Paddy Ashdown

Nein!: Standing up to Hitler 1935–1944


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Langenberg, Prince Maximilian Egon – Freelance spy. Friend of Dulles, Canaris and Himmler

      Jelinek, Charles and Antoinette – Owners of ‘De Favoriet’ bric-à-brac shop in The Hague

      Keitel, Field Marshal Wilhelm – Chief of the German armed forces high command

      Kleist-Schmenzin, Ewald von – German emissary of the opposition to Hitler; saw Churchill in London in August 1938

      Kluge, Field Marshal Günther von – Commander of Army Group Centre. Reluctant plotter

      Kordt, Erich – Head of Ribbentrop’s office in Berlin

      Kordt, Theo – Brother of Erich. Official at the German embassy in London

      Kubiš, Jan – Operation Anthropoid Czech agent

      Lahousen, Major General Erwin von – Head of the Austrian Abwehr and then senior officer in the German Abwehr. Close to Canaris and a key plotter. Lover of Madeleine Bihet-Richou

      Manstein, Field Marshal Erich von – Commander of Army Group South and mastermind of the Kursk offensive

      March, Juan – Mallorcan businessman and prime mover in Spain – contact of Canaris and MI6

      Masson, Roger – Head of Swiss intelligence

      Mayr von Baldegg, Captain Bernhard – Staff member of Swiss army intelligence; Waibel’s deputy head

      Menzies, Sir Stewart – Head of MI6

      Mertz von Quirnheim, Colonel Albrecht – Friend of Stauffenberg; involved in the 20 July 1944 plot

      Moltke, Count Helmuth von – Founder of the ‘Kreisau Circle’

      Morávec, Colonel František – Head of the Czech intelligence service

      Morávek, Václav – Resistance leader in Prague

      Mueller, Josef – Canaris’s spy in the Vatican

      Navarre, Henri – Madeleine Bihet-Richou’s French intelligence ‘handler’

      Niemöller, Martin – Anti-Hitler Lutheran pastor

      Olbricht, General Friedrich – Key plotter. Involved in the 20 July coup

      Oster, Colonel Hans – ‘Managing director’ of the attempted 1938 coup. Head of Z Section in the Tirpitzufer

      Pannwitz, Heinz – SD officer in charge of finding the ‘Dora Ring’

      Payne Best, Captain Sigismund – MI6 officer captured at Venlo

      Puenter, Dr Otto – ‘Dora’ agent – also in touch with MI6

      Radó, Sándor – Head of the ‘Dora’ spy network

      Ribbentrop, Joachim von – German ambassador to London and later Hitler’s foreign minister

      Rivet, Colonel Louis – Head of French military intelligence (SR)

      Roessler, Rudolf – Codename ‘Lucy’. Private purveyor of intelligence in Switzerland

      Sas, Gijsbertus Jacobus – Dutch military attaché in Berlin; contact of Oster and Waibel

      Schacht, Hjalmar – German minister of economics and president of the Reichsbank

      Schellenberg, Walter – Heydrich’s protégé and mastermind of Venlo

      Schlabrendorff, Fabian von – German lawyer. Liaison between Tresckow in Russia and Beck in Berlin

      Schneider, Christian – Alias ‘Taylor’. Swiss businessman. Cut-out supplying information from Roessler to the Dora Ring

      Schulenburg, Friedrich-Werner von der – Pre-war ambassador to Moscow and senior resistant

      Schulte, Edouard – German businessman and one of Chojnacki’s agents

      Sedláček, Karel – Alias ‘Charles Simpson’. Czech intelligence officer in Bern

      Stauffenberg, Colonel Claus Schenk, Graf von – Architect and perpetrator of the 20 July 1944 bomb plot

      Stevens, Major Richard – MI6 officer captured at Venlo

      Suñer, Serrano – Spanish foreign minister

      Szymańska, Halina – Wife of the Polish military attaché in Berlin before the war. Channel for Canaris to pass information to Menzies

      Thümmel, Paul – Many aliases. MI6 agent A54. Important spy in the early part of the war

      Timoshenko, Marshal Semyon – Commander of Soviet forces at Moscow, Stalingrad and Kursk

      Tresckow, Henning von – Chief of staff of Army Group Centre; a key plotter

      Trott zu Solz, Adam von – German lawyer, diplomat and active resister

      Vanden Heuvel, Count Frederick – Head of MI6 in Bern after 1941

      Vansittart, Sir Robert – Head of the pre-war British Foreign Office

      Waibel, Captain Max – Swiss intelligence officer

      Weizsäcker, Ernst von – Head of the German Foreign Office and key plotter

      Wilson, Sir Horace – Personal adviser to Chamberlain. Appeasement supporter

      Witzleben, General Erwin von – Commander of the Berlin garrison and de facto leader of the September 1938 coup

      Young, A.P. – One of Vansittart’s ‘spies’ in contact with Goerdeler

      Zaharoff, Basil – Director of Vickers and notorious arms dealer

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       Prologue

      To the millions whose votes helped make Adolf Hitler chancellor of Germany, he was the hero who would rescue them from the humiliations of the Versailles Treaty and the shaming chaos that followed.

      John Maynard Keynes, who attended the 1919 peace conference, condemned Versailles afterwards in unforgiving and uncannily prophetic terms: ‘If we aim at the impoverishment of Central Europe, vengeance, I dare say, will not limp. Nothing can then delay for very long the forces of Reaction and the despairing convulsions of Revolution, before which the horrors of the late German war will fade into nothing, and which will destroy, whoever is victor, the civilisation and the progress of our generation.’

      Keynes was not the only person to understand that in the punitive conditions imposed by Versailles lay the seeds of another explosion of German militarism. Others referred to it as ‘the peace built on quicksand’.

      Under Clause 231 of the Treaty, the ‘War Guilt’ clause, Germany was deprived of all her colonies, 80 per cent of her pre-war fleet, almost half her iron production, 16 per cent of coal output, 13 per cent of her territory (including the great German-speaking port of Danzig) and more than a tenth of her population. To add to these humiliations, the victorious Allies also planted a deadly economic time bomb beneath what was left of the German economy. This took the form of war reparations amounting to some $US32 billion, to be paid largely in shipments of coal and steel.

      In 1922, when Germany inevitably defaulted, French and Belgian troops occupied the centre of German coal and steel production in the Ruhr valley. Faced with the collapse of the domestic economy, the German government sought refuge in printing money, with the inevitable