Subject: What is War? Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2004 17:57:14 -0400 WHAT IS WAR? In our conventional way of thinking, war is driven by motives like the wish for conquest or territorial expansion, the defense of boundaries, and the pursuit of national interests. Standard historical accounts of the Second World War state that Hitler sought "living space," that he dreamt of building a "vast German Empire sprawling across Central and Eastern Europe," that his aim was to "wage a war of conquest against the Soviet Union" and to make Germany the "most powerful state in all of Europe." But careful study of Hitler's speeches and writings show a startling pattern that belies these interpretations: War was prompted by Hitler's deeper wish for the annihilation of himself, his nation and the German people. Hitler stated: "We do not want to have any other God, only Germany." He glorified warfare as an activity that required his soldiers and people to sacrifice their lives in the name of the object that they worshipped in common--their own nation. Writing about the First World War (in which two million German soldiers were killed), Hitler said: "When in the long war years Death snatched so many dear comrades and friends from our ranks, it would have seemed to me almost a sin to complain-after all, were they not dying for Germany?" Hitler asserted that "Any man who loves his people proves it solely by the sacrifices which he is prepared to make for it." He stated that National Socialism meant acting with a "boundless and all embracing love for the people, and if necessary to die for it." He proclaimed that giving one's life for the community constituted the "crown of all sacrifice." Tens of thousands of books have been written about Nazism, the Holocaust and World War II. However few scholars take the trouble to listen carefully to Hitler's words, which reveal what he thought he was doing. Here is what Hitler said on September 1, 1939, speaking before the Reichstag as German planes and troops crossed the Polish borders in a devastating Blitzkrieg: As a National Socialist and a German soldier, I enter upon this fight with a stout heart! My whole life has been but one continuous struggle for my people, and that whole struggle has been inspired by one single conviction: Faith in my people! I ask of every German what I myself am prepared to do at any moment: to be ready to lay down his life for his people and for his country. If anyone thinks that he can evade this national duty directly or indirectly, he will perish. In this passage, Hitler articulates his thinking about the war that is about to begin and provides a preview of what is going to occur. He asks every German to do what he was prepared to do (and eventually did). Hitler goes on to say that if anyone thinks he can "evade this national duty"--the obligation to lay down one's life for his people and country--he will "perish." In short, Hitler stated: Either die for Germany, or Germany will kill you. _____ To read Richard Koenigsberg's papers listed below, PLEASE <http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=8ohup7n6.0.d75zm7n6.85y8w8n6.1&p=http%3A%2F%2Fhome. earthlink.net%2F%7Elibraryofsocialscience%2F> CLICK HERE * AS THE SOLDIER DIES, SO DOES THE NATION COME ALIVE: The Sacrificial Meaning of Warfare * DYING FOR ONE'S COUNTRY: The Logic of War and Genocide * THE LOGIC OF THE HOLOCAUST: Why the Nazi's Killed the Jews * THE SACRIFICIAL MEANING OF THE HOLOCAUST * AZTEC WARFARE, WESTERN WARFARE: The Soldier as Sacrificial Victim _____ As the Second World War progressed with the invasion of Russia, Joseph Goebbels, Hitler's Minister of Propaganda, noted with satisfaction that "the German soldiers go into battle with devotion, like congregations going into service." General von Runstedt admonished the soldiers of World War II to emulate the example of their brothers in the First World War: "The heroic death of a German soldier is not something to be forgotten. Instead, it should inspire everyone who remembers it to die in the same way, to be as strong, unswerving and obedient, to go happily and as a matter of course to his death." Hitler declared war on September 1, 1939 by asking every German to lay down his life for his people. World War II was the vehicle through which Hitler acted out this sacrificial fantasy. While the history books observe and portray the scene as quintessentially aggressive, beneath the will to power was the will toward abject submission. Hitler felt compelled to-and clearly did--ask his own people to submit absolutely to the nation-state; to die for Germany. War represents an activity in which the self is cast off in the name of the collective. When Hitler proclaimed to the German people, "You are nothing, your nation is everything," he meant it. Nazism sought to obliterate individuality. As the nation was exalted to become "everything," so were human beings degraded to become "nothing." To bring Hitler's ideology to fruition, everyone would have to become a sacrificial victim. No one was exempt. Toward the end when the war was lost, Germany could have surrendered; many German lives could have been saved. But Hitler could not bear the idea that some might escape the sacrificial obligation. He refused to abandon his dream. His fantasy required total participation. The sacrificial offering had to be complete. Stephen Fritz, after studying the action on the Eastern front, noted that German soldiers suspected of desertion were often executed and left dangling from trees or poles with placards around their necks. Sixteen-year-old Hans-Rudolf Vilter never forgot the deserters hanging on lampposts and trees in Berlin in 1945, marked with the sign proclaiming, "I hang here because I am too cowardly to defend my fatherland." Hitler refused to allow his people to acknowledge that the war was lost. He continued to require that they "lay down their lives," thereby fulfilling his prophecy that one would either die in the process of fighting for Germany, or perish. One soldier recalled with bitterness the fall of 1944, when armed German officers gave his unit no choice but to attack enemy lines. The other option was clear: be shot by your own leaders. Units established special formations whose instructions were to "make immediate use of their weapons in order to enforce obedience and discipline." As Helmut Altner wrote caustically, the soldiers' situation was devilishly simple: "There were only two possibilities: Death by a bullet from the enemy or by the 'thugs' of the SS." Thus did Hitler fulfill his dream of war and enforce the sacrificial fantasy: Either die for Germany, or be killed. _____ E-mail: libraryofsocialscience-AT-earthlink.net Phone: 718-393-1081 Web: http://home.earthlink.net/~libraryofsocialscience/ <http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=8ohup7n6.0.d75zm7n6.85y8w8n6.1&p=http%3A%2F%2Fhome. earthlink.net%2F%7Elibraryofsocialscience%2F> --- StripMime Warning -- MIME attachments removed --- This message may have contained attachments which were removed. Sorry, we do not allow attachments on this list. --- StripMime Report -- processed MIME parts --- multipart/alternative text/plain (text body -- kept) text/html ---
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