Becoming Hitler Read online




  Copyright

  Copyright © 2017 by Thomas Weber.

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Weber, Thomas, 1974- author.

  Title: Becoming Hitler : the making of a Nazi / Thomas Weber.

  Description: New York : Basic Books, 2017. | Includes bibliographical

  references and index.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017022799 (print) | LCCN 2017027123 (ebook) | ISBN 9780465096626 (ebook) | ISBN 9780465032686 (hardcover)

  Subjects: LCSH: Hitler, Adolf, 1889-1945. | Hitler, Adolf, 1889-1945—Homes and haunts—Germany—Munich. | Hitler, Adolf, 1889-1945—Psychology. |

  Nazis--Germany—Biography. | Right-wing extremists—Germany—Biography. | Heads of state—Germany--Biography. | National socialism—History. |

  Germany—Politics and government—1918-1933. | BISAC: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Presidents & Heads of State. | BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical. | BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Political. | HISTORY / Europe / Germany.

  Classification: LCC DD247.H5 (ebook) | LCC DD247.H5 W366 2017 (print) | DDC

  943.086092 [B]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017022799

  E3-20170926-JV-NF

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Maps

  Prelude

  PART I: GENESIS Chapter 1: Coup d’État

  (November 20, 1918 to February 1919)

  Chapter 2: A Cog in the Machine of Socialism

  (February to Early April 1919)

  Chapter 3: Arrested

  (Early April to Early May 1919)

  Chapter 4: Turncoat

  (Early May to Mid-July 1919)

  PART II: NEW TESTAMENTS Chapter 5: A New Home at Last

  (Mid-July to September 1919)

  Chapter 6: Two Visions

  (October 1919 to March 1920)

  Chapter 7: A 2,500-Year-Old Tool

  (March to August 1920)

  Chapter 8: Genius

  (August to December 1920)

  Chapter 9: Hitler’s Pivot to the East

  (December 1920 to July 1921)

  PART III: MESSIAH Chapter 10: The Bavarian Mussolini

  (July 1921 to December 1922)

  Chapter 11: The German Girl from New York

  (Winter 1922 to Summer 1923)

  Chapter 12: Hitler’s First Book

  (Summer to Autumn 1923)

  Chapter 13: The Ludendorff Putsch

  (Autumn 1923 to Spring 1924)

  Chapter 14: Lebensraum

  (Spring 1924 to 1926)

  Epilogue

  Photos

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  More Advance Praise for Becoming Hitler

  Abbreviations

  Archival Collections & Private Papers and Interviews

  Notes

  Bibliography

  Index

  for Sarah

  Germany after the First World War

  Munich after the First World War

  PRELUDE

  December 14, 1918, was National Socialism’s greatest day yet. On that mild day, the first candidate for a National Socialist party was elected to a national parliament. After all votes had been counted, it emerged that 51.6 percent of the electorate in the working-class constituency of Silvertown, on the Essex side of the border between London and Essex, had voted for John Joseph “Jack” Jones of the National Socialist Party to represent them in the British House of Commons.1

  National Socialism was the offspring of two great nineteenth-century political ideas. Its father, nationalism, was the emancipatory movement aiming at transforming dynastic states into nation states, born in the age of the Enlightenment and toppling dynastic empires and kingdoms in the century and a half following the French Revolution. Its mother, socialism, had been born when industrialization took hold in Europe and an impoverished working class was created in the process. Its mother had come of age in the wake of the great crisis of liberalism, which had been triggered by the crash of the Vienna Stock Exchange in 1873.

  In its infancy, National Socialism had been most successful wherever the economic volatility of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries had met multiethnic dynastic empires in crisis. It was thus unsurprising that the first National Socialist parties were formed in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Czech National Social Party was formed in 1898. Then, in 1903, the German Workers’ Party was established in Bohemia. It renamed itself the German National Socialist Workers’ Party in May 1918, when it split into two branches, one based in Austria and the other in the Sudetenland, the German-speaking territories of Bohemia. Some Zionists, too, spoke of their Jewish “national-social” dreams.2

  National Socialism was therefore not a child of the First World War. Yet it had gone through puberty during the war. It had its political breakthrough when socialists all across Europe battled during the war over the question of whether to support their nation’s war efforts, and politicians equally opposed to capitalism and internationalism broke with their previous parties. It was that battle that allowed National Socialism to have its breakthrough in Britain, in the Palace of Westminster.3

  Germany, by contrast, was in the history of National Socialism a belated nation. It took six years after Jack Jones’s election to the lower chamber of the British Parliament for the first National Socialist politicians in Germany (then under the banner of the National Socialist Freedom Party) to be voted into the Reichstag. And not until 1928, ten years after Britain had its first National Socialist member of Parliament, were candidates from a party headed by Adolf Hitler voted into a national parliament.

  When the National Socialist Party was founded in Britain in 1916, Adolf Hitler, the would-be leader of Germany’s National Socialist Party, was still an awkward loner with fluctuating political convictions. This book tells the story of his metamorphosis into a charismatic leader and conniving political operator with firm National Socialist ideas and extremist political and anti-Semitic convictions. His transformation did not begin until 1919, and was only completed in the mid-1920s. It took place in Munich, to which Hitler had moved in 1913: a city that, compared with Silvertown and many cities in the Habsburg Empire, had remained politically stable until the end of the First World War.

  While this book focuses on the years between 1918 and the mid-1920s, crucial years in the life of Hitler, it likewise tells the story of National Socialism’s belated success in Germany. This is also the story of the political transformation of Munich, Bavaria’s capital, in which Hitler rose to prominence—a city that only a few years earli
er would have been considered one of the most unlikely places for a sudden emergence and triumph of demagoguery and political turmoil.

  When I first became a historian, I never would have imagined that I would write at any length about Adolf Hitler. As a graduate student, I felt greatly honored, and I still do, to work in a very minor role—compiling the book’s bibliography—on the first volume of Ian Kershaw’s magisterial Hitler biography. Yet after the many great works of scholarship about Hitler that had been published between the 1930s and the publication of Kershaw’s biography in the late 1990s, I found it difficult to imagine that anything worthwhile and new was left to say about the leader of the Third Reich. As a German raised in the 1970s and 1980s, undoubtedly I also was driven, at least subconsciously, by a concern that writing about Hitler may appear as apologetic. In other words, that it would constitute a return to the early 1950s, when many Germans tried to blame the many crimes of the Third Reich solely on Hitler and a small number of people around him.

  However, by the time I finished writing my second book in the mid-2000s, I had started to see the flaws in our understanding of Hitler. For instance, I was no longer so sure that we really knew how he had become a Nazi and, hence, that we were drawing the right lessons from the story of his metamorphosis for our own times. Not that earlier historians lacked talent. Quite the contrary; some of the very best and most incisive books on Hitler had been written between the 1930s and the 1970s. But all these books could only be as good as the evidence and research available at the time, as we all necessarily stand on the shoulders of others.

  By the 1990s, the long-dominant idea that Hitler had already become radicalized while growing up in Austria had been exposed as one of his own self-serving lies. Scholars therefore concluded that if Hitler had not been radicalized as a child and teenager in the Austrian-German borderlands, nor in Vienna as a young man, his political transformation must have come later. The new view was that Hitler became a Nazi due to his experiences in the First World War, or the combination of those with the postwar revolution that turned Imperial Germany into a republic. By the mid-2000s that view no longer made much sense to me, as I had started to see its many flaws.

  Thus, I set out to write a book about Adolf Hitler’s years in the First World War and the impact they had on the rest of his life. As I made my way through archives and private collections in attics and basements on three continents, I realized that the story Hitler and his propagandists told about his time in the war was not just an exaggeration with a true core. In fact, its very core was rotten. Hitler was not admired by his army peers for his extraordinary bravery, nor was he a typical product of the war experiences of the men of the regiment in which he served. He was not the personification of Germany’s unknown soldier who, through his experiences as a dispatch runner on the western front, had turned into a National Socialist and who differed from his peers only in his extraordinary leadership qualities.

  The book I wrote, Hitler’s First War, revealed someone very different from the man with whom we had been familiar. After volunteering as a foreigner for the Bavarian Army, Hitler had been deployed for the entirety of the war on the western front. Just like the majority of the men of his military unit—the Sixteenth Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment, commonly called “List Regiment”—he had not been radicalized by his experiences in Belgium and northern France. He returned from the war with still fluctuating political ideas. Whatever opinions he may have held about Jews, they had not been important enough for him to voice them. There is no indication that tension had existed during the war between Hitler and Jewish soldiers of his regiment.4

  His thoughts had been those of an Austrian who hated the Habsburg monarchy with all his heart and who dreamed of a united Germany. Yet beyond that he seems to have oscillated between different collectivist left-wing and right-wing ideas. Contrary to his claims in Mein Kampf, there is no evidence that Hitler already stood against Social Democracy and other moderate left-wing ideologies. In a letter written in 1915 to a prewar acquaintance of his from Munich, Hitler revealed some of his wartime political convictions, expressing his hope “that those of us who are lucky enough to return to the fatherland will find it a purer place, less riddled with foreign influences, so that the daily sacrifices and sufferings of hundreds of thousands of us and the torrent of blood that keeps flowing here day after day against an international world of enemies will not only help to smash Germany’s foes outside but that our inner internationalism, too, will collapse.” He added, “This would be worth much more than any gain in territory.”5

  From its context, it is clear that his rejection of Germany’s “inner internationalism” should not be read as being directed first and foremost at Social Democrats. Hitler had something else and something less specific in mind: a rejection of any ideas that challenged the belief that the nation should be the starting point of all human interaction. This included an opposition to international capitalism, international socialism (i.e., to Socialists who, unlike Social Democrats, did not stand by the nation during the war and who dreamed of a stateless, nationless future), to international Catholicism, and to dynastic multiethnic empires. His unspecific wartime thoughts about a united, noninternationalist Germany still left his political future wide open. His mind was certainly not an empty slate. Yet his possible futures still included a wide array of left-wing and right-wing political ideas that included those of certain strands of Social Democracy. In short, by the end of the war, his political future was still indeterminate.6

  Even though Hitler, just like most of the men of the List Regiment, had not been politically radicalized between 1914 and 1918, he was, nevertheless, anything but a typical product of the wartime experiences of the men of his unit. Contrary to Nazi propaganda, many frontline soldiers of his regiment did not celebrate him for his bravery at all. Instead, because he served in regimental headquarters (HQ), they cold-shouldered him and his HQ peers for supposedly leading a cushy life as Etappenschweine (literally, “rear-echelon pigs”) a few miles behind the front. They also believed that the medals such men as Hitler earned for their bravery were awarded for having kissed up to their superiors in regimental HQ.7

  Objectively speaking, Hitler had been a conscientious and good soldier. Yet the story of a man despised by the frontline soldiers of his unit and with an as yet indeterminate political future, would not advance his political interests when Hitler was trying to use his wartime service to create a place for himself in politics in the 1920s. The same was true of the fact that his superiors, while appreciating him for his reliability, had not seen any leadership qualities in him; they viewed Hitler as the prototype of someone who follows rather than gives orders. Indeed, Hitler never held any command over a single other soldier throughout the war. Furthermore, in the eyes of most of his peers within the support staff—who, unlike many of the frontline soldiers, appreciated his company—he had been little more than a well-liked loner, someone who did not quite fit in and who did not join them in the pubs and whorehouses of northern France.

  In the 1920s Hitler would invent a version of his experiences during the First World War that was mostly fictional in character but that allowed him to set up a politically useful foundational myth of himself, the Nazi Party, and the Third Reich. In the years to come, he would continue to rewrite that account whenever it was politically expedient. And he policed his story about his claimed war experiences so ruthlessly and so well that for decades after his passing, it was believed to have a true core.

  If the war had not “made” Hitler, an obvious question emerged: how was it possible that within a year of his return to Munich, this unremarkable soldier—an awkward loner with fluctuating political ideas—became a deeply anti-Semitic National Socialist demagogue? It was equally curious that within five years he would write a book that purported to solve all the world’s political and social problems. Since the publication of Hitler’s First War, a number of books have been published that have tried to answer these que
stions. Accepting to varying degrees that the war had not radicalized Hitler, they propose that Hitler became Hitler in postrevolutionary Munich when he absorbed ideas that were already common currency in postwar Bavaria. They present the image of a revenge-driven Hitler with talents for political oratory that he used to rail against those whom he deemed responsible for Germany’s loss of the war and for the revolution. Beyond that, they treat him as a man who was anything but a serious thinker and as someone who, at least until the mid-1920s, displayed little talent as a political operator. In short, they depict him as having more or less unchanging ideas and little ambition of his own, as being driven by others and by circumstance.8

  On reading new books on Hitler in recent years, I instinctively found counterintuitive the idea that he would suddenly absorb a full set of political ideas in the aftermath of the First World War and run with them for the rest of his life. But it was only while writing this book that I realized just how far off the mark those authors were. Hitler was not a revenge-driven man with fixed political ideas, who was driven by others and who had limited personal ambitions. This was also when I came to appreciate the importance of the years of Hitler’s metamorphosis—from the end of the war to the time of his writing of Mein Kampf—to our understanding of the dynamics of the Third Reich and the Holocaust.

  On encountering new literature on Hitler, I also found implausible the idea that he had simply absorbed ideas that were common currency in Bavaria, as he had already been in a love-hate relationship with Munich and Bavaria during the war. As someone dreaming of a united Germany—as a Pan-German, as such a person was called at the time—Hitler had felt deeply troubled by the Catholic, anti-Prussian Bavarian sectionalism—the undue devotion to the interests of Bavaria—reigning in Germany’s most southern state and among many soldiers in his regiment. It is important to remember that Bavaria is far older than Germany as a political entity. Once Bavaria became part of a united Germany after the establishment of the Prussian-led German Empire in 1871, the new empire was a federation of a number of German monarchies and principalities, of which Prussia was only the largest. They all retained much of their sovereignty, as evident in the fact that Bavaria kept its own monarch, armed forces, and foreign ministry. Kaiser Wilhelm, Germany’s leader, despite all his saber rattling, was only first among equals among Germany’s monarchs.