Post by Rich Rostrom... Supposedly a meeting took place among high
level political and military intelligence people...
Two objections were raised to killing Hitler...
Almost certainly fictional.
I wish I could remember the source for this. Is it possibly fictional?
Sure. Writers get things wrong sometimes and readers like me add
another level of possible misremembrance and/or misinterpretation. But
"almost certainly fictional"? I don't know where the "almost certainty"
would come from.
Post by Rich RostromGermany ... needed to be *completely* discredited -
as they were by the unconditional defeat...
Taken to an extreme, this would have the Allies
reject a German surrender so they could kill
more and devastate more. Which would cost thousands
of Allied lives in combat, plus the fate of PoWs
and other prisoners in Germany.
I don't think so. The Allies rejected any sort
of conditional peace, but they didn't want any
more fighting than necessary.
Agreed. I don't think this was taken to an extreme or intended to be
so. I'm almost certain, or I would even say "quite certain" (and I
would be happy to discuss the grounds for that "quite certainty" if
requested) that an unconditional surrender would indeed have been
accepted by the western allies. There may have been quibbling by Stalin
over what it meant and who got what.
Nevertheless, if the war were to go on, I believe it would have been to
the benefit of everyone, including the German people, if Hitler and the
Nazi regime could be clearly seen to be the authors of the fiasco (as
indeed they were) rather than have Hitler die a martyr in some Allied
attack - with all the consequent conspiracy theories about which Jews
and communists were responsible. If Hitler's death would have caused a
German surrender, then I think it likely that everyone in the Western
alliance would have supported pulling the trigger if the opportunity
arose. If it would not and the Germans fought on, it would be better if
Hitler were in charge for both of the reasons mentioned (his
incompetence as a military leader and the political importance of
demonstrating the total disaster of his political leadership.)
...
Post by Rich RostromAnd I think that pretty much all the Allied
leaders believed that Germany could be permanently
neutered by appropriate occupation policies, as
long as these policies were not constrained by
surrender conditions.)
That's an interesting question. Churchill speaks of the dangers of
German revanchism in his history of the war (again, it's possible that
I'm misremembering or misinterpreting - I don't have a citation and it's
been many years since I read the books.) Americans may have been
feeling very secure and self-confident, but British and Russians, not to
mention French, Poles, and many others, had felt the power of Germany
twice in a quarter century and were not so complacent about the
possibility of a third round.
Finally, someone might ask, Why, if there was a decision not to
assassinate Hitler, was there so much bombing in Berlin? Couldn't
Hitler have been killed in the bombing?
I don't know the answer to that one. My guess is that, if the meeting
did indeed take place, and I'm prepared to at least suppose that it did,
it was stimulated by specific questions raised by the intelligence
agencies and resulted in answers to them that said "We're not interested
in pursuing assassination attempts and don't see them as fruitful." I
don't see why it would have resulted in special instructions to the RAF
or USAAF to avoid killing Hitler. Even if there were a danger of
killing him in a bomb attack (which I doubt), I don't think it would
have been practical to give instructions to thousands of aircrew to not
kill him. No one would have been able to explain and justify that to
men who were risking their lives.
Alan