Things the US Media will never tell you: “Eight out of ten German soldiers who died (in WWII) were killed in the East.” “From June 1941 on, in no single month of the war did more Germans die in the west than in the east.” “The scale of fighting there (in the east) dwarfed anything in the west.” Why so much violence? Because Nazi Lebensraum required that the Soviet Union’s land be taken settler-colonial style, by either killing off or removing the inhabitants by force and taking their place because you mistakenly think you are a superior race (just like the US did to Native Americans and Zionists are doing in Israel). Hitler noticed the British “hunger” blockade in WWI had killed off 750,000 people and wished to emulate it. “His notion of Lebensraum harbored from the beginning murderous impulses.”
Hitler saw the US got its power through stealing tons of land by force to live and wanted in on the lucrative settler-colonialism racket. Seizing Russia, Hitler thought, offered the fewest risks because it was no threat to the British Empire. Thus, Hitler wrote, “If we speak of soil in Europe today, we can have in mind only Russia and her vassal states.” Taking Russia, would provide him with “the resources to lift Germany out of its economic misery.” Hitler was influenced by social Darwinism, and the brutal methods of British Imperialism, US settler-colonialism and Jim Crow laws, and the successful scramble for Africa by entitled white nations. Nations can get into some sick shit, once they start labelling other people inferior, backward, or uncivilized. “Life as a Darwinian struggle.” Nazi killing units were called Einsatzgruppen; top commanders were told by Hitler, “Have not pity. Brutal attitude. The strongest has the right.” “No one was going to be punished for being too ruthless.”
Poland: “On 9 September, Franz Halder confided to Major Helmuth Groscurth the chilling news that ‘it is the intention of the Fuhrer and Goering to destroy and exterminate the Polish people’.” “The spectacular military triumph in Poland left them with perhaps two million Jews under their control, a number that promised to overwhelm the already feeble strategy of emigration.” Despite the new land taken, “the Germans found themselves starved of food, coal, and oil.” Meanwhile, “for Britain, survival as a great power required continuing in the war.” By 1940, Britain “making peace on Hitler’s terms now meant recognition of German hegemony on the Continent and the likely end of Britain as a major power.”
Deciding to invade USSR: When Hitler choose invasion of the Soviet Union over invading Britain via crossing the English Channel he said, it was “not just a river crossing, but the crossing of a sea dominated by the enemy.” Intensifying US support for Britain made Hitler feel “if he was to realize his goal of Lebensraum in the east, he needed to do so quickly.” He felt that the Soviet Union alone had “the raw materials needed to sustain the war economy.” Hitler wrote in his diary, “With Russia smashed, Britain’s last hope would be shattered. Attack serves its purpose only if Russian state can be shattered to its roots with one blow. Resolute determination to eliminate Russia.” He said, all continental problems would have to be solved in 1941 “since the United States would be in a position to intervene from 1942 onwards.”
“The choice now was between destruction of the Soviet Union and Germany’s ruin.” Halder wrote, “Once England is finished, he would not be able to rouse the German people to a fight against Russia; consequently Russia would have to be disposed of first.” Operation Barbarossa was on. Hitler “simply expected the Soviet state to collapse” because he saw how fast France had collapsed. “From the beginning, the concept of annihilation constituted an integral part of Operation Barbarossa.” This was the largest military operation in history. The Red Army was larger though – it had five million soldiers.
Silly rabbit: So Hitler envisioned a Blitzkrieg/Cakewalk into Russia, yet he clearly didn’t have the vehicles and so “half of the units entered Russia the way Napoleon’s grand Army did, on foot with horse-drawn supply wagons.” “Only one quarter of the invading force consisted of motorized units.” So, instead of conjuring up fleets of black Mercedes trucks speeding with Colonel Klink towards the border, envision a scene from the black & white TV show Wagon Train, with wooden wheels lumbering through endless muddy ditches. A child can out-run that. Russian rail gauges didn’t match German ones, so rail transport was out. And so 2/3 to ¾ of each truck was filled with fuel, rations and ammunition. Since the vehicles varied so much in make and model, carrying spare parts for them all was a logistical nightmare. And they only brough fuel for 2 months of conflict. In Gilligan speak, that’s a “three-hour tour, a three-hour tour.” Yet, Germany knew in August 1940 that the Soviets had extensive armament factories past the Urals, so it wouldn’t make peace even if you took its biggest cities. The Wehrmacht would have to take the Urals as well. Germany knew that invasion would take out “normal harvests for two years.” This meant Germany would have to starve the local population, to use remaining food to feed invading Germans and Central Europe.
A German hunger policy stated, “tens of millions of people will undoubtedly starve to death if that which we require is taken out of the country.” “Goering dismissed their (Russian) starvation as essential for the German war effort.” Rosenberg wrote, “We certainly do not see that we have any duty to feed the Russian people.” Hitler insisted National Socialism would raise the German living standard, but only through taking out Russia. Originally Hitler thought only of removing Jews from Germany, but after victories he started seeing Jews removed from Europe. He planned on Jews being deported to inhospitable parts of Russia. Non-Germans were seen as “superfluous eaters.”
The Nazis projected their plans onto those they opposed; pretending all opponents were hate-filled, cruel and inhuman, made it easier for all to act that way toward all opponents. The Nazis however knew that “average Germans wanted an end to the war.” Hitler said, “Right or wrong we must triumph… once we have won, who will ask us about our methods?”
“By 1940, an astonishing 94 percent of German oil imports came from Rumania.” Germany relying on horse transport, put procurement of fodder and replacement animals at a premium. Hitler thought superior people had an obligation to simply take what was needed. “Living meant killing.” Hitler replaced class distinctions with racial distinctions. “Hitler had little interest in colonies” preferring to follow US settler-colonialism, and so he said, “Here in the east a similar process will repeat itself as in the conquest of America.” “Our Mississippi must be the Volga, not the Niger.” Envisioned were slave labor camps doing “enormous construction projects” and the deaths or relocation of “31 to 51 million people”. “So, genocide was implicit in Generalplan Ost.”
There was a problem with “execution tourism” as Wehrmacht “soldiers would often flock to scenes of executions and snap photographs.” I can just picture a German execution ad, “Trust your memories to Agfa film!” Babi Yar was a massacre of 33,000 by the Germans. Hitler was emulating Britain in his quest to create “Our India.” He said, “This is best done by shooting anyone who even looks sideways at us.” Goebbels saw that a Jew wrote in a new book that all Germans should be sterilized so then Goebbels told Germans if they lost, the plan was all Germans will be sterilized or killed. Once the Blitzkrieg failed, Hitler changed plans, opting to kill all Jews during the war, instead of after it. Some Nazi’s like Himmler were nauseated by the brutal killing and suggested gas vans. Even, “members of firing squads suffered from frequent nervous breakdowns.”
Russia: Had Hitler destroyed the Soviet Union, German estimates were 30 to 45 million dead Russians and some said to double that figure. If that happened, now we’d be talking about the Soviet Holocaust. But, the Soviets were fighting only on one front, and “almost four out of five German military deaths came at the hands of the Red Army.” And “Stalin far more effectively mobilized the Soviet populations for the war effort than did Hitler.” Soviet tanks were heavier and far superior to German tanks. Most Russian roads were unpaved, and even paved roads were “often ruined after a few days.” Bad roads meant poor fuel consumption. After 2,000,000 of the Red Army died, there was no sign of them slowing down. Time favored Russians because they were closer to supplies and resources. Back in Germany Goebbels noted food was scarce.
In 1939, Nazis started killing handicapped infants, and Hitler thought adult mental patients should be killed so hospital staff could then tend wounded soldiers. Nazi cruelly thinned out their 3.3 million alive Red Army prisoners to 1 million in 1941. Hunger was so bad, German’s didn’t have to guard the marching rear, just put a kitchen at the front and Red Army prisoners would follow. Thus, Red soldiers began to die en masse well before the Russian people did. Soon even the Russian people were so hungry that they were digging up dead horses to eat them. Goering said the Russians faced “the greatest mortality since the Thirty Year’s War.” From 1941 on, the Soviet Union was outproducing the Germans in weaponry. But to counter that, the Germans were still making more accordion beer drinking songs that no one wanted to listen to.
At this point Pearl Harbor happens and it becomes a World War. Nazis became a one-trick pony, focused only on “the Jew”. Now, “every Jew in Europe was to be killed.” Only one German soldier in five had winter clothing; apparently Hugo Boss wasn’t so Boss back then. German sentries for weeks were forced to a regime of one-hour sleep, then one hour of duty. As one Landser said, “You try coming out and dropping your trousers when it’s 40 below zero!” In a comedy of errors, German steam locomotives (unlike Russian ones) had their water pipes outside their boilers so when it got cold – oops, the lines froze and trains didn’t move. Germany knew it had to get its Lebensraum in the next year but then the tide turned against Germany at the end of 1942 with the Battle of Stalingrad. Now time was working against Hitler.
Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler were experts at projecting: Himmler said, “We had the moral right …the duty to our people, to destroy this people which wanted to destroy us.” Hitler said, “Why did the Jews start this war?” Goebbels said, “If we didn’t defend ourselves, the Jews would exterminate us.” Sounds a lot like the US projection rationale during its war on communism, and its Phoenix Program. Or today’s US military mantra; we fight them over there, so they can’t come over here. They wanted to keep killing everyone who looked at them sideways, but also now realized the war could not be won without foreign labor. Imagine not having to kill everyone – such restraint was needed. Back home Germans had to add horse meat to their diet. Imagine Wilbur eating Mr. Ed.
The Germans had the world’s largest artillery piece: an 800-millimeter gun named Dora. It required a modest “crew of two thousand, a sixty-car train, and six weeks to assemble.” Each shell weighed five tons and could travel 48 miles. Germans sent old people and children to “retirement villages” where “they would starve to death.” Himmler had envisioned an Empire that stretched to the Urals. Generalplan Ost (which was Himmler’s settler-colonial plan) envisioned all local Jews dead and 30-40 million Slavs dead or at least deported. But now Nazis saw they “could have racial purity or an effective war economy, but not both.” How about neither? The Soviets had shown that they were better at converting “their remaining resources into the weapons of war than did the Germans.” And the Allies together were then producing four to six times more armaments than Germany. Hitler after losing the Caucasus realizes his Ostkrieg will fail, and US intelligence sees the German failure is now irreversible. Once the US got involved, Germany no longer had a single front where to concentrate its resources. And, the Soviets now controlled the eastern battlefield.
Quality German Engineering: More German Panther and Tiger tanks died from mechanical failure and abandonment than from battle. Worker treatment by Nazis: The word from above was “pay no attention to the human cost.” That led to this: “Each morning, SS guards punched workers in the face; those who did not fall were considered fit for work.” One out of three workers would die at these work farms.
Why did Hitler keep fighting? Because unconditional surrender meant the end of him in power. He knew he couldn’t win but hoped against hope to stalemate. “Stalemate” was probably Eva Braun’s pet name for him. 75 to 85% of the Holocaust happened between spring 1942 and the early summer of 1943. Allied terror bombing of Germany only “brought the Volksgemeinschaft closer together.” Only in November 1943, did Hitler finally give precedence to the war in the west. Goebbels changed the Nazi propaganda story from Lebensraum for Aryan Civilization to “defense of European civilization against the onslaught of the Jewish-Bolshevik hordes.” After almost 900 days of fighting, the Red Army ends the Siege of Leningrad which alone had killed 1.6 to two million Russians. In May 1944 the Germans still had 2,243,000 soldiers left but the Soviets had six million.
Red soldiers when they entered Germany couldn’t understand why Germans would leave a life of such elegance to go invade Russia. It was hard for them to go back to Russia after seeing such finery and plentiful food in their occupier’s own country. In the end, 27.5 million Soviets died so that the Allies could win WWII and “the Soviet Union was left physically in ruins.” Soviet GDP fell by 34% between 1940 and 1942. In return for the massive Soviet contribution, Harry Truman starts a Cold War against all of them just to get elected and continue military Keynesianism. What an amazing book. As you can see, I learned a lot of cool stuff.