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October 11, 2009

Op-Ed Contributor


Hitler’s Jaws of Death 


By ANTONY BEEVOR

Lynsore Bottom, England

THE assertion by American researchers that Hitler might have escaped from 
Berlin because a skull fragment in a Moscow archive was not his but a young 
woman’s is rich in paradox. Stalin went to great lengths in 1945 to conceal the 
fact that Hitler’s body had been identified by pathologists working for Smersh, 
the Soviet military counterintelligence agency. Stalin even misled his own 
commander in chief, Marshal Georgi Zhukov, demanding to know why he had failed 
to find Hitler’s corpse. And Pravda declared that rumors of the discovery of 
Hitler’s body were a fascist provocation. 

Stalin ruled by creating fear and uncertainty among both subordinates at home 
and among his Western allies abroad, who were of course seen as potential 
enemies. Even after Hitler’s jaws, with their distinctive bridgework, had been 
identified by the assistant to the Führer’s personal dentist, the Soviet 
authorities nurtured rumors that Hitler was hiding in Bavaria. As Bavaria was 
part of the American zone of occupation, the implication was that the Americans 
had concealed him and were somehow in league with the Nazis. Now, 64 years 
later, an episode of the History Channel series “MysteryQuest” — with the 
outrageous title of “Hitler’s Escape” — has distorted the revelation of the 
skull to scare up a similar fugitive ghost, to the furious exasperation of the 
Russian authorities. 

On May 2, 1945, members of the Smersh detachment of the Soviet Third Shock 
Army, having heard of Hitler’s suicide two days earlier, sealed off the Reich 
Chancellery garden and Hitler’s bunker there as they searched for the body. All 
those on the Smersh team were sworn to secrecy and warned that any mention of 
their work would be treated as treason. Even Marshal Zhukov was refused entry 
to the bunker during the search on the ground that “it wasn’t safe down there.”

All members of Hitler’s household who had been identified were held in the 
Reich Institute for the Blind, on the Oranienstrasse. One after another they 
were interrogated by a major known to history only as Bystrov. Stalin was so 
desperate for news that a general from the N.K.V.D., the K.G.B.’s predecessor, 
was sent to supervise the interrogations. He was given a secure line with a 
scrambler so that he could report back to Moscow after each interview. 

On May 5, Smersh operatives finally discovered Hitler’s body along with that of 
Eva Braun in the chancellery garden; the two corpses had been doused in 
gasoline and set on fire by SS aides, in accordance with Hitler’s orders, and 
then buried in a shell crater. The Soviets smuggled the remains to an 
improvised morgue in Buch, a suburb of Berlin. Hitler’s body was too badly 
burned to be recognizable, so the jaws were removed since they offered the best 
means of identification. The assistant to Hitler’s dentist was tracked down and 
brought to examine them. 

Yelena Rzhevskaya, the interpreter with the Smersh group, later recounted how 
on the evening of May 8, when Soviet troops prepared to celebrate the German 
surrender, she was given a box covered in red satin and told to guard it with 
her life. She described it as “the sort used for cheap jewelry.” The box held 
Hitler’s jaws. Rzhevskaya was given it because, as a woman, she was considered 
less likely to get drunk that night and lose it. 

The skull and the jaws are still separate because Smersh hung on to its 
precious evidence. The cranium, recovered later, allegedly at the same site, 
was taken by the N.K.V.D., and that is why it has been in the State Archive of 
the Russian Federation since the collapse of the Soviet Union. The jaws are 
almost certainly still held in the Lubyanka, the Moscow headquarters of the 
Russian secret police, along with other prizes retrieved by Smersh from the 
garden, like Hitler’s Nazi party badge, which was taken from the body of Magda 
Goebbels. 

Although we have been subjected over the last few months to a barrage of 
disinformation from the Russians about the start of World War II — including 
attempts to blame the Poles and the British for its outbreak — I would tend to 
believe their version in the case of its ending. Even if the cranium is not 
Hitler’s but some unknown woman’s, the jaws are almost certainly genuine. The 
Russians could end speculation and ridiculous conspiracy theories by allowing 
an international team to carry out DNA tests on them. 

In any case, Stalin was obsessed with every detail about his archenemy Hitler, 
whom he both feared and admired in a distorted way. The investigations of his 
death were meticulous, as the Smersh reports show. Witnesses to the suicide and 
the burning of the bodies were interviewed again and again by Smersh and the 
N.K.V.D., and some by the British — in fact, by the historian Hugh 
Trevor-Roper, who wrote “The Last Days of Hitler.” 

There were no major discrepancies in any of the accounts, so suggestions that 
Hitler did not commit suicide and had escaped from Berlin represent nothing but 
gratuitous sensationalism. It is just another attempt to exploit the nightmare 
conspiracy theory that the source of unparalleled evil lived on somewhere, in 
secret. 

Antony Beevor is the author of “D-Day: The Battle for Normandy” and “The Fall 
of Berlin 1945.” 

 

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