CODOH Is Pleased to Present a World-Wide Exclusive Preview
of Mr. Irving's New Work. Scheduled for U.S. publication in March, 1996
by St. Martins Press, protests by the ADL and other Jewish organizations
and individuals caused the publisher to withdraw from their agreement
as the book was going to print. Now available in the UK from
Focal Point.
Goebbels:
Mastermind of the Third Reich
Biography
OF JOSEPH GOEBBELS, TIME MAGAZINE WROTE six months before World
War Two: "Having spent forty-two years of his life in bitter combat
with the normal and healthy world, 'Jupkin' Goebbels, lecherous,
shrewd, suave, ambitious, vindictive, stands today at the head of
Germany's smoothest-functioning organization and is largely responsible
for the nadir to which German prestige has sunk in the rest of the
world."
Perhaps his veins were tinged with Malay blood from a distant Dutch
forebear; his features were not unlike those of an Italian or, his
enemies mocked, a Jew. Height only five-foot-four; a figure of Ghandi-like
emaciation barely tipping the scales at one hundred pounds; a head
too large for his body; a clubfoot for which he was taunted as both
man and boy-all the cards seemed stacked against him. He blamed
the world at large; he hated the human race, and he boasted of this
hatred in his secret diaries.
British historian David Irving is the frst to make use of the entire
75,000 pages of the Goebbels Diaries-diaries which lay unrecognized
for fifty years in the Red Army's "trophy" archives in Moscow. From
this extraordinary trove, to which Irving has added six years' research
in the archives of the western world, he narrates the frst authentic
biography of Adolf Hitler's confidant and evil genius, Dr Joseph
Goebbels.
The narrative accompanies Goebbels as an impoverished student to
Heidelberg, where he wins the university's most beautiful female
student; belying the legends that he later nurtures, he remains
sexually immature until his early thirties, as he throws himself
into winning Berlin and then all of Germany for Hitler's rising
Nazi movement.
In the late Thirties a Czech actress beguiles him, bringing him
to the brink of suicide. In a frenzy bordering on delirium he takes
revenge on Germany's Jews, igniting the Night of Broken Glass in
November 1938; later, he hounds them out of Berlin and goads Hitler
on toward the Final Solution.
HERE FOR THE FIRST TIME are Goebbels' secret, unpublished writings
on the Reichstag Fire, the Night of the Long Knives, the Dollfuss
murder, the Saar plebiscite, the invasion of Prague, Pearl Harbor
and scores of other turning points in modern history. Dr Goebbels
faithfully records Hitler's innermost councils, documenting the
hidden methods and strategies of the Nazi leadership.
As his country is finally consumed by a rain of fire and slaughter
from the air, it is Goebbels whose voice exhorts the people to hold
out to the end. When that end comes in May 1945, he takes his wife
and six children with him to the Nazi Valhalla with a callousness
now revealed in full by the former Soviet archives.
At every turn of this gripping story, David Irving has built up
his narrative solidly on the archival record, dispelling many legends
about the Third Reich that have endured in the history books until
today.
·
David Irving's last work was his biography of Hermann
Göring:
"There are many who believe that Irving builds some new shock
to public belief into each book he writes. The other side of Irving
makes him a most formidable opponent. He is the most assiduous and
persistent of researchers into the mountains of documents. He has
uncovered enormous quantities of private diaries and papers hidden
from Allied investigators. And he has shown a combination of generosity
and commercial acumen in their disposal."
Professor Donald Cameron Watt in the Sunday Times.
"Irving has an extraordinary talent for digging up otherwise
obscure Nazi sources. He does have a real knack of penetrating the
'mind' of Nazism."
Professor Norman Stone in New Statesman.
"Irving's research effort is awesome."
Professor Larry Thompson
in the Chicago Tribune.
"David Irving, a remarkable researcher, a brilliant discoverer
of documents, and a skillful writer, tells the story well."
Professor Hugh Trevor-Roper (Lord Dacre),
in the Sunday Telegraph.
"Irving," wrote George Christian in his review for the Houston
Chronicle, is "a writer whose contempt for professional historians
is well known."
Introduction
WRITING THIS BIOGRAPHY, I have lived in the evil shadow of Dr Joseph
Goebbels for over seven years.
Four years into the ordeal, I had the immense good fortune to become
the first - and so far only - person to open the complete microfiche
record, made by the Nazis in 1944-45, of Goebbels' entire private diaries
and papers from 1923 to 1945; the Red Army had placed these in the Soviet
secret state archives in Moscow. There they languished until the ninety
or so original Agfa boxes containing the 1,600 glass plates, on which
Goebbels had had the diaries filmed for safety, were discovered by the
Goebbels Diaries expert Dr Elke Fröhlich in March 1992. (On behalf of
all historians of the period I place on record here our gratitude for
the work she has done on the diaries.) I was able to use them myself
in June and July of the same year, probably the first person to have
untied the string on those boxes since 1945. With the support of Dr
V. P. Tarasov, chief of the Russian federation's archives, and Dr V.
N. Bondarev, chief of the former Soviet secret state archives, I was
able to retrieve or copy some five hundred pages of the most important
missing passages of the diary, including Goebbels' first diary, begun
in 1923, the 1933 Reichstag fire, the 1934 Röhm putsch, the 1938 Kristallnacht,
the months before the outbreak of war in 1939 and many other historically
significant episodes. The conditions in these archives in Moscow's Viborg
Street were, it must be said, challenging: Soviet archives were designed
for keeping things secret, and the very notion of a public research
room was alien to them. Thus one had no microfilm or microfiche reader.
After struggling to read the 1,600 fragile glass microfiches (some 75,000
pages) with a thumbnail-sized 12x magnifier on my first visit, I was
able, through the generosity of the London Sunday Times,
to donate a sophisticated film and fiche reader to the Russians on my
second; the bulky machine arrived back in London, without explanation,
one day after I did in July 1992.

Click on the picture to see a larger version (260K).
What followed was a less enlightened episode. I provided extracts
from these diaries to Times Newspapers Ltd. in Britain.
The Sunday Times published them along with Der Spiegel
in Germany and other major newspapers around the world. I also
donated complete sets to the German federal archives in Koblenz and
to the archives of Goebbels' native city Mönchen-Gladbach. Nevertheless,
while the international press celebrated the retrieval of the long-lost
diaries, many rival historians registered something approaching a cry
of pain.
Their injured professional amour propre proved infectious. While
spending half a million pounds promoting its serialization of the diaries'
scoop, the Sunday Times mentioned the name of the person
who acquired them in the smallest type-size known to man; Der
Spiegel printed the series for five weeks without mentioning
him at all. A Berlin university historian, whose team has been laboring
for years on the other volumes of the diaries, reported at length on
the 'new find' to a symposium in the United States, again without reference
to either Dr Fröhlich, the discoverer - to whom all real credit is due
- or to myself. (1) The directors of Piper Verlag, Munich, who
a few weeks later published an abridged popular edition of the other
Goebbels Diaries, (2) deplored in a German television news bulletin
that "Mr. Irving of all people" should have exclusively obtained these
sensational missing diaries - and failed to mention either then or in
their publication that without reward he had at the last minute made
one hundred pages available with which they had filled aching gaps in
their publication.
Even more lamentable have been the actions of the German government's
federal archives, the Bundesarchiv, to which I also donated many Goebbels
documents, including a set of all the diaries I retrieved in Moscow.
On the instructions of the minister of the interior, on July 1, 1993
the archive banished me forever from its halls, without notice, two
hours before the conclusion of my seven years of research on this subject.
It had earlier provided a hundred photos at my expense - but on the
minister's instructions it now refused to supply caption information
for them. When I requested the Transit-Film Corporation, which inherited
the copyrights of Third Reich film productions, to provide still photographs
of the leading actors and actresses who play a part in the Goebbels
story, the firm cautiously inquired of Professor Friedrich Kahlenberg,
head of the Bundesarchiv, whether "special considerations" might apply
against helping me! (A copy of this letter fortuitously came into my
hands, but not the pictures I had requested.) The background can only
be surmised. Professor Kahlenberg had hurried to Moscow in July 1992
- too late to prevent the Russians from granting me access to the coveted
microfiches of the Goebbels Diaries. (There was no reason why the Russians
should have denied me access: Several of my books, including those on
Arctic naval operations and on Nazi nuclear research, have been published
by Soviet printing houses.) The Bundesarchiv has justified its banishment,
which is without parallel in any other archives, on the ground that
my research might harm the interests of the Federal Republic of Germany.
The ban has prevented me from verifying my colleagues' questionable
transcriptions of certain key words in the handwritten diaries. I had
a list of twenty such words which I wished to double-check against the
original negatives; pleading superior orders, the Bundesarchiv's deputy
director, Dr Siegfried Büttner, refused to allow even this brief concluding
labour. As one consequence, evidently unforeseen by the German government,
the Bundesarchiv has had to return to England its "Irving Collection,"
half a ton of records which I had deposited in its vaults for researchers
over the last thirty years. These include originals of Adolf Eichmann's
papers, copies of two missing years of Heinrich Himmler's diary, the
diaries of Erwin Rommel, Alfred Jodl, Wilhelm Canaris, and Walther Hewel,
and a host of other papers not available elsewhere.
I HASTEN to add that with this one exception every international archive
has accorded to me the kindness and unrestricted access to which I have
become accustomed in thirty years of historical research. I would particularly
mention the efforts of Dr David G. Marwell, director of the American-controlled
Berlin Document Center (B.D.C.), in supplying to me 1,446 pages of biographical
documents relating to Goebbels' staff. However, these now, like the
collections formerly archived in Moscow and in the D.D.R., also come
under the arbitrary aegis of the Bundesarchiv. Marwell's predecessor,
the late Richard Bauer, provided me with the B.D.C.'s file on Goebbels
(my film DI-81).(3) In the German socialist parties' Friedrich
Ebert Stiftung in Bonn, deputy archivist Dr Ulrich Cartarius generously
granted to me privileged access to the original handwritten diary of
Viktor Lutze, chief of staff of the S.A. (1934-43), on which he was
currently working. Karl Höffkes of Essen kindly let me use the Julius
Streicher diary and papers in his private archives.
The Yivo Institute for Jewish Research in New York also allowed me to
exploit their Record Group 215, which houses a magnificent collection
of original files of propaganda ministry documents, including Goebbels'
own bound volumes of press clippings. I must also mention my Italian
publishers, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, and their senior editor Dr Andrea
Cane, who made available to me for transcription Goebbels' entire handwritten
1938 diary - it was a two-year task, but without that "head start" in
reading Goebbels' formidable script I should have been unable to make
the sense of the Moscow cache that I did. This is also the proper place
to thank my friend and rival Dr Ralf Georg Reuth, author of an earlier
Goebbels biography, for unselfishly transferring to me a copy of Horst
Wessel's diary and substantial parts of the 1944 Goebbels diary, to
which I added from Moscow and other sources. The attitude of the other
German official archives was very different from that of the Bundesarchiv
in Koblenz. Dr Hölder, president of the German federal statistics agency
(Statistisches Bundesamt) in Wiesbaden, provided essential data on Jewish
population movements with reference to Berlin. Two staff members (Lamers
and Kunert) of the Mönchen-Gladbach archives provided several of the
early school photos and snapshots of girlfriends reproduced in this
work. André Mieles of the Deutsches Institut für Filmkunde (German Institute
of Cinematography) provided many of the original movie stills and other
fine photographs of filmstars. I owe thanks to Tadeusz Duda and the
Jagiellonski Library of University of Krakow, Poland, for the photographs
reproduced from Horst Wessel's diary in their custody. Dr Werner Johe
of the Forschungsstelle für die Geschichte des Nationalsozia lismus
(Research Office for the History of National Socialism) in Hamburg volunteered
data from the diary of Gauleiter Albert Krebs. Karl Heinz Roth of the
Hamburg Stiftung für Sozialgeschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts (Foundation
for the Social History of the Twentieth Century) assisted me in dating
certain episodes in 1934. The state archives of Lower Saxony (Niedersächsisches
Staatsarchiv) in Wolfenbüttel let me read Leopold Gutterer's papers
and I am glad to have been able to interview Dr Gutterer, now over ninety,
on several occasions for this book. I was fortunate to obtain access
to the papers of Eugen Hadamowsky as well as those of Joseph and Magda
Goebbels and of the propaganda ministry itself at the Zentrales Staatsarchiv
in Potsdam while it was still in the communist zone of Germany; most
of the e.g. vol. 765, Goebbels' letters to his colleagues at the front
- had remained untouched since last being used by Dr Helmut Heiber in
1958. In those last dramatic days before November 1989, archivist Dr
Kessler gave me unlimited access despite cramped circumstances; those
files too have now passed under the less liberal control of the Bundesarchiv.
Although any biographer of Goebbels owes a debt to Dr Helmut Heiber,
who first trod the paths to the papers in Potsdam, he will forgive me
for not using his otherwise excellent published volumes of Goebbels'
speeches; often important phrases - faithfully reported by local British
and other diplomats in the audiences - were omitted from the published
texts on which Heiber relies; these diplomatic records, as well as other
important documents, I have extracted from the holdings of the Public
Record Office in London, capably helped by Susanna Scott-Gall as a research
assistant. Shortly before its completion Manfred Müller, an expert of
the early years of the Goebbels family, generously commented on my manuscript
and let me read his own biography of Hans Goebbels, the brother of the
Reichsminister.
The Institut für Zeitgeschichte (I.f.Z.) in Munich gave me the run of
its library and archives and made available to me its files of press
clippings on Nazi personalities. But here too a possessiveness, an unseemly
territorialism came into play as the I.f.Z. contrived to protect its
virtual monopoly in unpublished fragments of the Goebbels diaries. Before
coming across the Moscow cache, I had asked the I.f.Z., while researching
there in 1992, for access to its Goebbels diaries holdings for the two
years 1939 and 1944; on May 13 the director of the I.f.Z. refused in
writing, stating that it was the institute's strict and invariable practice
not to make available "to outsiders" collections that it was still processing.
This was why - since I could not conceive of completing the biography
properly without those volumes - I travelled to Moscow, where I had
learned that the original Nazi microfiches were housed; here I accessed,
to the Munich institute's chagrin, not only the volumes for 1939 and
1944 but the entire diaries from 1923 to 1945 - though not before the
institute, in an attempt to secure my eviction, had urgently faxed to
Moscow on July 3, 1992 the allegation, which it many weeks later honourably
withdrew (4), that I was stealing from the Soviet archives. Foul
play indeed -methods of which Dr Goebbels himself would probably have
been proud. That was not all. A few days later, hearing that the
Sunday Times intended to publish the diaries which I had
found in Moscow, the same institute, with a haste that would have been
commendable under other circumstances, furnished to journalists on the
Daily Mail, a tabloid English newspaper, the diary material
which it had denied to me two months earlier: as of course they were
entitled to. There was one pleasing denouement. The tabloid newspaper
- which had paid out £20,000 in anticipation of its scoop - found that
neither it nor its hired historians could read the minister's notoriously
indecipherable handwriting. It abandoned its serialization in impotent
fury two days later.
___
Of course this biography is not based on Dr Goebbels' writings alone.
In no particular sequence, I must make mention of Andrzej Suchcitz of
the Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum in London who provided to me
important assistance on the provenance of Goebbels' revealing secret
speech about the Final Solution of September 1942; the George Arents
library at the university of Syracuse, N.Y., who allowed me to research
in the Dorothy Thompson papers; and to Geoffrey Wexler, Reference Archivist
of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, who gave access to Louis
P. Lochner's papers, copies of some of which are also housed in the
Franklin D. Roosevelt Library at Hyde Park, N.Y. I also owe thanks to
the latter library for the use of other collections including William
B. Donovan's papers and the "presidential safe". I used more of Donovan's
papers at the U.S. Army Military History Institute at Carlisle, Pa.
Dr G. Arlettaz of the Swiss federal archives in Berne, Dr Sven Welander
of the League of Nations archives at the United Nations in Geneva, and
Didier Grange of the Geneva city archives provided valuable information
and photographs on Goebbels' "diplomatic" visit to Geneva in 1933. In
Germany I was greatly helped by the officials of the Nuremberg state
archive, which houses reports on the postwar interrogations of leading
propaganda ministry and other officials (some of which I also read at
the National Archives in Washington D.C., where my friends John Taylor
and Robert Wolfe provided the same kindly and expert guidance as they
have shown for several decades).
Dr. Howard B. Gotlieb, director of the Mugar Memorial Library at Boston
university, drew my attention to their collection of the papers of the
former Berlin journalist Bella Fromm. Archivist Margaret Petersen and
assistant archivist Marilyn B. Kann at the Hoover Library at Stanford
university, California, allowed me to see their precious trove of original
Goebbels diaries as well as the political-warfare papers of Daniel Lerner
and Fritz Theodor Epstein. The Seeley Mudd Library of Princeton university
let me see their precious Adolf Hitler collection, although they were
not, alas, permitted to open to me their Allen Dulles papers, which
contain several fi les on Goebbels and the July 1944 bomb plot. Bernard
R. Crystal of the Butler Library of Columbia university, N.Y., found
several Goebbels items tucked away in the H. R. Knickerbocker collection.
Dr Jay W. Baird, of Miami university, Ohio, volunteered access to his
confidential manuscripts on Werner Naumann, whom he had interviewed
at length on tape in 1969 and 1970; the manuscripts are currently held
at the I.f.Z., which failed to make them available despite authorization
from Baird. The late Marianne Freifrau von Weizsäcker, mother of the
later President Richard von Weizsäcker, provided to me access to her
husband's then unpublished diaries and letters (later published by Leonidas
Hill). The late Freda Rössler, née Freiin von Fircks, talked to me at
length about her murdered husband Karl Hanke, Goebbels' closest colleague
and rival in love, and later gauleiter of Breslau, and supplied copies
of his letters and other materials.
Major Charles E. Snyder, U.S.A.F. (retired), gave me a set of the precious
original proofs of the moving Goebbels family photos reproduced in this
work; as in my work Hitler's War(London, 1991) some colour
photographs are from the unique collection of unpublished portraits
taken by Walter Frentz, Hitler's HQ film cameraman, to whom go my thanks
for entrusting the original transparencies to me. Other photographs
were supplied by the U.S. National Archives - I scanned around 40,000
prints from its magnificent collection of glass plates taken by Heinrich
Hoffmann's cameramen - and by Leif Rosas, Annette Castendyk (daughter
of Goebbels' first great love, Anka Stalherm), and Irene Pranger, who
also entrusted to me Goebbels' early correspondence with Anka. Among
those whom I was fortunate to interview were Hitler's secretary Christa
Schroeder, his adjutants Nicolaus von Below, Gerhard Engel, Karl-Jesco
von Puttkamer, his press staff officials Helmut Sündermann and Heinz
Lorenz, his minister of munitions Albert Speer, and Goebbels' senior
aide Immanuel Schäffer, all of whom have since died, as well as Traudl
Junge, Otto Günsche, both of Hitler's staff, Gunter d'Alquén, the leading
S.S. journalist attached to the propaganda ministry, film director Leni
Riefenstahl - who privately showed me her productions of the era - and
filmstar Lida Baarova (now Lida Lundwall). I am grateful to Thomas Harlan
for talking to me about his mother the late filmstar Hilde Körber, and
to Ribbentrop's secretary Reinhard Spitzy and Admiral Raeder's adjutant
the late Captain Herbert Friedrichs for anecdotes about Joseph and Magda
Goebbels. Gerta von Radinger (widow of Hitler's personal adjutant Alwin
Broder Albrecht) reminisced with me and provided copies of Albrecht's
letters to her, and of her correspondence with Magda. Richard Tedor
provided to me copies of rare volumes of Goebbels' articles and speeches.
Dr. K. Frank Korf gave me supplemental information about his own papers
in Hoover Library. Fritz Tobias supplied important papers from his archives
about the Reichstag fire and trial, and notes on his interviews with
witnesses who have since died. Israeli researcher Doron Arazi gave me
several useful leads on material in German archives. Ulrich Schlie pointed
out to me to key Goebbels papers on foreign policy buried in the German
foreign ministry archives. Dr. Helge Knudsen corresponded with me in
1975 about the authenticity (or otherwise) of Rudolf Semler's "diary,"
the publication of which he prepared in 1947. I corresponded inter alia
with Willi Krämer, Goebbels' deputy in the Reichspropagandaleitung;
Günter Kaufmann, chief of the Reichspropagandaamt (RPA, Reich Propaganda
Agency) in Vienna; and Wilhelm Ohlenbusch, who directed propaganda in
occupied Poland. Wolf Rüdiger Hess and his mother Ilse Hess gave me
exclusive access to the private papers of his late father, Rudolf Hess,
in Hindelang including correspondence with Goebbels. The late Dr Hans-Otto
Meissner discussed with me Ello Quandt and other members of Goebbels'
entourage, whom he interviewed for his 1950s biography of Magda Goebbels.
Peter Hoffmann, William Kingsford professor of history at McGill University
in Montreal, reviewed my chapter on Valkyrie, as did Lady Diana Mosley
those pages relating to her own meetings with Goebbels in the Thirties;
Robin Denniston, to whom I owe so much over twenty years, read through
the whole manuscript, offered suggestions, and advised me to temper
criticism with charity more often than I had.
DAVID IRVING
LONDON 1995
Notes
1. Dr Jürgen Michael Schulz, of the Berlin Free university, "Zur Edition
der Goebbels Tagebücher," a paper presented to the German Studies Association
conference, 1992. See its Newsletter, xvii, No. 2, winter 1992, 34ff.
2. Dr Ralf Georg Reuth (ed.), Joseph Goebbels Tagebücher,
(Munich, Zürich, 1992).
3. I have referred where relevant to my microfilm collection in the
source notes to this work. Most can be ordered from Microform Academic
Publishers Ltd., Main Street, East Ardsley, Wakefield, West Yorkshire
WF3 2AT, England (tel. +44 1924 825 700; fax 829 212).
(4) Süddeutsche Zeitung, July 22, 1992
[This introduction to Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third Reich
has been published with the author's permission.]
Goebbels will be available for purchase after March 1,
1996 from:
- Focal Point Publications, 81 Duke Street, London W1M 5DJ
- (U.S. Distributor) The Institute for Historical Review, P.O.
Box 2739, Newport Beach, CA 92659
- (Australia) Veritas Publishing Company Pty. Ltd., PO Box 42,
Cranbrook, WA 6321
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