| | |  | Threats & Solutions | Home » » The End: The Defiance and Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1944-1945 | | | | | | | Description: | | From the preeminent Hitler biographer, a fascinating and original exploration of how the Third Reich was willing and able to fight to the bitter end of World War II. Countless books have been written about why Nazi Germany lost World War II, yet remarkably little attention has been paid to the equally vital question of how and why it was able to hold out as long as it did. The Third Reich did not surrender until Germany had been left in ruins and almost completely occupied. Even in the near-apocalyptic final months, when the war was plainly lost, the Nazis refused to sue for peace. Historically, this is extremely rare. Drawing on original testimony from ordinary Germans and arch-Nazis alike, award-winning historian Ian Kershaw explores this fascinating question in a gripping and focused narrative that begins with the failed bomb plot in July 1944 and ends with the German capitulation in May 1945. Hitler, desperate to avoid a repeat of the "disgraceful" German surrender in 1918, was of course critical to the Third Reich's fanatical determination, but his power was sustained only because those below him were unable, or unwilling, to challenge it. Even as the military situation grew increasingly hopeless, Wehrmacht generals fought on, their orders largely obeyed, and the regime continued its ruthless persecution of Jews, prisoners, and foreign workers. Beneath the hail of allied bombing, German society maintained some semblance of normalcy in the very last months of the war. The Berlin Philharmonic even performed on April 12, 1945, less than three weeks before Hitler's suicide. As Kershaw shows, the structure of Hitler's "charismatic rule" created a powerful negative bond between him and the Nazi leadership- they had no future without him, and so their fates were inextricably tied. Terror also helped the Third Reich maintain its grip on power as the regime began to wage war not only on its ideologically defined enemies but also on the German people themselves. Yet even as each month brought fresh horrors for civilians, popular support for the regime remained linked to a patriotic support of Germany and a terrible fear of the enemy closing in. Based on prodigious new research, Kershaw's The End is a harrowing yet enthralling portrait of the Third Reich in its last desperate gasps.
| | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| Ian Kershaw | | Hardcover:
| 592 pages | | Publisher:
| Penguin Press HC, The | | Publication Date:
| September 08, 2011 | | Language:
| English | | ISBN:
| 1594203148 | | Product Length:
| 6.33 inches | | Product Width:
| 1.74 inches | | Product Height:
| 9.3 inches | | Product Weight:
| 1.0 pounds | | Package Length:
| 9.2 inches | | Package Width:
| 6.2 inches | | Package Height:
| 1.8 inches | | Package Weight:
| 2.55 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
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91 of 94 found the following review helpful:
Why Did the Nazis Continue to Fight a Losing War?Sep 28, 2011
By Ronald H. Clark Ian Kershaw, the author of a number of excellent books on the Third Reich including a fine biography of Hitler, asks a key question in this book: when when it became obvious that Germany would lose the war, and continue to suffer devastating destruction, why did the Nazis continue to fight on in futility? The author first sketches the issue in a preface and then identifies the "dramatis personae" or key players in the drama in brief bios. Then in a substantial introduction, he outlines the issues and explanations that have been offered. While not a book of military history as such, there is certainly enough discussion of the Reich's military posture during and after key battles to satisfy those with such interests.
Many explanations have been put forward to explain this surprising development, for example that the civilian population was "bought off" by some of the fruits of the war; that an overwhelming popular consensus continued to support Hitler's government; a pervasive feeling that the Germans had no other alternative but to continue fighting; the effective use of terror to cow the population; and the military code of honor. The author focuses on some additional and probably more fundemental reasons. The "charismatic rule" of Hitler continued to mesmerize the civil population; a strategy of "playing for time" so that new miracle weapons and division among the allies could fully develop; and surprisingly, the near successful assassination attempt on Hitler unleashed tremendous popular support. So in Kershaw's view, the answer lies in far more than the application of terror, though that was certainly a factor.
The author seeks to resolve these questions by focusing upon three key groups in the Reich: Hitler's top cronies; the views of senior military officials; and the civilian population. Where possible, he lets each group speak for itself via documents, recorded debriefings, and memoirs. He also skillfully demonstrates why the western front was so different from the horror of the East. Particularly important in keeping things going was Albert Speer, who has armaments director worked miracles in actually increasing wartime production of military equipment and directing critical repairs of railroads and bridges. When the Eastern front collapsed, and the Red Army flowed into East Prussia and was brutal in its actions, the civilian population's fear level rose to astounding highs, and led to continued support for the war even though it could not be won.
Kershaw also discusses another factor which has always seemed very important to me: the fear of punishment for wartime atrocities if Germany were to lose the war. So the top leadership felt it had no option but to fight on, and nothing to lose by doing so. Equally interesting is the author's discussion of what happened after Hitler's suicide when he could not longer block capitulation. Under Admiral Donitz a makeshift government continued to function for several weeks, until Ike lost patience and demanded capitulation.
There is much more to consider in this 400 page book. The narrative is supported by 41 photos and 9 excellent maps. As usual, the author's research is impeccable, and over 100 pages of notes, a list of archival sources, and a list of works cited are included. Most importantly, Kershaw is so knowledgeable about this period, that every page rings with authority. For those interested in this topic, this is an indispenable resource.
67 of 75 found the following review helpful:
Ship of FoolsSep 23, 2011
By Keith A. Comess Ian Kershaw needs no introduction to readers of WW-II history. His latest installment, "The End: The Defiance and Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1944-1945 claims to tread new ground by investigating the cause(s) of continued German fighting to the point of complete destruction of the state; a rare occurrence, according to the author. This book explores the reasons behind ongoing resistance, despite the obvious consequences of this self-destructive course of action. To accomplish this, Kershaw focuses on the attitudes and actions of the 4 primary Nazi leaders of the closing era (Goebbels, Bormann, Speer and Himmler) and secondarily on the senior military leaderships' posture. The story is amplified by extensive information culled from primary sources on the general population and it concludes with a summary chapter on "the anatomy of self-destruction". This is a good book, well-written and it provides a convenient one-volume synthesis of the topic; yet, it is not the unique effort asserted by the author in the preface.
It is quite apparent that Hitler enjoyed certain insights into the political nature of his potential opponents and cunningly implemented them initially to great success both domestically and internationally. So, given the barrage of pandering to the "volk" consciousness (in the form of German "master race" propaganda) and the overwhelming victories of the early years, it is hardly surprising that he successfully penetrated the core beliefs of the vast majority of his countrymen, imbuing them (and him) with a mutually reinforcing sensation of a shared and manifest destiny, this as destined rulers of the European continent. As has been written many times, Hitler was Germany's destiny and that destiny was war. As noted in 1935 by the British historian H.A.L. Fisher, `A country which is determined to have a war can always have it'. Hitler made no secret whatsoever of his intent (e.g., "It will be the duty of German foreign policy to get large spaces to feed and house the growing population of Germany. Destiny points us towards Russia." Mein Kampf, 1924). Thus, the German Reich knew exactly what the future under the Leader had in store both for ethnic Germans and those in the unfortunate and diverse groups of regime-designated "enemies".
According to conventional wisdom, the proximate cause for the military defeat of Hitler's war machine was the 22 June, 1941 invasion of the USSR. This event launched the dreaded two-front war, a feared development for Germany based on historical experience. Not only was this a blunder of titanic dimensions, it revealed the lack of strategic insight displayed by Hitler as military supremo. It should have provided resounding confirmation of the Leader's penchant for over-reach, reliance on overarching dares and the limitless conceit regarding his own "genius" embodied in the "Leader Principal". Additionally, deliberate, ideologically-motivated actions against civilians alienated potential allies and galvanized fanatical resistance, along with an intent to repay in kind.
With the failure to capture Moscow followed by the resounding defeat at Stalingrad, the auguries for the Reich were uniformly inauspicious. By 1944, the end was apparent to any rational thinker. Yet, Germany fought through to the end with horrific consequences for civilians and military personnel alike. The reasons for this are legion, but include regime-implemented terror, total "investment" by the Gaulieters and other figures whose future was inextricably linked to the fate of the Reich, relentless propaganda, nationalism, fear of occupation by the (justifiably angered) Red Army, inertia, confused concepts of loyalty...in other words, the entire (and expected) gamut of emotions, pragmatism, fear of the future and personal gain that motivates everybody everywhere. Monumental exertion on behalf of the Party by Speer and Goebbels are probably unique features of this event. One feature that deserves particular emphasis is the "will to self-delusion": "Blame attached to the Party for the war was to be countered by emphasizing that war had been declared on Germany, not the other way round, and that the enemy aimed to destroy not just the leadership but the very existence of Germany; that it would be far worse than after 1918. A rejoinder to the widespread view that the 'air terror' was the most unbearable burden of all and the accompanying expressions about the unfulfilled premisses was that hardships had temporarily to be endured to allow time to produce better weapons. Pessimistic remarks that Germany had been unable to do this with its industry intact and could therefore hardly hope to do sow with so much of it destroyed were to be turned round by saying that the loss of territories meant a smaller industrial output sufficed. Finally, dejection at enemy was necessary to hold out to allow time for military and political decisions to ripen." Amazingly, this general approach used by Goebbels was successfully used to influence the general population through the closing days of the conflict; more amazingly, it seemed to work on the military and Party leadership as well.
It comes as no surprise that actions undertaken in Eastern Europe would have later ramifications for Germany. Fear of Red Army retribution was a significant motivator for ongoing resistance. This isn't terribly surprising, since (as Max Hastings wrote in "Retribution"), "But in an imperfect world, it seems unrealistic to expect that any combatant in a war will grant adversaries conspicuously better treatment than his own people receive at their hands." Despite the self-evident nature of this observation, retribution on Reich enemies continued unabated. So, while Kershaw details the horrific tole of the war on Germany itself, he spares no gruesome detail of the fate of the regime's enemies in the final months. Eliminationist actions undertaken against Slavs, Poles and others were linchpins of the war in the East from the onset and the pointless, gratuitous, extreme brutality continued to the very end. The massacre at Celle ("Celler Hasenjagd") is but one revolting example. Parenthetically, Celle tellingly demonstrates that barbaric violence was dispensed not only by the SS, but by the Heer, the Volksstrum and by significant elements of the civilian population, a fact that post-war apologists attempt to gloss-over.
A sometimes overlooked fact is the disproportionate degree of casualties incurred in the closing months of the war. Not only were these militarily unjustifiable, they served no rational purpose. They did, however, fulfill Hitler's Wagner-inspired romance with Götterdämmerung. This inane construct seemed to underlie much of Nazi ideology, doctrine and actions...to the detriment of at least 40 million casualties in the East, alone. Another overlooked "fact" (myth is a more accurate noun) is that the Allies' demand for "unconditional surrender" was a major motive force in the continued German resistance: not at all true, according to Kershaw and considerable evidence is mustered in support of that claim.
There have been many other books which explore and elucidate the ongoing support of the Nazi regime. "Nazi Terror" by Eric A. Johnson, "Explaining Hitler" by Ron Rosenbaum and the 3 volume history of the Third Reich by Robert Evans seem to cover much that Kershaw covers in "End". Naturally, much of the history of Speer and other prominent Nazis has also been covered and the fate of Reich enemies in the final months of the war is not new, either. Yet, Kershaw makes a significant contribution in this synthesis.
It is indeed the case that "Fate is not satisfied with inflicting one calamity" as noted by the Roman-Syrian Publilius Syrus. The multiple calamities derived from Hitler and Nazism resonate to the present day. The wanton and despicable waste of life resulting from the continuation of hostilities past the "point of no return" and the fealty of Germany to the Leader have many explanations, all inextricably tied to human nature. Presumably, the message emerging from the colossal wreckage of WW-II and the fight-to-the-finish is "march of folly", "ship of fools" or simply that while "history never repeats itself, people always do".
68 of 80 found the following review helpful:
When Extremists Rule the GovernmentSep 12, 2011
By C. W. Emblom
"Bill Emblom"
Historian Ian Kershaw has written a very well researched account of World War II from the time of the attempt on Adolf Hitler's life in July of 1944 through the post Germany surrender in May of 1945. Kershaw attempts to answer the question why the Germans chose the course of action they did when the war was hopelessly lost.
The big four below Hitler were Martin Bormann, Heinrich Himmler, Joseph Goebbels, and Albert Speer each responsible for their own area of "expertise." Each province or region had its own governor referred to as a gauleiter that ruled with an iron fist over their specific area. Oaths were required to follow Hitler under all circumstances.
This is a book on pain and suffering, and Author Kershaw relates in considerable detail the hardships ordinary Germans suffered when they were being squeezed in by the Americans and British from the west and the Russians from the east with capitulation to the west preferable to surrender to the Soviets.
Hitler's underlings stressed the importance of dying in battle to surrender to the enemy while they, themselves, often were planning their own exit from Germany. A few die hard loyalists such as Admiral Karl Donitz and Joseph Goebbels remained loyal to their Fuhrer to the end. I found it interesting to see the rivalry and even outright hatred some of Hitler's henchmen had for each other. Martin Bormann was able to create a misunderstanding between Hitler and Hermann Goring that caused Goring's ouster from the party.
Hitler's popularity was waning even though an individual faced execution if caught expressing negative views. The German populace was sick of war and wondered where these so-called "miracle weapons" were that were supposed to deliver them from the enemy. Many also claimed ignorance regarding atrocities that had taken place such as the concentration and extermination camps that existed. They didn't mind producing weapons in the early stages of the war as long as those weapons rained down on the enemy, but it was another story when their own historic cities were being destroyed in retaliation.
I found it interesting that author Kershaw pointed out that had the Claus von Stauffenberg bomb attempt on Hitler's life in July of 1944 succeeded, and a peace treaty signed one-half of the German soldiers who died in the war would have lived. This, of course, assumes the treaty would have been agreed on by both fronts attacking from the east and the west.
This book aptly illustrates what can happen when extremists take hold of a country with government degraded and replaced by those with an agenda suited to their own selfish interests.
16 of 16 found the following review helpful:
Overlong and redundantJan 23, 2012
By Robert A., Shoaf I'm thankful this was a library loan. Kershaw seems to more or less repeat the same points ad nauseum in this overwritten, tedious tome about the last 10 months of Nazi Germany. 400 pages of text, which could easily have been reduced by 100 pages, and copious end notes, that actually were informative and useful. I can't say the same for the actual text of the book. If you are relatively well read on the Second World War, I doubt that any new revelations will jump out at you in this book. The author's point that by extending the war until May, 1945, the Nazi hierarchy caused huge numbers of unnecessary casualties is undoubtedly true, but this is not exactly a revelation. The same reasons were repeated over and over again, in one form or another, and it just grew very tedious to me.
26 of 33 found the following review helpful:
The final distinergation of GermanySep 16, 2011
By Dave Schranck
"Dave"
Some of Mr Kershaw's earlier books have dealt with Hitler and his Nazi regime; after much new research he expands on that universe with his latest work. Using the last ten months of the war as a backdrop, the author studies and explains the ideological, psychological, political and social circumstances that makes Hitler and his stooges drive the country to annihilation, sacrificing its people in order to stay in power for as long as possible. Its irrational but with the scale of vengeance being extracted by Stalin and secondarily by FDR's terms of unconditional surrender, its also an act of desperation, an attempt to prolong the inevitable defeat. A second defeat that will surpass the humiliating one of 1918. Hitler uses the invention of his super weapons among other reasons as his excuse for not surrendering but these weapons would be few in numbers and have little effect on the outcome even if Hitler could have delayed his defeat for months. Once evidence of the concentration camps became public, there would be no reprieve for the Nazis and they knew it. Besides Hitler, Boorman, Jodl, Goebbels, Speers highlight this book. The author does a good job of profiling these men.
The book describes the repressive, sadistic nature of Nazism providing one of the reasons why most Germans though by now having lost faith in Hitler never tried to rebell. It goes beyond fear. The Germans had more than a decade of propaganda from Hitler and Goebbels and believed in German superiority. As long as the war continued there was a chance to win; surrendering meant that dream would evaporate. Besides the discussion of these four henchmen, the daily lives of the German people also play an important role in this story, having to endure the tribulations of war as well as their leaders' fanaticism. Examples of those tribulations are throughout the book. The discussion is extended to cover why the Wehrmacht continued to buckle under Hitler's rule, rejecting a coup de tat or why his appointees, for the most part, stayed loyal.
While there are glimpses of battle action like towns or sectors falling to the Allies, the coverage is brief and secondary and is a means of showing the state of Hitler's shrinking, deteriorating domain as the Allies close in from the east and west. As the military situation worsens you see Hitler lose his grip on reality, firing key Generals like Hausser, ordering impossible feats to be accomplished and allowing the dissension of Party members to take control of their own principalities and committing their own atrocities.
There are nine maps that are useful but unremarkable. There is a nice photo gallery of key German personalities that are discussed in the book as well as a few photos that show the desperation and destruction of Germany. This book is highly annotated and has an impressive reading list if further study is desired.
As usual Mr Kershaw's writing style is engaging and informative in describing the intricacies of this environment and for anybody, especially new students, interested in all the ramifications of the collapse of Germany in 1945 this book will be beneficial. Though some of this material can be read in other books, more experienced students will also appreciate the arguments and positions that are presented and the logical manner in which this story is developed. You might want to supplement this book with Sean McAteer's "500 Days" which covers more of the operational aspects of this period.
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