The Rest Is History - 620. The Nazis at War: Hitler Strikes West (Part 1)
Episode Date: November 24, 2025What was Adolf Hitler’s next move, after occupying Czechoslovakia in March 1939, and brutally invading Poland that September? Why did the Allies fail to act, despite the Nazis shocking offensive? An...d, would an assassination plot from within Germany itself prove to be Hitler’s undoing? Join Dominic and Tom as they launch into the Second World War, as Hitler and the Nazis escalate their war on Europe. Hive. Know your power. Visit https://hivehome.com to find out more. _______ Is your door in the draw? Sign up by midnight 30th November at https://postcodelottery.co.uk. People’s Postcode Lottery manages lotteries on behalf of good causes, 18 plus, conditions apply, play responsibly, not available in Northern Ireland. _______ Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee ✅ _______ Join The Rest Is History Club: Unlock the full experience of the show – with exclusive bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to every series and live show tickets, a members-only newsletter, discounted books from the show, and access to our private Discord chatroom. Sign up directly at therestishistory.com For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editor: Jack Meek / Harry Swan Social Producer: Harry Balden Assistant Producer: Aaliyah Akude Producer: Tabby Syrett Senior Producer: Theo Young-Smith Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi everybody, welcome to The Rest is History.
For those of you who are new to the show, a little explainer about where we are.
For the next two weeks, we'll be looking at one of the most exciting and dramatic moments in modern history, the story of the Nazis in 1939 and 1940.
But for those of you who are new to the show, just a little explainer about where we are and how we've got here.
So in our previous episodes about the Nazis, we described how this radical right-wing organization spearheaded by Adolf Hitler took power in Germany in 1933 against the background of the humiliation of the First World.
war and the collapse of the Weimar Republic. And then Hitler subordinated everything to his vision
of making Germany great again and expanding Germany's borders, wiping away the stain of the
Treaty of Versailles, and so on. So previously, we described how he did a deal with Stalin,
how he and Stalin dismembered Poland between them. But that, of course, brought Hitler into
conflict with the two great Western powers of Britain and France. So in these episodes,
We'll be looking at some of the most exciting and dramatic moments in modern history.
Hitler survives an attempted coup by his army generals and a bomb plot against him that misses him by minutes.
The Fall of France, one of the most awe-inspiring and tragic stories in modern European history.
The advent of Winston Churchill, the duel between Hitler and Churchill, the Battle of Britain and the Blitz.
And finally, Hitler's decision to turn on Stalin and unleash hell on the Eastern Front, Operation Barbarossa, all of this is coming up.
But we start the series with a truly unforgettable moment, one of the most remarkable impressions that you will ever hear.
The continuation of the present state of affairs in the vest is unthinkable.
Each day will soon demand greater sacrifices.
The national wealth of Europe will be scattered as shellfire.
And instead of flourishing towns, there will.
will stand only ruins and graves without end.
Mr. Churchill and his cronies may interpret these statements as weakness or cowardice,
but I need not occupy myself with what they think.
I make them simply because it goes without saying that I wish to spare my people
this suffering, if, however, the opinions of Mr. Churchill.
and his followers should prevail.
Then we shall fight.
Neither force or arms nor the lapse of time will conquer Germany.
There will never be another November 1918 in German history.
Mr. Churchill may be convinced that Great Britain will win.
I do not doubt for a single moment that,
that Germany will be victorious.
Destiny will decide who is right.
So the unmistakable tones there, Dominic, of Adolf Hitler,
and he was addressing the right stag on the 6th October 1939.
And as ever with Hitler's speeches, it's a little bit over the top, isn't it?
Just a little.
Yeah.
So the Second World War is a month's old at this point.
I'm having to catch my breath.
I've been quite exhausted by that.
Yeah.
You don't have his stamina, clearly.
No, I don't.
I'm not given to rants summoning people to strengthen the sinews of war.
Not my vibe at all.
So Poland is conquered.
Hitler's been on a visit to the shattered, smouldering rubble of Warsaw,
and he's now come back to Berlin from a Poland that has been
brutalized, conquered and occupied. And the Nazi campaign in the East in Poland was one of lightning
speed, incredible ferocity, and Hitler has now carved out Lebanon's realm living room for the German
people in the East. And now he has to decide what to do about Poland's allies in the West,
Britain and France, who had declared war on Germany with the aim of defending Poland,
but that aim obviously now lies smouldering a rubble like Warsaw.
Yeah, that's right.
So he is in that speech.
He's actually, despite his warlike tone, he's actually offering peace or pretending to offer peace.
And we'll come back to that offer in a few moments.
But Tom, while you catch your breath, let's just set the scene, set the scene for listeners
who may be new to the rest of his history.
put up with previous series. So this is actually our fourth series on the Nazis. We've
been tracing the rise and fall of the Third Reich. In the first series, which is back in
2022, we looked at how the Nazis emerged in the chaos after the First World War. They
drew on kind of late Victorian racist, nationalist ideas. The Weimar Republic broke down,
democratic experiment broke down, and Hitler was levered into power by conservatives who
completely underestimated his radicalism and his ruthlessness. Then we did a second series
in 2023, about how he cemented his control over Germany, how he began to move against the Jews,
and how he prepared Germany for war.
And then our third series, which was last year in 2024, how he swallows Czechoslovakia after
appeasement at Munich.
His science is packed with Stalin, which will be talking about a fair bit in this series,
and then he launches the invasion of Poland.
And to Hitler's surprise, and he genuinely is shocked and surprised, Britain and France then pile in,
on behalf of Poland, and so Europe is facing a second major continental war in 25 years.
And Dominic, by invading Poland, Hitler had gambled, hadn't he, that Britain and France
wouldn't enter the war, and they do.
Yeah.
And Hitler, by instinct, is a gambler.
He is always likely to roll the dice and see what happens.
And this is going to be incredibly important for our discussions of what's going to happen
in this our fourth series.
Exactly, because in this series, when we look at 1939 and 1914,
Hitler will launch, effectively, two gambles.
One of them is his attack on the West,
and the second is he begins to move towards the greatest bet of all,
which is his invasion of the Soviet Union.
And one thing I will just say before we kick off the narrative,
it's interesting that in all the time that we've been recording these series on the Nazis,
online, some of the conversation about the Nazis has actually changed a little bit.
So you see now in this sort of Anglo-American sort of Twittersphere or whatever,
people openly saying, well, the Nazis maybe weren't all that bad.
They were pushed into radical measures by the pressures of war.
And actually Churchill was just as bad a villain as Hitler.
So it's actually really important to stress that during this series,
a lot of which will be about kind of military stuff and foreign policy and things,
Hitler's radical exterminatory policies are gathering momentum all the time.
Specifically two things.
One of them is the persecution of the Jews, which has been getting worse since the midnight.
1930s. And the other, which will be an episode in itself in the future series, because
I know it's something you've written about, is his forced euthanasia program where he targets
the disabled and the mentally ill. And that will end up claiming about a quarter of a million
lives, I think. So these are in the background the whole time. You know, Hitler is not a
conservative autocrat like other conservative autocrats. There is a kind of exterminatory edge to him
all through this story.
And that is an important aspect of his attitude to war, isn't it?
That war is a natural condition because it enables the strong to prevail over the week.
Yeah, completely, completely.
And actually that's why he's so comfortable in this.
Unlike, let's say, Neville Chamberlain, who will be talking about, Hitler loves all this.
He regards this as a natural condition of humanity.
So let's get into the story.
Hitler attacked Poland on the 1st of September 1939.
The Poles fought heroically with very little help from their so-called allies.
But just 16 days later, the Soviet Union, as per their secret pact with Hitler, invaded from the East as well.
So Poland ended up being divided between the two.
That really is a stab in the back.
I mean, completely it is.
So the question now is how does Hitler see the war?
And as you said, Tom, I mean, I think you're absolutely right.
Hitler sees the human condition as one of fighting.
In Mein Kampf, in 1925, he had said that basically the life of man is a dreadful struggle for existence.
And he had made his warlike ambitions very clear to his high command.
So in January 1939, before the war even started, he told his generals that the German
heroes of history had embraced brutality, meaning the sword.
He said it's time for Germany to stake its claim to the domination of Europe.
And then in May 1939, he'd explicitly told them to prepare for war with the West.
This is always part of his long-term plan.
England is our enemy and the showdown with England.
is a matter of life and death.
As we'll see, Hitler has a very conflicted attitude
to what he calls England.
On the one hand, he admires it
because as an empire, as Anglo-Saxon cousins,
but on the other, he does think that at the end of the day,
England is kind of going to be,
or England or the United States
will be the kind of final boss, as it were,
if it was a video game,
that Germany will have to overcome
for mastery of the world.
If only, he'd married Unity Mitford.
If only, yeah.
It's depressing to get her on the show
so soon, because you know she's not my favorite person. Anyway, the thing is Hitler doesn't
think this showdown with England is going to happen anytime soon. His generals have told him that
the Luftwaffe will not be ready till 1942 and the fleet until 1943. And the Vermak,
his army, don't have a plan for a war in the West. So actually, when he attacks Poland,
right up to the last minute, he's trying to make a deal with the British to keep them out
of it. And he says, effectively sends a message to Chamberlain, Neville Chamberlain, to say,
I will guarantee the borders of the British Empire if you give me a free hand and give me a
little bit of Poland.
And he's really, really astonished when Chamberlain says no, because he had described
Chamberlain as a little worm and thought that he would never fight and has really taken
her back.
Underestimated British pluck.
He had underestimated British pluck.
Or had he?
Because the war has now been going on for a month and the Allies really have done nothing.
And one obvious reason for this is that they are so traumatised by the experience of the Great
war by the massive casualties, the French, for example, had lost more than a million men in
the First World War, that they don't really have the sort of warlike spirit to force the issue
now in 1939. So, as we described in the last series, the French troops massed on their
borders. They actually went into the Tsarland in the far west of Germany for a few days. They
outnumbered the Germans five to one. And then they sort of said, well, you know, we've had a little
look around and we'll go back now. So the Germans have this kind of fortified.
line, don't they? The Siegfried line. But there are, I mean, it's really not heavily occupied
at all. And the French kind of go up to it. And an excellent description in a book by James
Holland, my brother, the war in the West, Germany ascendant 1939 to 1941. And he quotes a French
soldier going up to the Siegfried line. And they're fired at by a single automatic weapon.
And faced by this single automatic weapon, the French then retreat. And my brother,
other rights. A generation earlier, French Pauilu had advanced David Grand torn up by shellfire
into withering storms of machine gun and rifle fire. Now entire advances were being held up by a
single weapon. And I found that really striking because he's right. I mean, we were talking about
this in the series that we did on the early months of the First World War. I mean, thousands upon
thousands of French soldiers being moaned down by German fire. And now it's like they've lost
their cahones, I guess. Well, I think it's precisely because that happened. They don't want
that to happen again. They know the cost, right? And they know that was a terrible
mistake, the Battle of the Frontiers in 1914 or whatever, when Frenchmen in kind of
19th century uniforms advanced towards the machine guns and were mowed down, they don't want
that to happen again. And actually, I think the allied leaders, so Chamberlain and Deladier,
who is the French prime minister, they are ultimately hoping that the Germans will come to
their senses and get rid of Hitler, that economic pressure will do the job, and that there'll be
a long standoff and eventually the Germans will get bored or they'll realize that Hitler
is a bad, you know, a baden and they'll get rid of him. But do you think it's also because of
the kind of the potency of Nazi propaganda? Because actually, this was the perfect opportunity
for the French to invade because all the German forces are away in Poland. So they absolutely
could have stormed the Siegfried line. But the Germans have been brilliant at suggesting
that the Nazi forces are invincible. There's some story of a, of a, of a, of a, you know,
a French air chief being invited to inspect the headquarters of the Luftwaffe and the kind of
various aerodromes.
And they go from aerodrome to aerodrome.
And while the French chief is being transported, the Germans are busy moving the planes
from one aerdrome to another so that it looks as though the Luftwaffe is actually much
larger than it is.
But I think that must be part of it, this sense that they've swallowed Gerbil's propaganda,
that the Nazis are kind of steel-tipped, invincible.
You know, there's no prospect of defeating them.
Whereas in fact, the opposite is the truth.
This was the chance for the French to kind of overwhelm the German defences in the West.
But it's a chance they completely miss.
And that's why, you know, the sense of inertia is why people call it the Boer War,
or they call it most famously the phony war.
You know, it's a war in which we're basically doing nothing.
And there's a definite sense, I think, that as the autumn of 1939 becomes the winter of 39-40,
morale in the West is sort of sagging.
So mass observation, which was like this sort of giant proto-focused group conducted in the late
1930s in Britain, reports, and I quote, a strong feeling in the country that this wretched
war is not going on with.
We can suspect that Hitler has won news round one in this war.
He's been able to give his own people a tremendous success story, Poland.
We've got nothing.
We've done nothing.
And of all people, Jean-Paul Sartre, the French existentialist, was drafted into the French
French army. And in November, he wrote in his diary, all the men were raring to go at the outset,
but now they're dying of boredom. The war machine is running in neutral. And he tells a story
about a sergeant who said to him, well, I think this is, you know, this is all going to be
sorted. It's all going to be arranged. England will climb down. In other words, the French
think, we've actually been dragged into this really by the British, who wanted to stand up to
Hitler. And maybe, you know, we can, it'll be some deal and we can all go home. And that's basically
what we want. So kind of dreams of la gloat not really manifest in the French lines. The First
World War has wiped away a lot of the war enthusiasm and the sort of fighting spirits and
whatnot. And for completely understandable reasons, I don't think there's anything weird about
that. So all of this leaves Hitler with the initiative. And actually, there is a point now where
he could, if he was so minded, he could make a real effort to offer the British and the French
deal. So the senior civil servant at the foreign office, who's a guy called Erzvon, Weissiker,
tells him, I reckon there's a one in five chance that if you go out of your way now to make
overtures to London and to Paris, that they will accept. So this is the context for the speech
that we began with. And Hitler basically says, look, Poland is finished. It's never going to be
brought back. It's divided permanently now between us and the Russians. He says, this is my appeal
to the people of Britain and France. You have been dragged into this by, quote,
Jewish international capitalism and journalism.
And the person that he associates with that is Winston Churchill, of course, a former journalist
and, you know, an enthusiastic defender of capitalism and a man with a lot of Jewish contacts and friends.
And Hitler says, why don't we have another Munich and other conference to settle Europe's security?
Now, of course, Chamberlain rejects this.
He was always going to reject it.
Yeah, of course, once bitten, twice I.
Yeah, and the House of Commons would never have allowed him to accept it.
Had Britain and France accepted, what would have happened, I think it would only have delayed the inevitable, because as we've seen, Hitler has made it very clear to his generals. He thinks war in the West is inevitable one day. Anyway, Hitler kind of knows they're always going to reject it. And he's actually in a hurry to get on with the war in the West, partly because, as you said, he is a gambler, and that's an important part of his self-image. He's obsessed with what he sees as the kind of the bold strike, you know, the decisive thrift.
trust, all of that kind of thing.
And he thinks concession and compromise are weakness.
And he associates that with democratically elected leaders in kind of stiff collars and
carrying umbrellas.
And that's not his vibe at all.
Not his vibe in the slightest.
But there are also other good reasons why he'd be in such a hurry.
Number one, as we've talked about in previous series, Hitler is a massive hypochondriac who
knows that his parents died young.
And he thinks that he might die young as well.
and he is obsessed with his health and he is drinking, his necking, gigantic quantities of gun cleaning oil
in an attempt to sort himself out.
And that's not wise, is it?
Just for anyone listening who might be tempted to emulate Adolf Hitler.
A bit of medical advice there, that's nice.
Don't drink gun cleaning oil.
Or invade Poland.
Or invade Poland, right.
He also knows that Germany's economy is not in a good shape.
So basically, his so-called economic miracle is built on sand.
he has this sort of gnawing need for more raw materials and more territory and resources and food.
And without expansion, the German economy will just collapse.
I mean, this is a really important point to emphasise, isn't it?
That there is at this point a real Potemkin quality about the German economy and also about the German armed forces.
They are not as impressive as people in France or Britain tend to assume.
And the economy likewise is potentially in a terrible state, which means essentially that if it is going to be stabilized, the only way to do that is to plunder wealth and raw materials from conquered territories.
Exactly. So he's got to keep consuming kind of rubber and oil and all of these kinds of things and food and fats.
And iron ore, which will also be important, won't it?
And of course, Hitler also knows the Allies are hoping for a long war.
You know, they had a long war last time and that's how they won.
He knows that if they have a long war, they will be able to up their rearmament programs.
They'll get support and resources from their colonies and from the United States maybe in the long run.
And that's the last thing he wants.
He wants to knock them out quickly.
And is it also the specific fact that Hitler knows that Britain's strategy will be the same as in the Great War, which is to impose a blockade.
And the impact of a blockade on an already tottering economy will be lethal.
and that effectively is what had brought Germany to its knees in 1918.
That presumably is absolutely what he wants to avoid.
Yeah, and the German people know this.
I mean, don't forget, the German people think they didn't lose the war on the battlefield in 1918.
You know, they might be wrong about that, but that's what they think.
They think they lost it at home on the home front, and that's what they want to avoid.
So the very day that Hitler came back to Berlin from Poland, he said to his commanders,
I want you to draw up plans for an attack in the West now.
He said, time works against us.
We have to continue.
and he said, here's the thing. The real threat here are the British. The French are useless. Hitler
never rates the French. He said, if we knock the French out first, the British will not have a
foothold on the continent. So to bring England to its knees, this is a direct quote, we must destroy
France. And just to emphasise what he is nervous about with Britain isn't its army, but its fleet
and its ability to throttle Germany's economy. But he thinks that if you deny the
British any foothold on the European mainland, then they won't carry on. His generals say,
well, when would you like to do it? Hitler says, I want to do it now. I want to do it this autumn in
the autumn of 1939. And they are visibly shocked. They are stunned. Even Herman Guring, you know,
Man Mountain, Hitler, top Hitler crony. He kind of the blood drains from his vampiric features.
He can't believe that. He's a commander of the Air Force, isn't he? And he knows that the Air Force isn't
ready for such a campaign, and presumably the generals feel that the Wehrmacht isn't ready for
such a campaign either. Exactly. So when Chamberlain says, you know, no, no to a peace deal,
Hitler says, great, let's step up the plans for this operation. He says to Goebbels,
this is good news in a way that Chamberlain has said, no, I'm glad we can go for England.
We will definitely win. The only reason we lost in 1918 is because we were betrayed.
I mean, this is foolish from Hitler. This is the kind of a really good example of how his ideology
he blinds him to political, military, economic realities.
And he says, the English will have to learn the hard way.
And he makes a similar point to his commander-in-chief,
his man will be talking about a fair bit,
who is called Valta von Browkich.
Now, Browkich is from a Prussian military family.
He's been raised in the sort of tradition of patriotic service and duty and whatnot.
He's a really good example, actually, of the army,
because Browcich was always very cautious.
He didn't want to go into Austria in the Anschlis.
He didn't want to go into Czechoslovakia.
He was always very nervous of these things, thought they would provoke a war, a world war,
that Germany would lose.
But he is literally in debt to Hitler.
Hitler has lent him tens of thousands of Reichs Marx to help Broucich divorce his wife
and marry his mistress.
So he's completely enthralled to Hitler and he's terrified of him.
In Kershaw, Hitler's biographer, calls him, and I quote, spineless.
And Browkich is spineless.
Despite being the head of the army, he is a kind of massive weakling of a man.
And even though he's anxious about this, Hitler says to him, no, I want you to get at the British as quickly as possible.
The British are the kind of people that will only talk to you once they've been beaten.
You have to beat them first.
And the attack will be called Falgelp, Case Yellow, and I want it to happen on the 12th of.
November. And in the next few weeks, Hitler is really working himself up. He's very excited in the way
only he can be. He gathers all his Nazi party officials. He says, we're going to be attacking
within weeks. We're going to bomb the cities of Britain and France. My dream, he says, is to
recreate the Holy Roman Empire. So let's get Switzerland back. Let's get Belgium back.
It's a bit of Holland. Yeah, let's make Germany great again in the West. And the more he talks
about this, this is, you know, one of the things with Hitler. The more he talks, the more he gets
drunk on his own rhetoric. So by the 6th of November, when he talks to Goebbels, he says,
England's power is now simply a myth. It's not a reality any longer. All the more reason why it
must be smashed. They're like teenagers, I always think, getting more and more giddy before a
party or something. Just to ask, and this is a point my brother makes in his book, there is
actually a sense in which it has ever since the time of Frederick the Great been Prussian and
then German strategy in a continental war to kind of plan for rapid attacks because it's the
only way that the Germans can possibly have a victory. And they've done it in the 90th century
against Denmark, against France. And of course, in 1914, it was exactly the same strategy
that they were planning, you know, the rapid attack, the sweep through Belgium, are descending
on Paris. I mean, this is what German strategy has always been about. So to that extent,
Hitler isn't really doing something that unusual.
No, and I think they have two big problems, obviously, that run right through German history.
Number one, they're very easily encircled by enemies, so because of Germany's geographical
location, and number two, also because of its geographical location, it has limited outlets
to the sea, so its trade can very easily be choked off by blockades and so on.
And both of those things obviously worked against Germany in the long run in the First World War.
And, I mean, you can argue his strategic vision up to a point is right.
because, I mean, he does beat France.
The problem is, the great problem which will run through all this series that we
talk about for Hitler, his great folly, a tiny bit like Napoleon, actually, he doesn't
ever have a sense of how this will end.
Because if the British don't agree to do a deal, then how does it ever end for him
in a good way?
Because the British have their empire, they have their fleet, as we'll see, they're
effectively unconquerable.
So, you know, where do you go with this?
That's his problem.
And so that's an anxiety for the generals, but also I guess it's not so much, you know, in the kind of the short term, they would recognize that to certainly knock out France, they do need to go on the attack. But I'm guessing it's the timing that's the issue rather than the kind of overall strategy itself.
Yeah, I think it's the timing. It's the, you know, these are people often who served in the trenches in the First World War, who fought on the Eastern Front. So the experience of losing the First World War.
is the single most formative moment of their lives.
And so, of course, they're going to be anxious about throwing the dice yet again in the West.
So, you know, there's a guy called Colonel General Ritter von Lieb, who writes in his diary.
You know, I can't believe we're going to go through Holland and Belgium again.
You know, they're neutral countries.
We're once again.
Worked out so well before.
Yeah, we're going to make the same mistake.
And he writes in his diary, the whole world will turn on Germany, you know, if we do this.
And this is the big threat to Hitler's regime.
The threat to Hitler's regime for all that he's gone on about, of course, the Jews, communists, social democrats, trade unionists, whatever.
The real threat has always been from the army, from the kind of nationalist, conservative wing of German politics.
That's why the night of the long knives, when he purged his own movement, he was basically sucking up to the army because he was worried about alienating them.
And so with the army, there's a kind of also class element, isn't there?
That they're kind of Prussian aristocrats and they look down on Hitler.
Who is this Austrian corporal?
You know, who is he to boss us around?
And even before the outbreak of the Second World War,
so really by the summer of 1938,
there are quite a few groups of people in kind of the army
or in political establishment circles
who think Hitler is bonkers and his leading Germany to disaster.
They're nationalists.
So they don't necessarily disagree with his aims,
but they just think, come on, this is.
so reckless and so counterproductive. Again, they are not wrong. So there's a group at the
Foreign Office. There's a group at the Abwehr, which is German intelligence, working for
Admiral Canaris. There is a group of nationalist politicians around a guy called Carl Gerdler,
who wants being the Reich Price Commissioner. And in particular, there's a group of army
officers who are loyal to the former Army Chief of Staff Ludwig Beck, who we talked about
in our last series, we talked about how Beck resigned in 1938
after failing to get the other generals to turn on Hitler.
And actually, there were plans for a coup.
At the end of 1938, which were abandoned because Britain and France appeased Hitler in Munich.
And so the generals thought, well, this isn't the time.
And so they dropped their scheme.
They're still kind of in touch with each other.
So they're still kind of informally chatting.
You know, this bloke's a bit bonkers, isn't he?
you know, maybe we'll have to get rid of him. And amazingly, and this will probably surprise
a lot of listeners, the men at the top of the German army are in on this. So Valtar von Broucich,
who I described, the guy is in debt to Hitler, and his chief of staff, who is a sort of clipped,
bespectacled staff officer called France Haldor, they have been privately talking about getting
rid of Hitler for months and months. And now that he says he wants to attack the West,
They have a secret meeting on the 14th of October.
And Halder says to Browkitsch, look, we've got three options here.
Number one, we go along with Hitler and we attack the West.
Number two, we somehow persuade him to wait and to call it off.
Or number three, we have to make fundamental changes.
And what does fundamental changes mean?
It probably means we're going to have to declare Hitler mad, put him under arrest,
and launch a coup in Berlin.
And Browcich, because he is, as Ian Kershaw says, spineless, he's never going to go for the third option.
He says, look, I mean, I think we're going to just have to try and persuade him.
Let's change his mind.
So that's what Browkich wants to do.
Now, his deputy, Haldor, is not convinced by this.
He thinks Hitler is unpersuadable.
And by early November, 1939, Haldor, the chief of staff of the army, has made contact with other groups of plotters.
They have a scheme.
They will kill Hitler.
they will arrest the leaders of the other Nazi bigwigs
and they'll take Germany over
and they will negotiate peace with the allies.
Haldor actually sends an intermediary
to some of the other leading generals,
Fedor von Bok, Gert von Rundstedt,
generals who will be hearing a lot about in this series.
And these generals say,
yeah, I don't like the thought of attacking in the West
doing this replay of 1914 either.
But I don't think we can do a coup
because I don't think our junior officers would obey us.
you know, and actually I think they're right because this is what happens in
1944 with Operation Valky, Tom Cruise filmed the Staufenberg plot.
And Haldor says, well, I wonder what the public would think, and this tells you something
about the class background of these generals.
Haldor asks his father's chauffeur, what do you think the German people would
think if there was a coup against Hitler?
And the chauffeur says, what, people love the Fuhrer, you know, they would be appalled.
This would be a terrible thing, and Haldor is very shocked by this, and then goes back
and says, oh, this is clearly a bad plan, because the chauffeur thinks...
And we're going to bunk off this.
Yeah.
We come to a decisive day, which is the 5th of November, 1939.
If the attack is going to happen on the 12th as Hitler wants,
they have to confirm the orders to make operational preparations at lunchtime this day.
At midday, Halder and Browkech go into the Reich Chancellor to try to persuade Hitler to call it off.
And some of the plotters definitely know that they've gone to have this meeting.
And they're hoping Hitler will say no.
And then Browcich will have the guts to finally order this coup.
Browcich goes in.
Haldah waits outside.
Haldor is now carrying a loaded revolver in case he gets the chance to be with Hitler alone.
And he could shoot Hitler.
So Browcich weighed down by his debts, goes in to see Hitler.
He's really nervous, kind of shaky.
And he says, oh, mine, Fuhrer, you know, I don't actually think we're ready to take on France and Britain.
I think it's a very bad idea.
When I look at the Polish campaign, there are a few kind of flaws and stuff.
I think possibly if we did attack in the West, it might turn out like in 1918.
And this is the kind of fighting talk that Hitler loves, right?
Yeah.
So as soon as he mentions 1980, right, 1918, the most traumatic moment of Hitler's life
when he cried in the sanatorium at the news of Germany's defeat.
As soon as Browkich mentions 1918, Hitler goes absolutely bonkers.
It's kind of spittle-flecked rage.
He says, the problem is not the troops.
The troops are great.
The troops love me.
The problem is Army High Command, which is in Zossin, which is a kind of suburb of Berlin.
He says, I know the spirit of Zossan, and I will destroy it.
And then he storms out of the room and he slams the door.
Browcich, broken man.
Wets himself.
Yeah, it's basically shaking like a jelly.
Or as Americans would say, presumably it's gelo.
Jell-old.
Right, exactly.
He goes out, shaking like a jello.
Terrified, blood drain from his features.
And he says to Haldor, this is what happened.
and Halder says, what?
He was talking about Zossin, about Army High Command at Zossan.
Oh, he must know that I've been, you know, we've been having these chats.
Zossin, is that where Haldah lives?
No, it's where he has his office.
So they have, that's the offices of Army High Command.
So he thinks Christ the Gestapo are onto us.
And Haldor rushes back to Zosson to his office.
And he gets frantically gets all these papers and kind of destroys them.
So meanwhile, while they're doing that, Hitler gives the order.
Go ahead.
The invasion will start on the 12th of November.
Now, Lister's may be thinking, but hold on, there wasn't an invasion in the West on the 12th of November?
And here's the mad thing about all this.
Hitler gets the order and immediately the weather changes and it just starts raining.
And they have to call it off for that reason.
Basically, the winter rains have started.
The ground is turned to mud.
The panzers won't be able to get through because it's so muddy.
And they say, oh, well, after all that, actually, we'll have to just postpone it to the spring of 1940.
Anyway, and so even Hitler accepts that.
Hitler's not going to argue with the weather.
I don't know. Force of will.
I think even Hitler bows in the face of the climate.
At least at this point, of course, he doesn't in 1941.
They make a terrible mess of it.
I was going to say, because it didn't stop him invading Russia.
No, you're right.
But anyway, they postponed it.
So the chance for the army to strike is gone, and Hitler is actually safe for the time being.
Or is he, Dominic?
Because three days later, so this is the 8th of November, 1939, he is going to Munich, isn't he?
because it's the anniversary of the Beer Hall Putsch, kind of sacred moment in the Nazi calendar.
And it's traditional that Hitler will go to the Beer Hall and he will address an audience of his old comrades, the old fighters.
And he's scheduled to arrive at 8.30 and he will then speak for not half an hour, not one hour, but two hours.
Dominic and listeners, as Hitler walks into that beer hall, surrounded.
by his bodyguards. A bomb is literally ticking. And we will be back after the break to say
what happens. This question is brought to you by People's Postcode Lottery. You know,
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So, of all the great moments of change, from the fall of Rome to the rise of the internet,
what was the single biggest ever turning point in history?
So Tom, turning points, I mean, I don't know what defines them, scale, speed, legacy.
You think of the, I don't know, the fall of Rome, the rise of the printing press.
Do you have an answer for the greatest turning point in history?
I think there are two candidates.
One of them would be the agrarian revolution, so the process by which hunter-gatherers came to
settle down, plant crops, and those crops then enabled in the long run the emergence of
urbanism. But I think possibly even profounder in its long-term consequences than the agrarian
revolution is the industrial revolution. And I'm not saying that just because it began
here in Britain, though hooray for Britain for kicking it all off. But we would not be able
to record this episode and have it heard by you without that process of change. I mean,
We live in such a technologically advanced world now, and that would not have happened without the Industrial Revolution.
Massively improved living standards, led to urbanism, all these kinds of things.
I suppose the difficulty of all these things is about measuring their impact, isn't it?
Is it about the immediate shock?
Is it about the lasting consequences?
And those consequences are often very complicated.
The Industrial Revolution's legacy, for example, cities, capitalism, carbon.
Of course, it gave us the great age of Victorian philanthropy.
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at ActionAid, the charity that they support. It empowers communities. It supports women and children
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Oh, we love that. And I guess just kind of wrapping up these reflections on great turning
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of change that you are living through is the most significant. And then some other great
revolution, great turning point may happen. And people will move on and think that that's the
biggest. But we are living through the consequences of the Industrial Revolution now. And so
that's why I think I would choose it. But certainly the great turning points in history do
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Holiday Insiders Report. Please feast responsibly. Hello everyone and welcome back to the rest of history.
It is the evening of the 8th of November 1939. Adolf Hitler has arrived in the beer hall in Munich
for the annual celebration of the beer hall putch.
But Dominic, little does he know that his life, the future of Germany, the course of world history itself, are all hanging in the balance.
Right.
Now, we'll get back to, I notice you skipped pronouncing the name of the beer hall, the Burger Breye Keller in Munich, but we'll get back there.
I don't want to frighten people with foreign languages.
Okay.
Okay.
Well, we'll get back there in a second bit.
Should we pull back the camera?
Let's do that.
Like a top documentary to set the scene.
to set the scene and explain precisely why this bomb is ticking.
So among ordinary Germans, although they were delighted by the quick victory over Poland,
they are not suffused with war enthusiasm.
They're actually quite anxious.
And the reason for that is that if you're an ordinary German,
life has definitely got worse in the last few months.
So since the war started, if you work in an export industry,
you've lost your export market.
markets. German factories are short of raw materials. Every last penny of the government's budget is now going into weapons and munitions. And the Nazis had brought in an immediate austerity program as soon as the war broke out. So that means higher taxes. There's no more overtime. They cut leave for workers. Wages are frozen and so on and so forth.
And there's no coffee, is there? So they're all having to drink. What is it? Mucker fuck. The fake mokker, which is made from chickory.
Yeah, there's a lot of that kind of stuff.
And they, of course, remember it from the First World War.
Older people remember how hard things got.
Although they can't go on strike, there's a lot of absenteers, and people stop turning up to work.
They start refusing to do overtime.
And so daily life is definitely getting harder.
People feel they're working longer hours for stagnant pay.
Food is more expensive.
It's a very, very cold winter in 1939, 1940, but they can't get hold of coal easily.
even the trains. So the German trains now actually are terrible, the worst in Europe, the worst
punctuality record. But they're pretty poor in 1939 anyway. So the idea that fascists make their
trains run on time is wrong. The pressure of war is too much for the German train system. And there
are two crashes that kill more than 200 people. So there's great outrage about this. And above all,
people are obviously worried, you know, Britain and France, you know, they're serious countries. They
could beat us as they did, you know, a generation ago. And one of the people who's worried about
this is a totally unremarkable guy called Georg Elza. And Elzer, I think, is a really nice
example of German politics in the 1930s. Richard Evans kind of uses him in his great book
on the Nazis, precisely because he's not very political. He's not Jewish, is he? He's not
particularly religious like the White Rose campaign as in due course would be. He's just a
totally boring every man. And Elsa came from Wurttemberg, sort of southwestern Germany,
born in 1983. His father was an alcoholic and gave him, he was a violent man and gave
gay august kind of lifelong hatred of bullies and of authority. He becomes a carpenter.
He's a very nondescript person. He's short. He's kind of quiet. He has girlfriends. He has
a son out of wedlock, but he's not married. He's not a reader. He doesn't read books. He doesn't even
really read the newspapers so he doesn't know what's going on. And in that respect, he's completely
normal. Although there are kind of radios everywhere, aren't there? I mean, this is the thing,
that there are more radios in Germany than anywhere else. And even those you don't have them
have to listen to them kind of blaring out from cafes and things. So presumably he is
familiar with at least the headlines, I guess. Yeah, of course, he's familiar with the
headlines. And of course, he's drawn into politics almost despite himself as everybody is. So
he belongs to the Woodworkers Union. Because he belongs to the Union, he voted for the
communists in the late 20s and early 30s, because he thought they would get workers a better
deal. And he'd actually joined their kind of paramilitary group, the Red Front fighters, but he never
turned up to meetings. It's just not really his thing. He doesn't care for the Nazis. He never
voted in elections and referendums under the Third Reich. And his reason was not ideological,
really. It was that he didn't think they were for the working man. He didn't think they got
working people a good deal. He said, you know, our pay's not very good, all of this kind of thing.
And Georg Elza, who's too young to have fought in the First World War,
when he thinks that a second World War is coming,
he becomes very anxious about it and very alarmed.
So the key thing for him is late 1938 when Hitler turns on Czechoslovakia.
And Georg Elza becomes convinced that Hitler's going to drag us into a war,
and poor working-class Germans, like me, will pay the price for this.
This is where he becomes unusual.
He decides, well, the only way to stop this is to get rid of Hitler.
and the Nazi top brass.
I need to eliminate the leadership.
And is he doing this entirely on his own?
Entirely on his own.
This is the mad thing.
So he's just a carpenter, right?
He's a nobody.
He just says, well, clearly nobody else is going to do this,
so I'm going to do it.
He's a have a go hero.
He's a have a go hero.
And he reads that every 8th of November,
the Nazis always meet in the Burger Breuerrekeller,
this beer hall in Munich,
and they have their little anniversary celebration.
And so on the 8th of November,
1938, Gael goes off to Munich and he waits outside, just stands in that street outside.
He waits to everybody's gone, Hitler, Gering, whoever else, and the crowd has gone.
And then he goes inside the beer hall to sort of sneaks in to have a look around.
And he realizes two things.
Number one, the security is abject.
Security is terrible because the Nazis insist on doing the security themselves.
They don't let the police do it.
And the Nazis are useless, completely incompetent.
Number two, he can see where Hitler was.
speaking, and there's a pillar right behind it, and he thinks, well, if I could get a bomb in
that pillar, I'd kill Hitler, and I'd kill all his entourage. Now, as luck would have it,
like so many Germans at this point, Georg has basically been reassigned to work in an armaments
factory. Oh, right. So there were lots of timers and explosives. Exactly. So over that winter,
he steals loads of fuses and detonators from work, kind of just shoves from his pocket and walks out
with them. And the following spring, so April 1939, he comes back to the beer hall, he kind of
Waits to everyone else has gone late at night, and then he takes photos, he measures it up.
He's a carpenter, so he knows what he's doing.
He works out exactly how big the bomb would have to be.
He steals some dynamite from a quarry, and he starts doing tests in his parents' back garden.
God.
So, I mean, if your son started doing that, you might be perturbed, but clearly not.
Impressive forward planning, right?
He's the most impressive person in this whole series, frankly, and this series has got Churchill, isn't it?
So he is so meticulous and he really plays the long game.
Mendefica, he came up with this idea now almost a year ago.
Yeah.
I mean, really playing the long game.
Really playing the long game.
August 1939, the 5th of August, he comes back to Munich.
He rents a flat and he starts going to the beer hall every night to have his dinner
and to have like a pint of German ale.
Very cunning.
And every night he gets into a storeroom and he hides in this store room and he waits in this
store room and he waits till everybody else has gone and the staff.
of all gone home. Then when the coast is clear, he comes out the storeroom, he goes up to the
pillar, he carves out this hole, and he is so meticulous. So basically, he builds a secret
door in the wooden cladding of the pillar, that only he knows how to open, that looks just like
the rest of the cladding. Then behind that, he hollows out a sort of a niche in the brickwork of
the pillar with a special chamber. He lines this chamber with tin so that if you knock on it,
It won't sound hollow.
So that takes him 30 nights.
30 nights he's going in there, having his sausages and stuff,
wait until everyone's gone home and doing this.
And becoming a familiar face in the hall.
Of course, a much loved regular.
And then on the night of the 1st of November, he puts the explosives in.
Three nights later, there's a dance in the beer hall.
He buys a ticket to the dance, presumably he doesn't do any dancing.
He waits until 1 o'clock.
Everyone's gone home.
and that's the night that he puts in the timer and the detonator.
So now it's there, it's ready to go.
What is almost the striking as the kind of meticulousness of his preparations?
It's the kind of incompetence of Nazi security.
I mean, you'd think that they would go around checking for things like this if Hitler's coming.
I don't know, because I was thinking precisely this about the whole business of hiding in the storeroom.
I was almost tempted, I mean, it would be a mad thing for me to do in part of my research,
to try hiding in the storeroom of a restaurant or something
and to see whether I could pull it off,
whether I could hide in the storeroom, come out.
The headlines would write themselves.
Come out and try to put a bomb in, I don't know,
the River Cafe or something.
I don't think I could do it.
Well, I'm rubbish at crafts,
so undoubtedly could do it.
Well, also, I mean, you wouldn't want to experiment
with explosives in your garden, would you?
No, I wouldn't.
I definitely wouldn't.
Yeah, but this is all by way of making his preparations
are all the more striking.
Yeah, I guess the other thing is people aren't going to come up to him and say,
oh, I'm a member of the rest of history club.
How wonderful to see you in the restaurant.
Yeah, that's true.
What are you doing with that gelic night?
You've come here for the last three weeks.
You have a very strange and unexpected life.
Anyway, 7th of November, he visits the beer hall one last time.
He has his pint and whatnot.
He waits until after closing.
Then he checks the pillar, he puts his ear to the pillar.
And he can just hear the clock ticking.
And he says, brilliant.
They're coming tomorrow.
Yeah, tomorrow's the day.
So he's set the timer.
It will go off at 9.20 in the evening of the 8th.
So that will be just over an hour, probably, into Hitler's speech.
All the party faithful, the bigwigs will be there.
Everything is prepared.
And so it is.
On the 8th, the day that it's going to go off,
Gael very contented, leaves Munich, and he's heading for late Constance.
And there he's going to cross the border into Switzerland.
and by the time he crosses the border, he is confident that Hitler will be dead.
Meanwhile, Hitler is on his way to Munich for this meeting.
Now, he arrives at the Beer Hall at 8 rather than 8.30, which was originally planned.
Now, the reason for this is precisely because of all the mad arguments with the generals
about the attack in the West.
So just the day before, the 7th of November, that was the day that he had postponed the operation because of the bad weather.
And they're going to have another meeting about it on the 9th tomorrow.
Because there's loads to discuss.
Yeah, when are we going to do it?
We'll do the troops, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And so Hitler was like, oh, I've got to go.
I've got that.
Basically, it's like you talking about your diary, Tom.
So I agreed to do this a year ago.
This commitment has been staring at me all this time.
I'd love to get out of it, but I can't.
I have to go to Munich and get it done and dusted back on the train.
and prepare the next episode of the rest is history.
So in that way, Hitler is like me.
Exactly.
It's very similar.
So it turns up to the beer hall.
There's 3,000 people there, these so-called old fighters.
And at 10 past 8, Hitler gets up.
And he starts delivering this massive rant,
I'm sorry to say, against Britain.
So very poor from Hitler.
But here's the thing.
Now, normally you'd expect Hitler to be ranting about Mr. Churchill and whatnot for two hours.
No.
It's quite a short speech by his standards.
So he gets to his climax.
There's peroration at 907.
And the clock is due to go off at 920.
He finishes the speech.
There is a torrent of applause.
Everybody has very much enjoyed it.
Now, normally he would stay in the room for half an hour, working the room and shaking
the hands of his old comrades.
But he wants to be back in Berlin by bedtime.
So he leaves the hall immediately.
He rushes out of the hall, whisked away by his entourage, to catch his special train.
And the old fighters are very disappointed.
They were looking forward to shaking the hand of the furor.
And they begin to make their way out of the hall.
And the staff come in to start clearing up.
Now, meanwhile, Hitler's got onto it, he's made the train,
his special train taking back to Berlin.
And he's on the train.
They're rattling through the countryside.
He's actually sitting with gerbils,
and they're having a massive bitch about the Catholic church.
And then in Nuremberg, the train is stopped unexpectedly.
And Hitler's like, what's going on?
and a load of officers get on the train
and they say there's been an explosion at the beer hall
a bomb has gone off just after you left
and at first Hitler thinks it's a joke
or I mean God knows what kind of jokes they're telling
and kind of Nazi high command
but he thinks this is great banter
or it's a hoax of some kind
and then more news comes
13 minutes after he left
at 920 the bomb went off
it went just as gay or girls had planned
the upper gallery collapsed
the roof collapse. But by that point, the place was emptying. So three people only were killed at once.
Five more people will die their injuries in the next few hours. And more than 60 have been injured,
but none of them are the Nazi big names that Elsa wanted to get. And all but one of those who died
are members of the Nazi party. Yeah, exactly. I think they're the person, a member of staff
of the beer hall, maybe? Because you're thinking maybe it's members of staff who got killed because
they were doing the tidying up, but it is actually Nazis.
At first, people thought when the bomb went off, it's an air raid by the British.
And then they realised it's a bomb.
They still think it's the British Secret Service.
So the British kind of live, as it were, rent-free in the Nazis' heads.
And Hitler says to the SS, the SS say, we've been monitoring two British agents, actually, on the Dutch border.
And Hitler says, right, bring them straight in.
Like, get them across the border, bring them in for questioning.
And these two British agents, you know, obviously know nothing about it.
But they are trumpeted in Nazi propaganda.
are these are the people who were behind the plot.
So all this is going on, but what about Gil Gelsa?
Has he made it across the border into Switzerland?
No.
So completely by chance, when he was crossing the border,
a customs post near Constance,
a customs official detained him and said,
you haven't got the right permit.
And they sort of, you know, this was not uncommon.
They didn't assume there was anything terribly sinister about it.
But then they searched his pockets a couple of hours later
after the bomb had gone off.
And they found they had wire cutters.
He had a fuse.
and he had a postcard of the beer hall
that was absolute madness from him
and they said oh this is clearly the bloke
now they beat him up they tortured him
Himler tortured him personally
I think stamping on him or kicking him
or something
until he confessed
and here's the mad thing
they didn't kill him
in fact they treated him quite well
they interned him in Saxonhausen camp
and they made him a kind of special privileged prisoner
so he had two rooms
and one of them he was allowed to use
as a kind of carpentry workshop
and he spent his time,
he made himself a zither
and spent his time playing the zither
and smoking.
I did not imagine
that people in concentration camps
would be playing the zither.
Well, he's playing the zither.
He's not allowed to mix
with other prisoners,
but he was a loner
so he wouldn't have wanted to mix
with the prisoners anyway.
Aren't there prisoners in the camp
who think that this is because
he had actually been
a kind of a jean provocateur
that he was actually
working for the Nazis
to get sympathy for Hitler?
Exactly.
that it's a false flag operation.
And in fact, quite a few people thought it was a false flag operation
because there was such an outpouring of sympathy
for Hitler after the failure of the attack.
But no, I don't think it was.
I think what actually the Nazis wanted to have him
fit and healthy for a show trial at the end of the war,
which they would use as an exhibit against the British.
They would basically frame him as a puppet of the British Secret Service
and that this would be good propaganda.
Because Hitler thinks that it's a British conspiracy right to the end.
Exactly.
Because, you know, Hitler has this Wagnerian sense of himself, doesn't he? And he needs
Wagnerian enemies. A carpenter who's just, you know, a bit worried about the plight of the
working classes, doesn't cut it as a kind of Nazi antagonist, I think. But also he wouldn't
want to think that an ordinary German would want to kill him. It must be the British.
Exactly, exactly. Actually, what happened to Elsa, at the end of the war, he was moved to Daco
and he was shot in April, 1945. The Nazis did get rid of him in the end. And then he was
forgotten for a long time because really post-war Germans didn't really know what to make
of him. But today, there's more than 60 streets and squares and things named after him in
Germany. And the city of Munich has a Georg-Elzer Prize for Courage. So maybe if I did do that
thing where I hid it in the river cafe. Yeah. You could win that. I could win it. Yeah. That's
something to aspire to. But of course, at the time, nobody sees him as a hero at all. So all the evidence is
that most ordinary Germans were absolutely horrified by this,
and it led to a big boost in support for Hitler.
So this is why a good example, a really good source on the Third Reich in the early years of the war,
is William L. Shira, the American correspondent, who was there the whole time,
I wrote this diary.
Richard Evans uses him a lot.
And Shira genuinely thought the Nazis had organized this themselves,
that it must have been a false flag operation because it was so productive in terms of support for the regime.
And actually, Ian Kershaw says, you know, had the bomb gone off, had Hitler been killed,
would the Third Reich have fallen, you know, maybe in the long run, yes.
But initially, it would have led to a hardening of attitudes
and a hardening of attitudes towards the allies who would have been blamed,
so the war would not have ended.
But they probably wouldn't have attacked in the West, or indeed in Scandinavia, perhaps.
No, I'm sure they wouldn't.
They'd have sort of hunkered down, maybe.
Anyway, the other thing the bomb does, it completely pulls the rug out from under the plotters, the army plotters and whatnot, because they see the public reaction and they think, come on, we're not going to launch a coup now.
I mean, the public love their furor.
It would be mad to do this.
So the next couple of weeks is the aftermath of the bomb, really, that's in everyone's minds.
But then on the 23rd of November, Hitler tells all his senior commanders to meet him at the Reich's chancellery.
It says about 200 of them, and he says to them, look, the last couple of weeks have shown me how much the German people love me and how much Providence loves me.
You know, I really am walking with destiny.
I've been saved from death yet again.
And he says, look at all the things I've achieved.
You know, a lot of you doubted me, the Rhineland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland.
But I was right.
I wanted to fight and fight again, and Providence rewarded me for it.
And then he goes on, he makes his, has his usual rant about living space, a racial struggle.
Fighting is the law of life.
In fighting, I see the fate of all creatures.
If you don't want to go under, you can't avoid fighting.
And he says, look, in all Germanist history, this is going back to your point, Tom,
about the sort of strategic sweep of German history.
Hitler says our problem has always been fighting a war on two fronts.
But right now, Stalin's army are knee-deep in snowdrifts,
because they've got into a right mess in their war against Finland,
which we'll talk about in the next episode, in the Winter War.
And Hitler says, so we have a unique opportunity now
to attack France and England at the most favorable and earliest moment.
We'll go through Belgium and Holland.
Yeah, they're neutral.
Who cares about them?
You know, history will reward us for it.
This is about national survival.
He says, do you know who I'm like?
I'm like Frederick the Great.
He did love Frederick the Great, didn't he?
He's always going on about Frederick the Great.
Great. He said, Frederick the Great in the seven years war was facing total defeat and disaster.
His advisors told him to make peace, but he rolled the dice and he won. And he says,
the brilliant thing for Germany, though, is that we have a secret weapon. Do you know what the secret
weapon is? Would it perhaps be Adolf Hitler? Yeah, he's not a modest man. He says,
Germany's secret weapon is me. As the last factor, I must in all modesty, describe myself.
I'm irreplaceable. I couldn't be replaced by either a military man or a civilian.
I'm convinced of my powers of intellect and of decision.
Wars are always ended only by the annihilation of the opponent.
No compromises, hardness.
I shall strike and not capitulate.
The fate of the Reich depends on one man, on me.
But I mean, he's not entirely wrong, is he?
Because actually, the kind of the sense of aggression that Germany will display over the next year
kind of is focused on Hitler.
Without Hitler, probably those campaigns wouldn't have happened.
Do you think that's fair to say?
No, I think you're right, Tom.
I think, well, Ian Kershaw, in his mighty two volumes about Adolf Hitler,
has this idea that underpins the whole thing,
which is working towards the Fuhrer.
So this idea that basically the whole time,
people in the regime have this ideal of Hitler and what Hitler would want.
And they're constantly trying to,
using that as their inspiration, their lodestar.
And that has a ratcheting effect,
because they assume that Hitler would always want the most radical, most decisive and reckless
possible outcome. It's driving them towards ever greater radicalism. And that basically,
if you took the ideal of the Fuhrer and Hitler out of that, then they might not behave in the
same way. So Hitler is, to that extent, you're right, the Hitler is actually essential to the
whole operation. But also, I mean, just in the context of launching war against the West in
1939. I mean, even Gering is against that. So there is a sense that Hitler is too radical even
for the Nazi high command in that sense? Well, I mean, is he too radical? I mean, in a way, no,
because they've crumbled, right? I mean, he has definitely pushed them into a reckless gamble
that they think could end up with having disastrous consequences, but they lack the spine
and the support to stop him. So that afternoon, after they've had that meeting, he summons
Browich and Haldor, and he's still absolutely furious with them and says, you know,
you know, defeatists, you're cowards and all this.
Broucich offers to resign, and Hitler says, no, I won't accept it.
You stay and do your duty.
And in his biography, Ian Kershaw portrays Browich as a man totally crushed, totally
depressed, because he is about to take responsibility for an invasion in the West that deep
down he opposes and he thinks will end in disaster.
But with that, the last chance to stop Hitler is gone.
And the obvious question, which is, why were they so weak?
You know, they had the guns, they had the men, partly because they're divided.
They know that the Luftwaffe and the Kriegsmarie and the Navy were much keener on Hitler than they were.
But also, I think the biggest problem, he's popular.
The German people like him.
And the chauffeurs.
The chauffeurs, everybody.
Ian Kershaw says, you know, Hitler was more popular than any other political leader in Europe in this period.
there was a massive consensus, not everybody, of course, certainly not if you're Jewish,
but among a broad swathes of society, there is this consensus that Hitler has accomplished
great things, you know, that he's a good judge, that when the furor goes for something,
you know, he does it. And most people, you know, especially after the bomb attack, are very much on
his side. So now the course is set. The attack on the West, because of the weather,
has been postponed to the spring of 1940, but it is definitely going to happen. And in the meantime,
the Navy have gone to Hitler, Grand Admiral Rader, and persuaded him to start looking at another
operation, which is further north in Scandinavia, which is to safeguard shipments of iron ore. I know
you love a bit of iron ore, Tom, because I noticed you mentioned it gratuitously earlier in the episode,
showing off your enthusiasm for iron. Yeah, I love some iron ore stats. And the people who are interested
nine or stats, I'm going to have loads in the next episode. So that's definitely something to
look forward to. So as we get to the end of 1939, so many kind of threads are underway. The Nazis
are thinking about the attack in the West, the thing about an attack in the north as we'll come to.
Their euthanasia program has begun. They have started herding Jews into ghettos in Poland.
The very first ghetto in the general government occupied Poland is set up in December.
and Himmler and Reinhardt Heidrich are already talking about schemes for mass deportations of Jews from Poland,
perhaps to some reservation somewhere, though where has not yet been determined.
Because they're not yet talking about a program of mass genocide, are they?
This is to come.
Not yet, but in December, Hitler and Goebbels have a meeting where they explicitly say,
we must eradicate what they call the Jewish danger once and for all.
So the direction of travel, you know, you can see where this is going.
But of course, none of this is possible if they don't win the war in the West.
As Hitler marks the new year, this is his priority.
On the 15th of January, he has lunch with gerbils,
and they spend a lot of time talking about the weather and how they need it,
a fine spring weather to launch the offensive.
And then as always, Hitler talks about history.
He talks about Bismarck and Frederick the Great, his great heroes.
And he says, the lesson of history is that only when there is no more going back is the courage found for very big decisions.
It says when the German people are up against it, in times of struggle, they always find their historical genius.
If we keep going, keep rolling the dice, take the fight to the British, the prize of total victory is in sight.
So people talk about learning the lessons of history, but it's not always a good thing, is it?
No, not in this case.
not in this case
so the date is set
the first blow will come in 12 weeks
and it will be the invasion of Norway and Denmark
then on the 10th of May
Hitler will launch his greatest gamble
yet the attack in the west
through Holland and Belgium and the Arden forest
into the heart of France
an attack that will go down in history
as the lightning war
the Blitz Creek
massive tension
so next time in the series
the Blitzkrieg will begin, although important to note the Germans didn't actually call it the Blitzkrieg.
I think that was a British appellation.
And after the attack on France, we'll have Dunkirk, we'll have the defeat of France, the Battle of Britain,
and then Hitler's plans for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941.
And members of the Restless History Club can hear all those episodes right now.
So if you want to join them, sign up at...
the rest is history.com.
And Tom, here's the thing.
With Christmas on the way, guess what?
You can give the exquisite joy of membership of the rest is history club to the
history lover in your life, because you can give them a full year's membership of
the rest is history club.
It is the perfect gift for anybody who likes history.
Actually, if people, you don't have to give us a gift, you can get it for yourself.
You want to just get it for yourself.
You could, couldn't you?
Yeah.
And here's the thing.
It comes always membership of the Restis History Club with amazing benefits.
But this year, this Christmas, it comes with a benefit that needs to be seen to be believed.
It is an exclusive rest is history t-shirt designed in collaboration with our very own Theo Young Smith,
who describes himself in the copy as a very stylish man.
And so he is.
And so will you be, if you get to wear the sensational t-shirt, which I have seen.
And my goodness, it's the.
ideal festive gift. So thank you, Dominic. Thank you everyone for listening. We were back in the
next episode with the Blitzkrieg. Happy to say. Bye-bye. Throughout time, celebration has meant giving.
So the Romans at Saturnalia handed out all kinds of gifts. The third,
Three Magi handed out gold, frankincense and myrrh, and the Victorians absolutely loved
wrapping things up in paper and then tying it up in string.
John, those are lovely gestures, but I wonder if they're a little bit too extravagant
for the typical Christmas morning.
So this year, here's my suggestion to our listeners and our viewers.
Why not give something a little bit more enlightened?
Why not give the gift of the rest is history club membership?
It's the discerning choice for anybody.
who prefers a Hannibal to a hamper.
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Also, on top of that,
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If such people exist,
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