Seventy years ago today,
officers of the Wehrmacht attempted to seize the German government from the Nazis by
assassinating Hitler. They did not succeed, and the reprisals against them,
their families and anyone who might have been connected with them redefined the
concept of savagery.
There were 7000 arrests and
nearly 5000 executions, although of course (as with the Night of the Long
Knives, which had been carried out ten years earlier) there were a lot of
unrelated scores being settled in all the bloodletting.
Nonetheless, the attempt was an
extraordinary act of courage and honor, all the more remarkable when you consider that
every member of the Wehrmacht swore an oath of personal loyalty to Adolf Hitler—not
to the German government (or, as US armed forces do, to uphold the
Constitution). And officers, in particular, took things like oaths seriously. To
decide that there was a higher loyalty than that of their professional,
soldierly oath was huge.
Moreover, although the July
Conspiracy, as it’s come to be known, is most often referred to as an assassination
attempt, that was only part of the plan. Killing Hitler—or even killing him and
his top henchmen, Himmler and Goering—without replacing the Nazis with another
government would have done nothing more than set off a power struggle and
result in more lunatics running the asylum. Which would make no difference in
dealing with their external enemies.
No, Claus von Stauffenberg, Henning
von Tresckow, Friedrich Olbricht, Ludwig Beck and the rest wanted to find a way
to seize control of Germany to negotiate some kind of peace (or
at least an agreement) with the Western Allies, which would prevent the total
destruction of the country, and perhaps enable a continued fight against the
Soviet Union. They basically wanted to find a way to get around the Allies’
stated policy of accepting nothing less than unconditional surrender from
Germany.
It was much more ambitious
and complicated than a simple assassination—even one of a figure like Hitler, and I wonder whether there was any realistic possibility of achieving the ultimate objective (seizing military and political control). But perhaps what matters is not so much that they succeeded as that they tried. Someone—a small group of principled men and women—tried to turn their country away from the path of nihilism.
As I said, their failure had
serious consequences not only for them and their own loved ones, but for the Nazis’
prosecution of the war. It’s hard to imagine them prosecuting a more vicious
war than they had in the East, but it was as though any thought of restraint or
accountability had been blown up with the Wolf’s Lair in Rastenburg.
It took a long time for the
Germans to acknowledge that the Walküre conspirators were one of the good
things of 1933-45. For years they were considered the worst sort of traitors,
soldiers—officers—who broke their
sacred oaths and betrayed Germany.
It took a
generation for Germans people to accept some responsibility for the starting and
prosecution of the Second World War. Even with their nation in ruins and
evidence of atrocities clear in front of them, they were sorry not that they’d
started the war, but that it had had a bad outcome for them. They viewed
Stauffenberg and the others s having contributed to that bad outcome.
However, slowly they began
to acknowledge that maybe the July Conspirators upheld values higher than those
of mindless order-following and national arrogance, and that they were in fact exemplars
of the notion that not all Germans were active or even passive Nazis.
The Bendlerblock building—a
center of German military planning from the time of the Second Reich—was from
which the Walküre group had hoped to run the transition from the Nazi
government to their own. Instead, late on the 20th, forces loyal to
Hitler stormed the building and arrested the conspirators. Stauffenberg and a
couple others were taken out to the courtyard and executed in the early hours
of 21 July.
It is now the home of the German
Resistance Memorial Centre. And this is how it is represented in the courtyard:
I think that, considering
the kinds of militarized madness we’ve been seeing in our world just in the
past week, it’s good to remember that even in the worst situations, there are
some people who step up to the plate (however imperfectly) and proclaim, “Hey—let’s
try to stop this.”
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