(February
- April 1945)
1945
1
Pitt and Churchill - Pitt paves the way for Empire,
Churchill digs its grave - Europe has lost her
supremacy - Great Britain
ought to have accepted a negotiated Peace - The Third Reich was forced into war
- Misfortune and adversity, the parents of great resurrections.
4th February
1945
Churchill seems to regard himself as a second Pitt.
What a hope! In 1793, Pitt was thirty-four years old. Churchill unfortunately
is an old man, capable, and only just capable at that, of carrying out the
orders of that madman, Roosevelt.
In any case, the situations are in no way comparable.
Take your mind back for a moment to the conditions in Pitt's time. From England's point
of view, he was perfectly right in refusing to have any truck with Napoleon. By
maintaining, as he did, a firm attitude under impossible conditions, he was
safeguarding for his country such chance as it had of playing the role which
subsequently fell to its lot in the nineteenth century. It was a policy
designed to preserve the existence of his country. Churchill, by refusing to
come to terms with me, has condemned his country to a policy of suicide. He has
made the same mistakes as those generals make who wage a war according to the
principles of the preceding war. There are now elements which it is impossible
to fit into such a scheme of things. The crucial new factor is the existence of
those two giants, the United
States and Russia. Pitt's England ensured
the balance of world power by preventing the hegemony of Europe
- by preventing Napoleon, that is, from attaining his goal. Churchill's England, on the
other hand, should have allowed the unification of Europe,
if it wished to preserve that same balance of power.
At the beginning of this war I did my utmost to act as
though I believed Churchill to be capable of grasping the truth of this great
policy; and in his lucid moments he was indeed, capable of grasping it. But for
a long time now he has been bound hand and foot to the Jewish-chariot. My
object in trying to come to terms with England was to avoid creating an
irreparable situation in the West. Later, when I attacked eastwards and lanced'
the communist abscess, I hoped thereby to rekindle a spark of common sense in
the minds of the Western Powers. I gave them the chance, without lifting a
finger, of making a contribution to an act of catharsis, in which they could
have safely left the task of disinfecting the West in our hands alone. But the
hatred felt by these hypocrites for a man of good faith is stronger than their
sense of self preservation. I had underestimated the power of Jewish domination
over Churchill's England.
They preferred, indeed, to perish by default, rather than to admit National
Socialism to their midst. Under pressure, they might have tolerated a facade of
anti-semitism on our part. But our absolute determination to eradicate Jewish
power root and branch throughout the world was far too strong meat for their
delicate stomachs to digest!
Pitt's genius lay in the implementation of a realistic
policy, in harmony with the conditions of the epoch, which allowed his country
to make a truly extraordinary recovery and which ensured for it world supremacy
in the nineteenth century. The servile imitation of this policy which Churchill
is now pursuing - and with a complete disregard for the fact that conditions
are not in the least the same - is a sheer absurdity. The fact is that the
world has progressed since Pitt's day! For a whole century, changes, it is
true, came slowly; but the first war increased the pace, and this war has led
us to a presentation of the bills and a final settlement!
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, from the
point of power, Europe alone counted. The
great Asiatic empires had fallen into a sleep that resembled the sleep of
death. The New World was still nothing more
than an excrescence on the end of the old, and no one could reasonably have
foreseen the prodigious destiny which awaited the thirteen British colonies
which had just gained their freedom. . . . Thirteen! I'm not superstitious, but
that story tempts me to become so! That new State of four million inhabitants,
which grew so immeasurably in the course of a hundred years that at the
beginning of the twentieth century it had already become a world Power. . . . !
During the decisive period between 1930 and 1940, the
situation was quite different from that which obtained at the time of Pitt and
Napoleon. Europe, exhausted by a great war,
had lost her pride of place, and her role as leader was no longer recognized.
It was still one of the centres of attraction on earth, but one which was
steadily losing its importance in the face of the growing might of the United States of America,
of the Russo-Asiatic colossus and of the Empire of the Rising Sun.
If fate had granted to an ageing and enfeebled Britain a new
Pitt instead of this Jew-ridden, half American drunkard, the new Pitt would at
once have recognized that Britain's
traditional policy of balance of power would now have to be applied on a
different scale, and this time on a worldwide scale. Instead of maintaining,
creating and adding fuel to European rivalries Britain ought to do her utmost to
encourage and bring about a unification of Europe.
Allied to a united Europe, she would then
still retain the chance of being able to play the part of arbiter in world
affairs.
Everything that is happening makes. one think that Providence is now
punishing Albion for her past crimes, the
crimes which raised her to the power she was. The advent of Churchill, at a
period that is decisive for both Britain and Europe,
is the punishment chosen by Providence.
For the degenerate élite of Britain, he's
just the very man they want; and it is in the hands of this senile clown to
decide the fate of a vast empire and, at the same time, of all Europe. It is, I think, an open question whether the
British people, in spite of the degeneration of the aristocracy, has preserved
those qualities which have hitherto justified British world domination. For my
own part, I doubt it; because there does not seem to have been any popular
reaction to the errors committed by the nation's leaders. And yet there have
been many occasions when Britain
could well have boldly set forth on a new and more fruitful course.
Had she so wished, Britain could have put an end to
the war at the beginning of 1941. In the skies over London she had demonstrated to all the world
her will to resist, and on her credit side she had the humiliating defeats
which she had inflicted on the Italians in North Africa.
The traditional Britain
would have made peace. But the Jews would have none of it. And their lackeys,
Churchill and Roosevelt, were there to prevent it.
Peace then, however, would have allowed us to prevent
the Americans from meddling in European affairs. Under the guidance of the
Reich, Europe would speedily have become
unified. Once the Jewish poison had been eradicated, unification would have
been an easy matter. France
and Italy,
each defeated in turn at an interval of a few months by the two Germanic
Powers, would have been well out of it. Both would have had to renounce their
inappropriate aspirations to greatness. At the same time they would have had to
renounce their pretentions in North Africa and
the Near East; and that would have allowed Europe to pursue a bold policy of friendship towards
Islam. As for Britain, relieved of all European
cares, she could have devoted herself to the wellbeing of her Empire. And lastly,
Germany,
her rear secure, could have thrown herself heart and soul into her essential
task, the ambition of my life and the raison
d'être of National Socialism - the destruction of Bolshevism. This
would have entailed the conquest of wide spaces in the East, and these in their
turn would have ensured the future wellbeing of the German people.
The laws of nature follow a logic which does not
necessarily always conform to our own ideas of logic. We ourselves were
disposed to compromise. We were ready to throw our forces into the scales for
the preservation of the British Empire; and all that, mark you, at a time when,
to tell the truth, I feel much more sympathetically inclined to the lowliest
Hindu than to any of these arrogant islanders. Later on, the Germans will be
pleased that they did not make any contribution to the survival of an out-dated
state of affairs for which the world of the future would have found it hard to
forgive them. We can with safety make one prophecy: whatever the outcome of
this war, the British Empire is at an end. It
has been mortally wounded. The future of the British people is to die of hunger
and tuberculosis in their cursed island.
British obstinancy and the desperate resistance being
put up by the Reich have nothing in common. In the first place Britain had a
freedom of choice, and nothing forced her to go to war. Yet, not only did she
go to war, but she actually provoked war. I need hardly say that the Poles, had
they not been urged on by the British and French war mongers (who were
themselves spurred on by the Jews), would certainly not have felt themselves
called upon to commit suicide. Even so, and even after having made this initial
error, Britain could have pulled her chestnuts out of the fire, either after
the liquidation of Poland or after the defeat of France. It would not, of
course, have been very honourable on her part to do so; but in matters of this
kind British sense of honour is not too particular. All she had to do was to
place the blame for her defection squarely on the shoulders of her ex-allies-
just as she and France did with Belgium
in 1940, and, furthermore, we ourselves would have helped her to save face.
At the beginning of 1941, after her successes in North Africa had re-established her prestige, she had an
even more favourable opportunity of withdrawing from the game and concluding a
negotiated peace with us. Why, you may well ask, did she prefer to obey the orders
of her Jewish and American allies, people, indeed, who were more voracious than
even the worst of her enemies? I will tell you; Britain was not waging her own war,
she was waging that which had been imposed on her by her implacable allies.
Germany, on the other hand, had no option. Once we had
declared our desire of at last uniting all Germans in one great Reich and of
ensuring for them a real independence - in other words, freedom to live their
own lives - all our enemies at once rose against us. War became inevitable if
for no other reason that in order to avoid it we should have been compelled to
betray the fundamental interests of the German people. As far as our people
were concerned we could not and would not be content with the mere semblance of
independence. That sort of thing is all right for the Swedes and the Swiss, who
are always prepared to subscribe to dubious and tortuous formulae, provided
that they can at the same time line their pockets. Nor, for that matter could
the Weimar Republic lay claim to any more worthy
pretensions: That, however, is not an ambition worthy of the Third Reich.
We were, then, condemned to wage war - some time or
other; and our sole preoccupation was to choose the least unfavourable moment.
And once we were committed, of course, there could be no question of a
withdrawal. It is not to the doctrines of National Socialism alone that our
adversaries take exception. They hate National Socialism because through it the
qualities of the German people have been exalted. They therefore seek the
destruction of the German people - of that there can be no shadow of doubt. For
once in a way, hatred has proved to be stronger than hypocrisy. We can only
express our thanks to our enemies for having thus clearly exposed their minds to
us.
To this all-embracing hatred we can retort only by
means of total war. Fighting for our very survival, we are fighting
desperately; and whatever happens, we shall fight to the death to save our
lives. Germany
will emerge from this war stronger than ever before, and Britain more
enfeebled than ever.
History shows that for Germany misfortune and adversity
often constitute an indispensable prelude to a great renaissance. The
sufferings of the German people - and in this war they have suffered incomparably
more than any other people - are the very things which, if Providence wills, will help us to rise
superior to the heady influence of victory. And should Providence abandon us, in spite of our
sacrifices and our resolute steadfastness, it only means that Fate is
subjecting us to ever greater trials, in order to give us the chance to confirm
our right to live.
2
The last quarter of an hour - The determination to exterminate Germany -
Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans - The miraculous death of the Tsarina,
Elizabeth Victory in the final sprint - This war started on 30th January 1933
6th February
1945
After fifty-four months of titanic struggle, waged on
both sides with unexampled fury, the German people now finds itself alone,
facing a coalition sworn to destroy it.
War is raging everywhere along our frontiers. It i,
coming closer and ever closer. Our enemies are gathering all their forces for
the final assault. Their object is no merely to defeat us in battle but to
crush and annihilate us Their object is to destroy our Reich, to sweep our Weltan-schauung from the face of the
earth, to enslave the German people - as a punishment for their loyalty to
Nation Socialism. We have reached the final quarter of an hour
The situation is serious, very serious. It seems even
to be desperate. We might very easily give way to fatigue, to exhaustion, we
might allow ourselves to become discouraged to an extent that blinds us to the
weaknesses of our enemies. But these weaknesses are there, for all that. We
have facing us an incongruous coalition, drawn together by hatred and jealousy
and cemented by the panic with which the national socialist doctrine fills this
Jew-ridden motley. Face to face with this amorphous monster, our one chance is
to depend on ourselves and ourselves alone; to oppose this heterogeneous rabble
with a national, homogeneous entity, animated by a courage which no adversity
will be able to shake. A people which resists as the German people is now
resisting can never be consumed in a witches' cauldron of this kind. On the
contrary; it will emerge from the crucible with its soul more steadfast, more
intrepid than ever. Whatever reverses we may suffer in the days that lie ahead
of us, the German people will draw fresh strength from them; and whatever may
happen today, it will live to know a glorious tomorrow.
The will to exterminate which goads these dogs in the
pursuit of their quarry gives us no option; it indicates the path which we must
follow - the only path that remains open to us. We must continue the struggle
with the fury of desperation and without a glance over our shoulders; with our
faces always to the enemy, we must defend step by step the soil of our
fatherland. While we keep fighting, there is always hope, and that, surely,
should be enough to forbid us to think that all is already lost. No game is
lost until the final whistle. And if, in spite of everything, the Fates have
decreed that we should once more in the course of our history be crushed by
forces superior to our own, then let us go down with our heads high and secure
in the knowledge that the honour of the German people remains without blemish.
A desperate fight remains for all time a shining example. Let us remember
Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans! In any case, we are not of the stuff
that goes tamely to the slaughter like sheep. They may well exterminate us. But
they will never lead us to the slaughter house!
No! There is no such thing as a desperate situation!
Think how many examples of a turn of fortune the history of the German people
affords! During the Seven Years' War Frederick found himself reduced to
desperate straits. During the winter of 1762 he had decided that if no change
occurred by a certain date fixed by himself, he would end his life by taking
poison. Then, a few days before the date he had chosen, behold, the Tsarina
died unexpectedly, and the whole situation was miraculously reversed. Like the
great Frederick,
we, too, are combating a coalition, and a coalition, remember is not a stable
entity. It exists only by the will of a handful of men. If Churchill were
suddenly to disappear, everything could change in a flash! The British
aristocracy might perhaps become conscious of the abyss opening before them -
and might well experience a serious shock! These British, for whom, indirectly,
we have been fighting and who would enjoy the fruits of our victory. . . .
We can still snatch victory in the final sprint! May
we be granted the time to do so!
All we must do is to refuse to go down. For the German
people, the simple fact of continued independent life would be a victory. And
that alone would be sufficient justification for this war, which would not have
been in vain. It was in any case unavoidable; the enemies of German National
Socialism forced it upon me as long ago as January 1933.
3
Colonial enterprises exhaust a nation's strength - The
new worlds are only excrescences on the old - The white races suffer a set-back
- Materialism, alcoholism, fanaticism and syphilis - Unnatural sons - Germany's
sole possible direction for expansion eastwards - Europe for the Europeans -
The super-abundance of prolific Asia
7th February
1945
Any people which desires to prosper should remain
linked to its own soil. A man should never lose contact with the soil upon
which he had the honour of being born. He should not go away except for a short
while and always with the intention of returning. The British who became
colonizers of necessity, and who, indeed, were great colonizers, have generally
obeyed this rule.
As far as continental people are concerned, I am sure
that it is important that they should expand only in those directions where it
is certain that the soil of conquerors and conquered are contiguous.
This need to become properly enrooted applies to all
continental peoples and particularly, in my opinion to the German people. And
that most probably explains why we have never really felt the urge to become
colonizers. A glance at history, both ancient and modern, will show that
overseas enterprises have always in the long run impoverished those who
undertook them. They have all, in the end, been exhausted by their efforts;
and, in the inevitable nature of things, they have all succumbed to forces to
which either they have themselves given birth or which they have themselves
re-awakened. What better example of this than the Greeks?
What was true for the ancient Greeks remains equally
true for all Europeans in modern times. To prosper, a people must concentrate
its efforts on its own country. A scrutiny of any reasonably long period of
history will reveal facts which confirm the truth of this contention.
Spain, France
and Britain
have all enfeebled, devitalized and drained themselves in these vain colonial
enterprises. The continents to which Spain and Britain gave
birth, which they created piece by piece, have today acquired a completely
independent way of life and a completely egoistical outlook. Even so, they are
but artificial worlds, with neither a soul, a culture or a civilization of
their own; and judged from that point of view, they are nothing more than
excrescences.
It is, of course, possible to make out a case for the
success achieved in peopling continents which before had been empty. The United States
and Australia
afford good examples. Success, certainly - but only on the material side. They
are artificial edifices, bodies without age, of which it is impossible to say
whether they are still in a state of infancy or whether they have already been
touched by senility. In those continents which were inhabited, failure has been
even more marked. In them, the white races have imposed their will by force,
and the influence they have had on the native inhabitants has been negligible;
the Hindus have remained Hindus, the Chinese have remained Chinese, and the
Moslems are still Moslems. There have been no profound transformations, and
such changes as have occurred are less marked in the religious field,
notwithstanding the tremendous efforts of the Christian missionaries, than in
any other. There have been a few odd conversions the sincerity of which are
open to considerable doubt-except, perhaps in the case of a few simpletons and
mentally deficients. The white races did, of course, give some things to the
natives, and they were the worst gifts that they could possibly have made,
those plagues of our own modern world-materialism, fanaticism, alcoholism and
syphilis. For the rest, since these peoples possessed qualities of their own
which were superior to anything we could offer them, they have remained
essentially unchanged. Where imposition by force was attempted, the results
were even more disastrous, and common sense, realizing the futility of such
measures, should preclude any recourse to their introduction. One solitary
success must be conceded to the colonizers: everywhere they have succeeded in
arousing hatred, a hatred that urges these peoples, awakened from their
slumbers by us, to rise and drive us out. Indeed, it looks almost as though
they had awakened solely and simply for that purpose! Can anyone assert that colonization
has increased the number of Christians in the world? Where are those
conversions en masse which mark
the success of Islam? Here and there one finds isolated islets of Christians,
Christians in name, that is, rather than by conviction; and that is the sum
total of the successes of this magnificent Christian religion, the guardian of
supreme Truth!
Taking everything into consideration, Europe's policy of colonization has ended in a complete
failure. I have not forgotten the one instance of apparent success, but a
success that is purely material, and it is of that monster which calls itself
the United States
that I wish to talk. And monster is the only possible name for it! At a time
when the whole of Europe - their own mother -
is fighting desperately to ward off the bolshevist peril, the United States,
guided by the Jew-ridden Roosevelt, can think
of nothing better to do than to place their fabulous material resources at the
disposal of these Asiatic barbarians, who are determined to strangle her. Looking
back, I am deeply distressed at the thought of those millions of Germans, men
of good faith, who emigrated to the United States and who are now the
backbone of the country. For these men, mark you, are not merely good Germans,
lost to their fatherland; rather, they have become enemies, more implacably
hostile than any others. The German emigrant retains, it is true, his qualities
of industry and hard work, but he very quickly loses his soul. There is nothing
more unnatural than a German who has become an expatriate.
In the future we must guard against these haemorrhages
of German blood. It is eastwards, only and always eastwards, that the veins of
our race must expand. It is the direction which Nature herself has decreed for
the expansion of the German peoples. The rigorous climate with which the East
confronts them allows them to retain their qualities as hardy and virile men;
and the vivid contrasts they find there helps to keep fresh their love and
their longing for their own country. Transplant a German to Kiev, and he remains a perfect German. But
transplant him to Miami,
and you make a degenerate of him - in other words, an American.
Since colonization is not an activity which Germans
feel called upon to pursue, Germany
should never make common cause with the colonizing nations and should always
abstain from supporting them in their colonial aspirations. What we want, is a Monroe doctrine in Europe. `Europe for the
Europeans!' a doctrine, the corollary of which should be that Europeans refrain
from meddling in the affairs of other continents.
The descendants of the convicts in Australia
should inspire in us nothing but a feeling of supreme indifference. If their
vitality is not strong enough to enable them to increase at a rate
proportionate to the size of the territories they occupy, that is their own
look out, and it is no use their appealing to us for help. For my own part, I
have no objection at all to seeing the surplus populations of prolific Asia being drawn, as to a magnet, to their empty spaces.
Let them all work out their own salvation! And let me repeat - it is nothing to
do with us.
4
Should Franco have been drawn into the war? - Our involuntary
contribution to the victory of the Spanish clergy - Irrevocable decadence of
the Latin races - We ought to have occupied Gibraltar
10th
February 1945
I have sometimes asked myself whether we were not
wrong, in I94o, not to have drawn Spain into the war. It would have
been too easy for words to do so, for Spain was burning to follow Italy's example
and become a member of the Victors' Club.
Franco, of course, had very exaggerated ideas on the
value of Spanish intervention. Nevertheless I believe that, in spite of the
systematic sabotage perpetrated by his Jesuit brother-in-law, he would have agreed
to make common cause with us on quite reasonable conditions - the promise of a
little bit of France as a sop to his pride and a substantial slice of Algeria
as a real, material asset. But as Spain had really nothing tangible to
contribute, I came to the conclusion that her direct intervention was not
desirable. It is true that it would have allowed us to occupy Gibraltar. On the
other hand, Spain's
entry into the war would certainly have added many kilometres to the Atlantic
coast-line which we would have had to defend - from Saint Sebastian to Cadiz. Then there was the
further possibility of a renewal of the civil war, fanned by the British. We
might thus have found ourselves bound for better or for worse to a regime for
which I have now, if possible, less sympathy than ever, a regime of capitalist
profiteers, puppets of the clerical gang! I shall never forgive Franco for not
having reconciled the Spaniards once the civil war was over, for having
ostracized the Phalangists, whom Spain has to thank for such aid as we gave
her, and for having treated like bandits former foes, who were very far from
all being Reds. To put half a country beyond the pale of the law while a
minority of pillagers enrich themselves, with the blessing of the priesthood,
at the expense of the rest is no solution at all. I am quite sure that very few
of the so-called Reds in Spain
were really Communists. We were badly deceived, for, had I known the real state
of affairs, I would never have allowed our aircraft to bombard and destroy a
starving population and at the same time re-establish the Spanish clergy in all
their horrible privileges.
To sum up, by ensuring that the Iberian
peninsula remained neutral, Spain has already rendered us the
one service in this conflict which she had in her power to render. Having Italy
on our backs is a sufficient burden in all conscience; and whatever may be the
qualities of the Spanish soldier, Spain herself, in her state of poverty and
unpreparedness, would have been a heavy liability rather than an asset.
This war will, I think, have clearly demonstrated at
least one thing - the irremediable decadence of the Latin countries. They have
shown beyond dispute that they are no longer in the running and that they
therefore no longer have the right to participate in the settlement of the
world's affairs.
The easiest thing would have been to occupy Gibraltar
with our Commandos and with Franco's connivance, but without any declaration of
war on his part. I am convinced that Britain would not have seized this as a
pretext for declaring war on Spain. She would have been only too pleased to see
Spain continue to remain non-belligerent. And from our own point of view, this
would have eliminated all danger of any British landing on the coasts of
Portugal.
5
Facing the Jewish problem with realism - The stranger who cannot be
assimilated - A typically Jewish war - Exit the furtive Jew and enter Judea
gloriosa - While Jews exist there will always be anti-semitism - The futility
of racial hatred - Cross-breeding a failure - Prussian pride justified - the
Atticism of the Austrians - The modern German type - In reality there is no
such thing as a Jewish race - Superiority of mind over body - My honesty in
dealing with the Jews
13th
February 1945
It is one of the achievements of National Socialism
that it was the first to face the Jewish problem in a realistic manner.
The Jews themselves have always aroused anti-semitism.
Throughout the centuries, all the peoples of the world, from the ancient
Egyptians to ourselves, have reacted in exactly the same way. The time comes
when they become tired of being exploited by the disgusting Jew. They give a
heave and shake themselves, like an animal trying to rid itself of its vermin.
They react brutally and finally they revolt. It is an instinctive reaction, a
reaction of repugnance against a stranger who refuses to adapt himself and
become part of the whole, a parasite which clings to the host, imposes on it
and exploits it to the utmost. By nature, the Jew is a parasite which cannot
and will not be assimilated. A distinguishing feature of the Jew is that,
unlike other foreigners, he everywhere claims all the rights of citizenship in
the community that shelters him - and at the same time remains always a Jew. He
regards it as his right to be allowed to run with the hare and hunt with the
hounds; and he is the only man in the whole world to claim such an extravagant
privilege.
National Socialism has tackled the Jewish problem by
action and not by words. It has risen in opposition to the Jewish determination
to dominate the world; it has attacked them everywhere and in every sphere of
activity; it has flung them out of the positions they have usurped; it has
pursued them in every direction, determined to purge the German world of the
Jewish poison. For us, this has been an essential proces of disinfection, which
we have prosecuted to its ultimate limit and without which we should ourselves
have been asphyxiated and destroyed.
With the success of the operation in Germany, there
was a good chance of extending it further afield. This was, in fact,
inevitable, for good health normally triumphs over disease. Quick to realize
the danger, the Jews decided to stake their all in the life and death struggle
which they launched against us. National Socialism had to be destroyed,
whatever the cost and even if the whole world were destroyed in the process.
Never before has there been a war so typically and at the same time so
exclusively Jewish.
I have at least compelled them to discard their masks.
And even if our endeavours should end in failure, it will only be a temporary
failure. For I have opened the eyes of the whole world to the Jewish peril.
One of the consequences of our attitude has been to
cause the Jew "to become aggressive. As a matter of fact, he is less
dangerous in that frame of mind than when he is sly and cunning. The Jew who
openly avows his race is a hundred times preferable to the shameful type which
claims to differ from you only in the matter of religion. If I win this war, I shall
put an end to Jewish world power and I shall deal the Jews a mortal blow from
which they will not recover. But if I lose the war, that does not by any means
mean that their triumph is assured, for then they themselves will lose their
heads. They will become so arrogant that they will evoke a violent reaction
against them. They will, of course, continue to run with the hare and hunt with
the hounds, to claim the privileges of citizenship in every country and,
without sacrificing their pride, continue to remain, above all, members of the
Chosen Race. The shifty, the shamefaced Jew will disappear and will be replaced
by a Jew vainglorious and bombastic; and the latter will stink just as
objectionably as the former - and perhaps even more so. There is, then, no
danger in the circumstances that anti-semitism will disappear, for it is the
Jews themselves who add fuel to its flames and see that it is kept well stoked.
Before the opposition to it can disappear, the malady itself must disappear.
And from that point of view, you can rely on the Jews: as long as they survive,
anti-semitism will never fade.
In saying this, I promise you I am quite free of all
racial hatred: It is, in any case, undesirable that one race should mix with
other races. Except for a few gratuitous successes, which I am prepared to
admit, systematic cross-breeding has never produced good results. Its desire to
remain racially pure is a proof of the vitality and good health of a race.
Pride in one's own race - and that does not imply contempt for other races - is
also a normal and healthy sentiment. I have never regarded the Chinese or the
Japanese as being inferior to ourselves. They belong to ancient civilizations,
and I admit freely that their past history is superior to our own. They have
the right to be proud of their past, just as we have the right to be proud of
the civilization to which we belong. Indeed, I believe the more steadfast the
Chinese and the Japanese remain in their pride of race, the easier I shall find
it to get on with them.
This pride of race is a quality which the German,
fundamentally, does not possess. The reason for this is that for these last
three centuries the country has been torn by internal dissension and religious
wars and has been subjected to a variety of foreign influences, to the
influence, for example, of Christianity - for Christianity is not a natural
religion for the Germans, but a religion that has been imported and which
strikes no responsive chord in their hearts and is foreign to the inherent genius
of the race. When pride of race manifests itself in a German, as it sometimes
does and in a most aggressive form, it is in reality nothing more than a
compensatory reaction for that inferiority complex from which so many Germans
suffer. This, I need hardly say, does not apply to the Prussians. From the time
of Frederick
the Great they have possessed that quiet and simple pride which is the
hall-mark of people who are sure of themselves and who have no need of
ostentation to bear witness to what they are. Thanks to those qualities which
are inherently theirs, the Prussians were able, as they well showed, to create
a united Germany.
National Socialism has tried to give to all Germans that pride which hitherto
has been possessed by the Prussians alone among us.
The Austrians, too, have in their blood a pride very
akin to that of the Prussians, a pride born of the fact that for centuries they
have never been dominated by any other race, but had, on the contrary, been for
a very long time the ones who gave orders and were obeyed. They possess the
accumulated experience of domination and power, and to that is attributable
that panache of Atticism which no
one can gainsay.
In its crucible National Socialism will melt and fuse
all those qualities which are characteristic of the German soul; and from it
will emerge the modern German-industrious, conscientious, sure of himself yet
simple withal, proud not of himself or what he is, but of his membership of a
great entity which will evoke the admiration of other peoples. This feeling of
corporate superiority does not in any way imply the slightest desire to crush
and overwhelm others. We have, I know, on occasions exaggerated our cult of
this sentiment, but that was necessary at the outset and we were compelled to
jostle the Germans pretty roughly in order to set their feet on the right road.
In the nature of things, too violent a thrust in any direction invariably
provokes an equally violent thrust in the opposite direction. All this, of
course, cannot be accomplished in a day. It requires the slow-moving pressure
of time. Frederick
the Great is the real creator of the Prussian type. In actual fact, two or
three generations elapsed, before the type crystallized and before the Prussian
type became a characteristic common to every Prussian.
Our racial pride is not aggressive except in so far as
the Jewish race is concerned. We use the term Jewish race as a matter of
convenience, for in reality and from the genetic point of view there is no such
thing as the Jewish race. There does, however, exist a community, to which, in
fact, the term can be applied and the existence of which is admitted by the
Jews themselves. It is the spiritually homogeneous group, to membership of
which all Jews throughout the world deliberately adhere, regardless of their
whereabouts and of their country of domicile; and it is this group of human
beings to which we give the title Jewish race. It is not, mark you, a religious
entity; although the Hebrew religion serves them as a pretext to present
themselves as such; nor indeed is it even a collection of groups, united by the
bonds of a common religion.
The Jewish race is first and foremost an abstract race
of the mind. It has its origins, admittedly, in the Hebrew religion, and that
religion, too, has had a certain influence in moulding its general
characteristics; for all that, however, it is in no sense of the word a purely
religious entity, for it accepts on equal terms both the most determined
atheists and the most sincere, practising believers. To all this must be added
the bond that has been forged by centuries of persecution - though the Jews
conveniently forget that it is they themselves who provoked these persecutions.
Nor does Jewry possess the anthropological characteristics which would stamp
them as a homogeneous race. It cannot, however, be denied that every Jew in the
world has some drops of purely Jewish blood in him. Were this not so, it would
be impossible to explain the presence of certain physical characteristics which
are permanently common to all Jews from the ghetto of Warsaw to the bazaars of
Morocco - the offensive nose, the cruel vicious nostrils and so on. .
A race of the mind is something more solid, more
durable than just a race, pure and simple. Transplant a German to the United States
and you turn him into an American. But the Jew remains a Jew wherever he goes,
a creature which no environment can assimilate. It is the characteristic mental
make-up of his race which renders him impervious to the processes of
assimilation. And there in a nutshell is the proof of the superiority of the
mind over the flesh! . . .
The quite amazing ascendancy which they achieved
during the course of the nineteenth century gave the Jews a sense of their own
power and caused them to drop the mask; and it is just that that has given us
the chance to oppose them as Jews, self proclaimed and proud of the fact. And
when you remember how credulous the Germans are, you will realize that we must
be most grateful for this sudden excess of frankness on the part of our most
mortal enemies.
I have always been absolutely fair in my dealings with
the Jews. On the eve of war, I gave them one final warning. I told them that,
if they precipitated another war, they would not be spared and that I would
exterminate the vermin throughout Europe, and
this time once and for all. To this warning they retorted with a declaration of
war and affirmed that wherever in the world there was a Jew, there, too, was an
implacable enemy of National Socialist Germany.
Well, we have lanced the Jewish abscess; and the world
of the future will be eternally grateful to us.
6
Too soon and too late - We lack time, because we lack space - A
revolutionary State, pursuing a petit
bourgeois policy -Collaboration with France was a mistake - We should
have emancipated the French proletariat and liberated the French colonies - I
was right in Mein Kampf
14th
February 1945
The disastrous thing about this war is the fact that
for Germany
it began both too soon and too late. From the purely military point of view, it
would have suited us better if it had started sooner. I ought to have seized
the initiative in 1938 instead of allowing myself to be forced into war in
1939; for war was, in any case, unavoidable. However, you can hardly blame me,
if the British and the French accepted at Munich
every demand I made of them!
As things stand at the moment, then, the war came a
little too late. But from the point of view of our moral preparedness, it has
come far too soon. My disciples have not yet had time to attain their full
manhood. I should really have had another twenty years in which to bring this
new élite to maturity, an élite of youth, immersed from infancy in
the philosophy of National Socialism. The tragedy for us Germans is that we
never have enough time. Circumstances always conspire to force us to hurry. And
if at this point time is lacking, it is primarily because we lack space. The
Russians with their vast expansion can afford the luxury of refusing to be
hurried. Time works in their favour, but against us. Even if Providence had allotted to me a span of life
sufficiently long to allow me to lead my people to the complete degree of
development that National Socialism desires, you may be quite sure that our
enemies would never have permitted me to take advantage of it. They would have
done their utmost to destroy us before they found themselves face to face with
a Germany,
cemented by a single faith and national socialist in body and soul, which would
have been invincible.
Since we lacked men moulded in the shape of our ideal,
we had perforce to make what use we could of those whom we had. The result has
been obvious. Thanks to this discrepancy between conception and realization,
the war policy of a revolutionary state like the Third Reich has of necessity
been the policy of petty bourgeois reactionaries. Our generals and diplomats,
with a few, rare exceptions, are men of another age; and their methods of
waging war and of conducting our foreign policy also belong to an age that is
passed. This is just as true of those who serve us in all good faith as it is
of the rest of them. The former serve us ill through lack either of aptitude or
enthusiasm, and the latter do so deliberately and of malice aforethought.
Our greatest political blunder has been our treatment
of the French. We should never have collaborated with them. It is a policy
which has stood them in good stead and has served us ill. Abetz thought he was
being very clever when he became the champion of this idea and persuaded us to
pursue it. He thought he was two moves ahead of events, whereas in reality he was
well behind them. He seemed to think that we were dealing with the France of
Napoleon, with a nation, that is, which was capable of appreciating the
importance and far-reaching effects of a noble gesture. He failed to see what
is an obvious fact, namely, that during the last hundred years France has
changed completely. She has become a prostitute, and she is now a raddled old
strumpet, who has never ceased to swindle and to confound us, and has always
left us to foot the bill.
Our obvious course should have been to liberate the
working classes and to help the workers of France to implement their own
revolution. We should have brushed aside, rudely and without pity, the
fossilized bourgeoisie, as devoid of soul so it is denuded of patriotism. Just
look at the sort of friends our geniuses of the Wilhelmstrasse have found for
us in France - petty, calculating little profiteers, who hastened to make love
to us as soon as they thought that we were occupying their country in order to
safeguard their bank balances - but who were quite resolved to betray us at the
first possible opportunity, provided always that no danger to themselves was
involved!
We were equally stupid as regards the French colonies.
That, too, was the work of our great minds in the Wilhelmstrasse! Diplomats of
the old, classic mould, soldiers of a bygone regime, petty country squires - of
such were those who were to help us to revolutionize all Europe!
And they have led us into waging war as they would have waged it in the
nineteenth century. Never, at any price, should we have put our money on France and
against the peoples subjected to her yoke. On the contrary, we should have
helped them to achieve their liberty and, if necessary, should have goaded them
into doing so. There was nothing to stop us in I94o from making a gesture of
this sort in the Near East and in North Africa. In actual fact our diplomats instead set
about the task of consolidating French power, not only in Syria, but in Tunis, in Algeria and Morocco as
well. Our `gentlemen' obviously preferred to maintain cordial relations with
distinguished Frenchmen, rather than with a lot of hirsute revolutionaries,
with a chorus of musical comedy officers, whose one idea was to cheat us,
rather than with the Arabs, who would have been loyal partners for us. Oh! you
needn't think I don't see through the calculations of these Machiavellian
professionals! They know,their job and they have their traditions! All they
thought about was the dirty trick they were playing on the British, for they
were still under the ban of the famous alleged antagonism and rivalry between Britain and France in the
colonial field. What I'm saying is perfectly true - they are still living in
the reign of Wilhelm II, in the world of Queen Victoria and that of those artful sharpers
named Poincaré and Delcassé! In actual fact this rivalry has ceased to be of
any significance. That it still seems to exist is due to the fact that there
are still some diplomats of the old school in the ranks of our adversaries too.
In reality, Britain
and France
are associates, each of whom is playing his own game with considerable
asperity, neither of whom react to any appeal to friendship, but both of whom
unite again against a common danger. The Frenchman's deep-seated hatred of the
German is something deeper and different. Therein lies a lesson on which we
should do well to ponder in the future.
As regards France, there were two courses open
to her. Either she could have abandoned her alliance with Britain, in which
case she would have been of no interest to us as a potential ally, since we
knew that she would also abandon us on the first opportunity; or she could have
pretended to make this change of partners, in which case she would have been of
even more dubious value to us. On our side, some of the wishful thinking about
this country was quite ridiculous. In reality there was only one possible
policy to adopt vis-à-vis France - a
policy of rigorous and rigid distrust. I know I was right about France. With
prophetic foresight I gave an accurate picture of France in Mein Kampf. And I know perfectly well why,
in spite of all the representations that have been made to me, I have seen no
reason at all to change the opinions I formed twenty years ago.
7
The gravest decision of the war - Peace with Britain not possible till the Red
Army had been annihilated - Time works against us - Stalin's blackmail -
Settlement with Russia
as soon as the weather became fine
15th
February 1945
No decision which I have had to make during the course
of this war was graver than that to attack Russia. I had always maintained
that we ought at all costs to avoid waging war on two fronts, and you may rest
assured that I pondered long and anxiously over Napoleon and his experiences in
Russia.
Why, then, you may ask, this war against Russia, and why at the time that I
selected?
We had already given up hope of ending the war by
means of a successful invasion of Britain. Furthermore that country,
under the guidance of its stupid chiefs, would have refused to recognize the
hegemony we had set up in Europe as long as
there remained on the Continent a Great Power which was fundamentally hostile
to the Third Reich. The war, then, would have gone on and on, a war in which,
behind the British, the Americans would have played an increasingly active
role. The importance of the war potential of the United States, the progress
made in armaments - both in our own camp and in that of our enemies, the
proximity of the English coast - all these things combined to make it highly
inadvisable for us to become bogged down in a war of long duration. For Time -
and it's always Time, you notice - would have been increasingly against us. In
order to persuade Britain
to pack up, to compel her to make peace, it was essential to rob her of her
hope of being able still to confront us, on the Continent itself, with an
adversary of a stature equal to our own. We had no choice, we had at all costs
to strike the Russian element out of the European balance sheet. We had another
reason, equally valid, for our action - the mortal threat that a Russia in being
constituted to our existence. For it was absolutely certain that one day or
other she would attack us.
Our one and only chance of vanquishing Russia was to
take the initiative, for to fight a defensive war against her was not
practical. We dared not allow the Red Army the advantage of the terrain, place
our Autobahns at the disposal of
its swiftly on-rushing armour, and our railways at the disposal of its troops
and its supplies. But if we took the offensive, we could, indeed, defeat the
Red Army on its own ground, in the swamps and in the vast and muddy expanses;
but in a civilized country we could not have done so. We should simply have
been providing it with a spring-board with which to leap upon the whole of Europe and destroy it.
Why 1941? Because, in view of the steadily increasing
power of our western enemies, if we were to act at all, we had to do so with
the least possible delay. Nor, mind you, was Stalin doing nothing. On two
fronts, time was against us. The real question was not, therefore: `Why 22 June 1941 already' but
rather: `Why not earlier still?' But for the difficulties created for us by the
Italians and their idiotic campaign in Greece, I should have attacked Russia a few
weeks earlier. For us, the main problem was to keep the Russians from moving
for as long as possible, and my own personal nightmare was the fear that Stalin
might take the initiative before me.
Another reason was that the raw materials which the
Russians were withholding were essential to us. In spite of their obligations
their rate of delivery decreased steadily, and there was a real danger that
they might suddenly cease altogether. If they were not prepared to give us of
their own free will the things we had to have, then we had no alternative but
to go and take them, in situ and
by force. I came to my decision immediately after Molotov's visit to Berlin in November, for
it then became clear to me that sooner or later Stalin would abandon us and go
over to the enemy. Ought I to have played for time in order that our
preparations could have become more complete? No - for by so doing I should
have sacrificed the initiative; and again no, because the brief and precarious
respite which we might have gained would have cost us very dear. We should have
had to submit to the Soviet blackmail with regard to Finland, to Rumania, to
Bulgaria and to Turkey. That, of course was out of the question. The Third
Reich, defender and protector of Europe, could not have sacrificed these
friendly countries on the altar of Communism. Such behaviour would have been
dishonourable, and we should have been punished for it. From the moral as well as
from the strategic point of view it would have been a miserable gambit. War
with Russia had become inevitable, whatever we did; and to postpone it only
meant that we should later have to fight under conditions far less favourable.
I therefore decided, as soon as Molotov departed, that
I would settle accounts with Russia as soon as fair weather permitted.
8
A people which instinctively dislikes colonial adventures -Louisiana and Mexico
15th
February 1945
By not liberating the French proletariat at once in
i94o we both failed in our duty and neglected our own interests. And that is
equally true with regard to French subjects overseas.
The French people would certainly have borne us no
grudge, had we relieved them of the burden of Empire. In this:. respect the
people have shown much more common sense than the self styled elite, and they have an instinctive and
much truer appreciation of the nation's real interests. Under both Louis XV and
under Jules Ferry the people revolted against the absurdity of colonial
adventures. I have yet to be convinced that Napoleon became unpopular for
having rid himself cheaply of Louisiana.
But there was unprecedented indignation when his inefficient nephew tried to
balance matters by waging war on Mexico!
9
Some Frenchmen were courageous Europeans - The price of clear thinking
and good faith
15th
February 1945
I have never liked France or the French, and I have
never stopped saying so. I admit, however, that there are some worthy men among
them. There is no doubt that, during these latter years, quite a number of
Frenchmen supported the European conception with both complete sincerity and
great courage. And the savagery with which their own countrymen made them pay
for their clear vision is of itself a proof of their good faith.
10
My attitude towards Italy
a mistake - The Italian alliance a hindrance almost everywhere - We miss the
political bus as regards Islam - Shameful defeats of the Italians - Italy will have
contributed to our losing the war - Life does not forgive weakness
17th
February 1945
When I pass judgment, objectively and without emotion,
on events, I must admit that my unshakeable friendship for Italy and the
Duce may well be held to be an error on my part. It is in fact quite obvious that
our Italian alliance has been of more service to our enemies than to ourselves.
Italian intervention has conferred benefits which are modest in the extreme in
comparison with the numerous difficulties to which it has given rise. If, in
spite of all our efforts, we fail to win this war, the Italian alliance will
have contributed to our defeat!
The greatest service which Italy could have rendered to us
would have been to remain aloof from this conflict. To ensure her abstention,
no sacrifices, no presents on our part would have been too great. Had she
steadfastly maintained her neutral role, we would have overwhelmed her with our
favours. In victory we would have shared with her all the fruits and all the
glory. We would have collaborated with all our hearts in the creation of the
historic myth of the supremacy of the Italian people, the legitimate sons of
the ancient Romans. Indeed, anything would have been preferable to having them
as comrades in arms on the field of battle!
Italy's intervention in June 1940, with the sole
purpose of aiming a donkey-kick at a French army that was already in process of
disintegration, merely had the effect of tarnishing a victory which the
vanquished were at the time prepared to accept in a sporting spirit. France
recognized that she had been fairly defeated by the armies of the Reich, but
she was unwilling to accept defeat at the hands of the Axis.
Our Italian ally has been a source of embarrassment to
us everywhere. It was this alliance, for instance, which prevented us from
pursuing a revolutionary policy in North Africa.
In the nature of things, this territory was becoming an Italian preserve and it
was as such that the Duce laid claim to it. Had we been on our own, we could
have emancipated the Moslem countries dominated by France; and that would have had
enormous repercussions in the Near East,
dominated by Britain,
and in Egypt.
But with our fortunes linked to those of the Italians, the pursuit of such a
policy was not possible. All Islam vibrated at the news of our victories. The
Egyptians, the Irakis and the whole of the Near East
were all ready to rise in revolt. Just think what we could have done to help
them, even to incite them, as would have been both our duty and in our own
interest! But the presence of the Italians at our side paralysed us; it created
a feeling of malaise among our
Islamic friends, who inevitably saw in us accomplices, willing or unwilling, of
their oppressors. For the Italians in these parts of the world are more
bitterly hated, of course, than either the British or the French. The memories
of the barbarous, reprisals taken against the Senussi are still vivid. Then
again the ridiculous pretensions of the Duce to be regarded as The Sword of
Islam evokes the same sneering chuckle now as it did before the war. This
title, which is fitting for Mahomed and a great conqueror like Omar, Mussolini
caused to be conferred on himself by a few wretched brutes whom he had either
bribed or terrorized into doing so. We had a great chance of pursuing a
splendid policy with regard to Islam. But we missed the bus, as we missed it on
several other occasions, thanks to our loyalty to the Italian alliance!
In this theatre of operations, then, the Italians
prevented us from playing our best card, the emancipation of the French
subjects and the raising of the standard of revolt in the countries oppressed
by the British. Such a policy would have aroused the enthusiasm of the whole of
Islam. It is a characteristic of the Moslem world, from the shores of the Atlantic to those of the Pacific, that what affects one,
for good or for evil, affects all.
On the moral side, the effects of our policy were
doubly disastrous. On the one hand we had wounded, with no advantage to
ourselves, the self esteem of the French. On the other hand this, of itself,
compelled us to maintain the domination exercised by the French over their
empire, for fear that the contagion might spread to Italian North Africa and
that the latter might then also claim its independence. And since all these
territories are now occupied by the Anglo-Americans, I am more than justified
in saying that this policy of ours was a disaster. Further, this futile policy
has allowed these hypocrites, the British, to pose, if you please, as
liberators in Syria,
in Cyrenaica and in Tripolitania!
From the purely military point of view things have not
been much better! Italy's
entry into the war at once gave our enemies their first victories, a fact which
enabled Churchill to revive the courage of his countrymen and which gave hope to
all the Anglophiles all the world over. Even while they proved themselves
incapable of maintaining their positions in Abyssinia and Cyrenaica, the
Italians had the nerve to throw themselves, without seeking our advice and
without even giving us previous warning of their intentions, into a pointless
campaign in Greece. The shameful defeats which they suffered caused certain of
the Balkan States to regard us with scorn and contempt. Here, and nowhere else,
are to be found the causes of Yugoslavia's
stiffening attitude and her volte face in
the spring of Ig4I. This compelled us, contrary to all our plans, to intervene
in the Balkans, and that in its turn led to a catastrophic delay in the
launching of our attack on Russia.
We were compelled to expend some of our best divisions there. And as a net
result we were then forced to occupy vast territories in which, but for this
stupid show, the presence of any of our troops would have been quite
unnecessary. The Balkan States would have been only too pleased, had they been
so allowed, to preserve an attitude of benevolent neutrality towards us. As for
our paratroopers I would have preferred to launch them against Gibraltar than against Corinth or Crete!
Ah! if only the Italians had remained aloof from this
war! If only they had continued in their state of non-belligerence! In view of
the friendship and the common interests that bind us, of what inestimable value
to us such an attitude would have been! The Allies themselves would have been
delighted, for, although they never held any very high opinion of the martial
qualities of Italy,
even they never dreamed that she would turn out to be as feeble as she was.
They would have considered themselves lucky to see remain neutral such power as
they attributed to the Italians. Even so, they could not have afforded to take
chances, and they would have been compelled to immobilize considerable forces
to meet the danger of an intervention, which was always menacing and which was
always possible, if not probable. From our point of view this means that there
would have been a considerable number of British troops, immobile and acquiring
neither the experience of battle nor the fillip derived from victory - in
short, a sort of `phoney war', and the longer it continued, the greater would
be the advantage that we gained from it.
A war that is prolonged is of benefit to a belligerent
in that it gives him the opportunities to learn to wage war. I had hoped to
conduct this war without giving the enemy the chance of learning anything new in
the art of battle. In Poland
and Scandinavia, in Holland, Belgium
and France
I succeeded. Our victories were swift, were achieved with a minimum of
casualties on both sides, but were yet sufficiently clear-cut and decisive to
lead to the complete defeat of the enemy.
If the war had remained a war conducted by Germany, and
not by the Axis, we should have been in a position to attack Russia by 15th May 1941. Doubly
strengthened by the fact that our forces had known nothing but decisive and
irrefutable victories, we should have been able to conclude the campaign before
winter came. How differently everything has turned out!
Out of gratitude (for I shall never forget the
attitude adopted by the Duce at the time of the Anschluss) I have always
abstained from criticizing or passing judgment on Italy. I have on the contrary
always been at great pains to treat her as an equal. Unfortunately, the laws of
nature have shown that it is a mistake to treat as equals those who are not
your equals. The Duce himself is my equal. He may perhaps even be my superior
from the point of view of his ambitions for his people. But it is facts and not
ambitions that count.
We Germans do well to remember that in circumstances
such as these it is better for us to play a lone hand. We have everything to
lose and nothing to gain by binding ourselves closely with more feeble elements
and by choosing into the bargain partners who have given all too frequent proof
of their fickleness. I have often said that wherever you find Italy, there
you will find victory. What I should have said is - wherever you find victory,
there, you may be sure, you will find Italy!
Neither my personal affection for the Duce nor my
instinctive feelings of friendship for the Italian people have changed. But I
do blame myself for not having listened to the voice of reason, which bade me
to be ruthless in my friendship for Italy. And I could have done so,
both to the personal advantage of the Duce himself and to the advantage of his
people. I realize, of course, that such an attitude on my part would have
offended him and that he would never have forgiven me. But as a result of my
forbearance things have happened which should not have happened and which may
well prove fatal. Life does not forgive weakness.
11
A cast-iron excuse for Roosevelt
- Nothing could have prevented the entry of the U.S.A. into the war - The Yellow
Peril obsession - Solidarity with the Japanese
18th
February 1945
Japan's entry into the war caused us no misgivings,
even though it was obvious that the Japanese had made a present of a cast-iron
pretext to Roosevelt for bringing in the United States
against us. But Roosevelt, urged on by Jewry,
was already quite resolved to go to war and annihilate National Socialism, and
he had no need of any pretexts. Such pretexts as were required to overcome the
resistance of the isolationists he was quite capable of fabricating for
himself. One more little swindle meant nothing to him.
The magnitude of the Pearl Harbour
disaster was, I am sure, balm to his soul. It was exactly what he wanted in
order to be able to drag his countrymen into a total war and to annihilate the
last remnants of opposition in his own country. He had done all in his power to
provoke the Japanese. It was only a repetition, on a vaster scale, of the
tactics employed with such success by Wilson
at the time of the first war: the torpedoing of the Lusitania, provoked with diabolical skill, prepared
the Americans psychologically for the entry of their country into the war
against Germany.
Since the intervention of the United
States could not be prevented in 19I7, it is
obvious that their intervention now, twenty-five years later, was both a
logical premise and unavoidable.
It was only in 1915 that World Jewry decided to place
the whole of its resources at the disposal of the Allies. But in our case,
Jewry decided as early as 1933, at the very birth of the Third Reich, tacitly
to declare war on us. Furthermore the influence wielded by the Jews in the United States
has consistently and steadily increased during the last quarter of a century.
And since the entry of the United
States into the war was quite inevitable, it
was a slice of great good fortune for us to have at our side an ally of such
great worth as Japan.
But it was also a slice of great good fortune for the Jews. It gave them the
chance they had so long been seeking to implicate the United States
directly in the conflict, and it was a master stroke on their part to have
succeeded in dragging the Americans unanimously and enthusiastically into their
war. The Americans, mindful of their disillusionment in I9I9, were by no means
anxious once again to intervene in a European war. On the other hand they were
more obsessed than ever with the idea of the Yellow Peril. Trying to teach the
Jews a trick or two is like carrying coals to Newcastle, and you can be quite sure that all
their plans are conceived with Machiavellian astuteness. I myself am quite
convinced that in the case we are discussing they took a very long view which
envisaged the overthrow by a white Power of the Empire of the Rising Sun, which
had risen to the status of a world Power and which had always sternly resisted
contamination by the race of Jewry.
For us, Japan will always remain an ally
and a friend. This war will teach us to appreciate and respect her more than
ever. It will encourage us to draw more tightly the bonds which unite our two
countries. It is of course regrettable that the Japanese did not enter the war
against Russia
and at the same time as ourselves. Had they done so, Stalin's armies would not
now be besieging Breslau or squatting in Budapest. We should have
liquidated Bolshevism by the time winter came, and Roosevelt
would have hesitated to take on adversaries as powerful as our two selves. In
the same way I am sorry that Japan
did not capture Singapore
as early as 1940, immediately after the defeat of France. The United States
was then on the eve of a presidential election and would have found it
impossible to intervene. That, then, was one of the turning points of the war.
In spite of everything, we and the Japanese will
remain staunchly side by side. We will conquer or die together. Should we be
the first to succumb, I can't see the Russians continuing to maintain the myth
of `Asiatic solidarity' for the sake of Japan!
12
We should have occupied Gibraltar in
1940 - Congenital weakness of the Latin countries - The British duped by the
French-Misunderstandings with the Duce - The disastrous campaign in Greece
20th
February 1945
Taking advantage of the enthusiasm we had aroused in Spain and the
shock to which we had subjected Britain,
we ought to have attacked Gibraltar in the
summer of 1940, immediately after the defeat of France.
At that time, however, the awkward thing was that it
would have been difficult to prevent Spain entering into the war on our
side - and particularly so as we had failed, a few weeks previously, from
preventing Italy
from flying to the rescue of our victory.
These Latin countries bring us no luck. Their overweening
conceit is in direct proportion to their weakness, and that always confuses the
issue. We failed entirely to curb the Italians' desire to shine on the field of
battle, even though we had shown ourselves willing to confer upon them an
honours degree for heroism, to bestow upon them all the fruits of military
glory and all the advantages accruing from a war that has been won-provided
always that they took no part in it at all.
The British, of course, were duped even more
completely by their Latin ally than we were. Chamberlain, obviously, would
never have declared war, had he realized the full extent of French
demoralization and inadequacy. For the British undoubtedly expected France to bear
the whole brunt of the land campaign on the Continent. For Chamberlain nothing
would have been easier than to shed a few crocodile's tears for Poland and then
to have left us to carve the country up at our leisure.
To material weakness the Latin countries add a quite
fantastic pretentiousness. Friendly Italy or hostile France - it
makes no odds. The weakness of both of them will have been equally fatal to us.
The only disagreements that have ever occurred between
the Duce and myself arose from the precautions which from time to time I had
felt constrained to take. In spite of the complete confidence I had in him
personally, I felt compelled to keep him in ignorance of my intentions in any
case where indiscretion might have prejudiced our interests. Just as I had
complete confidence in Mussolini, he had complete confidence in Ciano - and he,
of course, had no secrets from the pretty ladies who fluttered like butterflies
around him. That we know to our cost, and as the enemy were anxious for
information regardless of costs, they learnt a goodly number of secrets through
this channel. I had good reasons, therefore, for not telling the Duce
everything. I am only sorry that he did not appreciate the fact, that he
resented my attitude and paid me back in my own coin.
There's no doubt about it - we have no luck with the
Latin races! While I was occupied, first in Montoire, buttoning up a futile
policy of collaboration with France, and then in Hendaye, where I had to submit
to receiving fulsome honours at the hands of a false friend, a third Latin -
and one, this time, who really was a friend - took advantage of my
preoccupation to set in motion his disastrous campaign against Greece.
13
Third Reich's need of peace to consolidate - Abstract man and the
Utopian doctrines - National Socialism a realistic doctrine, applicable only to
Germany - Had war occurred in 1938, it would have been a local war - What would
have happened - a double coup for the West
21st
February 1945
We had need of peace in order to cary out our programme. I always desired to
maintain peace. We have been jockeyed into war at the desire of our enemies. In
practice, the threat of war has existed ever since January 1933, from the time
that I came to power.
On the one hand, there are the Jews and all those who
march in step with them. On the other, there are those who adopt a realistic
attitude towards world affairs. And throughout history we have had these two
families of wholly irreconcilable outlook in the world.
On the one hand, there are those who strive for the
happiness of mankind in the abstract and who pursue the chimera of a formula
applicable all the world over. On the other, there are the realists. National
Socialism is interested only in the happiness of the German race and strives
only to secure the wellbeing of the German man.
The universalists, the idealists, the Utopians all aim
too high. They give promises of an unattainable paradise, and by doing so they
deceive mankind. Whatever label they wear, whether they call themselves
Christians, communists, humanitarians, whether they are merely sincere but
stupid or wire-pullers and cynics, they are all makers of slaves. I myself have
always kept my eye fixed on a paradise which, in the nature of things, lies
well within our reach. I mean an improvement in the lot of the German people.
I have restricted myself to making promises that I
knew I could keep and that I had every intention of keeping. Hence the
universal hatred which I have aroused. By refusing to make impossible promises,
as do our enemies, I was not playing the game. I was holding myself aloof from
the syndicate of the world's leaders, whose aim, un-avowed but tacitly
accepted, is the exploitation of human credulity.
The National Socialist doctrine, as I have always
proclaimed, is not for export. It was conceived for the German people. All the
objectives at which it aims are, of necessity, limited - but attainable. It
follows, then, that I can put as little credence in the idea of universal peace
as in that of universal war.
It was on the eve of Munich that I realized beyond doubt that the
enemies of the Third Reich were determined to have our hide at all costs and
that there was no possibility of coming to terms with them. When that arch
capitalist bourgeois, Chamberlain, with his deceptive umbrella in his hand, put
himself to the trouble of going all the way to the Berghof to discuss matters
with that upstart, Hitler, he knew very well that he really intended to wage
ruthless war against us. He was quite prepared to tell me anything which he
thought might serve to lull my suspicions. His one and only object in
undertaking this trip was to gain time. What we ought then to have done was to
have struck at once. We ought to have gone to war in 1938. It was the last
chance we had of localizing the war.
But they gave way all along the line and, like the
poltroons that they are, ceded to all our demands. Under such conditions it was
very difficult to seize the initiative and commence hostilities. At Munich we
lost a unique opportunity of easily and swiftly winning a war that was in any
case inevitable.
Although we were ourselves not fully prepared, we were
nevertheless better prepared than the enemy. September 1938 would have been the
most favourable date. And what a chance we had to limit the conflict.
We ought then and there to have settled our disputes
by force of arms and disregarded the inclination of our opponents to meet all
our demands. When we solved the Sudeten question by force we liquidated
Czechoslovakia at the same time-and left all the blame squarely on Benes'
shoulders. The Munich
solution could not have been anything but provisional, for, obviously, we could
not tolerate in the heart of Germany
an abscess, small though it was, like an independent Czech State.
We lanced the abscess in March 1939, but in circumstances that were psychologically
less favourable than those which would have obtained, had we settled the issue
by force in 1938. For in March 1939, for the first time, we put ourselves in
the wrong in the eyes of world opinion. No longer were we restricting ourselves
to reuniting Germans to the Reich, but were establishing a protectorate over a
non-German population.
A war waged in 1938 would have been a swift war - for
the emancipation of the Sudeten Germans, the Slovaks, the Hungarians and even
of those Poles who were under Czech domination. Great Britain and France taken by
surprise and discountenanced by the course of events would have remained
passive - particularly in view of the fact that world opinion would have been
on our side. Finally, Poland,
the main prop of French policy in eastern Europe, would have been at our side.
If Great Britain
and France
had made war on us in these circumstances they would have lost face. In actual
fact, I'm quite sure they would not have gone to war; but they would have lost
face all the same. Once our arms had spoken, we could have left till later the
settlement of the remaining territorial problems in eastern Europe and the
Balkans without fear of provoking the intervention of the two Powers, already
discredited in the eyes of their protégés. As far as we ourselves were
concerned, we should thus have gained the time required to enable us to
consolidate our position, and we would have postponed the world war for several
years to come. In fact, in these circumstances I doubt very much whether a
second world war would, indeed, have been inevitable.
It is by no means unreasonable to presume that in the
breasts of the well-founded nations degeneration and love of comfort could well
have proved stronger than the congenital hatred they bore us - particularly
when it is remembered that they must have realized that all our aspirations
were, in reality, orientated eastwards. Our adversaries might even have deluded
themselves with the hope that we might perhaps exhaust ourselves in the pursuit
of these eastern aspirations of ours. In any event, it would, for them, have
been a case of heads I win, tails you lose, since it would have ensured for
them maintenance of peace in the west, and at the same time would have allowed
them to take advantage of the resultant weakening of Russia, whose growing
power had been a source of preoccupation for them, though to a lesser degree
than had been our own resurgence.
14
The tragedy of war with America
- Contribution by Germans to America's
greatness - The failure of the New Deal and the war -Possibility of peaceful
co-existence between Germany
and U.S.A - The Americans will become anti-Jew - Roosevelt,
a false idol -No colonial ventures, but a grand Continental policy
24th
February 1945
This war against America is a tragedy. It is
illogical and devoid of any foundation of reality.
It is one of those queer twists of history that just
as I was assuming power in Germany,
Roosevelt, the elect of the Jews, was taking command in the United States.
Without the Jews and without this lackey of theirs, things could have been
quite different. For from every point of view Germany and the United States
should have been able, if not to understand each other and sympathize with each
other, then at least to support each other without undue strain on either of
them. Germany,
remember, has made a massive contribution to the peopling of America. It is
we Germans who have made by far the greatest contribution of nordic blood to
the United States.
And it is also a fact that Steuben played a part which decided the issue in the
War of Independence.
The last great economic crisis struck Germany and the
United States
at more or less the same time and with the same force. Both countries rode the
storm in much the same way. The operation, though extremely difficult, was
crowned with success on our side. In America, where, after all, it
presented no difficulty at all, the operation achieved only a very mediocre
success under the guidance of Roosevelt and his Jewish advisers. The failure of
the New Deal is responsible in no small measure for their war fever. The United
States as a matter of fact could survive and prosper in a state of economic
isolation; for us, that is a dream which we would love to see come true. They
have at their disposal a vast territory, ample to absorb the energies of all
their people. As far as Germany
is concerned, my hope is one day to ensure for her complete economic
independence inside a territory of a size compatible with her population. A
great people has need of broad acres.
Germany expects nothing from the United States,
and the latter have nothing to fear from Germany. Everything combines to
ensure the possibility of peaceful co-existence, each in his own country and
all in perfect harmony. Unfortunately, the whole business is ruined by the fact
that world Jewry has chosen just that country in which to set up its most
powerful bastion. That, and that alone, has altered the relations between us
and has poisoned everything.
I am prepared to wager that well within twenty-five
years the Americans themselves will have realized what a handicap has been
imposed upon them by this parasitic Jewry, clamped fast to their flesh and
nourishing itself on their life-blood. It is this Jewry that is dragging them
into adventures which, when all is said and done, are no concern of theirs and
in which the interests at stake are of no importance to them. What possible
reason can the non-Jewish Americans have for sharing the hatreds of the Jews
and following meekly in their footsteps? One thing is quite certain - within a
quarter of a century the Americans will either have become violently
anti-semitic or they will be devoured by Jewry.
If we should lose this war, it will mean that we have
been defeated by the Jews. Their victory will then be complete. But let me
hasten to add that it will only be very temporary. It will certainly not be
Europe which takes up the struggle again against them, but it certainly will be
the United States. The latter is a country still too young to have acquired the
maturity conferred by age and exaggeratedly lacking in political sense. For the
Americans, everything has so far been ridiculously easy. But experience and
difficulties will perhaps cause them to mature. Just think for a moment what
they were when their country was born - a group of individuals come from all
corners of the earth hastening forward in pursuit of fortune and finding at
their disposal a vast continent to appease their hunger and all theirs for the
taking. National conscience is a thing which develops very gradually,
especially in vast territories such as these. Nor must it be forgotten that
these individuals had been drawn from a variety of races and had not yet been
fused by the bonds of a national spirit. What an easy prey for the Jews!
The excesses in which the Jews indulged in our country
are as nothing in comparison with the excesses in which they have indulged and
in which they will continue to indulge in ever increasing measure on their new
hunting grounds. It will `not be very long before the Americans realize that
the Roosevelt whom they have adored is an idol with feet of clay and that this
Jew-ridden man is in reality a malefactor - both from the point of view of the
United States and of humanity as a whole. He has dragged them along a path on
which they had no business to be, and in particular he has forced them to take
an active part in a conflict that does not concern them at all. Had they
possessed even a minimum of political instinct they would have remained in
their splendid isolation, content in this conflict to play the role of arbiter.
Had they been a little more mature and a little more experienced, they would
doubtless have realized that their best course in their own major interests
would have been to have entrenched themselves firmly with their faces towards a
shattered Europe and in an attitude of vigilant neutrality. By intervening they
have once again played into the hands of their Jewish exploiters; and the
latter are worldly wise and know exactly what they are doing - but, of course,
from their own particular Jewish point of view.
Had Fate so willed that the President of the United States
during this critical period were someone other than Roosevelt,
he might well have been a man capable of adapting the American economy to the
needs of the twentieth century and of becoming the greatest President since Lincoln. The 1930 crisis
was brought on by growing pains - but on a world-wide scale. Economic
liberalism showed that it was nothing more than an out-dated catch-phrase. Once
the signification and the potentialities of the crisis had been appreciated,
all that was required was the discovery of appropriate remedies. That is the
task on which a great President would have concentrated, and by so doing he
would have placed his country in an unassailable place in the world. Naturally
a wise President should have fostered among his countrymen an interest in
international affairs and should have encouraged them to turn their eyes to the
great world at large; but to have flung them into the middle of a dog fight, as
this criminal, Roosevelt, has done, was sheer lunacy. He, of course, has quite
cynically taken advantage of their ignorance, their naïveté and their
credulity. He has made them see the world through the eye of Jewry, and he has
set them on a path which will lead them to utter disaster, if they do not pull
themselves together in time.
American affairs are no business of ours, and I should
be completely indifferent to what happens to them, but for the fact that their
attitude has direct repercussions on our destiny and on that of Europe.
The fact that neither we nor they have any colonial
policy is yet another characteristic which should unite us. The Germans have
never really felt the imperialist urge.
I regard the efforts made at the end of the nineteenth
century as a fortuitous accident in our history. Our defeat in I9I8 had at
least the fortunate consequences that it stopped us from pursuing the course
into which the Germans had foolishly allowed themselves to be led, influenced
by the example of the French and the British and jealous of ä success which they
had not the wit to realize was purely transitory.
It is to the credit of the Third Reich that we did not
look back with any nostalgia to a past that we have discarded. We have on the
contrary turned our eyes resolutely and bravely towards the future, towards the
creation of great homogeneous entities and a great Continental policy. It is,
incidentally, a policy on all fours with the traditional American policy of not
meddling in the affairs of other continents and forbidding others to meddle in
the affairs of the New World.
15
The Germans always, inevitably, in a hurry - Time fights on Russia's side -
A people with a tragic past - Not the work of one man, or even of a generation
- Germans have never ceased to fight for their existence
25th
February 1945
It is a fact that we always bungle everything through
being forced to act in a hurry. With us, to act swiftly is always to act with
precipitation. To acquire the gift of patience, we should have both time and
space, and at the moment we have neither. The Russians are lucky in possessing
both, quite apart from that inclination towards placidity which is a
characteristic trait of the Slav temperament.
Furthermore, thanks to the Marxist religion, they have
everything required to make them patient. They have been promised happiness on
earth (a feature which distinguishes Marxism from the Christian religion) but
in the future. The Jew, Mardochée Marx, like the good Jew that he was, was
awaiting the coming of the Messiah. He has placed the Messiah conception in a
setting of historic materialism by asserting that terrestial happiness is a
factor in an almost endless process of evolution. 'Happiness is within your
reach,' he says, 'that I promise you. But you must let evolution take its
course and not try to hurry matters.' Mankind always falls for a specious trick
of that sort. . . . Lenin did not have the time, but Stalin will carry on the
good work, and so on and so on . . . Marxism is a very powerful force. But how
shall we assess Christianity, that other child of Judaism, which will not
commit itself further than to promise the faithful happiness in another world?
Believe me, it is incomparably stronger!
I myself am fated to being compelled to try and
accomplish everything in the short space of a human lifetime. To help me I have
but a realistic idealism, based on tangible facts, from which flows promises
that can certainly be fulfilled, but which forbids me to promise the moon.
Where others have all eternity at their disposal, I have but a few short,
miserable years. Those others know that they will be succeeded by yet others
who will carry on where they left off, ploughing with precision exactly the
same furrow with exactly the same plough. I have now reached the stage where I
wonder whether among my immediate successors there will be found a man
predestined to raise and carry on the torch, when it has slipped from my hand.
It has also been my fate to be the servant of a people with so tragic a past, a
people so unstable, so versatile as the German people, and a people who go,
according to circumstances, from one extreme to the other. From my own point of
view, the ideal thing would have been, firstly to ensure the future existence
of the German people, then to form a youth imbued deeply with the national
socialist doctrine - and then to have left it to the generations of the future
to wage the inevitable war, unless, of course, our enemies recoiled when they
found themselves faced with the newly acquired might of the German people. In
this way, Germany
would have been well equipped both materially and morally. She would have at
her disposal an administration, a foreign policy and an army all moulded from
infancy in the principles of National Socialism. The task I have undertaken of
raising the German people to the place in the world that is their due is
unfortunately not a task that can be accomplished by a single man or in a
single generation. But I have at least opened their eyes to their inherent
greatness and I have inspired them to exaltation at the thought of the union of
Germans in one great indestructible Reich. I have sown the good seed. I have
made the German people realize the significance of the struggle they are waging
for their very existence.
One day the harvest will come, and nothing on earth
will be able to prevent it from coming. The German people is a young and strong
people, a people with its future before it.
16
Churchill's lack of appreciation - The irreparable could have been
avoided - Essentiality of forestalling Russian attack - Italy prevents the
opening of the campaign in good time - Catastrophic consequences of the delay -
My illusion of a possible entente with
Stalin
26th
February 1945
In actual fact, my decision to settle the issue with Russia by force
of arms was taken as soon as I became convinced that Britain was determined to remain
stubborn. Churchill was quite unable to appreciate the sporting spirit of which
I had given proof by refraining from creating an irreparable breach between the
British and ourselves. We did, indeed, refrain from annihilating them at Dunkirk. We ought to have
been able to make them realize that the acceptance by them of the German
hegemony established in Europe, a state of
affairs to the implementation o which they had always been opposed, but which I
had implemented without any trouble, would bring them inestimable advantages.
Even by the end of July, one month, that is, after the
defeat of France,
I realized that peace was once again eluding our grasp. A few weeks later I
knew that we should not succeed in invading Britain before the advent of the
autumnal gales because we had not succeeded in acquiring complete command of
the air. In other words, I realized that we should never succeed in invading Britain.
The attitude of the Russians during the summer of
1940, the fact that they had absorbed the Baltic States and Bessarabia while we
ourselves were busy in the west left me with no illusions regarding their
intentions. And even if I had retained any, Molotov's visit in November would
have been sufficient to dissipate them. The proposals which Stalin submitted to
me after the return of his Minister did not deceive me. Stalin, that
incomparable and imperturbable blackmailer, was trying to gain time in order to
consolidate his advanced bases in Finland and the Balkans. He was
trying to play cat and mouse with us.
The tragedy, from my point of view, was the fact that
I could not attack before 15th May, and if I were to succeed in my first
initial onslaught, it was essential that I should not attack later than that
date. Stalin, however, could have launched his attack much earlier. Throughout
the winter of 1940, and even more so in the spring of 1941, I was haunted by
the obsession that the Russians might take the offensive. In the event, the
Italian defeats in Albania
and in Cyrenaica had roused a minor storm of
revolt in the Balkans. Indirectly, they also struck a blow at the belief in our
invincibility, that was held by friend and foe alike.
This alone was the cause of Yugoslavia's volte face, an event
that compelled us to drag the Balkans into the war; and that was something
which at all costs I had desired to avoid. For once we had become involved in
that direction we might well have been tempted to go still further ahead. I
need hardly say that in the spring of I94I we could rapidly have liberated the
Near East with only a small fraction of the forces which we were about to
employ against Russia. But to have removed the necessary forces from their
place in our order of battle at that juncture would have been to incur the
indirect danger of giving Russia
a signal to attack. They would have done so in the summer, or at the latest in
the autumn, and under conditions so disastrous from our point of view, that we
could never have hoped to win the day.
Where the Jew-ridden democracies are concerned, the
Russians have the patience of an elephant. They know with absolute certainty
that sooner or later and without recourse to war, they will succeed in
establishing dominion over them, thanks to the internal dissensions that rend
them, the succession of economic crises from which they seem unable to escape
and the powerful lure of Marxism to which they are particularly vulnerable. But
they also know that in the case of the Third Reich the situation is very
different. They know that in every field of endeavour, and more so in peace
than in war, we shall everywhere outclass them.
The explanation of this patience which the Russians
exhibit is to be found in their philosophy, which allows them to avoid taking
risks and to wait - a year, a generation, a century, if necessary - until the
time is ripe for the implementation of their plans. Time means nothing to them.
Marxism, certainly, has promised them a paradise on earth - but certainly not
today, not even tomorrow, but some time in the dim, indefinite future.
Notwithstanding this patience which is the backbone of
their power, the Russians could not stand idly aside and watch the destruction
of Great Britain, for in that case, with the United States and Japan cancelling
each other out, as it were, the Russians would find themselves face to face
with us - and alone. And that would mean without any doubt that, at a time and
a place of our choice, the long-outstanding issue between us would be settled
in our favour.
If I felt compelled to decide to settle my accounts
with Bolshevism by force of arms, and, indeed, arrived at my decision on the
very anniversary of the signing of the Moscow
pact; I have every right to believe that Stalin had come to the same decision
before even he signed the pact.
For a whole year I adhered to the hope that an entente, at least honestly sincere if not
unreservedly friendly, could be established between the Third Reich and
Stalin's Russia.
I imagined that after fifteen years of power Stalin, the realist, would have
rid himself of the nebulous Marxist ideology and that he was preserving it
merely as a poison reserved exclusively for external use. The brutal manner in
which he decapitated the Jewish intelligensia, who had rendered him such signal
service in the destruction Tsarist Russia, encouraged me in that belief. I
presumed that he did not wish to give these same Jew intellectuals the chance
of bringing about the downfall of the totalitarian empire which he had built -
that Stalinist empire which, in all its essentials, is only the spiritual
succesor to the empire of Peter the Great.
In a spirit of implacable realism on both sides we cot
have created a situation in which a durable entente
would have been possible - by defining precisely the zones of influence
to be attributed to each party, by rigorously restricting our collaboration to
the field of economics and in such a manner that both parties would have
derived benefits therefrom. An entente, in
short, watched over 1 an eagle eye and with a finger on the trigger!
17
Europe's last chance - Napoleon and winning the peace -Napoleon's agony
and mine - Britain
always bars our way - Those who thrive on discord in Europe
26th
February 1945
I have been Europe's
last hope. She proved incapable of refashioning herself by means of voluntary
reform. She showed herself impervious to charm and persuasion. To take her I
had to use violence.
Europe can be built only on a foundation of ruins. Not
material ruins, but on ruins of vested interests and economic coalitions, of
mental rigidity and perverse prejudice, of outmoded idiosyncrasy and narrow
mindedness. Europe must be fashioned in the
common interest of all and without regard for individuals. Napoleon understood
that perfectly.
I, perhaps better than anyone else, can well imagine
the torments suffered by Napoleon, longing, as he was, for the triumph of peace
and yet compelled to continue waging war, without ceasing and without seeing
any prospect of ceasing - and still persisting in the hope eternal of at last
achieving peace. Since the summer 1940 I have myself been suffering the same
torments. At always it has been this Britain who barred Europe's way to prosperity. But now she is aged and
enfeebled, though not less vicious and wicked. Finally, she is being supported
in this negative and unnatural attitude by the United States, themselves
inspired and urged on by the who forces of international Jewry, which has
flourished an hopes long to continue to flourish as the result of our
dissentions.
18
A defeat which must inevitably be complete - The Reich hacked to pieces
by the conquerors - A Germany in transition - The resurrection of eternal
Germany - Lines of conduct for the faithful - The premier people on the
Continent - Britain and Italy, if only. . . . A France degenerate and implacably
hostile - Waiting for the rise of the African and Asiatic peoples - The U.S.A.
and Russia
face to face - A Russia rid of Marxism - The frailty of the American colossus -
The rights of famished peoples - The chances of survival for a courageous
people
2nd April
1945
If we are destined to be beaten in this war, our
defeat will be utter and complete. Our enemies have proclaimed their objectives
in a manner which leaves us no illusions as to their intentions. Jews, Russian
Bolshevists and the pack of jackals that follows, yelping at their heels - we
know that none of them will lay aside their arms until they have destroyed and
annihilated national socialist Germany and reduced it to a heap of rubble. In a
ghastly conflict like this, in a war in which two so completely irreconcilable
ideologies confront one another, the issue can inevitably only be settled by
the total destruction of one side or the other. It is a fight which must be
waged, by both sides until they are utterly exhausted; and for our part, w know
that we shall fight on until victory is achieved o until our last drop of blood
has been shed.
It is a cruel thought. It fills me with horror to
think o our Reich hacked to pieces by the victors, our people; exposed to the
savage excesses of the Bolsheviks and the American gangsters. Even this
prospect, however, doe; not shake my invincible faith in the future of the
German people. The more we suffer, the more glorious will be the resurrection
of eternal Germany!
That characteristic of the German mind, to plunge into lethargy when it seem;
certain that the very existence of the nation is at stake will once more stand
us in good stead. But as far as I personally am concerned I could not bear to
live in Germany
during the transition period that would follow the defeat of the Third Reich.
The ignominies and the treachery we experienced in igI8 will be as nothing in
comparison with what we may now expect. It is beyond comprehension that, after
twelve years of National Socialism, such a thing could happen. My imagination
boggles at the idea of a Germany,
henceforth deprived of her elite which
led her to the very pinnacles of heroism, wallowing for years and years in the
mire.
What advice can we give, then, what rules of conduct
can we recommend to those who survive, with their souls untarnished and their
hearts unshaken? Battered, left alone to work out its own salvation, existing
solely as a custodian during the grim darkness of the night, the German people
must strive its very utmost spontaneously to respect those racial laws which we
laid down for it. In a world which is becoming more and more perverted through
the Jewish virus, a people which has remained immune to the virus must in the
long run emerge supreme. From this point of view, National Socialism can justly
claim the eternal gratitude of the people for having eliminated the Jew from Germany and Central Europe.
Post-war Germany's second preoccupation
should be to preserve indissoluble the union of all the German races. It is
only when we are united that our qualities expand to their full stature; only
when we cease to be Prussians, Bavarians, Austrians, Rhinelanders and become
just Germans. The Prussians were the first to gather the Germans into one Reich
under Bismarck,
and by so doing gave the German people their opportunity to show that they were
the premier people in Europe. I myself by
uniting them all in the Third Reich, set them on the path to become the
architects of a new Europe. Whatever the
future holds, the German peoples must remember that it is essential that they
should cast out all elements that make for discord among them and should indefatigably
pursue every measure which contributes to the maintenance of their unity.
As far as foreign countries are concerned, it is not
possible to lay down rigid rules, for the situation is in a constant state of
change. Twenty years ago, I wrote that there were only two possible allies in Europe for Germany-Britain and Italy. The course of events during
this period has not been such as to permit the implementation of a policy which
would have been the logical sequence to my statement. The British, admittedly
still wielded imperial power, but they no longer possessed the moral qualities
requisite for the preservation of their empire. They seemed to dominate the
world; in reality they were themselves dominated by the Jews. Italy had tried
to emulate ancient Rome.
She had all the Roman ambitions, but she lacked the two essential adjuncts of a
determined spirit and material power. The only trump card she had was the
leadership of a true Roman. What a tragedy for that man! And what a tragedy for
that country! For a people, as for an individual, it is tragic to have
ambitions and to lack both the means essential to their fulfilment and any hope
of acquiring those means.
These remains France. Twenty years ago I wrote
what I thought of France.
She was and is the mortal enemy of the German people. Her steady degeneration
and her frequent crises de nerfs have
sometimes led us to minimize the importance of her actions. Should she continue
to become more feeble, as seems probable; that will be no reason for us to become
less distrustful of her. The military might of France is now nothing but a memory,
and purely from that point of view you may be quite sure that she will never
again cause us a moment's anxiety. Whatever may be the issue of it, this war
has at least put France in the category to which she belongs - that of a
fifth-class Power. Even so, thanks to her unlimited powers of corruption and
her inimitable skill in the art of blackmail, she can still be a source of
danger to us. Our watchwords therefore must be: Mistrust and vigilance. Let the
Germans take care never to allow themselves to be lulled by the voice of this
syren!
While, therefore, it is not possible to adhere to
rigid principles in dealing with foreign countries and one must always be
prepared to adapt one's policy to the changing conditions, it can nevertheless
be asserted with confidence that Germany will always recruit her staunchest
friends from among those peoples who are actively resistant to Jewish
contagion. I am sure that the Japanese, the Chinese and the peoples of Islam
will always be closer to us than, for example, France, in spite of the fact
that we are related by blood. It is a tragedy that France has consistently
degenerated in the course of centuries and that her upper classes have been
perverted by the Jews. France is now condemned to the pursuit of a Jewish
policy.
With the defeat of the Reich and pending the emergence
of the Asiatic, the African and, perhaps, the South American nationalisms,
there will remain in the world only two Great Powers capable of confronting
each other - the United States and Soviet Russia. The laws of both history and
geography will compel these two Powers to a trial of strength, either military
or in the fields of economics and ideology. These same laws make it inevitable
that both Powers should become enemies of Europe.
And it is equally certain that both these Powers will sooner or later find it
desirable to seek the support of the sole surviving great nation in Europe, the German people. I say with all the emphasis at
my command that the German must at all costs avoid playing the role of pawn in
either camp.
At this juncture it is difficult to say which, from
the ideological point of view, would prove to be the more injurious to us -
Jew-ridden Americanism or Bolshevism. It is possible that under the pressure of
events, the Russians will rid themselves completely of Jewish Marxism, only to
re-incarnate pan-slavism in its most fierce am ferocious form. As for the
Americans, if they do no swiftly succeed in casting off the yoke of New York
Jewry (which has the same intelligence as a monkey that saw through the branch
on which it is perching), well - it won't be long before they go under, before
even having reached the age of maturity. The fact that they combine the
possession of such vast material power with so vast lack of intelligence evokes
the image of some child stricken with elephantiasis. It may well be asked
whether this i not simply a case of a mushroom civilization, destined to vanish
as quickly as it sprang up.
If North America does not succeed in evolving a
doctrine less puerile than the one which at present serves as ; kind of moral vade mecum and which is based on lofty but
chimerical principles and so-called Christian science it is questionable whether
it will for long remain a pre dominantly white continent. It will soon become
apparent that this giant with the feet of clay has, after its spectacular rise,
just sufficient strength left to bring about its own downfall. And what a fine
chance this sudden collapse will offer to the yellow races! From the point of
view of both justice and history they will have exactly the same arguments (or
lack of arguments) to support their invasion of the American continent as had
the Europeans in the sixteenth century. Their vast and undernourished masses
will confer on them the sole right that history recognizes - the right of
starving people to assuage their hunger - provided always that their claim is
well backed by force!
And so, in this cruel world into which two great wars
have plunged us again, it is obvious that the only white peoples who have any
chance of survival and prosperity are those who know how to suffer and who
still retain the courage to fight, even when things are hopeless, to the death.
And the only peoples who will have the right to claim these qualities will be
those who have shown themselves capable of eradicating from their system the
deadly poison of Jewry.
Hitler
was frequently urged to suppress or to change the passage on France in the
later editions of his book, Mein Kampf, but
he consistently refused to do so - even after Munich. It is to this that he is alluding
here.