-Caveat Lector-

an excerpt from:
Secret Germany - Stauffenberg and the Mystical Crusade Against Hitler
Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh,(C) 1994
PENGUIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Books Ltd. 27 Wrights Lane London W8 3TZ, England

--[14]--
Part Five

HEROSIM IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY


13

In the Courtyard of the Bendlerstrasse

In the end one returns to that moment just after midnight, a few minutes into
21 July 1944, in the courtyard of the War Office, in the Bendlerstrasse - the
crack of rifle shots and those defiant words: 'Es lebe unser geheimes
Deutschland!' One returns, as well, to the three or four hours immediately
preceding that moment.

By the early evening of 20 July, it was obvious that Hitler was alive, that
the conspiracy had failed and that nothing could possibly be gained by
further effort. Yet Stauffenberg continued to conduct himself as if success
could still be achieved. Even when the situation was clearly hopeless, he
proceeded as if it could still be salvaged. When he died, it was not with the
disappointment, still less the despair, of a thwarted man. It was with a
gesture of undiminished affirmation, even, paradoxically, of triumph. In a
public execution, with an audience of spectators and witnesses, such a
gesture might be explicable and understandable, but in the privacy of that
nocturnal courtyard, for whose benefit was it made?

The so-called 'work ethic' introduced by Protestantism emphasises the act -
the act that yields tangible results, that culminates in demonstrable and
measurable accomplishment. Success is palpable proof of God's favour and,
therefore, a testimony to virtue. The man who succeeds is the virtuous man,
and vice versa. Success and virtue are synonymous.

Stauffenberg was raised, trained and shaped according to a different, more
subtle, logic - the logic of Stefan George's syncretic thought with its
emphasis on sacrifice, and, before that, the logic of Catholic tradition. If
the logic of Protestantism is pragmatic, that of both George and the Church
can be described as essentially poetic. According to poetic logic, the
symbolic gesture weighs as heavily as the utilitarian act. Indeed" in the
moral and spiritual balance, it may even count for more. It may even, in
itself, constitute a redemptive principle, regardless of whether or not it
accomplishes anything. Thus, for example, saints and martyrs are revered more
often than not for pragmatically futile but poetically resonant gestures.
They thereby conform to the figure who performed the supreme such gesture in
Western tradition -Jesus himself

This is not to suggest, of course, that Stauffenberg should be seen as a
'Christ figure', or that he ever saw himself as such. Nor is it to suggest
that he sought nothing more than the symbolic significance of martyrdom. He
was, above all else, a man of action, who wanted the conspiracy to achieve an
actual, as well as a symbolic, success.
Were that not the case, he could easily enough have ensured the Fuhrer's
death through his own self-immolation, as Axel von dem Bussche and Ewald von
Kleist, their uniforms packed with explosive, had been prepared to do.-
Stauffenberg, however, felt it necessary to keep himself alive, not from a
personal desire for self-preservation, but to ensure the conspiracy achieved
its goals.

Yet it is clear that poetic logic still figured prominently in his, and in
many of the other conspirators', thinking. According to this logic, the
symbolic gesture might still salvage a measure of triumph when the
utilitarian act had failed. In the pragmatic sphere of politics and mundane
history, the conspiracy might prove futile and- accomplish nothing, but in
the moral and spiritual sphere, it might, as a symbolic gesture, constitute
an accomplishment of an altogether different kind. On behalf of Germany as a
whole, it could be, an act of atonement, without which there could be no
redemption. This calls to mind Henning von Tresckow's statement that 'Just as
God once promised Abraham that he would spare Sodom if only ten just men
could be found in the city, I also have reason to hope that, for our sake, he
will not destroy Germany.[1]

What, then, kept Stauffenberg functioning as he did until the very end? It
was something much loftier than the prosaic propaganda purpose of 'letting
the world know that there were good Germans'. It was the desire to make
atonement for Germany, and so redeem everything most valid and laudable in
Germanic history and culture - redeem the Hohenstauffen emperors and the
achievements of the high Middle Ages, redeem Luther and the Reformation,
redeem Goethe and Schiller, Holderlin and Novalis, Gneisenau and Yorck von
Wartenburg and, above all perhaps, redeem Stefan George, whose own work had
inadvertently contributed to Germany's damnation. Like a number of the other
conspirators, Stauffenberg viewed his own actions from the standpoint of
posterity. He saw himself as taking Germany's sins upon his own shoulders and
dying for them. We are the posterity for whose sake Stauffenberg offered
himself in sacrifice. To the extent that we accept and acknowledge his
sacrifice, the culmination of the drama in the courtyard of the
Bendlerstrasse was not a failure, but an apotheosis.

*
>From one point of view, the events of 20 July and the circumstances
surrounding them offer just another story of twentieth-century political
conspiracy, and a failed conspiracy at that. It may have been
well-intentioned, even noble and exalted, but it was also bungled. It did not
significantly alter the course of events, and is therefore little more than a
footnote to history. Yet what if one shifts one's perspective and points of
emphasis? What if one transfers one's focus from the conspiracy itself to
Stauffenburg and the men like him? What if one concentrates not on the plot
of 20 July, nor even on the war as a whole, but on the vista stretching back
at least to 1933? Such a vista would include Stauffenberg organising an
honour guard at Stefan George's bier to prevent the dead poet's body from
being taken back to Germany and used as a pretence for an official state
ceremony. It would also include Stauffenberg daring to walk out in the middle
of a lecture by Julius Streicher. It would include his humane efforts, during
the invasion of Czechoslovakia, to keep the local population supplied with
food and other vital resources. It would include his calling an officer to
account for the indiscriminate shooting of two peasant 'women in Poland. It
would include his ongoing personal crusade against the SS and everything they
represented. It would include his rigorous adherence to a code of honour,
chivalry and decency amid circumstances that militated violently against such
virtues. It would include the recognition of responsibility implicit in his
statement while convalescing in hospital from his wounds: 'Since the generals
have so far done nothing, it is time for the colonels to act.[2]

The story that then emerges from this book is not just the story of a failed
conspiracy. It is the story of a unique, distinctive and extraordinary man
who mirrored in himself Germany's collective identity crisis, and effected
his own reconciliation between the martial nationalism of his ancestor,
Gneisenau, a rid Goethe's ideal of dedication to culture and the spirit. It
is the story of a figure who bridges the great modem gulf between 'the man of
thought' and 'the man of action'. It is the story, in short, of an heroic
figure~ and, even more, of a specifically twentieth-century heroic figure. To
that extent, his story transcends the historical context of the Third Reich.
It applies equally to Germany, and to all of us, today.


Before the advent of self-awareness, self-consciousness and selfalienation,
action alone was sufficient to determine and define heroism. Homer may single
out Odysseus by virtue of his resourceful intelligence and capacity for
'strategic thought'. Thucydides may cite Pericles' funeral oration to the
Athenians at the end of the first year of the Peloponnesian War:

We were capable at the same time of taking risks and of estimating them
beforehand. Others are brave out of ignorance; and, when they stop to think,
they begin to fear. But the man who can most truly be accounted brave is he
who best knows the meaning of what is sweet in life and of what is terrible,
and then goes out undeterred to meet what is to come.[3]

Despite such homages to intelligence, however, the hero of antiquity was
exemplified by such figures as Achilles in The Iliad, or Cuchulain in the
Irish sagas of the Red Branch of Ulster. They are indeed 'brave out of
ignorance'. Their bravery amounts to little more than an insensate berserker
rage, an embarrassingly infantile temper tantrum. Except for a certain
rudimentary tactical cunning, both Achilles and Cuchulain are consummate
dolts. But in their own eras and milieux, bravery and martial prowess are
alone sufficient to confer heroic status. They are, in effect, virtues in
themselves, and even extolled as the highest virtues. They exist in a kind of
vacuum, utterly divorced from any moral context or hierarchy of values. Even
politics are of peripheral importance, and war is reduced to the level of two
boxers in a ring.

As civilisation, culture and consciousness evolve, the intelligence informing
Pericles' oration becomes more meaningful and relevant. There arises, too,
the desire for what might be called a 'strategic' context, an acknowledgement
not just of bravery alone and for its own sake, but also of its implications
and ramifications, its repercussions, consequences and effects. Even more
significantly, there arises, too, the desire for a moral context.

We recognise today, for example, that simple bravery is in itself a
questionable virtue. It can often stem from, and be equated with, sheer
arrant stupidity. It can also stem from, and be equated with, something
manifestly reprehensible, wicked or evil. If bravery is a virtue at all, it
can only too easily be negated by the absence of other virtues - by the
absence of a moral context, or by the cynical expediency which allows ends to
justify means. Many of the SS were unquestionably brave. So, too, no doubt,
are certain members of today's Provisional IRA. But that does not render them
any the less morally bankrupt, contemptible and repellent. To the modern
mind, bravery in itself can no longer automatically validate., justify and
redeem itself, the man who displays it or the cause on behalf of which he
does so.

To the extent that we now demand (at least in theory) a moral context for
action, humanity can probably be said to have progressed. Yet such progress
has brought new problems in its wake; for the very awareness that demands a
moral context for action is the same awareness that can question the purposes
of any action whatever, and can lead ultimately to paralysis. In mobilising
the United States for the Second World War, Roosevelt pointed out that all we
have to fear is fear itself Awareness can foster a greater fear of fear than
of the circumstances that engender fear. We are all familiar - through books
and films if not through personal experience - with the soldier who is less
afraid of the enemy guns than of something in himself, something which might,
at the crucial moment, panic in the face of those guns. It is a tired but
none the less valid truism that some price in efficiency will be paid by the
soldier who thinks, who questions the cause for which he is fighting, who
visualises the circumstances of his own death, who imagines what he will feel
at the impact of bullet, bomb or mine. His morale may well flag. He may
become utterly panic-stricken and freeze. Heroism in such circumstances is
less a triumph over an external foe than over something within himself - a
form of self-mastery.

The epic, 'larger-than-life' protagonists of nineteenth-century literature -
Faust, for example, Prince Andrey Bolkonsky in War and Peace or Ivan
Karamazov - perform precisely such an act of selfconquest. It is from this,
in large part, that their heroic stature derives. But in the process, they
also resolve the dichotomy between what Conrad, towards the end of the
century, labelled 'the man of thought' and 'the man of action'.

The achievements of such fictional characters had their counterparts in
history. Since the Lutheran Reformation, if not indeed before, the
'Renaissance man'- the man displaying audacity in both thought and action -
had played a dominant role in Western civilisation. There were, for example,
the figures of the Elizabethan age - soldier-poets like Sir Philip Sidney,
explorers and adventurers like Sir Walter Raleigh. In the seventeenth
century, there were figures like Rupert of the Rhine, Gustavus Adolphus and
Wallenstein. In the eighteenth century, there was Frederick the Great himself
who, between campaigns, consorted with Voltaire, composed music, wrote poetry
and speculated in philosophy. In the nineteenth century, there were Nelson
and Napoleon. There were some of the dashing yet still reflective commanders
of the American Civil War, such as the 'Grey Ghost', John Singleton Mosby;
there were adventurers like Sir Richard Button, and explorers like Ludwig
Leichart, the prototype for Patrick White's Voss. All of these individuals
were men endowed with the capacity for thought and action. And it was largely
from their aptitude for both that they derived their heroic status.


It is by now a cliche that the twentieth century witnessed the decline of
traditional concepts of heroism - not just the primitive heroism of Achilles
and Cuchulain, but also the heroism of the 'Renaissance man'. There were, of
course, many contributing factors to this decline. The First World War
produced heroism on an inflationary scale, like that of German currency in
its aftermath; and like German currency, the very concept of heroism became
debased and devalued. In the prolonged stalemate of the Western Front, there
was not much opportunity for distinctive or decisive heroic action. Anyone,
with a bare minimum of effort, could become a hero. One did not even have to
lead a localised charge or perform a deed of derring-do. One had only to poke
one's head too far above the parapet of a trench - or, like Saki, according
to the accepted story, light three cigarettes on a match - and one promptly
became a dead hero. With heroism in itself so plentiful and so easily
obtainable, the concept became discredited.

Then, too, there was the debasement of language by the burgeoning organs of
the media. In The Man Without Qualities, the protagonist is known only as
Ulrich, his surname having been suppressed 'in order not to embarrass his
father'. Ulrich is a man without qualities because he is conscious of
possessing, at least in potential, all qualities - which is tantamount to
having no qualities because they cancel each other out. As a result, Ulrich
is left with the agonising dilemma of what to do with his life - and, even
more painful, of what simply to be. For a time he considers becoming 'a man
of importance'. That seeming somewhat too vague, he then entertains the
prospect of becoming a genius, which he is certainly sufficiently well
equipped to do. But this alternative is also frustrated by what the media
have done with language:

The time had already begun when it became a habit to speak of geniuses of the
football-field or the boxing-ring, although to every ten or even more
explorers, tenors and writers of genius that cropped up in the columns of the
newspapers there were not, as yet, more than at the most one genius of a
centre-half or one great tactician of the tennis-court. The new spirit of the
times had not yet quite found its feet. But just then it happened that Ulrich
read somewhere - and It came like a breath of too early summer ripeness blown
down the wind - the phrase 'the race-horse of genius'. It occurred in a
report of a spectacular success in a race, and it was quite possible that the
writer was far from aware of the magnitude of the inspiration wafted into his
pen by the spirit of contemporaneity. Ulrich, however, suddenly grasped the
inevitable connection between his whole career and this genius among
race-horses. For to the cavalry, of course, the horse has always been a
sacred animal, and during his youthful days of life in the barracks Ulrich
had hardly ever heard anything talked about except horses and women. That was
what he had fled from to become a man of importance. And now, -when, after
varied exertions, he might almost have felt entitled to think himself near
the summit of his ambitions, he was haled from on high by the horse, which
had got there first.[4]

As Musil ironically demonstrates, both the term and the concept of 'genius'
could easily be debased by media hacks. A similar debasement of such terms
and concepts as 'hero', and 'heroism' had already, by Musil's time, begun to
occur. If a sports journalist could speak of a 'race-horse of genius', he
could - and often does - speak of, say, the horse's 'heroic effort in the
final stretch'. And if comparison with a horse can deter one from wanting to
be a genius, it can equally well deter one from wanting to be a hero.

The concept of heroism also implies that, in the fashionable American phrase,
'one man can make a difference'. Almost by definition, the hero is an
individual whose action, to one or another degree, makes a difference. In
Homer's Iliad, the outcome of the Trojan War rests entirely on the actions of
the heroic figures Achilles and Odysseus. But as society grows more complex,
as chains of command become more attenuated and complicated, as the
decision-making process becomes more collectivised and bureaucratic, the
opportunities to make a difference become more limited. By the twentieth
century, the scope for heroic action of a decisive kind has become
dramatically circumscribed. What, for instance, could anyone conceivably have
done to make the difference - or even a difference, however modest - on the
Western Front during the First World War? One could obviously rescue a
comrade, eliminate an enemy machine-gun post, capture a sector of trench. But
such feats could do nothing to alter or determine the course of events,
unless they were performed in such quantity as to become routine.

In the world of the twentieth century, what scope remains for the kind of
heroism that was still possible as recently as a century before - for a unity
of thought and action that makes some sort of decisive difference? One can no
longer play Wyatt Earp and single-handedly 'clean up` today's equivalents of
Dodge City and Tombstone. Despite the impressions fostered by film and
television, modem law enforcement is more often than not a bureaucratic 'team
effort' which offers little latitude for the decisive individual initiative
of 'mavericks'. In the sphere of exploration, there are precious few
uncharted territories to discover, no lost dries to seek, no Northwest
Passage to be found. Terrestrial exploration now more closely resembles sport
than anything else; and even the vaunted 'conquest of space' is a
bureaucratic 'team effort' which, like law enforcement, offers little
latitude for decisive individual initiative. One cannot simply find a patron,
recruit a crew, build or buy a ship and set off into the unknown as did the
maritime adventurers of five centuries ago. Even war, the traditional arena
for heroism, affords restricted opportunities for it today. One can no longer
lead the flamboyantly colourful cavalry charge that determines the outcome of
the battle. In modem warfare, the only opportunity for decisive individual
heroism lies in covert operations, in guerrilla activity, in sabotage and
missions behind enemy lines - the sort of thing associated with the Long
Range Desert Groups, or with the SAS and other special forces of our own era.
Even then the individual's actions may not necessarily be decisive. They may
simply be contributing factors - and relatively minor contributing factors at
that - to the eventual outcome.


It is difficult to imagine a sphere of today's world in which an individual's
behaviour, combining thought and action, can make a significant difference -
can qualify, in other words, as 'heroism', on something more than a
circumscribed, parochial or localised level. During the peak of the Cold War,
espionage represented one of the few such spheres remaining. Thus James Bond
could become a hero of the sixties. Even then, most people recognised that
Bond was more fantasy than anything else, and that the world of espionage was
much more accurately portrayed by Len Deighton and John le Carre; and today,
the dashing spy whose derring-do saves 'civilisation as we know it' is little
more than escapism, camp or farce. What remains? Perhaps the best answer to
that question offers scant comfort. For if there is still one realm in which
a semblance of 'heroism' is still possible, it is crime. Thus the criminal
can become a romantic figure and a role model for a generation of youth
unable to find heroes elsewhere. In reality, as opposed to Hollywood, Wyatt
Earp may have been transformed into corporate man, a cog in the wheel of an
ever more automated, ever more 'high-tech' police force, but Billy the Kid,
Jesse James, Bonnie and Clyde, the Mafia 'hit man' of today and, in Northern
Ireland, his terrorist paramilitary counterpart can still retain a spurious
mystique of romantic individual glamour - can still become; according to the
popular phrase, a 'contemporary folk here'.


The twentieth century has been an age of celluloid heroes, massproduced by
the film and television industry. Their sheer prevalance, and the appeal they
exercise, attest to our perennial need for such figures; and our need is all
the greater because current history and reality contains so few of them.

Although the First World War could accommodate innumerable localised heroic
deeds, it allowed no sustained heroic activity, and certainly not an heroic
life, except in peripheral theatres of operation, where a man like T. E.
Lawrence could make his mark. The rhetoric of politics and the jargon of the
media both indulge in a facile, indiscriminate hyperbole which debases
language and renders such words as 'hero', 'heroism' and 'heroic'
meaningless. The nature of modem society provides less scope for decisive
heroic action, and our own pervasive awareness of implications,
ramifications, repercussions and consequences often constitutes an inhibiting
factor which dissociates the 'man of thought' from the 'man of action'. As a
result, the dominant protagonist of twentiethcentury literature is one or
another variant of what critics call the 'anti-hero'. According to these same
critics, the 'anti-hero' is the epitome, and most accurate reflection, of
twentieth-century man.

Who or what precisely is the 'anti-hero'? Literary and cultural criticism has
devoted endless pages of analysis to this question; for the 'anti-hero' can
appear in as many guises as can the hero. Ultimately, however, he conforms to
one of four basic patterns. He can be a 'man of action', who lacks the
awareness and capacity for thought required to cope with his circumstances.
Such is the dilemma of Franz Biberkopf, the protagonist of Alfred Doblin's
influential novel Berlin, Alexanderplatz, and of Joe Christmas in Faulkner's
Light in August. Alternatively, the 'anti-hero' can be a ,man of thought',
whose hyperconscious awareness negates his capacity for action - Matin's
Tonio Kroger, for instance, Joyce's Stephen Dedalus and all the other
artist-protagonists of twentiethcentury fiction. Third, the 'anti-hero' can
be the kind of figure who populates Kafka's work, incapable of effective
thought or effective action, a hapless victim at the mercy of an alien and
inimical reality. Or he can be like Musil's-Ulrich in The Man Without
Qualities, potentially capable of both thought and action, but trapped in a
milieu which allows the effective exercise of neither.

In whichever guise the twentieth-century 'anti-hero' appears, he differs from
his heroic nineteenth-century predecessors precisely in his inability to
bring thought and action together and exercise them in an effective manner.
It is this which makes him appear ineffectual, ,small', impotent or even
puerile in comparison with the likes of Faust, Ivan Karamazov or Prince
Andrey - and with Patrick White's eponymous protagonist in Voss, the creation
of a twentieth-century artistic imagination but placed in an earlier
historical context.

The 'anti-hero' is not, of course, unique to Germany. He is a product of
twentieth-century civilisation as a whole; and, as such, he can be found
everywhere - in English, Irish and continental literature, in the literature
of North and South America, from the dawn of the twentieth century to the
present day. But it could be argued that he is accorded his fullest, most
comprehensive, most exhaustive and obsessive treatment by Germanic artists of
the first half of the century - by Mann, Musil, Broch, Rilke, Kafka, Doblin,
Hesse and numerous lesser-known figures. What is more, he performs, in
Germanic literature, a very particular function. The dissociation in Germanic
literature between the 'man of thought' and the 'man of action' mirrors, in
individual terms, the collective identity crisis - the dissociation between a
political entity based on nationalism, and Goethe's ideal of a nation
dedicated to culture and the spirit.

Is it coincidental that the two most monstrous totalitarian 'isms' of the
twentieth century took root in Germany and Russia, the two nations most torn
by a collective identity crisis, most in quest of a self-definition and
therefore most vulnerable? Not if one again draws an analogy to the
individual undergoing a personal identity crisis, whose quest for
self-definition all too readily leads him into the hands of a petty Fuhrer -
the guru, or the cult leader. In both instances, the individual and the
collective, the need for selfdefinition is accorded an ersatz fulfilment
which conforms to what Stefan George called 'das Leichte', 'the facile'. By
means of 'das Leichte', the Fuhrer, whether great or petty, fosters more than
just a sense of solidarity and belonging. He also fosters a sense of group
identity, to compensate for the abdication of individual identity. And this
group identity will invariably be that of an 'elect', a 'chosen few' - or a
'master race'. Each member of the collective entity is handed a ready-made
and prefabricated identity. He is 'one of the saved', 'one of the
enlightened', one of those entrusted with a destiny higher and more exalted
than that of other people; and this complacent arrogation of superiority
offsets the vacuum within. Identity and self-definition are no longer to be
sought and found within oneself, but in the group as a whole. And through the
group as a whole, one can acquire the qualities one lacks in oneself,
including heroism.

The totalitarian 'isms' of our century, whether Left or Right on the
political spectrum, propagate a kind of collective heroism. The 'People' as a
whole become heroic, whether they be the German 'Volk' of Nazism or the
'proletarian masses' of Marxism-Leninism. Again and again in the rhetoric of
Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia, as well as in that of Mussolini's Italy and
Mao's China, words like 'heroism' and 'heroic' are repeated like a drumbeat.
It is not the individual that is heroic, however, but the collective. A
grandiose collective ideal of heroism is proclaimed, while individual
awareness is negated or eclipsed through a semi-hypnotic state induced by
mindless chanting and incantatory rhythm, through an air-tight system of
belief which requires only adherence and precludes any independence of
mentality. And as an adhesive component for the collective-as-hero, a
scapegoat will be put forward, which inspires even greater fear than that
inspired by the unknown and unpredictable elements within man himself - a
scapegoat who distracts one from the potential dangers of introspection, and
focuses one's energy on a supposed external threat. In near-Manichaean
conflict with this supposed threat, collective heroism is seemingly attained
- or, at least, promised.

The meretricious character of such collective heroism should be self-evident
enough. If it absolves - or, more accurately, deprives - the individual of
responsibility, it also deprives him of his very individuality, of everything
Western civilisation considers most uniquely sacred. And the putative
collective heroism offered by twentieth-century totalitarianism is also
profoundly retrograde - a return to the 'primitive'. It is, in effect, the
mindless berserker bravery of Achilles again, divorced from a moral context
and justified solely by an enforced unanimity and uniformity. It does nothing
to fulfil the need for self-definition, either individual or collective. It
offers no satisfactory solution to the individual or the collective identity
crisis. It fails to re-integrate the dissociated spheres of thought and
action. At best, it constitutes a form of psychological and spiritual
anaesthesia.

Clans von Stauffenberg represents an alternative. Like T. E. Lawrence and
perhaps a dozen or so others, he is a lineal successor to the epic,
'larger-than-life' heroic figures of nineteenth-century literature and
nineteenth-century history - a 'real life' avatar, in a sense, of Prince
Andrey Bolkonsky. He is also an heroic figure of particular relevance to our
century: a man whose capacity for action is equalled, yet not inhibited, by
his capacity for thought. In his own personality, he reconciles political
commitment with moral vision, and with Goethe's ideal of dedication to
culture and the spirit. To that extent, he embodies a resolution to Germany's
collective identity crisis. To that extent, too, he exemplifies what the
German people at their best can be - and not just the German people, but all
of us, and our civilisation as a whole.

On 22 July 1944, two days -after Stauffenberg's bomb exploded at Rastenburg,
an article appeared on page 4 of The Times of London. In the small hours of
that morning, the article reported, shortly after German radio stations had
closed down for the night, a broadcast was picked up on Frankfurt's
wavelength. Emanating mysteriously out of the war-tom darkness, the voice of
an unknown and unidentifited German officer issued a defiant proclamation:

Achtung, comrades. Achtung, soldiers. Achtung, listeners in Germany. Stand by
for an announcement of the utmost importance.

My comrades, the death of Klaus [sic] von Stauffenberg sounds the clarion
call to action, the call to battle with all means at *our disposal, the call
to us German officers to go on fighting until Hitler has been destroyed.
Today Hitler has been forced to admit that sections of the German Officer
Corps - those who are decent and honest - have taken their stand against him.
He can no longer deny today that the German officers have gone over to
organise resistance against him.

If he tries to paralyse this fight of resistance, and attempts to speak of 'a
small clique of traitors and destroyers', let him know this much for certain
- there is more than one Stauffenberg, there are more than a hundred, these
Stauffenbergs are here in their thousands.

My comrades, the German officers with us are officers who have kept their
uniforms clean and for whom honour and duty have remained fixed principles.
These are our men. I call today on those officers who have not yet
established contact with us, wherever they are stationed, at the front or in
the reserves, no longer to obey the orders of Hitler and his henchmen.

Whose was that lost voice? For all one knows, it may simply have been a ploy
of Anglo-American or Russian propaganda, though one would like to believe it
genuine. In any case, and despite the voice's assertion, there were not,
unfortunately, enough Stauffenbergs left in 1944 to make the decisive
difference. But as the spectre of Nazism emerges to haunt Europe today, let
us hope that this time there will indeed be enough Stauffenbergs to exorcise
it.

pp.283-298

--[notes]--
13 In the Courtyard of the Bendlerstrasse

1. Schlabrendorff, The Secret War Against Hitler, pp. 294-5
2. Kramarz, Stauffenberg, p. 104.
3. Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War, P. 147,
4. Musil, The Man Without Qualities. p.46.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
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and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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