Perhaps Ciano penetrated Hitlers mind best when he had a long talk with the Chancellor in Berlin on
October 1. The young Italian Foreign Minister, who by now thoroughly detested the Germans but had to keep up appearances, found the Fuehrer in a confident mood. As he outlined his plans, his eyes flashed in a sinister fashion whenever he talked about his ways and means of fighting, Ciano observed. Summing up his impressions, the Italian visitor wrote:
. . . Today to offer his people a solid peace after a great victory is perhaps an aim which still tempts Hitler. But if in order to reach it he had to sacrifice, even to the smallest degree, what seems to him the legitimate fruits of his victory, he would then a thousand times prefer battle.
William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich