Behind the Bastards - Part Three: Adolf Eichmann: Mr. Holocaust Himself
Episode Date: July 8, 2025In Part 3, the Reich has invaded Russia and Eichmann is on a fact finding mission that will determine the course of the Holocaust.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Welcome back to Behind the Bastards, a podcast about the very worst people in all of history.
We are talking about Adolf Eichmann this week and last week.
Last week we got through his childhood and his early rise through the SD, which is the SS, the security division, to become the, in his words,
Tsar of the Jews for Nazi Germany.
And today, with our guest, Joe Kasabian,
we're talking about what happens to Eichmann
as the war moves towards its final phase.
How you doing, Joe?
You excited to hear about this guy?
You think he's gonna finally break good
in this last two parts?
I gotta say, I'm not super optimistic that he's gonna have a redemption arc.
I dressed up for this episode because I was surprised last time.
So now I'm just wearing a shirt that says all pain.
Yeah.
Hahaha.
I'm treating this like people were treating like the second half of Andor where they were
hoping their favorite like monster Imperial characters were like, oh, this guy's going
to totally turn out good at the end, right?
Yeah, this is our moment like that for Eichmann.
Yeah, most Nazis are not in fact the one from the pianist.
No, no.
This is an iHeart Podcast.
So what happened to Chappaquiddick?
Well, it really depends on who you talk to.
There are many versions of what happened in 1969 when a young Ted Kennedy drove a car
into a pond.
And left a woman behind to drown.
Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death and how the Kennedy machine took control.
Every week we go behind the headlines and beyond the drama of America's royal family.
Listen to United States of Kennedy on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Maybe you've heard that Stonewall was a riot where queer people fought back against police,
or that it's the reason Pride is celebrated this time of year.
It was one of the most liberating things that I have ever done.
Legend says Marsha P. Johnson threw the very first brick.
Started banging on the door of the Stonewall like one, boom.
This week on Afterlives, we'll separate the truth from the myth in the life of Marcia P. Johnson.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
From iHeart Podcast, before social media, before cable news, there was Alan Berg.
He was the first and the original shock chuck.
That scratchy, irreverent kind of way,
talking to people and telling them that you're an idiot
and I'm gonna hang up on you.
This is Live Wire, the loud life
and shocking murder of Alan Berg.
And he pointed to the Denver phone book and said,
well, there are probably two million suspects.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Did it occur to you that he'd charmed you in any way?
Yes, it did. But he was a charming man.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story.
Because this ties together the Cold War with the new one.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Where we left off in part two, he had gone on a fact-finding mission to Eastern Europe
in the fairly early stages of Operation Barbarossa Were the first parts of what we now know as the actual killing stage of the Holocaust began which was a mix of you know
Gas vans showing up outside of various villages and Einsatzgruppen units just doing mass shootings
Well Eichmann's watching all that and he's taking notes and he's figuring out
How do you actually kill a lot of kill a shitload of people?
More people than would have died in a war a generation or two ago.
We've got to figure out how to get rid of, while we're fighting a war, how do we do that?
All of this is preparation for a big old meeting they're going to have called the Wannsee Conference
in early 1942.
That's where we are right now. that's what we're hurtling towards at
the moment. And the problem the Nazis are dealing with as the war in the East starts
to turn against them is they've got a logistical hurdle on their hands. They have captured
way more Jews than they know how to handle, and they have no real process for dealing
with them. If you think back to the numbers we were talking about in the first parts of this series,
they're dealing with a couple of hundred thousand people
at a time as they take over Austria,
as they take over Czechoslovakia,
and then more when they take over Poland.
But now that they've captured this huge chunk
of what had been the Soviet Union,
they got millions of people on their hands, right?
And these earlier decisions they had to make about what should we do, do we deport these
people, do we find a place for them, the decision quickly moves towards like all we can do is
annihilate them, right?
But we have a limit in our war material and a limit in how many soldiers we can have actually
kill people.
And that dimension, like how many people are willing to drive insane
right and drink themselves to death by turning them into executioners. That's a
major problem for the SS at this stage right. So many of the sources that you'll
find on Eichmann will point out that he never really wrote policy right he was
just an implementation guy and this is accurate technically in some ways,
but I don't think it is in a way that matters, right? Eichmann does-
Eichmann wasn't a policy wonk, was he?
Yeah. He really kind of was, right? He's not the author of a bunch of stuff, but he's like,
he's part of the process of authoring a lot of things. And he does help create policies,
particularly like where the treatment of people with partial Jewish ancestry is concerned. And he's got this foundational role in how the Nazi state interacts
with captured Jewish communities and deports them, right? And that's not, he's not literally
writing out policies all the time, but he is effectively making policy in all but name.
Now that said, he doesn't give the order to start the Holocaust, right? That's obviously not his call. That happens way above his head, which begs the question then, who does, right?
You would expect in an organization as hierarchical as the Nazis,
there's someone we could trace to like, and this is the moment the order was given, right?
We don't actually, we don't directly have that, right?
We know Eichmann helps organize and facilitate the Wannsee conference where it's planned, and this is on orders of his boss Reinhard Heydrich, and Heydrich takes
his orders from Himmler and from Hitler, but we don't have any record of Himmler or Hitler
saying, okay, it's time to do the Holocaust now, right? Because that's just not the way
any of this works, right?
And man, has that led to a lot of problems and then Holocaust denial and Hitler rehabilitation
and fucking name it.
Yeah, we have no evidence of Hitler saying we've got to do this.
And that kind of feeds into at the time, a lot of people in Nazi Germany who were often
annoyed or even horrified by aspects of the regime by things the SS and the SD did, right?
We'd be like, well, but Hitler clearly doesn't know about this, right?
Like he can't have any idea this is going on.
And this is something Hitler, you know,
this is the smart way to play shit
as a totalitarian dictator.
You don't want your name attached
to everything the regime is doing,
especially shit that's not gonna work out
or that's more experimental.
You need plausible deniability, right?
Even if you're Hitler.
Not every tyrant or dictator is gonna have a camp
called like the Hitler camp for undesirables.
Right, right, that's just a bad business.
And in the Nazi regime, again, there's this attitude,
and this really is something that causes people
who even aren't trying to do Nazi apologia
to do apologia for regular people under the Nazi system,
there's this errant idea that like,
well, normal people had no choice but to go along
with what the regime has doing.
It was so dangerous.
Any degree of resistance would have gotten you killed,
would have gotten your family wiped out.
At no point in the history of the Nazi regime
was that true, right?
There were no- Of course not.
No members of the Nazi state and like were ever executed or punished
for just refusing to take part in the Holocaust, right?
That did not happen.
Most of them were given out.
Yes, and people could take it, right?
Yeah, like the Nazi reserve police battalions
had to volunteer.
Yes, exactly.
To do the Holocaust by bullets.
And they overwhelmingly volunteered.
Yeah, and people who said no didn't have their families killed or themselves killed, right?
They didn't even get demoted. They just got moved somewhere else.
So much choice was involved in being part of the worst aspects of the regime and there was in fact
internal criticism inside Nazi Germany and the regime even buckled under that criticism at. When word of the T4 euthanasia program broke out,
which was basically the gassing of disabled people
by the Nazi state, there was backlash
among German civilians.
And that backlash was significant enough
that it made Hitler, number one,
they backed away publicly on the program,
and it made Hitler wary in the future
of putting further policies of mass murder in writing.
And I want to quote from an article by Kevin Sweeney in the journal Constructing the Past here.
Between 1940 and 1941, the German people's negative reaction became increasingly vocal and vehement,
culminating in Hitler being openly jeered by a crowd watching mentally challenged patients being loaded onto a train at a rail station in Hof,
Bavaria, in 1941.
Ultimately, this negative public reaction to the T4 program and Hitler's sanctioning of it,
bolstered by denunciations from Catholic and Protestant church leaders, forced Hitler to
publicly cancel the program in August of 1941, though it continued in secret until 1945."
So again, people yelled at Hitler over this, and he backed down, right? Like,
that's such a critical part of the story
of how this regime worked.
Do you also think like, this is something
that is batted around a bit in my field of research
where it's just like, this is the one
that was taking average Germans family members away as well.
Yes.
Everybody was connected to it.
Yes, and there were other times where that happened, right?
There was a moment where they started deporting people who had like one Jewish relative
But weren't like religiously Jewish and were married into you know, Gentile German families
They were protests and they had to publicly back off of that because Germans were like well, but these guys aren't really Jewish
Right. What are you doing here? You know, yeah
Like moments like that happened and the state was always conscious
of how far they were pushing people, right?
Which meant that the state could be pushed.
Now, because of all of this,
there's not a clear order to like,
okay, Hitler signed this paper saying kill everybody, right?
And this has led even within, and again,
these are none of these people
are what you'd call denialists,
but there was a debate for a very long time, like half a century, between historians who specialized
in the Holocaust, between what are generally called intentionalists and functionalists.
And the intentionalists argued that Hitler personally instigated the final solution.
The functionalists argued that it arose naturally as a result of the structure of the Third
Reich.
Now, this debate is mostly done. We don't really, this is like I think people will talk about in result of the structure of the Third Reich. Now, this debate is mostly done.
We don't really, this is like, I think people will talk
about in terms of the history of how we looked at this.
There's not much argument here anymore.
A preponderance of evidence that exists today proves
that Hitler, that basically aspects of both of these
are very true, right?
Yeah, I was actually gonna point that out.
There's more, there's a third camp,
which I generally fall into
Which is like Hitler ordered it. However, a lot of it arose from the structure of the Nazi state
Yeah, even if it didn't it would have happened
Yeah, Hitler premeditated on the slaughter of European Jewry and also the functionalists have some very good points
One piece of evidence for the intentionalists
that often get cited that is important
when we talk about Hitler's premeditation
is an interview Hitler gave in 1922 to a journalist
where he said, once I really am in power,
my first and foremost task will be the annihilation
of the Jews as soon as I have the power to do so.
Yeah, and he's like, I will have the gallows built in rows
and the Jews will be hanged indiscriminately
until all of Germany has been completely cleansed of Jews.
That's pretty hard.
That's like not, you know,
we can state that as pretty clear evidence of intent, right?
Yeah, and Mein Kampf also kind of really lays it out there.
Yeah, yeah, there's not a lot.
There's a, it's hard to argue he didn't say regularly
what he planned to do, right?
It's what he's known for.
It's his bit.
It's his whole thing.
And obviously the fact that he said all this
doesn't mean Hitler wrote out the plan for Auschwitz
or ever, like he's not the guy.
He didn't tell everyone, okay, we're gonna do an Auschwitz
and here's how it's gonna work, right?
He was like, we gotta kill these guys, figure it out.
I'm Hitler, I got Hitler stuff to do, right?
Like there's a lot of tasks on my hand.
You guys lock down how we're going to handle this, right? And there were always other
possibilities. Up until, you know, things start to turn for them in the East, it's not a guarantee
that mass slaughter is the only thing that will be done for all of these captured people. I think
there was a point at which something like the Madagascar plan, if that itself was never really
feasible, could have been done for some amount of people, right?
But at a certain point,
the only thing they were going to do was genocide.
And Hitler had repeatedly countenanced that
and urged that throughout his career.
In 1939, he told the Czech foreign minister,
"'We are going to destroy the Jews.
"'They are not going to get away with what they did
"'on November 9th, 1918.
"'The day of reckoning has come."
Eichmann himself would later claim under interrogation that Reinhard Heydrich had told him about
plans for the Holocaust as early as August 1941.
And this is Heydrich talking to an interrogator.
The war with the Soviet Union began in June 1941.
I believe it was two months later that Heydrich sent for me.
I reported he began with a little speech and then the Fuhrer has ordered physical extermination
of the Jews.
Then Heydrich said, go and see SS Obergruppenführer
Otto Globochnik.
The Fuhrer has already given him instructions."
And you know, that doesn't mean that's exactly what happened
because Eichmann lies under interrogation,
but there's a good amount of evidence to suggest
that's pretty much what happened, right?
We haven't talked we'll talk about globocnik one of these days is really interesting Nazi and
From what we know of heidrich and of him. This is pretty feasible, right? That's something like this is basically what went down
There's a lot of outside kind of evidence that this is pretty close to what happened
Those ideas definitely would have flowed through heidrich. Yes
Yes, they were heidrich and probably through globoc too, in a similar way to how it's described here.
And Bettina Stangneth basically argues that Eichmann was given the job of planning the Wannsee Conference,
helping to coordinate all the different government branches who played a role in the genocide,
because he'd made himself the Reich's gopher in anything related to the Jewish question.
He's just the guy you reach for when you're like, well, we need someone to pull all of these things
we've been doing together
and plan the execution of the Holocaust.
You've got Eichmann, right?
You already know he knows how to do this kind of shit.
So you pull for him.
Stagnath writes, when others were at a loss,
he was the man they called on.
For example, a professor at Strasburg University
was adamant he wanted the schools
of Jewish Bolshevik commissars to add to a collection of skeletons, despite the fact that they were
still alive.
And Eichmann's the guy who gets pulled in to do that.
He's just already been the kind of, we need someone to handle this unpleasant implementation
that's going to involve killing a lot of people, right?
Well Eichmann's who does that, you know?
Of course, that's a collection that existed at a German university.
Of course, that's a German university's collection, right?
I mean, recently a German university, I forget which one, maybe it was Salzburg, discovered,
oh, we still have all these boxes of human skulls from the Herrera and Nama genocide,
just laying around.
Oops, oops.
Oops, all skulls.
Look, you don't want to go too deep into the archive section of any German or British?
University or any American University older than a certain age honestly
I should I should point out due to my family's land deeds or Turkish universe
Yeah, or Turkish universe very few old universities
Do you want and honestly the Vatican sub basements? We don't really want to get into those two deep either no those should stay locked
yeah there's some there's some fucking first Indiana Jones movie shit if you go
deep enough in that so as the death camps spun up to full operation in the
years following von say Eichmann was set to the task of organizing the registration, collection, and eventual deportation
or evacuation of captive Jewish populations to the camps.
By this point, he was highly placed enough
and the job was big enough
that he often sent out trusted subordinates
to handle the on-the-ground work for him,
involving himself directly
if he felt their progress was too slow
and acting as a wrecking ball
whenever his people encountered resistance
from local government officials.
And this resistance is usually not, we have a moral issue with what's happening.
Sometimes especially later in the war, it's a mix of that or they're just worried that
they'll get blamed for it because they could see where things are coming.
But a lot of the times it's more, well, we need supplies for other things, right?
Like we have issues that are a bigger priority to us and the general government of Poland or whatever
than the annihilation of these people.
And why are we focusing on this?
And Eichmann will come in and say, fuck off.
This is the priority, right?
Like that's kind of part of his job.
And one of his personal obsessions is ensuring
that no individual Jews are exempted
from the final solution.
This is more of an issue than you might expect.
It was often said that every Nazi had their good Jew or even recognized a handful of good Jews that
ought to be spared. And in fact, this extends to Hitler, as I bring up on this show every now and
then, he interviewed personally to save his childhood doctor, a Jewish man who he viewed
as a decent person, right? And his personal driver, Emile Maurice.
Yeah, right. There were guys, right? And ladies, right? That every, even a lot of the worst of
the Nazis had, they would be like, well, this person should be spared. Eichmann, one of the
things that makes him noteworthy is he doesn't have these people, right? And he actually sees
that it's his personal job to make sure none of the, like every, even the worst of the SS
are soft towards a Jew here and there.
I have to make sure those people don't escape the dragnet
as much as possible, right?
So he has to be more evil than the most evil men under.
Then Hitler, yes, that's part of his job here.
I've gotta be a harder even than the boss, you know?
Hitler's, you know, he's too soft.
He can be soft on this issue, right?
I have to pick up the slack. You know, Hitler real, you know, he's too soft. He can be soft on this issue. I have to pick up the slack.
You know, Hitler real soft on the Jewish issue.
Yeah, yeah.
At least softer than he's willing to be.
And this is a thing that comes down from Heidrich too.
Heidrich's very much similar in this attitude, right?
So, and again, it's kind of,
when we talk about his complicity,
he doesn't order any of this,
but his job is to make sure it's as total a victory for the Nazis as he can manage.
And while his role here is important, we shouldn't neglect to highlight other major figures behind
the Final Solution, including Eichmann's childhood friend Ernst Kaltenbrunner, as well
as Heinrich Müller, Theodor Daniker, Dieter Wyslinski, Franz Novak, and a bunch of other
young men in Hitler's SS and SD.
And it's really worth emphasizing how young a lot of the people doing this are, that the
Holocaust is committed primarily from an implementation stage by very young, ambitious men.
An article for the National World War II Museum by Dr. Jason Dawsey notes of Eichmann's peers,
quote, none of them had reached the age of 35 when World War II ended.
They exhibited a terrifying combination of attention to detail and steadfast commitment
to the core ideas of Nazism.
Reinhard Heydrich himself, Eichmann's boss, was 38 when he was killed by Czech partisans
in June of 1942, just a few months after the Wannsee Conference.
We've already covered Heydrich in other episodes, and there's not enough time in these ones to discuss all of Eichmann's subordinates and colleagues, the guys at his
level. But we should talk about one of his men in order to kind of tell the story of several others,
right? Because I don't want it to look like, I never want it to be like a great man thing where
Eichmann's the only one kind of at this level of importance. There are other guys who are at similar
levels, and one of them is his subordinate, Theodore Daniker, right?
And we'll talk a little bit about Daniker
both because he's a monster worth knowing
and because his story tells us something important
about how Eichmann operated.
Daniker was born in March of 1913
in Tübingen, Southwest Germany.
His father was a member of the comfortable middle class
as a lot of these guys are,
and was a businessman until he died in 1918 fighting for the Kaiser. Theodore was raised by his mom and he grows
up number one, angry about the war, believing in the stabbed in the back myth like all of
these guys do. And other than that, he's kind of mediocre, right? His family was used to
being more comfortable than they are after the war. He wants to do better.
He feels like he's owed it,
but he's not very good at anything.
Like Eichmann, he's a mediocre student, right?
He makes no real impact on his professors
and there's no signs that he's going to go on
to have a really significant career.
He's just kind of mid, right?
These are all very young, very mid guys
who are given their only chance to be
excellent is with the Nazi party.
Man, that is unfortunate. We need some kind of jobs program for dudes who are solidly
mid.
Yeah, it's this thing I come up with with like guys like Ben Shapiro, like all of these
dudes in the right wing media who try to it in the Hollywood and can't because they're mediocre
We need like a fake Hollywood where we like we give these guys fake fans and let them pretend like they've got a TV
This is what we can use AI for just generate their shitty scripts Robert. This already exists. It's the Hallmark Channel
It's the Hallmark Channel. Thank God. We'd be in so much worse shape if it weren't for the Hallmark Channel.
Yeah.
Ben Shapiro could be cranking out, or the Danickers of today, or Big Balls who works
at Doge, could just be cranking out the world's worst Christmas movies year round for Hallmark.
Yeah.
And we use AI to give a bunch of fake fans so they feel like they're really making it.
And yeah.
I mean, on a serious level, it is important you understand people always,
a lot of people get this wrong when they act like,
oh, well the Nazis were this,
they came out of the middle class
or they came out of like the poor and the working class,
these people who had endured privation.
And that was, you know, there were these real legitimate,
you know, fear and anger of this group of people
who were really suffering that fed into Nazism.
Some of those guys existed.
And part of this guy, Hitler was that kind of guy.
Hitler really did suffer.
He had a terrible early life, right?
Yeah, he had a shitty fucking life.
Dog shit.
That's very few Nazis, right?
Unfortunately, that shitty life did not kill him.
No.
Yeah, Hitler was that guy, but his inner circle,
the people that surround him, it absolutely
weren't.
A lot of these guys were young, like you said, and a lot of them were mid.
Fucking Gehring was like famous and kind of well off, right?
Like a lot of guys were like that.
Yeah, a lot of these dudes are doctors.
Yes, doctors, lawyers, you know?
PhDs, fucking engineers, lawyers.
He surrounded himself by Germany's elite
Eichmann comes from oil and gas like his dad was comfortable from oil and gas money, right?
Dan Ecker comes from like a comfortable middle-class business owning background, right?
These are not guys who are poor but they are guys who are not doing as well as they think they ought to be doing and
They blame that on
Whoever's convenient which turns out to be the Jews and the communists, right?
So that's Danica.
They would own a Mitsubishi dealership today.
Right, right, right.
100%.
Not a great Mitsubishi dealership,
but they're able to go to an okay private school.
Well, it's a Mitsubishi dealership,
but it's not a great car.
None of them are great, right?
Yeah, they don't own a Ford,
they don't own a Chevy dealership.
They're like, we have to, look, family, we have to settle
for selling, I don't know, Evo Lancers or fucking whatever.
Yeah, their spokesman is like a fucking
amateur baseball star, it's just not that good.
Yeah.
So speaking of amateur baseball,
don't watch amateur baseball,
listen to the rest of this podcast.
Or watch amateur baseball while listening to this podcast.
No, absolutely don't do that. You'll turn into a fascist.
Now these ads from Mitsubishi.
["The New York Times"]
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So what happened at Chappaquiddick?
Well, it really depends on who you talk to.
There are many versions of what happened in 1969 when a young Ted Kennedy drove a car
into a pond.
And left a woman behind to drown.
There's a famous headline, I think, in the New York Daily News. It's, Teddy escapes,
blonde drowns. And in a strange way, right, that sort of tells you. The story really became
about Ted's political future,'s political hopes will Ted become president
Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death and how the Kennedy machine took control
And he's not the only Kennedy to survive a scandal the Kennedys have lived through disgrace affairs violence you name it
So is there a curse every week?
We go behind the headlines and beyond the drama of America's royal family
Every week we go behind the headlines and beyond the drama of America's royal family. Listen to United States of Kennedy on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
From iHeart Podcasts and Rococo Punch, this is The Turning, River Road. I knew I wanted to obey and submit, but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life
what that meant.
In the woods of Minnesota, a cult leader married himself to ten girls and forced them into
a secret life of abuse.
Why did I think that way?
Why did I allow myself to get so sucked in by this man and thinking to the point that
if I died for him, that would be the greatest honor?
But in 2014, the youngest of the girls escaped and sparked an international manhunt.
For all those years, you know, he was the predator and I was the prey.
And then he became the prey.
Listen to The Turning, River Road, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Maybe you've heard that Stonewall was a riot where queer people fought back against police,
or that it's the reason Pride is celebrated this time of year.
It was one of the most liberating things that I have ever done. against police, or that it's the reason pride is celebrated this time of year.
It was one of the most liberating things that I have ever done.
But did you know that before it went down in history, the Stonewall was a queer
hangout run by the mafia? The voguing at Stonewall was unbelievable.
In the summer of 1969, it became the site
that set off the modern movement for LGBTQ plus rights. It started banging on the door of the Stonewall like one boom, boom, boom.
Legend says Marsha P. Johnson, a mother in the fight for trans rights, threw the very
first brick.
She was really like scrubbed out of that history.
This week on Afterlives, we'll separate the truth from the myth in the life of Marsha P. Johnson.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jan Masilek was a model of German corporate success.
It seemed so damn simple for him.
Also, it turned out, a fraudster.
Where does the money come from?
That was something that I always was questioning myself.
But what if I told you that was the least interesting thing
about him?
His secret office was less than 500 meters down the road.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Certain things in my life since then have gone terribly wrong.
I don't know if they followed me to my home.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story
because this ties together the Cold War with the new one. Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
We're back.
So Theodore Daniker comes up, kind of mated everything.
When he's a young adult, he starts working as a textile dealer and he like Eichmann,
he goes to a trade school
because his grades aren't good enough for him to do anything else.
Right.
And he feels pulled to far right politics from a young age.
Like Eichmann, for a similar motivation,
the Nazi party offers him a chance to remake himself in a new regime
that he wouldn't have been able to earn,
a place of similar kind of importance in the Weimar Republic.
In 1932, he joins the Nazi party at age 19.
At age 21 in 1934, Danaker joins the SS,
initially serving in the VT or the SS Dispositional Corps.
These were essentially political soldiers
at the direct command of Adolf Hitler,
except in times of war,
in which case they'd be integrated into the army.
This is the unit that eventually becomes the Waffen-SS, right?
It isn't that yet, but he's in the proto-Waffen-SS, that's Danneker.
Like Eichmann, Danneker's first real job for the regime is helping to guard an early concentration
camp. In his case, it's Columbia House in Berlin. Now, this was the only official SS camp in Berlin,
and it was built out of an empty prison in 1933,
and like most wild concentration camps,
which is kind of what the first camps are called,
where they're like,
we've got this empty government building
or school or whatever,
we'll just throw some political prisoners there,
we'll torture them, right?
Columbia House is noteworthy for being
where lawyer Hans Litten dies, right?
We've talked about him in the past,
he's the guy who puts Hitler on trial.
So it's that kind of place.
And Columbia House has been described
by one historian and camp survivor as an agony house
and the site of quote,
perhaps the ghastliest atrocities imaginable.
It acted as an SS testing ground
for promising young officers.
As historian Reinhard Burbeck noted, quote,
this was not just a place where people were terrorized and tortured, but a school of torture.
The people who had been commanders after Columbia later turned to commanders of other concentration
camps at Buchenwald, at Sachsenhausen, at Majdeneck, in Auschwitz.
So once you had gone through concentration camp Columbia, apparently this was the perverse
career step in order to stay in the SS and become a commander elsewhere, right?
Oh, God, it was a concentration camp trade school.
Yes.
And this is also important when we talk about how this is, this, this is like
less on the intentionalist side of things, right?
And more on the other side of things where you're like, well, they started
building this system where you would train people up in how a concentration
campus to work and once you've committed the kind of crimes you're committing
at Columbia house, you don't go back.
You only do worse and worse stuff.
And you don't always have to be ordered
to do that worse stuff, right?
You are naturally, when you get put in charge somewhere,
going to be even more extreme than you were at Columbia House
because that's just how this kind of thing works, right?
Your humanity is sanded away.
Even if the people who started off as like, you know,
prison guards, say what you
will about them and their ethics and morality, by the time they leave this place, they're
just dead-eyed psychos.
There's nothing left of humanity in them, right? And that's important too. No one necessarily
orders that. I want you to do 20% worse than Columbia House. You just are that person by
this point, right? And so that happens naturally.
And nobody's tracking fingernail metrics, you know?
Right, right, yeah, it's like,
how many fingernails did you pull out this week, right?
You don't have to do that anymore.
So eventually Danneker gets transferred
over to the SS Security Office or the SD,
where Eichmann works, and he winds up working under Eichmann
at the Department of Jewish Affairs in 1937.
That same year, he writes a report urging
the complete removal of Jews from political life
in the Reich in order to bring Germany's Jewish question
closer to its final solution.
In this paper, he attacks the Gestapo
for being too mild in their application to force
and insufficiently committed to anti-Semitism.
So like Eichmann, he's this guy where he's like,
wow, the Gestapo really soft on the Jews.
We gotta get these people under control, you know?
I'm really sick of our local Gestapo
being so soft and cuddly.
The woke Gestapo.
These DEI policies have ruined the Gestapo.
He is that guy though, right?
And that's why he's the kind of guy
who becomes Eichmann's second, effectively.
Fuck.
In 1938, after the Anschluss, Danneker goes with Eichmann's second effectively. Fuck. In 1938, after the Anschluss,
Danneker goes with Eichmann to Vienna
to help expel thousands of Jews from their homes
and confiscate their possessions for the state.
And he brings this new expertise with him to Poland.
He goes to Paris in 1940 after the German victory,
and he helps oversee the French police
in their roundup of the Jewish population of Paris.
Now it's not widely known or discussed
that some of the most important early perpetrators
of the Holocaust were local police all over Europe.
And these are not German police.
These are by and large-
Oh boy were they.
These are French police, right?
Some of whom had been part of French far right parties,
right?
And Dutch police.
Don't forget my local police here.
And Dutch police, right?
But they're local cops and most of them hadn't been super involved in the far right, you know?
They were cops before anything else.
And like basically a hundred percent of cops in basically every society,
their identity as police matters more to them than the morality of whatever actions they are asked to take, right?
Mm-hmm.
So you can find arguments that French police helped to shield, and this is true,
there are individual French police who helped to shield
and hide hundreds of Jews from the Nazis, right?
There are individual French cops who act heroically
to protect people targeted by the SS.
But modern historiography has made it very clear,
and I would say unarguable, that as an institution,
French law enforcement was overwhelmingly a willing tool
of the Nazi genocide.
Well, I'm sure they were.
Yeah, there's just no real argument against that.
In late 2018, historian Laurent Jolie published The State Against the Jews, which compiled
previously unknown documents about French police and government collaboration and the
rounding up of tens of thousands of Jews.
Per an article in France 24, quote, Jolie told AFP that Paris
police had one of the most sophisticated systems in the world to classify foreigners. Some 125,000
Jews were recorded in a role based on the census the Nazis demanded in 1941, which Jolie has said
curiously remained unknown until my research, because it got buried, right? Yeah, of course it
did. In Vichy, France, the authorities were so eager to curry favor with their new Nazi
masters that they began rounding up and handing over Jews without being asked.
Per Jolie, the Germans were not asking for the Jews who lived in the Vichy
controlled part of France to be handed to them.
Vichy was always trying to demonstrate its goodwill towards the Germans.
In other words, the French police in Vichy, France, create a problem for the
Nazis because they're handing over more Jews than the Nazis can process. And they're like,
guys, Jesus, like we're the Nazis, but come on, calm down here.
That reminds me of early on in the Holocaust when the Gestapo put out effectively was like
a hotline to regular Germans to rat out people who were hiding Jews
or people they thought were Jews.
And so many people were ratting out their neighbors
that the Gestapo had to kindly ask them to fucking stop
because they couldn't handle it all.
God, and now thankfully there's no SS analog
in the US today that would put out a request
for regular Americans to report their neighbors
for sequestering undocumented foreigners, right?
Weird how that's always what it is, right?
Weird how that's what it is in Paris, you know?
Remember folks, tyranny doesn't work
without the assistance of your friendly neighbors.
Yeah, and yeah, the cops and local government officials,
yeah, there's the guy who lives next to you.
Dan Ecker's job in Paris was to push French authorities
to arrest and deport ever greater numbers of Jews,
both foreign refugees who'd fled other areas the Nazis had advanced on or native
French people.
Some were told that these deportees would be taken to a new Jewish state being established
by the Nazis, essentially a variation of the Reservation Plan, although this was known
to be false by anyone with half a brain.
There had been ample reporting before the German invasion about the early stages of
the KZ, or concentration camp, system.
The first major arrest and deportation of French Jews in World War II was the Green
Ticket Roundup.
Eichmann and Danaker both helped to organize this scheme, by which almost 7,000 foreign-born
Jews living in France were sent to summons by mail, ordering them to visit a local immigration
office for a review of their visas.
Anyone who showed up, as around 3,700 men did,
was arrested and deported immediately.
Now, again, you'd never see anything like this
whereby people who are attempting
to maintain their legal status,
even though they're foreign-born people who have immigrated,
would be asked to show up at the immigration office
and then arrested as soon as they show up
trying to comply with the law.
That would never happen here, right?
You know?
Thankfully not.
Thankfully not.
I can't think of anything that's happening currently or before.
Yeah.
It would be like really, really wrong of me to just suggest that the Department of Homeland
Security is the American SS based on something like this because they've never done anything
like this, right? You know, ICE hasn't, right?
Yeah. And ICE is certainly not the Gestapo.
No, no, no.
They would never do things that are Gestapo-esque. No. They're not the Department ICE hasn't, right? Yeah, and ICE is certainly not the Gestapo. They would never do things that are Gestapo-esque.
No, they're not the Department of Jewish Affairs, right?
There's no similarity between these organizations.
No, never.
Right, exactly, because we haven't started death camps yet,
just like the Nazis had in the 1940, right?
I feel like, Robert, we can really trust the guy
who wears a mask and snatches people into an unmarked van.
Yes, if I'm remembering properly from my Disney movies as a kid, the child catcher is a good
guy, right?
Oh man.
So despite this success and the success of Operation Green Ticket, France lags behind
the arbitrary deportation quota that Eichmann's office had set for them.
It was Danekker's office to motivate French authorities.
Eichmann came to consider Danekker almost as his right arm,
someone he could drop into a new territory
and trust to centralize the system
by which Jews were rounded up and deported
and leave it in such a way that whoever followed
would be able to continue operating the system with ease
because it runs on its own, right?
That's a huge part of it.
You leave as little up to chance as possible.
You leave as little up to the mercy of individual members of the government as possible, all of whom are soft
to some groups of people you want to get rid of. That's why you build a system that has no softness
left inside it. Right? That write-up for the National World War II Museum notes, Danekar was
a completely modern form of perpetrator, really unknown before the 20th century, the deportation specialist, right?
Oh, he's Tom Holman.
He's Tom Holman, right? This is how modern genocide is done. The primary perpetrators are
not the guys who just shoot a bunch of people, right? They're the deportation specialists.
That's who does a modern genocide, is a deportation specialist, right?
Not to keep linking these two things together, but when that like, when the,
the things that sticks out to me is in the book, um, ordinary men, uh, one of
the things that sticks out is, uh, the, the German reserve police officers were
just normal guys who took this job because they, they wanted a pension and
benefits.
And then again, they were voluntarily doing this.
They, they were told multiple times they could back out
whenever they wanted, but they're there pulling the trigger.
Yeah.
And then you got this fucking guy.
And there's this argument,
you get it around ordinary men too,
about like, well, it's wrong to look at these
as like the banality of evil,
because these guys weren't banal.
The things they did weren't banal.
The kinds of crimes they committed.
Of course not, no.
But that's the point,
is that that kind of hideous mask off
nightmare evil is lurking behind your neighbor's eyes.
If he gets the opportunity,
if it'll benefit him enough, right?
If it'll get him that Mitsubishi dealership.
You never know quite, just like you never know
what motherfucking guy who like seems kind of lame
and boring right now could be a hero
when actually called upon to shelter people from Eugery.
I'm thinking about that judge, husband,
and wife cop couple in New Mexico,
who were like destroying evidence
to protect these undocumented friends of theirs
who are now being tried.
Where it's like, you would never guess
that these people would have been the heroes
in a time like this, but God damn it,
you can't look at them any way else, right?
And in the same matter, some guy who you would never guess
is anything but the dude who lives next to you could become an absolute monster if he was given the opportunity,
if it would advance him personally enough. And you don't know until the chips are down
who's going to be what, right? There's hints sometimes, but you can't know perfectly.
Cool stuff.
Yeah. Just to be safe, I say if you've ever seen them shooting a video in the cab of their pickup truck at that upward angle
Probably on the bad side of things
Yeah, you need to stay the fuck away from them
Yeah, right, Daniker would have loved filming himself drunk in his car, ranting about movies
God, they would love that so much. Yeah, yelling like, my wife left me
So historian Robert Gerwalth describes Daniker as as one of the quote, young, educated, self-confident
and ideologically committed men, Heidrich actively courted for the Jewish desk.
These men would develop the actual methodology by which Hitler's dream of a Jew free Europe
might be made a reality.
To continue with another quote from that article, Danekir utilized an array of weapons, the
pen, the telephone and the typewriter.
Besides researching and working behind a desk, Danneker negotiated, cajoled, and berated
officials, coordinated with the Reich Transportation Ministry to secure rolling stock, and worked
at the SSSD, Gestapo, and German Armed Forces to ensure the efficient and orderly removal
of massive numbers of Jewish men, women, and children.
In the spring of 1942, Danneker visited the camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
This was the same month that it transferred from being primarily a labor camp to being
a straight up death camp, and Danneker is one of the very first people to see Auschwitz
in full operation.
He reports back to his boss about it, and he immediately sets to work feeding a group
of 1,100 French Jews into the factory of death.
This annihilation acts as a proof of concept,100 French Jews into the factory of death. This annihilation acts as a proof of concept.
This is the Death Star test firing of Auschwitz, where you're like, yep, okay, we can get rid of
people at the speed we need to here. Daniker reports back to Eichmann about how Auschwitz
is working and Eichmann could not have been happier. So he and Daniker spend several weeks
planning a more ambitious operation to wipe out a substantial chunk of the French Jewish population.
They call this Operation Spring Wind. It had been initially scheduled for July 14th, but that was
Bastille Day and the French collaborators insisted it would be bad form to commit genocide on a holiday.
So the operation is ultimately executed by French. Oh, I hate that. They're like, we'll do this, but not on Bastille Day, right?
We can't do a Holocaust on Bastille Day.
That's like the most fucking French way, honestly.
Like, no, you don't understand.
We have the day off work.
Yeah, everyone's got the day off work.
Look, we'll do a Holocaust, but not on our day off, right?
If you make all the cops go in and do the genocide
on the holiday, they're gonna riot,
and they're gonna fight the firefighters.
It's something that happens here. We really can't do this
So the operation is ultimately executed by French police on July 16th and 17th
They break into houses and they rip whole families out of their beds arresting 13,000 Parisian Jews for deportation
The police insisted in public face and communications that these people were mostly quote foreign and stateless
So they're barely people.
Of course.
Of course.
Of course.
Fuck.
Yeah.
Operation Springwind was the brainchild
of a French Vichy collaborator named Louis Darkier.
He had fought in World War I
and become a radical far right activist in the thirties,
actively participating in the 1934 far right riot
that was seen by some at the time as an attempted coup d'etat.
He had become a journalist largely to write articles drumming up anti-Semitic hate among
his fellow Frenchmen.
When the Nazis took over, they made him Commissar General for Jewish Affairs, basically the
Vichy counterpart to Eichmann.
Durkier had suggested to denaturalize all Jews who'd acquired French citizenship since
1927, and he also suggested the mass arrest of stateless Jews, largely because it provided a legal
coding for the general expulsion of Jews.
This worked.
Daniker himself noted that once the shoddy justification was in place, the cops were
happy to help the SS.
The French police, despite a few considerations of pure form, have only to carry out orders.
Right?
As long as we make sure- That's not surprising. Yeah. That's just how these guys work. That to carry out orders, right? As long as we make sure.
That's not surprising.
Yeah, that's just how these guys work.
That's how cops are. Right.
And that's how cops are.
And France was wildly anti-Semitic.
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
For people who don't know,
one of my co-hosts and producers on my show did.
He speaks French and did research on like French officers
magazines in the French military
A little bit after this time in Algeria
Yeah, and like half half of the titles are like Lee anti-semitism. Yeah shit like that. Like yeah, you know
I'm just subscribed to anti-semitism weekly
By the way folks watch the Battle of Algiers.
Great movie.
Yeah, that's all I'll say about it for now.
So Danekker's role in France came to an end
shortly after Operation Spring Wind,
which is better known as the Valdiev Roundup, right?
His direct supervisor in the SD,
a guy named Helmut Nauken,
caught Danekker abusing his authority,
by which I mean he was stealing shit from deported Jews that the SS wanted to steal from Germany, right?
And so he was transferred back to Berlin, right?
It's like, look, you can kill these people.
You can kill them, you can't steal from them.
Yeah, we're stealing from them.
You're stealing from us when you steal too much from them, right?
Come on, man.
Jesus.
Yeah.
Now, the system Danneker had built with Eichmann's guidance
continued to operate for the remainder
of Vichy France's lifespan.
Ultimately, some 77,000 French Jews and Jews on French soil
were deported and murdered by the Nazis
under the direction of Eichmann and Danaker
and with the enthusiastic aid of French collaborators
in law enforcement and the Vichy government.
After the war, Charles de Gaulle and the French government
that replaced the Vichy regime refused to apologize
for the role the police played in these genocidal crimes.
Their argument was that-
Yeah, it sounds like de Gaulle, all right.
Yeah, it sounds de Gaulle, yeah.
Their argument was that Vichy France
wasn't the French Republic,
and the reestablished republic shouldn't have to apologize
for the crimes of another government, right?
Now, is it the case- Never mind the fact
that all those dudes kept their fucking jobs. Right, right, is it the case? Never mind the fact that all those dudes kept their fucking jobs.
Right, right, is it the case that these cops are still cops?
A lot of times, yes, but why is that our responsibility, right?
Just slipping off the armband.
You can't blame law enforcement as a whole
for the fact that everyone in it did this, right?
Oh, it's cool stuff.
No, you do not understand.
I was not throwing a piece of the salute.
I was just ashing my cigarettes very awkwardly. Oh
Man it was not until
1995 that French president Jacques Chirac finally admitted blame on behalf of French law enforcement and the state right so you know that
It's so bad that had to be Chirac that did it cuz he's like cartoonish Lee corrupt
He's so lame otherwise. Yeah, but he's like, ah, geez, this is, wow,
we really fucked up here.
I will steal from everybody's pension
and I will get France locked solidly into the Afghan war,
but I will not cover for Nazi cops.
Not going to cover for the Nazi cops.
I got too much other shit I got to do.
After Paris, Dan Ecker doesn't remain in Berlin long.
He's forgiven for his misdeeds.
He's sent to Bulgaria in 1943 to arrange the deportation of some 11,000 foreign Jews
to various death camps.
He follows the Eichmann playbook in this, interfacing with a newly created Bulgarian
Commissar for Jewish Affairs to arrange the deportations.
In just two months, all 11,000 people had been shipped by train to Treblinka or Auschwitz,
where nearly half of them died. The dead included all 11,000 people had been shipped by train to Treblinka or Auschwitz, where nearly half of them died.
The dead included some 2,000 children.
This deportation, yeah, I mean, these guys,
the level of mass murderer, the least of the SS men
in Eichmann's office commit is pretty outrageous.
I mean, I can't imagine a more cursed title
that we've spoken other than a Bulgarian Jewish commissar.
Yeah, oh boy.
I was like, oh.
Your war crimes did war crimes.
This deportation met with little local resistance as the Jews marked for expulsion were mainly
from Thrace and Macedonia and thus not Bulgarian citizens.
But Danekar's next move was to evacuate nearly 50,000 Bulgarian Jews from Sofia, the capital.
This was done and some 48,000 Jews were stripped of their property and forced into a camp outside
the city.
However, this sparked resistance because again, these aren't foreigners, right?
These are Bulgarian, you know?
Jason Dawsey writes, quote, outrage from Dimitar Peshchev, the deputy speaker of the parliament,
clergy from the Bulgarian Orthodox Church and representatives of communities where these Jews resided, pushed King Boris
III to intervene.
Peshchev, who was forced to resign his position, still appealed to the honor of Bulgaria, warning
that our nation's reputation would be stained forever and its moral and political standing
forever compromised if deportations ensued.
Boris acquiesced and prevented the removal of Bulgaria's Jewish populace.
And we can see this as both there's legitimate heroism here, which saves a lot of lives,
right?
Right, of course.
But also any pride in this has to be tempered by the fact that all these guys are only moved
to act against the Nazis because now citizens were being deported, right? These Macedonian
Jews and whatever, if they get exterminated, no one's going to speakorted, right? These Macedonian Jews and whatever,
if they get exterminated, no one's gonna speak up, right?
But now you're going after Bulgarian Jews
and we've gotta say something, right?
Of course, they shouldn't even be here.
Like they broke the law just crossing the border, Robert.
I mean, Christ, you can't just break the law, right?
That's fucked up.
Look, I wouldn't have voted for Hitler
if he was gonna start going after the good ones.
Right, right, right.
These are the good ones, you know?
He was only supposed to go after the criminals, you know?
And had the Nazi regime lasted,
Eichmann and his colleagues would have taken another stab
at this group that King Boris helps to protect.
As it was, things were going pretty badly for the Nazis
by the summer of 43, and the work of extermination
was taking on
an air of dire urgency.
By this point, Danekker's qualities had been recognized
outside the SD, and Eichmann's protege was sent
by the Gestapo chief to Rome, which had just been occupied
by the Nazis after Mussolini's overthrow.
Eichmann, by this point, was the most prestigious name
in the genocide business.
His obsessive need to stamp his name
on every part of the Holocaust,
even in actions at which he had little to no known involvement,
ensured him steady promotions
and regular direct contact with Himmler.
It also got him the attention of the international press.
He and his friend, Kaltenbrunner,
would brag to each other about their respective
war criminal ranks during social events.
Eichmann later recalled-
Good God!
Yeah, that's how they frame it. They're like looking at foreign press and be like, oh man,
I'm a higher ranking war criminal than you now, Kaltenbrunner. Ha ha ha. Right?
Yeah. What's impressive is I don't really think that there's like a lot of competition
because nobody else wanted to put their fucking name on this shit.
Right, right. Everyone else is too smart to like stamp their fucking last, first and last
name on this shit. Eichmann later recalled, quote, "'I found the war criminals in a press review once.
"'I was number nine and I had a bit of a laugh
"'about it all.'"
Right?
And he will, he'll go back and forth between,
I was 14, I was nine, I was number one, right?
Depending on who he's talking to after the war.
Oh bro, you were never number one.
You were never number one.
Nobody ever thought you were number one.
Calm down.
You were like, I'll give credit.
You were easy top 10, but you were,
no one ever considered you number one.
I'll believe nine.
Nine is credible, right?
You're making the playoffs.
Good for you.
Sure, yeah, you're in the war crime playoffs.
Yeah, you and Kaltenbrunner.
In 1944, as the war neared its end,
Adolf Eichmann was about to do something that would
skyrocket him to the top of that list.
In November of 1940, Germany had signed the Tripartite Pact with Italy and Japan, officially
creating the Axis powers, and they considered it a priority to sign on as many new allies
as possible, given how things had gone the last time Germany was isolated in an international
war.
Hungary's regent was a guy named Admiral Miklos Horthy, and he was offered the honor of becoming the fourth member
of the club. But German diplomat Joachim von Ribbentrop tacitly threatened that
Romania might be allowed to join first if Hungary dithered. Ultimately, Horthy
signed up, and this would prove to be a catastrophic mistake. Horthy, who had
served the Old Empire in World War I, had seen World War II as a chance to regain
lost Hungarian territory and make his country great again.
Right?
We did so good last time, boys.
Yeah, World War I was, I mean, it could have worked better
if we just did a couple of things different, right?
I love that the Nazis were so fucking stupid, right?
They're like, look, it didn't work out for us last time,
but what if we allied with Austria, Italy, and Hungary
again and brought the band back together? What if we allied with Austria, Italy, and Hungary
again and brought the band back together?
What if we got the band back together?
Yeah.
Oh, man.
God, now that you think about it,
Italy really is the Pete Best of World War I, right?
Yeah.
Or reverse Pete Best, I guess.
I don't know.
The Patrick Stumpf of World War I.
Ha ha ha. Hungarian troops. This seemed to work at first, right? I guess I don't know Patrick stump of World War one
Hungarian troops this seemed to work at first right World War two initially is go is kind of working like Horthy had hoped
Hungarian troops get to invade the Balkans alongside the Wehrmacht and by the spring of 1941
Hungary was nearly tripled the size of where it had stood in 1938
Then came Operation Barbarossa and the invasion of the USSR. Hungary again sends troops, but this time there's no swift victory. Within months, 30% of the Hungarian army is killed or wounded too badly to fight.
As tradition demands when Hungary goes to war.
And by the way, if you're looking, if you're thinking from like a military planning standpoint,
if you have lost 30% of your forces killed or injured, you no longer have an effective
army. It sounds like 70% is a lot. It's not enough. You've lost too much of your command
and control, too much. You have to reorganize that point before you can continue fighting
effectively.
Yeah. From a military historian's perspective, I must say it is not good. If you're planning
a war at home today, don't lose 30% of your forces in a year and a half. Yeah, it's a catastrophe. In early 1943, the entire Hungarian Second Army was smashed trying
to anchor the German northern flank during the Battle of Stalingrad. Only 20% of the
army survived the retreat home intact. Hey, at least they have something in
common with Romanians now. Right, right, right. Hungary and Romania
wiping out 80% of their army.
Hey fellas, you wanna meet up outside of Stalingrad and die?
Stalingrad, that's a nice name.
I think things are gonna go well for us there.
Yeah, yeah.
So, Horthy at this point,
showing that he's smarter than Hitler,
complains the war is lost, right?
After Stalingrad, Horthy's like, well fuck,
there's literally no way we can pull a victory
out of this one.
And Hitler, for his his part complains that
Hungarian soldiers had doomed the Wehrmacht which is not really correct, you know
That is not true. Yeah, that is that is not true over on my show lines up by donkeys
We talked about Stalingrad for about six hours. Yeah
Look, I'm not saying Hungary would have won the battle, but they certainly didn't lose them the battle
Look, I'm not saying Hungary would have won the battle, but they certainly didn't lose them the battle.
No, no.
Things were fucked by the point at which, you know,
they get into action in this way, right?
If you're, for one thing,
if your entire battle plan comes down to the Hungarian army
holding in the field, you have fucked up, right?
Mine fewer, the army has been churned to goulash.
Yeah.
So, Horthy had never been a good guy.
I think we've made that clear, but he's not personally genocidal towards
the Jews of his nation, right?
He doesn't, uh, left to his own devices.
He had no desire to wipe out the whole Jewish population of Hungary.
And so for most of world war two, Hungarian Jews were fairly safe, right?
For most of the war, this is the best place and kind of broader, the kind of broader Nazi and Nazi allied territory, one of the better places to be.
But Hitler now demanded that Horthy kill or put his Jews into camps.
Horthy refused. He has no issue, like they seized Jewish property to fund the war effort. He's fine with that.
But he doesn't want, because he sees the writing on the wall.
He's like, I don't want to be involved in a war crime
of this scale right now, cause we're not going to win.
There's going to be a butcher's bill to pay.
As the Russians advanced, he and other Hungarian leaders
tried to make a separate peace with the allies.
Hitler finds out and he orders German troops
to conquer the country in March of 1944,
which they do easily because the Hungarians are very bad
at having an army, right?
Even the 1944 Wehrmacht can take them.
Hungarians military tradition, all right,
they will lose every war they go in,
but they'll be goddamn just thinking about a genocide.
Be on the side of genociders, yes.
Sure, sure, but we're not that active at it.
We have our standards here in Hungary.
Yeah, which is we'll sit by and let it happen, right?
That's right.
Now, Horthy is kept on as a puppet leader for a time.
And as soon as Hungary was under the German occupation,
Hitler orders the Jewish population wiped out.
This is no mean task.
There were somewhere between 700,000 and over 800,000
Jews in Hungarian territory. Sometimes you'll hear around a million. Eichmann is sent over
to supervise the work of an Einsatzkommando, especially assembled for the task. Daniker
and other colleagues in the SD are there as well, and they handle a lot of the ground
actions while Eichmann coordinates this massive effort. What followed was one of the swiftest
and bloodiest mass killings in human history.
Per Dr. Dawsey's article,
what happened in Hungary in the late spring
and early summer of 1944,
overwhelms our fragile capacities to imagine.
It was simply a frenzy of killing.
In May and June of 1944,
437,000 Hungarian Jews were transported to Auschwitz-Birkenau
and 397,000 were plunged
into Birkenau's gas chambers.
Their fate exhibited just how desperate the Nazi regime was to finish the annihilation
of European Jews, even as its hopes of winning the war disintegrated.
Under increasing pressure, Horthy finally halted the deportations in July, temporarily
sparing most of Budapest's Jewish populace.
Eichmann and Daniker bided their time.
The removal of Horthy three months later opened up new possibilities.
When Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg openly offered sanctuary to Jews in Budapest as Soviet
troops neared the capital city, the enraged Eichmann turned to Daniker to raid the safe
houses established by Wallenberg.
Now first off, that term frenzy of killing is the thing to remember when you're thinking
about what did Eichmann do, what did Danekker do.
Eichmann is the man who masterminds this.
This is on him more than any other single person, right?
And it's telling how important he is in the hierarchy in general and how much everybody
relies on them when they're like, we have this insurmountable killing goal in mind.
We have to bring in our experts.
Yeah.
And it's him and his boy.
Yeah. And it's Eichmann arrayed against Wallenberg, right?
In trying to, Wallenberg is trying to save this Jewish population
and Eichmann is trying to annihilate it.
And we've done a reverse batch.
It's a Christmas episode on Wallenberg.
He's one of the great heroes our species ever produced.
In the war's waning days, he was Eichmann's's nemesis granting fake Swedish documents to every Jew he could find Europe. You're a Swedish citizen
You're a Swedish resident. You got a green card. They can't kill you. You're a Swede, right?
Yeah, the hand reaches out your hand for the paperwork. It just smashing meatballs in every single fucking one
They can't deport you take a meatball.
They can't deport you with a meatball in your hand.
Oh my God.
It's your official Swedish paperwork.
These are not, there's nothing legal and legitimate.
Only Wallenberg's charisma is backing these documents up,
but he is so good at what he's doing
that a lot of SS men back off because he's like,
look, if you're seen violating the law here,
I'll make sure you get your due when the war is over, right?
And they're so fucking scared of him that he saves,
by some accounts, 100,000 people.
There's a lot of debate about these numbers,
but it's in the tens of thousands at the very least,
personally.
And these men know the war is fucked at this point.
Yeah, no one has illusions at this point, right?
Everybody's fully in, I have, like, look,
the guy with the meatballs is telling me he's good.
He's fucking good.
Fuck it.
Yeah.
Fuck it.
I don't like, I don't want any more of his.
The guy with the meatballs.
So Eichmann calls Raoul the Jew dog Wallenberg and threatens to have Raoul and all other friends
of Jews assassinated.
Someone subsequently blows up Wallenberg's car, and he only narrowly
escapes. In her book, Eichmann Before Jerusalem, Bettina Stangneth describes Adolf Eichmann in
this period as almost mad, with a mix of desperation and megalomania. He could feel the walls closing
in, but just as crucially, as he feels the window closing, he feels that he might be losing out on
his chance to achieve the only goal that matters to him at this stage, winning the war against European Jewry.
And this is important, you understand the Nazis
don't see this all as one war.
The war against the Jews,
even though the war against the rest of Europe
may be unwinnable now,
the war against the Jews of Europe is still winnable, right?
We have to pull something out of this.
Speaking of, have we done our second ad break yet, Sophie?
No.
Here it is.
So what happened at Tappaquitic?
Well, it really depends on who you talk to.
There are many versions of what happened in 1969 when a young Ted Kennedy drove a
car into a pond.
And left a woman behind to drown.
There's a famous headline, I think, in the New York Daily News.
It's Teddy escapes, blonde drowns.
And in a strange way, right, that sort of tells you.
The story really became about Ted's political future, Ted's political hopes.
Will Ted become president?
Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death and how the Kennedy machine took control.
And he's not the only Kennedy to survive a scandal.
The Kennedys have lived through disgrace,
affairs, violence, you name it.
So is there a curse?
Every week we go behind the headlines
and beyond the drama of America's royal family.
Listen to United States of Kennedy
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
For My Heart podcasts and Rococo Punch, this is The Turning, River Road.
I knew I wanted to obey and submit, but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life what that meant.
In the woods of Minnesota, a cult leader married himself to ten girls and forced them into
a secret life of abuse.
Why did I think that way?
Why did I allow myself to get so sucked in by this man and thinking to the point that
if I died for him, that would be the greatest honor.
But in 2014, the youngest of the girls escaped and sparked an international manhunt.
For all those years, you know, he was the predator and I was the prey. And then he became
the prey.
Listen to The Turning, River Road, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Maybe you've heard that Stonewall was a riot where queer people fought back against police,
or that it's the reason Pride is celebrated this time of year.
It was one of the most liberating things that I have ever done.
But did you know that before it went down in history, the Stonewall was a queer hangout run by the mafia.
The voguing at Stonewall was unbelievable.
In the summer of 1969, it became the site
that set off the modern movement for LGBTQ plus rights.
Started banging on the door of the Stonewall,
like one boom, boom, boom.
Legend says Marsha P. Johnson, a mother in the fight for trans rights, threw the very
first brick.
She was really like scrubbed out of that history.
This week on Afterlives, we'll separate the truth from the myth in the life of Marsha
P. Johnson.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jan Masilek was a model of German corporate success.
It seemed so damn simple for him.
Also, it turned out, a fraudster.
Where does the money come from?
That was something that I always was questioning myself.
But what if I told you that was the least interesting thing about him?
His secret office was less than 500 meters down the road.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Certain things in my life since then have gone terribly wrong.
I don't know if they followed me to my home.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story
because this ties together the Cold War with the new one.
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
podcasts. or something. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Critical partners in the Nazi war against European Jews. Yeah.
This ad brought to you by Hugo Boss.
Oh man, be a boss like Eichmann.
Yeah, but ew.
So the Nazi state was in chaos at this point.
Eichmann doesn't report kind of,
he's not technically on like an org chart.
He's not directly reporting to Himmler,
but he basically is reporting to Himmler. He's got regular meetings with the man. And so even though there's not directly reporting to Himmler, but he basically is reporting to Himmler.
He's got regular meetings with the man.
And so even though there's guys between him and Himmler
on the org chart, Eichmann outranks everyone above him,
except for Himmler because he's regularly talking to Himmler.
And so whenever there's a disagreement,
he can bring Himmler in, right?
And that's kind of how the Nazi state works.
More than like officially here's who's reporting to who.
It's like
Well, but this guy can bring in Himmler or this guy can bring in garing right? This guy could bring in Hitler directly
So he's effectively in charge. It's all it's a whole power structure of just constant name-dropping. Yes
Absolutely, that's how it works now Eichmann as a like show of how fucking important he is
He has access in this late stage of
the war to a private aircraft that he can travel around what remains of the crumbling
Reich end.
That means he's a big man.
And when he really wanted to impress another Nazi, Eichmann would claim to have personal
control over the gas chambers at Auschwitz, right?
I'm the guy running the gas chambers.
That's his brag.
Eichmann's colleagues later recalled some of Eichmann's most outrageous boasts.
And these are all direct quotes from Eichmann.
I am a bloodhound.
I'll set the mills of Auschwitz grinding.
And blood for goods.
This is a reference to a promise that Eichmann made
to send Hungary aid in exchange for Jews, right?
That's the blood for goods program.
You give us Jews, we'll give you the aid that you need
to continue holding on.
Oh God, it's like the most evil foreign aid package I've ever heard of.
Yeah, blood for Jews.
His favorite line was simply, I'll inform Himmler.
And his darkest boast was, I'll do away with all the Jewish filth of Budapest.
In the last months of 1944, Eichmann makes constant trips back and forth from Budapest
to Auschwitz, dealing with Commandant Hess personally to ensure the smooth operation
of the chief genocide machine in the Nazi toolkit.
Stagnath writes, He seemed to be everywhere and nowhere at once.
Eichmann talked so much and for so long that the people around him, ignorant of what was
really going on, believed he might actually have been involved in the overthrow of Hungarian
Reich Administrator Miklos Horthy.
Wislinski claimed that in Hungary, Eichmann boasted that he and Otto Globochnik were behind
the whole idea of exterminating the Jews.
Eichmann inflated his murderous lifetime achievement to crazy proportions and believed there was
certain to be a monument erected to me in Budapest.
He threatened his victims with the prospect that after final victory, Hitler would make
him World Commissar of the Jews.
These are the things that Eichmann is bragging about. And you can see this as maybe he's
lost his mind a little bit at the end of the Reich, or you can see this as he knows where
things are going, but he knows that these are the boasts that will give him just enough
flex to accomplish his mission, right? That's what matters to him at this stage. And I am curious, like he's not a dumb person.
So he probably has to know that the war is lost.
He sure does.
But I am curious if he thought a lost war in their mind
also include a complete loss of Nazi Germany itself,
or if this is gonna be more like a World War I situation
where Germany just continues to exist, you know?
Yeah.
It's debatable at the point at which he knows even keeping that is not on the table anymore.
But he, as we'll talk about in part four, he's starting to make plans in 44 for what
he's going to do after the war, right?
I think it really is.
It just is his personal response.
He feels personally a duty to kill as many of these people
as he can, even though the war is over,
that that's what's important to him morally, right?
And it was his job.
Yeah, and it's his job, right?
And he's gonna do it.
He's always been a dead-eyed careerist.
And if everybody else is failing,
I bet he probably thinks the way to continue to stick out
and feel great is to be successful when everything else is failing
I will I won't fail, you know
Yeah
So Eichmann is a master still at this late stage of shaping clout and the perception of clout into a weapon to get what he
Wants in the case of Hungary this allows him to oversee the slaughter of at least
437 thousand four hundred and two men women and children in a matter of months
That is the number the Nazis officially document,
so the real number is higher than that.
Credible estimates of the number of people Eichmann
is responsible for organizing to kill
in a matter of again months,
range up to almost 600,000 out of a pre-war population
of 700 to 800,000.
Jesus.
This is the most complete and fastest extermination of a Jewish population in Europe during the
war.
Fucking Christ.
Horst Grell, the advisor on Jewish affairs for the Budapest embassy, later claimed that
during this time Eichmann bragged the enemy had promoted him to war criminal number one.
And he's not super exaggerating at this stage, right?
He would then repeat a German saying that translates to,
many enemies, much honor.
The more people are talking about me as a monster,
the more honor I have for what I've done.
Eichmann was so good at what he did
that other SS men begin using his name
in the same way he used Himmler's.
When Kurt Becker, one of Eichmann's professional rivals,
got stalled in negotiations
over the expropriation of Jewish property, he threatened to get Eichmann involved. After the war, Eichmann's professional rivals got stalled in negotiations over the expropriation of Jewish property,
he threatened to get Eichmann involved.
After the war, Eichmann himself would brag,
every department was trying to squeeze
everything possible out of the Jews
to winkle it out by threatening them
with the big bad Eichmann.
He must have fucking loved that.
He does, but he also, he's smart enough to know
we're not gonna win.
And so now this reputation,
the fact that I'm getting accredited
for crimes I hadn't committed,
which is happening because I wanted that, right?
And I used to take credit for them.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a problem now, right?
Now that like, you know we're not gonna win,
the fact that you're getting blamed for shit
you didn't even do is an issue, right?
Well, well, well, if it isn't the consequences of my actions.
Right, right, right.
By early 45, he knows these days are numbered,
and everyone, including Eichmann,
increasingly knows that, right?
This is part of why colleagues like Becker
are eager to use his name.
It's not just that it gets shit done,
but it allows them to divert their own responsibility
for genocide onto Eichmann, right?
Oh yeah, Eichmann's the guy making this happen.
It's all Eichmann, not me.
I mean, it's the difference between swinging
from the end of a rope or doing like five years in prison
and then getting a government job in West Germany.
Yeah man, oh boy.
Holocaust was awful.
We were all, it's like that scene in a hot rod
where his friend's stolen the TV and he's like,
boy, riots are so terrible,
you just gotta get out as fast as you can, right?
Everyone's like, wow, the Holocaust, awful.
Can you believe what that Eichmann guy made me do?
Fucked up.
Incredible.
So in the last months of the Reich,
as it becomes clear to everyone what's happening,
Eichmann's gonna become a pariah within the SD, right?
People are like, oh, I don't wanna be associated
with this motherfucker any more directly than I have to.
And we'll talk about that and how he gets himself out
of this for a shocking length of time in part four.
But first, Joe, let's talk about how you're gonna get
yourself out of this podcast by plugging your pluggables.
I am the host of the Lions led by donkeys podcast.
We talk about military history and history of genocides, war crimes, other uplifting
things like that.
So if you want to hear more about Stalingrad, we did hours upon hours about that or other
genocides like Rwanda or the Armenian genocide or the Herero Nama genocide, things of that
nature.
We've all we've talked about that as well.
So come listen to it and it will not improve your mood.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Speaking of things that won't improve your mood,
the next episode of this podcast coming out Thursday.
Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media,
visit our website, coolzoneoneMedia.com,
or check us out on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube.
New episodes every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to our channel, YouTube.com,
slash, at, Behind the Bastards.
So what happened at Chappaquiddick?
Well, it really depends on who you talk to.
There are many versions of what happened in 1969
when a young Ted Kennedy drove a car into a pond.
And left a woman behind to drown.
Chappaquiddick is a story of a tragic death
and how the Kennedy machine took control.
Every week we go behind the headlines
and beyond the drama of America's royal family.
Listen to United States of Kennedy
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Maybe you've heard that Stonewall was a riot
where queer people fought back against police,
or that it's the reason Pride is celebrated this time of year.
It was one of the most liberating things
that I have ever done.
Legend says Marsha P. Johnson threw the very first brick.
Started banging on the door of the Stonewall like one, boom.
This week on Afterlives, we'll separate the truth
from the myth in the life of Marsha P. Johnson.
Listen to Afterlives on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
From iHeart Podcast, before social media,
before cable news, there was Alan Berg.
He was the first and the original shock choc.
That scratchy, irreverent kind of way,
talking to people and telling them
that you're an idiot and I'm gonna hang up on you.
This is Live Wire, the loud life and shocking murder of Alan Berg.
And he pointed to the Denver phone book and said, well, there are probably two million
suspects.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Did it occur to you that he'd charmed you in any way?
Yes, it did, but he was a charming man.
It looks like the ingredients of a really grand spy story, because this ties together
the Cold War with the new one.
I often ask myself now, did I know the true Jan at all?
Listen to Hot Money, Agent of Chaos on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts or wherever
you get your podcasts.
This is an iHeart podcast.