Ostkrieg: Hitler's War of
Extermination in the East,
by Stephen G. Fritz
Publisher: The
University Press of Kentucky
Released: September 8, 2011
ISBN-10: 0813134161
ISBN-13: 978-0813134161
Hardcover: 688
pages
Publisher contact: Mack McCormick
Director of Publicity
(859) 257-5200
permissions@uky.edu
Director of Publicity
(859) 257-5200
permissions@uky.edu
Stephen G. Fritz, professor of history at East Tennessee State University, is the author of Frontsoldaten: The German Soldier in World War II and Endkampf: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Death of the Third Reich. He lives in Johnson City, Tennessee.
Nonfiction History Military History & Affairs World War II
Stephen G. Fritz is Professor of History at East Tennessee State University,
and produces solidly written and researched history on the subjects of Germany
and the Second World War. His academic and scholarly success seems to come from
within, and is the result of hard work instead of patronage, devotion to a
particular cause, or association with a perceived wellspring of scholarly
genius. Like the other fruits of his labor, Fritz’s latest work, Ostkrieg. Hitler’s War of Extermination in
the East, is all the more valuable as a result.
Early on the morning of June 28, 1940, one week after the execution of
the Franco-German armistice, Adolf Hitler and a small entourage that included
Albert Speer and Arno Breker took a brief tour of some of the more well-known
cultural sites of Paris. The Fuehrer
was at his ease, surrounded by his security detail, and showing off his
knowledge of the artwork encountered along the way. At some point a member of
his party suggested that Hitler be the central figure in a formal victory
parade in the French capital. The
dictator promptly rejected the idea. “I am not in the mood for a victory
parade,” he said. “We aren’t at the end
yet.”
This little vignette, as related by Fritz in Ostkrieg, informs the reader in somewhat cryptic fashion both as to
the author’s thesis and the mind of his subject.
Concerning the mind of Adolf Hitler, even a casual student of the
Second World War must face the question whether the German Fuehrer was possessed of all his faculties when he decided to
launch the single largest and most violent military operation in history,
thereby putting at risk all that he had already achieved. And as for Stephen Fritz,
his thesis might be boiled down to this: the Ostkrieg was Hitler’s war. Here we do not allude to the fact that
the dictator immersed himself in the micromanagement of that war almost from
its beginning. Adolf Hitler most certainly did this, but that is not the point.
The Fuehrer “owned” the Ostkrieg because it was the “real” war,
the conflict that came from his heart and soul, the crusade that expressed the
essence of his being, the cause for which he had been brought into the world.
Ostkrieg is probably not for
the casual reader. Its narrative runs to 500 pages, while the footnotes and
bibliography (vital to some, but inexplicably of little interest to others)
consume another 100 pages. And notwithstanding the author’s protestations to
the contrary, Fritz did in fact generate a work based on both original research
and the use of secondary works. Fritz’s original sources---the original war
diary of Franz Halder, the speeches of Adolf Hitler, the diaries and letters of
German soldiers in the field, the diaries and records of the German Armed
Forces high command, the daily record kept by Joseph Goebbels, and other like
material--- have been treated as such by many scholars in the field.
Stephen Fritz brought to his sources his considerable analytical skills
and clarity of expression. The product
is a very readable consideration of the European war’s most important front,
and one that expresses a new understanding of its causes and effects. Fritz is
not the first scholar to bring to the fore the complex obsessions that enslaved
Adolf Hitler’s mind, nor is he the only one to associate those obsessions with
the war the Fuehrer made. Fritz is
the first, however, to correctly connect Hitler’s obsessive character with
specific decisions made by him that determined the fate of Germany and the
lives---and deaths---of tens of millions of Europeans.
Adolf Hitler’s conviction that “international Jewry” controlled the
course of human events, and aimed to eradicate Germany and the German “Volk”, was
the root cause of the war that forever altered western culture. For the Fuehrer,
Jewry was a contagion that must be eradicated forever, and failing that, at the
very least removed from Europe once and for all. Initially, however, Hitler confronted the not
insignificant problem of the Versailles Treaty and Germany’s resultant military
weakness. Hitler resolved this problem
during the period 1938-1940, expanding the borders of the Reich and removing
from the equation as military threats not only Poland but France and---for the
moment at least---Great Britain.
Nevertheless the German victories of 1938-1940, both diplomatic and
military, seemed in some ways to have multiplied Germany’s problems, rather
than allay them. The fundamental issue, in
the view of Hitler and his toadies, was that the string of victories merely
added substantially to the number of Jews under German control without
providing the means to deal with them. By this point in time the Nazis’ options
for resolving the “Jewish problem” were fast shrinking, in part because their
efforts to deport the European Jews had run aground on the inability,
particularly with Britain still in the war, of the German armed forces to mount
a successful campaign to seize the island of Madagascar and make use of it as
an appropriate haven for the Jews.
If the Jews could not be removed physically from Europe, then Germany
must expand the reach of its control still further, and that could only be
accomplished through the use of force, which must be applied to Ukraine and the
rest of European Russia. And in this case time was of the essence, since Great
Britain had chosen to continue its fight, and more importantly would have the
greatest opportunity to persuade the United States to join in the struggle on
the side of Britain. Finally, if the war
went badly for Germany, as it began to do in December 1941, this could only be the
result of the machinations of “international Jewry”. If the Jews of Europe therefore could not be
pushed out, Nazi Germany would be forced to adopt---and this was clearly the
fault of the Jews---more radical measures, and in the here and now, not the
future. The end result was four years of bitter fighting and the slaughter of
tens of millions of innocent people.
The thesis set forth by Stephen Fritz in Ostkrieg is so simple and compelling that it merits consideration
even by those who have studied the topic for years.
fyi to readers: Blogger now has a feature that works through the Comment box to allow threaded comments. This will allow banter among comment writers, as I understand it.
ReplyDeleteRegards to all.
Tom