The Conspiracy Against Hitler in the Twilight War

Author:

Harold C. Deutsch

“A careful and most readable reconstruction, based on new evidence, of conspiratorial efforts against Hitler in the first ten months of the war.” --Foreign Affairs

“A must for all students of the period.” --Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science

“A superb scholarly study of a phase of German resistance which heretofore has received inadequate attention.” --Military Affairs

This is the first detailed account in English of the German anti-Nazi plot of September 1939 - May 1940, a conspiracy which involved the services of Pope Pius XII as in intermediary. Much new information is presented, and the book puts the whole story of the German resistance movement in a clearer light than has been possible before.

Much of the account is based on the testimony of over fifty witnesses whom Professor Deutsch interviewed or interrogated, comprising virtually all the participants or observers who survived the period. He also had access to previously unavailable French and Belgian documents as well as to diaries and other private material.

As the author explains, there were four major rounds of opposition to the Hitler regime, the conspiracy described in this volume being the second. IN many ways it was the round in which circumstances were the most favorable for success. High military quarters were the most fully committed, it was the only plan in which a foreign power at odds with Germany (britain) took a supporting position, and it was the only instance in which a notable outside figure, Pius XII, made his good offices available as an intermediary.

The role of the Pope in this conspiracy has been known in a general way since 1946, but Professor Deutsch’s investigation is the first intensive study were at the core of the affair, Josef Muller, the Opposition agent who dealt with the Pope and who later became the Bavarian Minister o Justice, and Rev. Robert Leiber, S.F., the Pope’s confidential aide.

In his conclusion Professor Deutsch points out that the story of this conspiracy clearly testifies to the moral nature of the German resistance movement. The author writes: “No term recurred more often in these months to define the conflict with the Third Reich then ‘the decent Germany.’”

Harold C. Deutsch was a professor of history at the University of Minnesota.

“A careful and most readable reconstruction, based on new evidence, of conspiratorial efforts against Hitler in the first ten months of the war.” --Foreign Affairs

“A must for all students of the period.” --Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science

“A superb scholarly study of a phase of German resistance which heretofore has received inadequate attention.” --Military Affairs