest him in the Reich Chancellery using SS troops. Any such action would cause the whole military machine to come to a halt. That would never do if
Germany hoped to resist -even defeat- the Russians. Himmler complained that if he tried to talk Hitler into resigning, the Führer would become enraged and shoot him out of hand.

 

Finally Himmler and Hitler had a meeting, demanded by protocol, on April 20, 1945, to give Hitler birthday greetings. Himmler had seized the occasion to talk alone with Dr. Stumpfegger. What passed between them is not reliably known, but Amt VI intelligence officer Wilhelm Höttl later claimed in his postwar memoirs that his boss, Schellenberg, had told him. "Himmler tried to persuade his friend [Stumpfegger] to get rid of Hitler by means of a lethal injection." [Wilhelm Höttl, The Secret Front: The Story of Nazi Political Espionage, New York, 1954]

 

Under postwar interrogation, Schellenberg stated that on the night of April 24-25, during a meeting between Himmler and Bernadotte, the Reichsführer formally asked the count to convey to the Swedish government for onward transmission to General Eisenhower a message expressing his willingness to order a cease-fire on the Western Front. But Himmler's statement, as remembered by Schellenberg, made Allied acceptance impossible because of its special enmity shown toward the USSR. The text read:

To the Russians it is impossible for us Germans, and above all for me, to capitulate.


~U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, RG 165, July 1945, declassified January 1995, "Report on the Case of Walter Friedrich Schellenberg," British-U.S. interrogation of Schellenberg.

 

According to Schellenberg's interrogation report:


Himmler also declared that he had the authority to make these declarations to Bernadotte for further transmission at this time since it was only a question of one or two, or at the most three, days before Hitler gave up his life in this dramatic struggle.

Höttl confirmed this, asserting that Himmler made this statement to Bernadotte during the night of April 24-25. Höttl later also confirmed that "Schellenberg considers that there is a connection between the Himmler-Stumpfegger conversation and the statement to Bernadotte; and that Himmler had Stumpfegger's promise to give a lethal injection within that specified period." (Höttl, The Secret Front.)

 

Höttl added in his memoirs that immediately after his talk with Bernadotte, “Himmler had a long telephone conversation with Stumpfegger in Berlin, and may have had a plan-obviously never carried out-to murder the Führer!”

 

After hypocritically describing how he had remained loyal to the Führer, Himmler had rationalized that now Hitler was on the edge of death, it was up to him to act soon to save what was left of Germany. That was why he asked Bernadotte to send a message from him to the Swedish government for transmittal to Supreme Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower surrendering German forces on the Western Front.

 

Bernadotte's version of these events appeared in his 1945 book The Fall of the Curtain, rushed into print as the War ended. In it, he told how he had on April 23. Bernadotte found Schellenberg on the phone line, wanting to arrange a meeting that afternoon to discuss a most urgent matter. When they met, "Schellenberg lost no time in letting off his bombshell: Hitler was finished! It was thought that he could not live more than a couple of days at the outside."  Count Folke Bernadotte, The Fall of the Curtain, London: Cassell, 1945.

 

Hearing from Schellenberg that Himmler wanted him to see Eisenhower and tell the Allied commander that the Reichsführer was prepared to assume command of German forces in the West and order them to capitulate, Bernadotte insisted that German forces in Norway and Denmark be ordered to surrender as well. And he warned Schellenberg that the Western Allies would never recognize Himmler in any capacity except war criminal - certainly not as Germany's head of state. There were many things to talk about, so a meeting between Himmler and Bernadotte took place.

 

Bernadotte did, allow for the fact that Himmler's involvement might prevent Germany from falling into complete chaos. Bernadotte presented a number of conditions under which he would be willing to go to Eisenhower. First of all, Bernadotte expected an announcement by Himmler that Hitler, who had stepped down for medical reasons, had chosen him as his successor. Secondly, Himmler was to dissolve the Nazi party, remove all of its functionaries, and instruct the cessation of all Werewolf -Nazi guerilla- activities. Lastly, true to his own initial mission, Bernadotte expected Himmler's permission to transfer all Norwegian and Danish concentration camp inmates to Sweden. This discussion with Schellenberg took place at the very beginning of April 1945, and Bernadotte stressed that it would have meant the end of Nazi Germay.

 

Schellenberg Bernadotte wrote "did not hesitate, he told me that he would try to induce his chief to accept them." This shows however that Schellenberg might have played a double game.

 

After Bernadotte had left, Schellenberg met with Himmler again, this time planning, albeit in vague terms, for the time after Hitler's death. In the afternoon of 22 April 1945 Himmler relented and allowed Schellenberg to contact Bernadotte again. This time, Himmler was willing to request that Bernadotte transmit a surrender offer to the Western powers in his name. (Final Report on the Case of Walter Schellenberg, National Archives, RG 319, IR.R, XE 001725, Walter Schellenberg, Folder 7 and 8; Autobiography, NA, RG 226, Entry 125A.)

 

Regardless of whether Himmler was acceptable to the Western Allies, whether the Allies were interested in separate surrender negotiations at all, or whether Bernadotte deemed them useless, Schellenberg had achieved what he wanted and needed most at this point in time. He was the man who had convinced Himmler to offer Nazi Germany's surrender.

 

During the meeting in Lübeck, Himmler declared that he had the authority to offer, surrender as he expected Hitler to be dead within a matter of days. He emphasized, however, that he was by no means surrendering to the Soviet Union, stressing that the German army would keep fighting in the East until the arrival of the Anglo-American relief troops. (Final Report on the Case of Walter Schellenberg, NA, RG 319, I~XE 001725, Walter Schellenberg Folder 7 lind 8; Autobiography, N1\ RG 226, Entry 125A, Folder21.) Despite the obvious friction, Bemadotte agreed to transmit Himmler's message to the Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs, as long as Himmler was willing to include Denmark and Norway into the surrender. Himmler agreed and proceeded to write down his offer.

 

The conditions under which Himmler made his final bid are worth considering.

 

He obviously assumed that Hitler was dead or would be within a matter of days; he considered himself Hitler's rightful successor. Himmler simply assumed power before the preconditions, namely Hitlers death and Himmler's official nomination as the successor, were fulfilled. Secondly, Himmler offered unconditional surrender to the West alone. Moreover, he expected the Western Allies to join the German army in their battle against the common enemy of Bolshevism. Himmler's surrender offer created a temporary stir among Allied leaders, but it was ultimately rejected.

 

Himmler's offer of surrender was the topic of a telephone conversation between Churchill and Truman on 25 April 1945 in which the two Western leaders decided immediately to inform Stalin about Himmler's offer. In his reply of 26 April 1945, Stalin made it clear that the offer should also be extended to the Soviet Union according to the common policies adopted at Casablanca. The same day, Truman requested the American Minister in Sweden, Johnson, to "inform Himmler's agent that the only acceptable terms of surrender by Germany are unconditional surrender on all fronts to the Soviet Union, Great Britain, and the United States." For the exchange of telegrams as well as for the phone conversations between Churchill and Truman, see Foreign Relations of the United States, Diplomatic Papers 1945, Volume III, European Advisory Commission, Austria, Germany (Washington, D.C.: GPO. 1968).
 

Schellenberg failed to inform Himmler that his involvement was part of the problem. In the end, though, Schellenberg yet again walked away from this meeting with a special task from Himmler; Schellenberg was now ordered to negotiate the cessation of hostilities in the Northern Sector. During their earlier meeting, Bernadotte had indicated Scandinavian interest in that matter, and Schellenberg jumped onto the opportunity this. presented. Himmler all but appointed him as the special envoy for Scandinavia. He was to negotiate with the Swedish government. This was quite a positive development for Schellenberg. Rather than stay in Germany, Schellenberg began to travel between Northern Germany and Denmark while keeping in close contact with Bernadotte and his assistants. Hitler, reeling about the information that Himmler had offered surrender, had appointed Admiral Dönitz as his successor. In the following days, Schellenberg, with Himmler's backing, managed to establish himself on Dönitz' staff, preparing, jointly with Wirsing, a memorandum on the earlier negotiations and future strategies for Krosigk. Judging from the little that is known about this memorandum, Schellenberg still believed that it would be possible to deal with the Western allies only.

 

This document was primarily intended to demonstrate that the results of any political bargaining with the Western Powers would depend on the internal political measures adopted by the new Government and it also contained the suggestion that Dönitz should dissolve the Nazi Party, the Gestapo and the SD and announce this action by radio. (Final Report on the Case of Walter Schellenberg, NA, RG 319, lRR, XE 001725, Walter Schellenberg, Folder 7 and 8; Autobiography, NA, RG 226, Entry 125A, Folder 21.)

 

As late as the first days of May 1945, Walter Schellenberg still believed that a peace could be negotiated, hoping that musings by American representatives, dating back to 1943, and  anti-Bolshevist attitudes would be sufficient to sue for a separate peace. In the last days of the war, Schellenberg engaged in a frenzied shuttle diplomacy, going back and forth, between Copenhagen and Northern Germany, discussing the cessation of hostilities in Denmark and Norway with his Swedish counterparts. (Schellenberg, Labyrinth}.

 

At one point on 3 May, one of his Swedish contacts noted that the cessation of hostilities in Scandinavia was by now a rather academic question; it was patently obvious that a complete and unconditional German surrender was a matter of days anyway--if it would be that long. (Schellenberg, Labyrinth, 407)

 

On 5 May 1945, Schellenberg and his entourage boarded Bernadotte's plane, which brought them to Sweden. While keepenig up the pretense of negotiations, Walter Schellenberg had at least reached one of his goals. Unable to end the war--be it by breaking up the anti-Hitler alliance or by negotiating a separate peace--he had at least achieved his own personal goals: he had established, himself as a humanitarian and as the man who cajoled Himmler into a surrender offer. Schellenberg had it on good authority that this surrender offer would be rejected, but he neither could nor would believe Bernadotte's assertions; he trusted his own, ideologically tainted analysis of the situation.

 

On 8 May 1945, the Dönitz government finalized Nazi Germany's uncondinonal surrender; the document was signed that night at Karlshorst, near Berlin. General Zhukov represented the Soviet Union; the alliance against Nazi Germany held until the War in Europe ended.

 

Within days, Schellenberg found himself living at Bernadotte's home, near Stockholm, where he took some time to recover from the "constant journeys and negotiations." Soon. he was busy contemplating his future, mostly with Bernadotte.

 

Schellenberg initially envisioned creating an outline for a later book, but, realizing that voluntary surrender to the Americans or the British was on the horizon, Schellenberg opted to write an autobiographical summary. Slightly more than nine-tenths of the text discusses Schellenberg's good deeds, in particular his collaboration with Bernadotte, which began in February of 1945. While Schellenberg wrote his own autobiographical text, two other authors were puttng pen to paper: Bernadotte and Göring. Over the years, the question of how much of Bernadotte's account was ghostwritten by Schellenberg has occasionally come up.

 

Recently, Charles Whiting brought an interesting new claim against Schellenberg's memoirs, suggesting that the manuscript was ghostwritten by the British Intelligence service. This suggestion is absolutely baseless. Charles Whiting, Hitler's Secret war. The Nazi Espionage Campaign against the Allies (London, UK: Leo Cooper, 2000).

 

The ghostwriting charges are most certainly taking the issue too far. There were differences between the two accounts, which Schellenberg would have smoothed over if he had been the ghostwriter. For example, Bernadotte told him early on the Himmler would not be an acceptable partner for peace negotiations for the West. On the other hand, there can be little doubt that the three men must have discussed their respective writing efforts; therefore, a strikingly coherent picture emerges.

 

In this context, the question of how much influence Schellenberg had over Göring's writing seems to be the much more interesting question. Göring's account, sometimes labeled as excerpts from his wartime diaries, is only rarely identified as what it really was: an "annex" to Schellenberg's writing. As it was, Schellenberg "asked him [Göring] to write an eye witness account, in order to supplement and confirm certain "part of his [Schellenberg's] story."

 

Schellenberg was Göring's supervisor and the main reason that Göring found, himself (at his fiancee/mistress) on a Swedish estate and not in a British prisoner of war camp in the middle of May 1945. Göring also had reasons to use Schellenberg's last--ditch humanitarian effort and his own role in it to sanitize his own record. At any rate, it is likely that Schellenberg set the tone for both of their accounts, effectively establishing ninety per cent of what will ever be known about these negonatiotis. Therefore, Göring's account should by no means be considered independent confirmation of Schellenberg's statements, as it is sometimes done.

 

U.S. Assistant Military Attache in Stockholm, Colonel Rayens noted that, Schellenberg had a good influence on Himmler: “this may stem from the fact that Schellenberg, a Catholic, employed an approach that appealed to the Catholic teaching of Himmler's youth." (CMs. E. Rayens; Assistant Military Attache to Military Air Attache, American Legation, Stockholm, Sweden, Subject: Disposition of SS-Brigadier Walter Schellenberg, 8 June 1945, NA" RG 226, Entry 119 A, Box 26, Folder 29.)

 

Schellenberg was brought to Nuremberg in the fall of 1945. The Allies wanted to prosecute a number of high-ranking Nazi officials to the fullest extent of the law: Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Otto Skorzeny, Joachim von Ribbentrop, and Heinrich Müller, who had disappeared at war's end. There was very little doubt among the Allies that these men should be considered war criminals. As Schellenberg's luck would have it, these were precisely the men he had interacted with closely, competed with viciously, and grown to dislike intensely over the years. He had much to say about them and none of it was positive. In addition, Schellenberg was the quintessential insider; therefore, he was able to speak to many other matters in which the Allies were interested. And by 1947 Schellenberg had managed to recast his own role in Nazi Germany as that of a diplomat; no small feat for an early and important member of the SD and the RSHA, and most certainly the more agreeable alternative for Schellenberg personally.

 

However, Schellenberg was found guilty of "Membership of a Criminal Organization;"as his SS and SD memberships finally caught up with him. However in that day and age, a Persilschein, an affidavit noting that a person was a not a Nazi or had helped victims of Nazi persecution, was a valuable commodity. In the face of prosecution, old animosities were easily shoved aside. High-ranking Nazi officials vouching for Schellenberg assumed, and rightly so, that he would do the same for them. Similarly, Western representatives had something to gain from Schellenberg receiving a lenient sentence: they had dealt with the devil and establishing the negotiation partner in Nazi Germany as a less than completely despicable person also helped to save their own reputations. Everybody won. By 1948, Schellenberg was a sick man however. Having been a frequent patient at the Nuremberg hospital, he was never transferred to the Landsberg prison, as were most of the men sentenced at Nuremberg. Instead, he spent his time in a guarded room in the Nuremberg City Hospital. An operation in the spring of 1949 did not help matters; he was kept alive by very strong doses of penicillin. A subsequent operation was deemed necessary, but Schellenberg was by far too weak and his long-term prognosis was abysmal. On 27 March 1950, the US High Commissioner for Germany, John J. McCloy signed Walter Schellenberg's medical pardon.

 

When he was well enough, Schellenberg traveled to Switzerland, and managed to see some specialists. In June 1950, the CIA traced Schellenberg to a hospital near Osnabruck. (Heidelberg to Special Operations, 26 June 1950, NA, RG 263, CIA Name Files, Reference Collection, Box 45, Schellenberg. vol. 2.) According to CIA documents, he visited Spain in May 1951, where he was in contact with his old colleague and adversary Skorzeny; nothing else is presently known about this trip. He died of heart failure, liver cirrhosis, and infection of the spleen on the last day of March 1952.