One may
dislike Hitler’s system and yet admire his patriotic achievement. If our
country were defeated, I hope we should find a champion as indomitable to
restore our courage and lead us back to our place among the nations. - Churchill, 1935
It is remarkable to see the spell that the
Third Reich continues to cast over people three generations on from the war. I’m
not talking about skinheads who think they’re cool by giving the stiff-arm
salute and barking ‘Sieg Heil’ (often mispronounced), but about ordinary, decent
people from across the social spectrum. It is grudgingly conceded by social
scientists that many people from all walks of life nowadays feel an affinity
with Nazi Germany, although they are mostly advisedly prudent about expressing
those feelings openly.
One indication of the widespread sentiment is
the number of ‘hits’ period German newsreel footage on YouTube enjoys and the impressive
volume of favourable comments it attracts, many of them accompanied by scathing
critiques of the conduct of the Western allies during the war. If the balance of feeling expressed is
anything to go by, the ‘goodies’ and ‘baddies’ have changed places in the eyes
of a great many people, particularly in the context of the air war in which many now regard the Luftwaffe
as David valiantly taking on the Goliath of formations of allied bombers intent
on mass murder. One can almost hear the cheers every time one of those metallic
morphs of Tyrannosaurus is brought
down by a nimble Messerschmitt or Focke-Wulf bravely darting in through a hail of defensive
fire.
All this may seem enigmatic in light of the
bad press the Third Reich has been subjected to for the past three quarters of
a century. We have all been reminded umpteen times of the dark side of that
regime – and continue to be so on a regular basis – and for that reason I won’t
be mentioning any of that. The question is what attracts about the Third Reich,
not what repels.
The paradigm shifts that took hold from the
1960s saw growing numbers of people adopting a critical attitude to ‘accepted
history’. The maxim about the victors writing the history books went from being
a fashionable yuppie heresy to now being well entrenched in popular wisdom. The Cold War drew attention to the nature of
“our friends and allies” (a common expression at the time) the Soviets, and the
large-scale atrocities associated with the reoccupation of vassal states and
the Rape of Berlin while the response to the uprisings in Hungary and
Czechoslovakia elicited increasing Western public indignation. The shedding of
light on the joys of Stalin’s Paradise and the dawning realisation that that
most evil of all empires had murdered far more people than the Nazis ever did (yes,
do check that out) brought about a growing cynicism towards the alliance that
had crushed the Third Reich in 1945. This was added to by a constant flow of
revelations to the effect that allied war crimes had been glossed over or
sanitised – Dresden, for instance – and that a lot of fibs had been told; for
example, the Russians admitted in 1990 that the Katyn Forest massacre of Polish
officers, hitherto attributed to the SS, had actually been carried out by the
NKVD. (These could become very long lists, but this is not the time or place.) The
question “I wonder what else we’ve been lied to about”, hitherto a lurking
doubt in the sceptical mindset, found a voice.
I, for one, will never accept the proposition
that there was anything ‘moral’ about the decision of the Western allies to
side with Stalin’s USSR against Hitler’s Germany. That unholy alliance had a
great deal more to do with the threat that a united Europe posed to the
Anglo-American-dominated world order than with any ‘moral’ considerations. As
for the presence of Stalin’s stooges at the Nuremberg kangaroo court deciding
on charges of crimes against humanity, that just makes me puke.
The appeal of the Third Reich to many both
inside and outside it before and during the war is not hard to pin down, and
brings us right back to the Soviets. The world circa 1930 was an unstable and uncertain place. The First World War
had seen the toppling of four empires and the remaining ones were looking
shaky. The global economic order was a shambles and the Great Depression looked
like its death throes. Hovering in the shadows was the communist threat with
Moscow’s operatives and their fellow travellers holding half the counties of
Europe to ransom through their pernicious hold on the labour union movement. Collapse at the national and international levels seemed imminent. No informed,
thinking adult of the period could be blamed for believing that the whole show
was falling apart and the Soviets were going to pick up the spoils.
Enter a ‘third way’ – National Socialism.
Germany picked itself up by the bootstraps and did a true phoenix act
economically as well as socially, turning the country into an industrial
powerhouse and world leader in science and technology as well as a model of
social welfarism. The National Socialists won two general elections on the
trot, and a modern politician can only dream about the rating voters gave them
the second time. Others looked on with envy and some tried to emulate the
model. A stock history joke is that in Italy, Mussolini even got the trains
running on time. In Holland, almost 40% of the population were behind the Dutch
national socialist party at one point.
Then came the war. In the Baltic states,
Germany was welcomed as a protector from an aggressively expansionist Soviet
Union. In the Ukraine and other Soviet vassals, the incoming German forces were
hailed as liberators. National Socialism as the guiding paradigm of a united
Europe under German leadership became a pan-European ideology fanned by
anti-communism. The Waffen SS, that
much maligned (because they were the finest fighting force the world has ever
seen) international army spearheading the struggle, recruited the fittest and
ablest young men – all volunteers – from all over Europe; there was even a
small British SS contingent. As it turned out, Stalin’s USSR was the big winner
and for the next 45 years, half of Europe was under Soviet domination and the
communist menace gave us, inter alia,
Korea and Vietnam. This is what we have inadvertently been ‘celebrating’ on VE
Day.
All of this goes a long way towards explaining
why many have been taking a fresh look at the history of the first half of the
last century, although it does not quite explain the mesmeric effect that the
Third Reich appears to exert on a significant – and apparently growing – number
of people today in 2015. Wherein lies the allure? One need not look far to
identify it, methinks – although the answer to the question will be far from
palatable for many. The potent symbolism, the rousing mass rallies, the stirring
marching songs, the powerful speeches, the infectious national pride and morale
– these all add up to a magnetism that few Europeans can resist. For the Third
Reich was White Pride par excellence
– and it transpires from numerous comments
found on various internet websites that this aspect of it is strongly adding to
its appeal in these Politically Correct days when to be White is to be in the
wrong. The haunting images evoke a sense of nostalgia and a nagging sensation
of Paradise Lost – ‘look at us then, look at us now’ – supplemented by a
mounting conviction on the part of growing numbers of Europeans that Paradise
Regained remains within reach, as the impressive growth of the European ‘far
right’ bears witness to.
Erich Priebke, ex-SS Sipo (security
police) and hounded for the last 20 years of his life by ‘Nazi hunters’, said the following in an interview with the
ABC (American) just before his death in 2013 at the age of 100:
Q: So do you still
consider yourself a National Socialist?
A: Loyalty to our past
determines our convictions and our character. This is the way I view the world
and my ideals. It is what was once our German Weltanschauung, the way we view the world. It is what still
determines my sense of honour and my self-respect. Politics is something
different. National Socialism perished with the defeat of Germany and today
there is no longer any prospect of its continuation.
That last evaluation is probably true – the
European ‘far right’ parties aiming for representation in parliament have done
their utmost to distance themselves from the political tsunami that swept
through Europe during the 1930s and early 40s. But have we in the West, in
rejecting all that the Third Reich stood for, thrown out the baby with the
bathwater? I hear few assenting voices, but I see many silently nodding heads.
Barend Vlaardingerbroek BSc (Auckland), BA, BEdSt (Queensland), DipCommonLaw,
PGDipLaws (London), MAppSc (Curtin), PhD (Otago), is associate professor of education
at the American University of Beirut and a regular contributor to Breaking
Views on geopolitical and social issues. Feedback welcome at bv00@aub.edu.lb.
5 comments:
Barend, I draw a long bow here intellectually. I see this as World War 3.
WW 3 indeed. Russia today is not Stalin's Soviet Union.
Many countries in the 1930s were fascist: Hungary, Romania, Poland... Revival of heroic nazism is government policy, or at least sponsored, in Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Croatia, Romania and, Ukraine... Poland looks back to a Polish Empire "from sea to sea", i.e. from the Baltic to the Black Sea.
Ukraine has adopted as their national day the birthday of the (western) Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), allies of Germany in World War II. The two western Ukrainian SS Divisions, Nachtgelle and other battalions, slaughtered hundreds of thousands of defenceless women and children, Poles, Jews, Gypsies and Russians, burning villages (including my mother's) and churches.
Imagine the bitterness and hatred smouldering just below the surface even today.
Anyone wearing the Russian St George's ribbon in Ukraine on Russia's Victory Day 9 May (Russia's ANZAC Day) risks arrest or death.
The US is revising the result of WWII, is determined to end the friendship between Russia and Germany, and appears to want to drag Russia into a war with NATO and EU. Obama has said that his greatest achievement has been to isolate Russia and trash her economy.
Prussian General Blucher once said, as a warning to Napoleon, "I know 1,000 ways to drag the bear out of his cave. But I don't know a single way to put him back."
The allure of the Third Reich...might this be a rejection, a reaction of its complete opposite - Total Communism of a 4th Commune?
Interesting viewpoint Barend, although as just one Schoolboy celebrating VE Day in Litchfield (UK) I recalling the expectations, the hope registered that day on the faces of the many service men/ women, and for us the civilians, that now at long, last a Peace had come! This illusion soon passed with the Iron Curtain across Europe.
Victories are always achieved at a cost and linking the Allies with Stalin monstrous regime was a means to an end. The betrayal came after the war allowing Stalin unlicensed control of a major portion of Europe. The trust placed by the Allies in Stalin was, a repeat of Chamberlain’s “Peace in our Time” welcomed by a war weary populace.
The intervening years of a pseudo Communism idea of governing have engulfed most of the West with perhaps, the exclusion until now, of the United States. It was certainly grasped by the United Nations as a world solution, and has been very successful in merely pulling the emotive wool over our eyes. It certainly seems so, when one examines how much our individual freedoms have been reduced in the name of the so called common good!
Are the “Western States” we now live in just part of an ever ongoing revolution? Perhaps we do need an Edmund Burke, who saw quite clearly the implications of the French Revolution...a Revolution which came to grief so suddenly from the high idealism brandished by its romantic founder’s; basically discontented lawyers, and a desire of bourgeois constitutionalism followed in blood by the populace. Unlike the French or Russian our revolution is bureaucratic in its origin and a credit to the many regulations and demands that a state can impose and sell so successfully to a gullible public.
Nazism is dead, but like Communism will not lie down, which if it proves anything, proves that they are both are a sinister menace to democracy. Unfortunately they pale into insignificance when compared with the apathy of our Western Nations leaders and citizens in its defence!
Brian
Thanks Barend, it was a very interesting article and worthy of further study, especially in light of Leonard Peikoff’s book The Ominous Parallels.
Could you to explain your comment
“As for the presence of Stalin’s stooges at the Nuremberg kangaroo court deciding on charges of crimes against humanity, that just makes me puke. “
Wayne Nicholls,
Wayne – greetings to you.
The credibility of the Nuremberg war trials has been questioned by various legal academics – one of the international law textbooks I have is quite scathing about them.
The point I was making is that for Stalin’s personal appointees to be sitting as judges in any trial for crimes against humanity is rather like the Mafia conducting a prosecution for dealing in contraband. It is so preposterous it would be funny if it were not so hugely offensive to any sense of moral decency.
Best wishes
Barend Vlaardingerbroek
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