Posted on 04/29/2011 7:01:26 AM PDT by marcbold
You probably know that Hermann Goering was one of the architects of the hellish Nazi concentration camps for political dissidents and Jews among others. You probably know that next to Hitler, Herman Goering was the man who played the largest role in the holocaust and The Final Solution.
You probably didnt know, however, that Herman Goerings little brother Albert, a devout Catholic, was a hero who struggled against the Nazis and risked his life many times to save possibly hundreds of people from the grasp of the Nazis, to the point of being arrested four times and even had him fleeing an execution order. But his heroics have been hidden, obfuscated by the evil last name which he bore...
(Excerpt) Read more at ncregister.com ...
They were not friends and if I remember correctly, the Von was purchased for Ribbentrop. He also assured Hitler that Poland wouldn’t turn into another world war.
One of the things I remember was that Goering told ‘Von’ Ribbentrop to, “Shut Up you champagne salesman!”
It was also Von Ribbentrop that turned Hitler anti-British. Before, Hitler had hoped that Germany and Britain could be allies against Bolshevism. Von Ribbentrop felt snubbed by the British while Ambassador there, and like a spurned jealous lover, became the biggest Anglophobe in Hitler’s inner circle.
Good point. On such things wars were decided.
Not just before the war. After France fell, Hitler sincerely expected the British to sue for peace, and he was willing to grant them very favorable terms. Essentially he would keep down the subhuman in Europe and environs, and the Brits could do so in the rest of the world.
This was why the Germans had made remarkably few plans for the invasion of Britain. They didn't expect they'd need them.
Hitler was quite genuinely surprised when the Brits refused to cave. Reasonably enough, as their continuing to fight on under such circumstances was not a logical thing to do. Heroic to the extreme, but not logical.
Did you ever see, “It Happened Here.” It was a great movie, done on a shoestring budget back in 1966, that conjectured what a Nazi occupation of Britain would have looked like.
I still maintain that Hitler personally ordered Rudolf Hess to fly to Britain, and Hess and Hitler were the only two who knew about it.
That’s a real possibility.
The strangest part is that he was essentially kept in solitary and incommunicado till he died. The most logical reason being that he knew something his captors didn’t want to get out.
The western powers pushed for more gentle treatment, but the Russians vetoed it. Which means whatever he knew was discreditable to USSR, not Britain.
But darn if I can figure out what it might have been.
Or possibly he was just a loonie.
Excellent post!
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