IT WAS a fateful hour, on the first of September of this year, when you met here as representatives of
the German people. I had to inform you then of serious decisions which had been forced upon us as a
result of the intransigent and provocative action of a certain State.
Since then five weeks have gone by. I have asked you to come here today in order to give you an
account of what has passed, the necessary insight into what is happening at present and, so far as that is
possible, into the future as well.
For the last two days our towns and villages have been decorated with flags and symbols of the new
Reich. Bells are ringing to celebrate a great victory, which, of its kind, is unique in history. A State of no
less than 36,000,000 inhabitants, with an army of almost fifty infantry and cavalry divisions, took up
arms against us. Their arms were far-reaching, their confidence in their ability to crush Germany knew
no bounds.
After one week of fighting there could no longer be any doubt as to the outcome. Whenever Polish
troops met German units, they were driven back or dispersed. Poland's ambitious strategy for a great
offensive against the territory of the Reich collapsed within the first forty-eight hours of the campaign.
Death-defying in attack, advancing at an unconquerable rate of progress, infantry, armored detachments,
air force and units of the navy were soon dictating the course of events.
They were masters of the situation throughout the campaign. In a fortnight's time the major part of the
Polish Army was either scattered, captured, or surrounded. In the meantime, however, the German Army
had covered distances and occupied regions which twenty-five years ago would have taken over
fourteen months to conquer.
Even though a number of peculiarly gifted newspaper strategists in other parts of the world attempted to
describe the pace at which this campaign progressed as not coming up to Germany's expectations, we
ourselves all know that in all history there has scarcely been a comparable military achievement.
That the last remnants of the Polish Army were able to hold out in Warsaw, Modlin, and on Hela
Peninsula until October 1 was not due to their prowess in arms, but only to our cool thinking and our
sense of responsibility.
I forbade the sacrifice of more human lives than was absolutely necessary. That is to say, I deliberately
released the German Supreme Command from adherence to a principle still observed in the Great War
demanding that for the sake of prestige certain objectives must under all circumstances be reached
within a certain time limit.
Everything which it is imperative to do will be done regardless of sacrifice, but what can be avoided will
not be done.
There would have been no difficulty for us in breaking the resistance of Warsaw between the 10th and
12th of September, just as we finally broke it September 25-27, only that in the first place I wanted to
spare German lives and in the second place I still clung to the hope, misdirected though it was, that the
Polish side might for once be guided by responsible common sense instead of by irresponsible lunacy.
But in this instance we were once more confronted with the spectacle which we had witnessed before on
the largest possible scale.
The attempt to convince the responsible Polish command - in so far as it existed - that it was futile and
in fact insane to attempt resistance, especially in a city of more than a million inhabitants, proved
entirely fruitless. A 'generalissimo,' who himself took to inglorious flight, forced upon the capital of his
country a resistance which could never lead to anything but its destruction.
Since it was realized that Warsaw's fortifications alone were not likely to withstand the German attack,
the entire city was converted into a fortress and barricaded in every direction. Batteries were mounted in
every square and great courtyard, thousands of machine-gun posts manned and the whole population
called up to take part in the fighting.
Sheer sympathy for women and children caused me to make an offer to those in command of Warsaw at
least to let civilian inhabitants leave the city. I declared a temporary armistice and safeguards necessary
for evacuation, with the result that we all waited for emissaries just as fruitlessly as we had waited at the
end of August for a Polish negotiator. The proud Polish commander of the city did not even condescend
to reply.
To make sure, I extended the time limit and ordered bombers and heavy artillery to attack only military
objectives, repeating my proposal in vain. I thereupon made an offer that the whole suburb of Praga
would not be bombarded at all, but should be reserved for the civilian population in order to make it
possible for them to take refuge there.
This proposal, too, was treated with contempt on the part of the Poles. Twice I attempted to evacuate at
least the international colony from the city. In this I finally succeeded after great difficulties, in the case
of the Russian colony, actually at the last moment. I then ordered a general attack on the city for
September 25.
The same defenders who at first considered it beneath their dignity even to reply to my humane
proposals, made on grounds of humanity, then very rapidly changed face. The German attack opened on
September 25, and Warsaw capitulated on the 27th.
With 120,000 men the defenders did not even attempt to break through as our German General
Litzmann once did at Brzesiny with a vastly inferior force, but, on the contrary, preferred to lay down
arms.
Any comparison with the Alcazar is entirely out of place. There for weeks on end Spanish heroes defied
the bitterest attacks and earned a right to lasting fame. Here, on the other hand, a great city was
unscrupulously exposed to destruction, only to capitulate after a forty-eight-hour assault.
The Polish soldiers as individuals fought bravely on many occasions, but their officers, beginning with
the command, can only be described as irresponsible, unconscientious and inefficient. Before the
bombardment of Hela I had also given orders that not a single man should be sacrificed until the most
careful preparation for action had been made. There, too, surrender came at the very moment when the
Germans had at length announced their intention of attacking and had begun to do so.
I have made these statements, gentlemen, with the object of forestalling the invention of historical
legends, for if legend is to be woven around any who took part in this campaign, it should be woven
around German soldiers who, during the attack and on the march, added yet another page to their
immortal glorious record.
Legends could be woven, too, around the heavy artillery which performed untold feats of endurance in
rushing to the assistance of the infantry. Men of our armored mechanized units who, with dauntless
courage and heedless of counterattacks and numerical superiority of the enemy, attacked again and again
are worthy of this legend.
Such a legend should also immortalize the airmen who, fearless of death and knowing that if antiaircraft
fire did not kill them in the air, they would, if forced to make a parachute landing, inevitably
suffer frightful death, continued with steadfast courage to carry out reconnaissance flights and attacks
with bombs or machine-gun fire whenever they were commanded to do so and whenever they found
objectives.
The same is true of the brave men of our submarine fleet. If, within four weeks, we totally annihilated a
State with a population of 36,000,000 and corresponding military strength, and if during this whole
period our victorious arms have not suffered a single setback, this cannot be ascribed simply to good
luck but constituted certain proof of fine training, excellent leadership, and indomitable courage.
Our knowledge of the strength of our fighting forces fills us all with a well of confidence, for they have
not only proved that they are strong in attack, but also that they are strong in retaining what they have
won. The excellent training received by the individual officers and men has been amply justified. It is
this training which is responsible for the extremely few casualties which - hard as they are for the
individual to bear - are on the whole far less than we ventured to expect.
Admittedly the total number of casualties gives no idea of the severity of the various encounters, for
certain regiments and divisions suffered very heavy losses when they were attacked by Polish forces
which were numerically superior or came into conflict with such forces when they themselves were
attacking....
As I am now about to make known to you the number of our dead and wounded, I request that you rise
from your seats. Though owing to the training given our troops, the effectiveness of our weapons and
the command of our forces the figures do not amount to even one-twentieth of what our apprehensions
had been at the outset of the campaign, we will never forget that every soldier who fell fighting brought
for his people and our Reich the greatest sacrifice that man can bring.
According to the casualty list of up to September 30, 1939, which will not change materially, the total
losses for the army, navy and air force, including officers, are as follows: 10,572 killed; 30,322
wounded; 3,404 missing. Unfortunately, of those missing a certain number who fell into Polish hands
will probably be found to have been massacred and killed.
All our gratitude is due to the victims of the campaign in Poland, while the wounded may be assured of
our best attention and care, and the families of those killed of our sympathy and help.
By the capitulation of the fortresses of Warsaw and Modlin and the surrender of Hela, the Polish
campaign has come to an end. The task of safeguarding the country against vagabonding marauders,
gangs of robbers and individual groups of terrorists will be carried through with all energy.
The outcome of the war was the annihilation of all Polish armies, followed by the dissolution of the
Polish State. Six hundred and ninety-four thousand prisoners have set out on their march to Berlin. The
amount of war material captured cannot yet be estimated.
Since the outbreak of the war, the German forces have at the same time in calm preparedness taken up
positions in the West ready to meet the enemy.
The naval forces of the Reich have fulfilled their duty in the attack on the Westerplatte, Gdynia, Oxhoeft
and Hela, and in protecting the Baltic Sea and the German North Sea coast our submarines are fighting
in a spirit worthy of the memory of our heroes in the last war.
In the face of this historically unprecedented collapse of a structure purporting to be a State, the question
in almost everybody's mind is as to the reason for such a phenomenon.
Versailles was the cradle of a Polish State which had emerged from the untold sacrifice of blood - not of
Polish but of German and Russian blood. Poland, who for centuries past had proved herself incapable of
existence, was in 1916 artificially begotten and in 1919 no less artificially born by a German
government just as incapable of existence.
In utter disregard of almost 500 years of experience, without consideration for the lesson of historical
development during many centuries, without appreciation for ethnographic conditions and with no
regard for all economic expediencies, a State was constructed at Versailles which, according to its whole
nature, was sooner or later bound to become the cause of a most serious crisis.
A man who, I am sorry to say, now ranks among our fiercest enemies, at that time clearly foresaw all
this. I mean Mr. Lloyd George. Like so many others he sounded warning, not only at the time of the
creation of that structure but also in the course of its subsequent expansion which had taken place in
utter disregard of reason and right.
At that time he expressed apprehension that in that State an accumulation of conditions was being
created containing the risk of conflicts which sooner or later might lead to great European
complications.
As a matter of fact, conditions surrounding the structure of this new so-called State, as far as its
nationalities were concerned, could not be clarified until now. It requires some knowledge of Polish
census methods to realize how utterly alien to truth, and therefore irrelevant, statistics on the national
composition of that territory were and are.
In 1919 the Poles laid claims to the territory where they pretended to have a majority of 95 per cent - in
East Prussia, for instance - whereas a plebiscite later showed the Poles actually had reached a figure of 2
per cent.
In the State finally created, which contained parts of former Russia, Austria, and Germany, non-Polish
elements were so brutally ill-treated, suppressed, tyrannized and tortured that any plebiscite depended
entirely on the good will of local administrative officials for producing such results as were desired or
demanded.
Nor did indisputable Polish elements receive much better recognition. And then, on top of all this,
statesmen of our Western Hemisphere spoke of this kind of creation as of democracy of the
fundamentals of their own system.
In that country there ruled a minority of aristocratic or non-aristocratic large, vast estate-owners and
wealthy intellectuals to whom under the most favorable circumstances their own Polish compatriots
were nothing but mass man power. For that reason the regime was never backed by more than 15 per
cent of the total population.
The economic distress and low cultural level corresponded with these conditions. In 1919 this State took
over from Prussia and also from Austria provinces which had been developed through hundreds of years
of hard toil, some of them being in a most flourishing condition. Today, after the elapse of twenty years,
they are at a point of gradually turning into steppes again.
The Vistula, the river whose estuary has always been of such tremendous importance for the Polish
Government, owing to the lack of any and all care is now already unsuitable for any real traffic and,
depending on the season, is either an unruly stream or a dried-up rivulet.
Towns as well as villages are in a state of neglect. The roads, with very few exceptions, are badly out of
repair and in a terrible condition. Anyone who travels in that country for two or three weeks will get the
proper idea of the classical German term 'Polnische Wirtschaft,' meaning a 'Polish state of affairs!'
In spite of the unbearable conditions prevailing in that country, Germany endeavored to establish
peaceful relations with it. During the years 1933 and 1934 I endeavored to find some equitable
compromise between our national interests and our desire for the maintenance of peace with that
country. There was a time, when Marshal Pilsudski was still alive, when it seemed possible for this hope
to materialize were it only to a modest extent.
Unlimited patience and still greater self-restraint were called for because many of the regional Polish
administrative officials took the understanding between Germany and Poland to be merely a license for
the persecution and annihilation of the Germans in Poland with even less risk. In the few years up to
1922 more than one-and-a-half million Germans had been forced to leave their homes. They were
hunted out, often without being able to take even their most necessary clothing.
When, in 1938, the Olsa territory went to Poland, they used the same methods against the Czechs who
lived there. Often within a few hours many thousands of these had to leave their working places, their
homes, their villages and towns at the shortest notice without being allowed to take anything more with
them than a suitcase or a little box with clothing.
Things like this went on for years, and for years we looked on, always striving to attain some
improvement in the lot of the unhappy Germans living there by establishing closer relations. It was,
however, impossible to overlook the fact that every German attempt thereby to secure the removal of
these intolerable conditions was taken by the Polish rulers to be nothing more than a sign of weakness, if
not of stupidity.
When the Polish Government proceeded in a thousand ways gradually to subjugate Danzig as well, I
endeavored, by means of practical proposals, to secure a solution whereby Danzig, in accordance with
the wishes of its population, could be nationally and politically united with Germany without impairing
the economic needs and so-called rights of Poland. If today any one alleges that these were ultimative
demands, that allegation is a lie.
The proposals for a solution, as communicated to the Polish Government in March, 1939, were nothing
but the suggestions and the ideas already discussed long ago between myself and Polish Foreign
Minister Beck, except for the fact that in the spring of 1939 I thought I would be able to facilitate the
acceptance of these proposals by the Polish Government in the face of their own public opinion by the
offer to concede to them an equivalent.
The fact that the Polish Government at that time refused to consider a discussion of these proposals was
due to two reasons: for one thing, the inflamed chauvinist powers behind the Government never
intended to solve the problem of Danzig, but on the contrary already lived in the hope, expounded later
in publications and speeches, of acquiring territory from the Reich far beyond the bounds of Danzig; in
fact, they hoped to be in a position to attack and conquer.
'These aims, far from stopping, at East Prussia, were climaxed by a flood of publications and a
continuous sequence of speeches, addresses, resolutions, etc., in addition to the incorporation of East
Prussia, for the annexation of Pomerania and Silesia. The Oder represented the minimum of frontier
claims and finally even the Elbe was described as the natural dividing line between Germany and
Poland.
These demands, which today may appear crazy but which were then presented with fanatical
seriousness, were based in a simply ridiculous manner on the assumption of a 'Polish mission of
civilization' and declared justified because they were supposed to be capable of fulfillment in view of the
strength of the Polish Army.
While I was inviting the then Polish Foreign Minister to take part in a conference for the discussion of
our proposals, the Polish military generals were already writing about the inefficiency of the German
Army, the cowardice of the German soldiers, the inferiority of the German weapons, the obvious
superiority of the Polish forces and the certainty, in case of war, of defeating the Germans at the gates of
Berlin and of annihilating the Reich.
The man, however, who intended, as he expressed it, to hack the German Army to pieces at the gates of
Berlin, was not just an illiterate, insignificant Pole but their commander-in-chief, Rydz-Smigly, who at
present resides in Rumania.
Violations and insults which Germany and her armed forces had to put up with from these military
dilettantes would never have been tolerated by any other State, just as they were not expected from any
other nation. No French or English generals would ever have presumed to express a judgment of the
German armed forces similar to that which we heard read from the Polish side for years, particularly
since March, 1939; and on the other hand no German general would have spoken in that manner of
English, French or Italian soldiers.
A great deal of self-control was needed to keep calm in face of these simply shameless insults, in spite
of the fact that we knew that the German armed forces could destroy and sweep away the whole of this
ridiculous State and its army within a few weeks.
But this attitude, for which the Polish leaders themselves were responsible, was the fundamental reason
why the Polish Government refused even to discuss the German proposals.
Another reason was that fatal promise of guarantee given to the State which, although not menaced at
all, very rapidly became convinced it could afford to challenge a Great Power without risk once it was
assured of the support of two Great Powers, perhaps even hoping this way to lay the foundation for
realization of all its own insane ambitions.
For, as soon as Poland felt certain of that guarantee, minorities living in that country had to suffer what
amounted to a reign of terror. I do not consider it my task to speak of the lot of the Ukrainians, or White
Russian population, whose interests now lie in the hands of Russia.
However, I do feel it my duty to speak of the lot of those helpless thousands of Germans who carried on
the tradition of those who first brought culture to that country centuries ago and whom the Poles now
began to oppress and drive out. Since March, 1939, they had been victims of truly satanic terrorization.
How many of them had been abducted and where they are cannot be stated even today.
Villages with hundreds of German inhabitants are now left without men because they all have been
killed. In others women were violated and murdered, girls and children outraged and killed. In 1598 an
Englishman - Sir George Carew - wrote in his diplomatic reports to the English Government that the
outstanding features of Polish character were cruelty and lack of moral restraint.
Since that time this cruelty has not changed. Just as tens of thousands of Germans were slaughtered and
sadistically tormented to death, so German soldiers captured in fighting were tortured and massacred.
This pet lapdog of the Western democracies cannot be considered a cultured nation at all.
For more than four years I fought in the great war on the Western Front, but such things did not happen
on either side.
Things that have occurred in Poland, in the past few months, and especially the last four weeks,
constitute flaming accusations against those responsible for the creation of a so-called State lacking
every national, historical, cultural, and moral foundation. Had only 1 per cent of these atrocities been
committed in any part of the world against the English people, I should be interested to see the
indignation of those gentlemen who today in hypocritical horror condemn the German or Russian
procedure.
No! To grant guarantees to this State and this Government as was done could only lead to appalling
disasters. Neither the Polish Government, nor the small cliques supporting it, nor the Polish nation as
such were capable of measuring the responsibilities which were implied in such guarantees in Poland's
favor by half of Europe.
The passionate sentiment thus aroused, together with the sense of that security which had been
unconditionally guaranteed to them, counted for the behavior of the Polish Government during the
period between April and August this year.
It was also the cause of the attitude they adopted toward my conciliatory proposals. The Government
rejected these proposals because they felt themselves protected, or even encouraged, by public opinion
and public opinion protected them and encouraged them on their way because it had been left in
ignorance by its Government and particularly because in its every action it felt itself sufficiently
protected from without.
All this led to an increase in the number of appalling atrocities committed against German nationals in
Poland and to the rejection of all proposals for a solution and in the end to the steadily growing
encroachments on actual Reich territory. It was quite comprehensible that such a state of mind
interpreted German longsuffering as a weakness, that is, that every concession on Germany's part was
regarded as proof of the possibility of some further aggressive steps.
A warning given Poland to refrain from sending Danzig any more notes amounting to ultimata and
above all to desist from economic strangulation of that city did not ease the situation in the least; it
resulted, in fact, in complete stoppage of all Danzig means of communication.
The warning to suspend or at least to take steps against the unceasing cases of murder, ill treatment and
torture of German nationals in Poland had the effect of increasing these atrocities and of calling for more
bloodthirsty harangues and provocative speeches from the Polish local administrative officials and
military authorities.
The German proposals aiming at a last-minute agreement on a just and equitable basis were answered by
a general mobilization. The German request that an intermediary should be sent, founded on a proposal
made by Great Britain, was not complied with and on the second day was answered by an offensive
declaration.
Under these circumstances it was obvious that if further incursions into the Reich's territory occurred,
Germany's patience would be at an end. What the Poles had erroneously interpreted as weakness was in
reality our sense of responsibility and my firm determination to come to an understanding if that at all
was possible.
Since they believed that this patience and longsuffering was a sign of weakness which would allow them
to do anything, no other course remained than to show them their mistake by striking back with the
weapons which they themselves had used for years.
Under these blows their State has crumbled to pieces in a few weeks and is now swept from the earth.
One of the most senseless deeds perpetrated at Versailles is thus a thing of the past.
If this step on Germany's part has resulted in a community of interests with Russia, that is due not only
to the similarity of the problems affecting the two States, but also to that of the conclusions which both
States had arrived at with regard to their future relationship.
In my speech at Danzig I already declared that Russia was organized on principles which differ from
those held in Germany. However, since it became clear that Stalin found nothing in the Russian-Soviet
principles which should prevent him from cultivating friendly relations with States of a different
political creed, National Socialist Germany sees no reason why she should adopt another criterion. The
Soviet Union is the Soviet Union, National Socialist Germany is National Socialist Germany.
But one thing is certain: from the moment when the two States mutually agreed to respect each other's
distinctive regime and principles, every reason for any mutually hostile attitude had disappeared. Long
periods in the history of both nations have shown that the inhabitants of these two largest States in
Europe were never happier than when they lived in friendship with each other. The Great War, which
once made Germany and Russia enemies, was disastrous for both countries.
It is easy to understand that the capitalist States of the West are interested today in playing off these two
States and their principles against each other. For this purpose, and until it is realized, they certainly
regard the Soviet Union as a sufficiently respectable partner for the conclusion of a useful military pact.
But they regard it as perfidy that their honorable approaches were rejected and in their place
rapprochement took place between those two very powers who had every reason for seeking happiness
for their respective peoples in developing their economic relationship along the lines of peaceful cooperation.
Months ago I stated in the Reichstag that the conclusion of the German-Russian non-aggression pact
marked the turning point in the whole German foreign policy. The new pact of friendship and mutual
interest since signed between Germany and the Soviet Union will insure not only peace but a constant
satisfactory co-operation for both States.
Germany and Russia together will relieve one of the most acute danger spots in Europe of its threatening
character and will, each in her own sphere, contribute to the welfare of the peoples living there, thus
aiding to European peace in general. If certain circles today see in this pact either the breakdown of
Russia or Germany - as suits them best - I should like to give them my answer.
For many years imaginary aims were attributed to Germany's foreign policy which at best might be
taken to have arisen in the mind of a schoolboy.
At a moment when Germany is struggling to consolidate her own living space, which only consists of a
few hundred thousand square kilometers, insolent journalists in countries which rule over 40,000,000
square kilometers state Germany is aspiring to world domination!
German-Russian agreements should prove immensely comforting to these worried sponsors of universal
liberty, for do they not show most emphatically that their assertions as to Germany's aiming at d
domination of the Urals, the Ukraine, Rumania, etc., are only excrescences of their own unhealthy warlord
fantasy?
In one respect it is true Germany's decision is irrevocable, namely in her intention to see peaceful, stable,
and thus tolerable conditions introduced on her eastern frontiers; also it is precisely here that Germany's
interests and desires correspond entirely with those of the Soviet Union. The two States are resolved to
prevent problematic conditions arising between them which contain germs of internal unrest and thus
also of external disorder and which might perhaps in any way unfavorably affect the relationship of
these two great States with one another.
Germany and the Soviet Union have therefore clearly defined the boundaries of their own spheres of
interest with the intention of being singly responsible for law and order and preventing everything which
might cause injury to the other partner.
The aims and tasks which emerge from the collapse of the Polish State are, insofar as the German sphere
of interest is concerned, roughly as follows:
1. Demarcation of the boundary for the Reich, which will do justice to historical, ethnographical and
economic facts.
2. Pacification of the whole territory by restoring a tolerable measure of peace and order.
3. Absolute guarantees of security not only as far as Reich territory is concerned but for the entire sphere
of interest.
4. Re-establishment and reorganization of economic life and of trade and transport, involving
development of culture and civilization.
5. As the most important task, however, to establish a new order of ethnographic conditions, that is to
say, resettle ment of nationalities in such a manner that the process ultimately results in the obtaining of
better dividing lines than is the case at present. In this sense, however, it is not a case of the problem
being restricted to this particular sphere, but of a task with far wider implications for the east and south
of Europe are to a large extent filled with splinters of the German nationality, whose existence they
cannot maintain.
In their very existence lie the reason and cause for continual international disturbances. In this age of the
principle of nationalities and of racial ideals, it is utopian to believe that members of a highly developed
people can be assimilated without trouble.
It is therefore essential for a far-sighted ordering of the life of Europe that a resettlement should be
undertaken here so as to remove at least part of the material for European conflict. Germany and the
Union of Soviet Republics have come to an agreement to support each other in this matter.
The German Government will, therefore, never allow the residual Polish State of the future to become in
any sense a disturbing factor for the Reich itself and still less a source of disturbance between the
German Reich and Soviet Russia.
As Germany and Soviet Russia undertake this work of re-establishment, the two States are entitled to
point out that the attempt to solve this problem by the methods of Versailles has proved an utter failure.
In fact it had to fail because these tasks cannot be settled sitting around a table or by simple decrees.
Most of the statesmen who in Versailles had to decide on these complicated problems did not possess
the slightest historical training, indeed they often had not even the vaguest idea of the nature of the task
with which they were faced.
Neither did they bear any responsibility for the consequences of their action. Recognition that their work
might be faulty was of no significance because in practice there was no way for a real revision. It is true
that in the Treaty of Versailles provision was made for keeping open the possibility of such revisions but
in reality all attempts to attain such a revision miscarried and they were bound to miscarry because the
League of Nations as the competent authority was no longer morally justified to carry out such a
procedure.
After America had been first to refuse to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, or to join the League of Nations,
and later when other countries also felt they could no longer reconcile their presence in this organization
with the interests of their respective countries, the League degenerated more and more into a clique of
parties interested in the Versailles dictate.
At any rate it is a fact that none of the revisions recognized from the outset as necessary had ever been
effected by the League of Nations.
Since in our time it became customary to regard a refugee government as still existing even if it consists
of three members provided they have taken with them sufficient gold so as not to be an economic burden
to the democratic country offering hospitality, it may be assumed that the League of Nations, too, will
carry on bravely if but two nations sit there together. Perhaps even one will do!
But according to the government of the League any revision of the Versailles clauses would still be
adjudicated exclusively by this illustrious organization - that is, in other words, revision would be
practically impossible.
The League of Nations is not living but already a dead thing, nevertheless the peoples concerned are not
dead but alive and they will uphold their vital interests, however incapable the League of Nations may
be of seeing, grasping, or respecting those interests.
National Socialism is not a phenomenon which has grown up in Germany with the malicious intent of
thwarting League efforts at revision, but a movement which arose because for fifteen years the most
natural human and social rights of a great nation had been suppressed and denied redress.
And I personally take exception at seeing foreign states- men stand up and call me guilty of having
broken my word because I have now put these revisions through.
On the contrary I pledged my sacred word to the German people to do away with the Treaty of
Versailles and to restore to them their natural and vital rights as a great nation.
The extent to which I am securing these vital rights is modest.
This I ask: If forty-six million Englishmen claim the right to rule over forty million square kilometers of
the earth, it cannot be wrong for eighty-two million Germans to demand the right to live on 800,000
square kilometers, to till their fields and to follow their trades and callings, and if they further demand
the restitution of those colonial possessions which formerly were their property, which they had not
taken away from anybody by robbery or war but honestly acquired by purchase, exchange and treaties.
Moreover, in all my demands, I always first tried to obtain revisions by way of negotiation.
I did, it is true, refuse to submit the question of German vital rights to some non-competent international
body in the form of humble requests. Just as little as I suppose that Great Britain would plead for respect
of her vital interests, so little ought one to expect the same of National Socialist Germany. I have,
however, and I must emphasize this fact most solemnly, limited in the extreme the measure of these
revisions of the Versailles Treaty.
Notably in all those cases where I did not see any menace to the natural, vital interests of my people, I
have myself advised the German nation to hold back. Yet these eighty million people must live
somewhere. There exists a fact that not even the Versailles Treaty has been able to destroy; although it
has in the most unreasonable manner dissolved States, torn asunder regions economically connected, cut
communication lines, etc., yet the people, the living substance of flesh and blood, has remained and will
forever remain in the future.
It cannot be denied that since the German people has found its resurrection through National Socialism,
the relation existing between Germany and the surrounding nations has been cleared up to a great extent.
The uncertainty that today is weighing down the common life of nations is not due to German demands,
but to the malignant insinuations published in the so-called democracies.
The German demands themselves were formulated in a very clear and precise way. They have, it is true,
found their fulfillment not thanks to the insight of the League of Nations but thanks to the dynamics of
natural development.
The aim of the German foreign policy as pursued by me has never been other than to guarantee the
existence - that is to say, the life - of the German people, to remove the injustice and nonsense contained
in a treaty which not only destroyed Germany economically but has drawn the victor nations into
disaster as well.
For the rest, however, our whole work of rebuilding was concerned with the home affairs of the Reich
and no country in the world had a greater longing for peace than the German people. It was fortunate for
humanity and no misfortune at all that I succeeded in removing the craziest, most impossible clauses of
the Versailles Treaty by peaceful methods and without compromising foreign statesmen in the internal
politics of their countries.
That some details of this action may have been painful to certain interested parties is comprehensible.
But the merit is all the greater for the fact that this reorganization was brought about without bloodshed
in all cases but the last one.
The last revision of this treaty could have been brought about in exactly the same peaceful way had not
two circumstances I have mentioned had the contrary effect. That is chiefly the fault of those who not
only tool; no pleasure in the former peaceful revision, but on the contrary com- plained of the fact that
by peaceful methods a new Central Europe was being built up; that is to say, a Central Europe that was
able once more to give its inhabitants work and bread.
As I have already mentioned, it was one of the aims of the Government of the Reich to clear up the
relation between ourselves and our neighbors. Allow me to point out some facts that cannot be refuted
by the scribblings of international press liars.
First. Germany has concluded non-aggression pacts with the Baltic States. Her interests there are of an
exclusively economic nature.
Second. In former times Germany never had any conflict of interests or indeed litigation points with the
Northern States and she has none today either.
Third. Germany has taken no steps in regard to the German territory handed over to Denmark under the
terms of the Treaty of Versailles; she has, on the contrary, established local and friendly relations with
Denmark. We have claimed no revision, but we have concluded a non-aggression pact with Denmark.
Our relations with that country are thus directed toward unswervingly loyal and friendly co-operation.
Fourth. Holland: the new Reich has endeavored to continue the traditional friendship with Holland; it
did not take over any differences between the two States nor did it create new ones.
Fifth. Belgium: immediately after I had taken over the Government I tried to establish friendly relations
with Belgium. 1 renounced any revision as well as any desire for revision. The Reich has put forward no
claim which might in any way have been regarded as a threat to Belgium.
Sixth. Switzerland: Germany adopted the same attitude toward Switzerland. The Reich Government has
never given the slightest cause for doubt regarding their desires to establish friendly relations with the
country. Moreover, they themselves have never brought forward any complaint regarding the relations
between the two countries.
Seventh. Immediately after the Anschluss [with Austria] became an accomplished fact, I informed
Yugoslavia that the frontier in common with that country would henceforth be regarded as unalterable
by Germany and that we wished only to live in peace and friendship with that country.
Eighth. The bond which binds us to Hungary is old and traditional, one of close and sincere friendship.
In this instance, too, our frontiers are unalterable.
Ninth. Slovakia appealed to Germany of her own accord for assistance in connection with her
establishment as a State. Her independence is recognized and not infringed upon by the Reich.
Tenth. However, it is not only with these states but also with the Great Powers that Germany has
improved and settled those relations which to a certain extent had been adversely affected by the Treaty
of Versailles.
My first step was to bring about an alteration in the relations between Italy and the Reich. The existing
frontiers between these two States have been formally recognized as unalterable by both countries. Any
possibility of a clash of interests of a territorial nature has been removed. One-time enemies during the
World War, they have in the meantime become sincere friends.
Establishment of friendly relations was not the final development, but, in the periods which followed,
this led to the signing of a cordial pact based on our mutual philosophies and political interests which
has proved itself to be an important factor in European co-operation.
My chief endeavor, however, has been to rid our relations with France of all trace of ill will and render
them tolerable for both nations. I once set forth with the utmost clarity Germany's claims in this domain
and have never gone back on that declaration. Return of the Saar territory was one demand which I
regarded as an indispensable pre-condition of Franco-German understandings.
After France herself had found a just solution of this problem, Germany had no further claims against
France. No such claim exists any longer and no such claim shall ever be put forward. That is to say, I
have refused even to mention the problem of Alsace-Lorraine not because I was forced to keep silent,
but because this matter does not constitute a problem which could ever interfere with Franco-German
relations.
I accepted the decision made in 1919 and refused to consider ever embarking upon war for the sake of a
question which, comparatively speaking, is of slight importance for Germany's vital interests, but which
is certainly likely to involve every second generation in a deadly war fear. France realized this.
It is impossible for any French statesman to get up and declare I have ever made any demands upon
France the fulfillment of which would be incompatible with French honor or French interest. It is,
however, true that instead of demands I have always expressed to France my desire to bury forever our
ancient enmity and bring together these two nations, both of which have such glorious pasts.
Among the German people, I have done my utmost to eradicate the idea of everlasting enmity and to
inculcate in its place a respect for the great achievements of the French nation and for its history, just as
every German soldier has the greatest respect for the feats of the French Army. I have devoted no less
effort to the achievement of an Anglo-German understanding, nay, more than that, of an Anglo-German
friendship.
At no time and in no place have I ever acted contrary to British interests. Unfortunately I have only too
often been forced to guard against instances of British interference in German affairs, even in cases
which did not concern Great Britain in the least. I actually considered it as one of my life aims to
reconcile these two peoples, not only through mutual understanding but through inner sympathy.
The German nation has gladly followed my lead in this respect. If my endeavors have been
unsuccessful, it is only because of an animosity on the part of certain British statesmen and journalists,
which has deeply affected me personally.
They made no secret of the fact that - for reasons which are unfathomable to us - their sole aim was to
seize the first opportunity in order to resume the fight with Germany. The fewer reasons of substantial
nature these men have for their schemes, the more they attempt to motivate their actions with empty
phrases and assertions.
But I believe even today that there can only he real peace in Europe and throughout the world if
Germany and England come to an understanding. Because of this conviction I have often shown the way
to an understanding. If in the end there was not the desired result, it was really not my fault.
Finally, I now also attempted to bring the relations between the Reich and Soviet Russia to a normal
and, in the end, to a friendly basis. Thanks to a similar trend of thought on the part of Mr. Stalin these
endeavors have now been realized. Now with that State lasting and friendly relations have been
established, the effect of which will be a blessing to both nations.
Thus the revision of the Versailles Treaty carried through by me did not cause any chaos in Europe, but
on the contrary produced the prerequisite of clear, stable and bearable conditions.
Only those who detest this order of things in Europe and wish for disorder can feel hostile to these
actions. If, however, certain people think themselves obliged to reject with a hypocritical air the method
by which a tolerable order of things was established in Central Europe, then my only reply to them is
that in the end it is not so much the method but the useful result that counts.
Before I came into power Central Europe, that is to say not only Germany but also the surrounding
States, was sinking into the hopeless distress of unemployment and production had decreased, involving
an automatic jump in commodity consumption. The standard of living went down. Distress and misery
were the result.
No criticizing foreign statesman can deny that not only in the old Reich but also in all the territory now
merged with it, it has become possible to remove these indications of decay in the face of the most
adverse conditions.
It has thus been proved that only as an entity is this Central European space capable of existence and
that whoever breaks up that entity commits a crime against millions of people.
To have wiped out that crime does not amount to a breach of my word, but to me is honor itself; I am
proud of it as my deed before history.
Neither the German people nor myself has taken an oath on the Treaty of Versailles; I have merely taken
an oath on the welfare of my people, who gave me my mandate and on the welfare of those whom
destiny has placed within our living space, thus inseparably binding them to our own welfare.
To guarantee the existence and thus the life of all of them is my sole concern.
Any attempt to criticize, judge or reject my actions from the rostrum of international presumption has no
foundation before history and personally leaves me stone-cold. I was called to my post by the
confidence vested in me by the German people, whose attitude toward me is only strengthened by any
such attempt at criticism or interference from abroad.
Moreover, previous to each single revision I have put forward proposals. I had attempted, by means of
negotiations, to achieve and secure what was absolutely indispensable. In a certain number of cases I
was successful. In other cases, I am sorry to say, my readiness to negotiate and perhaps also the small
extent of my demands and the modesty of my proposals were interpreted as a sign of weakness and
therefore rejected. Nobody could have regretted this more than I did.
There are, however, in the life of nations certain necessities which, if they are not brought about by
peaceful methods, must be realized by force, however regrettable this appears, not only to the life of the
individual citizen but also to the life of the community. It is undeniable that the greater interests
common to all must never be impaired by the stubbornness or ill will of individuals and communities.
To Poland, too, I made the most moderate proposals.
They were not only rejected, but on the contrary brought forth the general mobilization of that State, for
which reasons were advanced which proved conclusively exactly that it was the very modesty of my
proposals which was considered a confirmation of my weakness, nay, even of my fear. Really, such an
experience is apt to make anyone shrink from ever again making any reasonable and moderate
proposals.
Also at present I once more read in certain newspapers that every attempt to bring about a peaceful
settlement of relations between Germany on the one hand and France and England on the other was
doomed to failure, and that any proposal in that direction only proved that I, filled with apprehension,
anticipated Germany's collapse and that I only made such a proposal out of cowardice, or from a bad
conscience.
When, irrespective of all this, I have expressed my ideas on this problem, I am prepared to appear in the
eyes of these people as a coward or a finished man. I can afford to run that risk, because the judgment to
be passed upon me by history will not, thank God, be written by these miserable scribblers but is
established by my life's work, and because I do not care very much about any judgment that may be
passed upon me by these people at the time.
My prestige is sufficient for me to allow myself such an attitude, because the question of whether my
following thoughts are actually dictated by fear or desperation will in any case be settled by the future
course of events. Today I can only regret that those people, whose bloodthirstiness cannot have enough
of war, unfortunately are not where the war is actually being fought, and never were at such places
where people were shooting it out.
I can very well understand that there are interested parties who profit more from war than from peace,
and I also understand that for a certain variety of international journalist it is more interesting to report
on war than on peaceful activities or cultural achievements, which they are incapable of either judging
or understanding. And finally it is clear to me that there is a certain Jewish international capitalism and
journalism that has no feeling at all in common with the people whose interests they pretend to
represent, but who, like Herostrates of old, regard incendiarism as the greatest success of their lives. But
there is still another reason why I feel obliged to voice my opinion.
When reading certain international press publications, or listening to speeches of various capitalist
glorifiers of war, I consider myself entitled to speak and reply in the name of those who are forced to
serve as the living substance for the mental activities of these formulators of war aims, that living
substance to which I myself belonged as an unknown soldier for more than four years during the Great
War.
It is, perhaps, a magnificent effect when a statesman or a journalist stands up and in enthusiastic words
announces the necessity of removing the regime of another country in the name of democracy or
something similar. Practical execution of these glorious slogans, however, has quite a different aspect.
Newspaper articles are being written today which are sure of an enthusiastic reception by the
distinguished public. Realization of demands therein contained, however, is apt to arouse much less
enthusiasm; I shall not deal with the powers of judgment or the gifts of such people. Whatever they may
write has no bearing on the real nature of such a struggle.
These scribblers announced before the Polish campaign that German infantry perhaps was not bad, but
that tank and mechanized units in general were inferior and would be, sure to break down in action.
Now, after the defeat of Poland, the same people brazenly assert that the Polish armies have collapsed
only because o German tank formations and other mechanized troops, but that, on the other hand,
German infantry had deteriorated most remarkably and had got the worst of it in every clash with the
Polish.
'In this fact,' so one such writer actually says, 'one has the free right to see a favorable symptom for the
course of the war in the West, and the French soldier will know how to take advantage of this.'
I think so, too, provided he has read that article and can remember it later on. He will then probably box
the ears of these military soothsayers. But unfortunately that will be impossible, since these people never
will put their theories on inferiority of the German infantry to a personal test on the battlefields, but will
merely describe these qualities from their editorial sanctums.
Six weeks - let us say fourteen days - of concentrated shellfire, and these war propagandists would soon
think differently. They always are talking of the necessities of world politics, but they have no
knowledge of military realities.
I do know them and for that reason I consider it my duty to speak here, even at risk of the warmonger
again seeing in my speech evidence of my anxiety and symptoms of the degree of my despair.
Why should this war in the West be fought? For restoration of Poland? Poland of the Versailles Treaty
will never rise again. This is guaranteed by two of the largest States in the world. Final re-organization
of this territory and the question of re-establishment of the Polish State are problems which will not be
solved by a war in the West but exclusively by Russia on the one hand and Germany on the other.
Furthermore, the elimination of the influence of these two Powers within the territories concerned would
not produce a new State but utter chaos.
The problems awaiting solution there will never be solved either at the conference table or in editorial
offices, but by the work of decades. It is not enough that a few statesmen who are not really concerned
with the fate of the people affected get together and pass resolutions. It is necessary that someone who
has himself a share in the life of these territories takes over the task of restoring really enduring
conditions there. The ability of the Western democracies to restore such ordered conditions has at least
in recent times not been proved.
The example of Palestine shows it would be better to concentrate on the tasks at hand and solve these in
a reasonable manner instead of meddling with problems which lie within the vital spheres of interest of
other nations and could certainly be better solved by them. At any rate, Germany has in her Protectorate
of Bohemia and Moravia not only established peace and order but, above all, has laid the foundation for
a new economic prosperity and increasing understanding between the two nations. England still has
much to accomplish before she can point to similar results in her Protectorate in Palestine.
One also realizes that it would be senseless to annihilate millions of men and to destroy property worth
millions in order to reconstruct a State which at its very birth was termed an abortion by all those not of
Polish extraction.
What other reason exists? Has Germany made any demands of England which might threaten the British
Empire or endanger its existence? On the contrary, Germany has made no such demands on either
France or England.
But if this war is really to be waged only in order to give Germany a new regime, that is to say, in order
to destroy the present Reich once more and thus to create a new Treaty of Versailles, then millions of
human lives will be sacrificed in vain, for neither will the German Reich go to pieces nor will a second
Treaty of Versailles be made. And even should this come to pass after three, four, or even eight years of
war then this second Versailles would once more become the source of fresh conflict in the future.
In any event, a settlement of the world's problems carried out without consideration of the vital interests
of its most powerful nations could not possibly, after the lapse of from five to ten years, end in any other
way than that attempt made twenty years ago which is now ended. No, this war in the West cannot settle
any problems except perhaps the ruined finances of certain armament manufacturers, newspaper owners,
or other international war profiteers.
Two problems are ripe for discussion today.
First, the settlement of the problems arising from the disintegration of Poland and, second, the problem
of eliminating those international difficulties which endanger the political and economic existence of the
nations.
What then are the aims of the Reich Government as regards the adjustment of conditions within the
territory to the west of the German-Soviet line of demarcation which has been recognized as Germany's
sphere of influence?
First, the creation of a Reich frontier which, as has already been emphasized, shall be in accordance with
existing historical, ethnographical and economic conditions.
Second, the disposition of the entire living space according to the various nationalities; that is to say, the
solution of the problems affecting the minorities which concern not only this area but nearly all the
States in the Southwest of Europe.
Third, in this connection: An attempt to reach a solution and settlement of the Jewish problem.
Fourth, reconstruction of transport facilities and economic life in the interest of all those living in this
area.
Fifth, a guarantee for the security of this entire territory and sixth, formation of a Polish State so
constituted and governed as to prevent its becoming once again either a hotbed of anti-German activity
or a center of intrigue against Germany and Russia.
In addition to this, an attempt must immediately be made to wipe out or at least to mitigate the ill effects
of war; that is to say, the adoption of practical measures for alleviation of the terrible distress prevailing
there.
These problems can, as I have already emphasized, perhaps be discussed but never solved at the
conference table.
If Europe is really sincere in her desire for peace, then the States in Europe ought to be grateful that
Russia and Germany are prepared to transform this hotbed into a zone of peaceful development and that
these two countries will assume the responsibility and bear the burdens inevitably involved.
For the Reich this project, since it cannot be undertaken in an imperialistic spirit, is a task which will
take fifty to a hundred years to perform.
Justification for this activity on Germany's part lies in the political organizing of this territory as well as
in its economic development. In the long run, of course, all Europe will benefit from it. Second, and in
my opinion by far the most important task, is the creation of not only a belief in, but also a sense of,
European security.
For this it is necessary first that aims in the foreign policy of European States should be made perfectly
clear.
As far as Germany is concerned the Reich Government is ready to give a thorough and exhaustive
exposition of the aims of its foreign policy.
In so doing, they begin by stating that the Treaty of Versailles is now regarded by them as obsolete; in
other words, that the government of the German Reich, and with them the whole German people, no
longer see cause or reason for any further revision of the Treaty, apart from the demand for adequate
colonial possessions justly due to the Reich, namely, in the first instance, for the return of German
colonies.
This demand for colonies is based not only on Germany's historical claim to German colonies but above
all on her elementary right to a share of the world's resources of raw materials. This demand does not
take the form of an ultimatum, nor is it a demand backed by force, but a demand based on political
justice and sane economic principles.
Secondly, the demand for a real revival of international economic life, coupled with an extension of
trade and commerce, presupposes a reorganization of the international economic system; in other words,
of production in the individual States. In order to facilitate the exchange of goods thus produced,
however, markets must be organized and a final currency regulation arrived at so that the obstacles in
the way of unrestricted trade can be gradually removed.
Thirdly, the most important condition, however, for a real revival of economic life in and outside of
Europe is the establishment of an unconditionally guaranteed peace and of a sense of security on the part
of the individual nations.
This security will not only be rendered possible by the final sanctioning of the European status, but
above all by the reduction of armaments to a reasonable and economically tolerable level. An essential
part of this necessary sense of security, however, is a clear definition of the legitimate use of an
application of certain modern armaments which can, at any given moment, have such a devastating
effect on the pulsating life of every nation and hence create a permanent sense of insecurity.
In my previous speeches in the Reichstag I made proposals with this end in view. At that time they were
rejected -maybe for the simple reason that they were made by me. I believe, however, that a sense of
national security will not return to Europe until clear and binding international agreements have
provided a comprehensive definition of the legitimate and illegitimate use of armaments.
A Geneva convention once succeeded in prohibiting, in civilized countries at least, the killing of
wounded, ill treatment of prisoners, war against noncombatants, etc., and just as it was possible
gradually to achieve universal observance of this statute, a way must surely be found to regulate aerial
warfare, use of poison gas and submarines, etc., and also so to define contraband that war will lose its
terrible character of conflict waged against women and children and against noncombatants in general.
A growing horror of certain methods of warfare will of its own accord lead to their abolition and thus
they will become obsolete.
In the war with Poland I endeavored to restrict aerial warfare to objectives of so-called military
importance, or only to employ it to combat active resistance at a given point. But it must surely be
possible to emulate the Red Cross and to draw up some universally valid international regulations. It is
only when this is achieved that peace can reign, particularly in our densely populated continent - a peace
which, uncontaminated by suspicion and fear, will provide the only possible condition for real economic
prosperity.
I do not believe that there is any responsible statesman in Europe who does not in his heart desire
prosperity for his people. But such a desire can only be realized if all the nations inhabiting this
continent decide to go to work together. To assist in assuring this co-operation must be the aim of every
man who is sincerely struggling for the future of his own people.
To achieve this great end, the leading nations of this continent will one day have to come together in
order to draw up, accept, and guarantee a statute on a comprehensive basis which will insure for them all
a sense of security, of calm - in short, of peace.
Such a conference could not possibly be held without the most thorough preparation; this is, without
exact elucidation of every point at issue.
It is equally impossible that such a conference, which is to determine the fate of this continent for many
years to come, could carry on its deliberations while cannon are thundering or mobilized armies are
bringing pressure to bear upon it.
If, however, these problems must be solved sooner or later, then it would be more sensible to tackle the
solution before millions of men are first uselessly sent to death and milliards of riches destroyed.
Continuation of the present state of affairs in the West is unthinkable. Each day will soon demand
increasing sacrifices.
Perhaps the day will come when France will begin to bombard and demolish Saarbruccken. German
artillery will in turn lay Mulhouse in ruins. France will retaliate by bombarding Karlsruhe and Germany
in her turn will shell Strasbourg.
Then the French artillery will fire at Freiburg, and the German at Kolmar or Schlettstadt. Long-range
guns will then be set up and from both sides will strike deeper and deeper and whatever cannot be
reached by the long-distance guns will be destroyed from the air.
And that will be very interesting for certain international journalists and very profitable for the airplane,
arms, and munitions manufacturers, but appalling for the victims.
And this battle of destruction will not be confined to the land. No, it will reach far out over the sea.
Today there are no longer any islands. And the national wealth of Europe will be scattered in the form of
shells and the vigor of every nation will be sapped on the battlefields.
One day, however, there will again be a frontier between Germany and France, but instead of flourishing
towns there will be ruins and endless graveyards.
Mr. Churchill and his companions may interpret these opinions of mine as weakness or cowardice if
they like. I need not occupy myself with what they think; I make these statements simply because it goes
without saying that I wish to spare my own people this suffering.
If, however, the opinions of Messrs. Churchill and followers should prevail, this statement will have
been my last.
Then we shall fight. Neither force of arms nor lapse of time will conquer Germany. There never will be
another November 1918 in German history. It is infantile to hope for the disintegration of our people.
Mr. Churchill may be convinced that Great Britain will win. I do not doubt for a single moment that
Germany will be victorious.
Destiny will decide who is right.
One thing only is certain. In the course of world history, there have never been two victors, but very
often only losers. This seems to me to have been the case in the last war.
May those peoples and their leaders who are of the same mind now make their reply. And let those who
consider war to be the better solution reject my outstretched hand.
As Fuehrer of the German people and Chancellor of the Reich, I can thank God at this moment that he
has so wonderfully blessed us in our hard struggle for what is our right, and beg Him that we and all
other nations may find the right way, so that not only the German people but all Europe may once more
be granted the blessing of peace.
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Danzig -- Speech of September 19, 1939
My District Leader, My Dear Danzigers:
Not only you experience this moment with deepest emotion; nay, the entire German nation experiences
it with you, and I, too, am aware of the greatness of the hour when I, for the first time, tread on the soil
which German settlers occupied five centuries ago and which for five centuries was German, and which
- thereof you may rest assured - will remain German. ...
The fact that a province was torn from the German Reich and that other German territories were given to
the Polish State was explained on the grounds of national necessity. Later, plebiscites everywhere
showed that no one wished to become a part of the Polish State - that Polish State which arose out of the
blood of countless German regiments. It then expanded at the expense of old settlement areas and above
all at the expense of intelligence and economic possibility.
One thing has been clearly proved in the last twenty years; the Poles who had not founded that culture
also were not able to maintain it. It has been shown again that only he who is himself culturally creative
can permanently maintain real cultural performance.
Thirty years would have been sufficient to reduce again to barbarism those territories which the
Germans, painstakingly and with industry and thrift, had saved from barbarism. Everywhere traces of
this retrogression and decay were visible.
Poland itself was a 'nationalities State.' That very thing had been created here which had been held
against the old Austrian State. At the same time Poland was never a democracy. One very thin anemic
upper class here ruled not only foreign nationalities but also its so-called own people.
It was a State built on force and governed by the truncheons of the police and the military. The fate of
Germans in this State was horrible. There is a difference whether people of lower cultural value has the
misfortune to be governed by a culturally significant people or whether a people of high cultural
significance has forced upon it the tragic fate of being oppressed by an inferior.
In this inferior people all its inferiority complexes will be compensated upon a higher culture-bearing
people. This people will be horribly and barbarically mistreated and Germans have been evidence of this
fate for twenty years.
It was, as already emphasized, tragic and painful. Nevertheless, as everywhere else, I tried to find a
solution here which might have led to a fair adjustment. I have tried in the West and then later in the
South to maintain final frontier delineations in order thus to deliver region upon region from uncertainty
and assure peace and justice for the future. I made the greatest efforts to attain the same thing here also. .
.
The world, which immediately sheds tears when Germany expels a Polish Jew who only a few decades
ago came to Germany, remained dumb and deaf toward the misery of those who, numbering not
thousands but millions, were forced to leave their home country on account of Versailles - that is, if
these unfortunates were Germans. What was for us and also for me most depressing was the fact that we
had to suffer all this from a State which was far inferior to us; for, after all, Germany is a Great Power,
even though madmen believed the vital rights of a great nation could be wiped out by a crazy treaty or
by dictation.
Germany was a big power and had to look on while a far inferior people of a far inferior State maltreated
these Germans. There were two especially unbearable conditions: First, this city whose German
character nobody could deny was not only prevented from returning to the Reich but in addition an
attempt was made to Polonize it by all kinds of devices; second, the province [East Prussia] severed
from the German Reich had no direct contact with the Reich, but traffic with this province was
dependent upon all kinds of chicanery or upon the good will of this Polish State.
No power on earth would have borne this condition as long as Germany. I do not know what England
would have said about a similar peace solution at its expense or how America or France would have
accepted it. I attempted to find a solution - a tolerable solution - even for this problem. I submitted this
attempt to the Polish rulers in the form of verbal proposals. You know these proposals. They were more
than moderate....
I do not know what mental condition the Polish Government was in when it refused these proposals. I
know, however, that millions of Germans sighed with relief, since they felt I had gone too far. As an
answer, Poland gave the order for the first mobilization. Thereupon wild terror was initiated, and my
request to the Polish Foreign Minister to visit me in Berlin once more to discuss these questions was refused.
Instead of going to Berlin, he went to London. For the next weeks and months there were
heightened threats, threats which were hardly bearable for a small State but which were impossible for a
Great Power to bear for any length of time.
We could read in Polish publications that the issue at stake was not Danzig but the problem of East
Prussia, which Poland was to incorporate in a short time. That increased. Other Polish newspapers stated
that East Prussia would not solve the problem, but that Pomerania must, under all circumstances, come
to Poland.
Finally it became questionable in Poland whether the Oder would be enough as a boundary or whether
Poland's natural boundary was not the Oder but the Elbe. It was debated whether our armies would be
smashed before or behind Berlin.
The Polish Marshal, who miserably deserted his armies, said that he would hack the German Army to
pieces. And martyrdom began for our German nationals. Tens of thousands were dragged off,
mistreated, and murdered in the vilest fashion. Sadistic beasts gave vent to their perverse instincts, and
this pious democratic world watched without blinking an eye.
I have often asked myself: Who can have so blinded Poland? Does anyone really believe that the
German nation will permanently stand that from such a ridiculous State? Does anyone seriously believe
that? It must have been believed because certain quarters described it as possible to the Poles, certain
quarters which general warmongers have occupied decades long, yes, hundreds of years long and which
they occupy even today.
These quarters declared that Germany was not even to be considered as a Power. The Poles were told
that they would easily be able to resist Germany, and, going a step further, assurance was given that if
their own resistance was not enough they could depend on the resistance and assistance of others. The
guarantee was given which put it into the hands of a small State to begin a war, or again perhaps not to
do so.
For these men Poland, too, was only a means to an end. Because today it is being declared quite calmly
that Poland was not the primary thing, but that the German regime is. I always warned against these
men. You will recall my Saarbruecken and Wilhelmshaven speeches. In both these speeches I pointed
out the danger that in a certain country such men could rise and unmolested preach the necessity of war -
Herren Churchill, Eden, Duff-Cooper, etc.
I pointed out how dangerous this is, especially in a country where one does not know whether these men
may not be the Government in a short time. I was then told that that would never happen. In my opinion
they are now the Government. It happened exactly as I then foresaw. I then decided for the first time to
warn the German nation against them. But I also have left no doubt that Germany, under no
circumstances, will capitulate to the threats or coercion of these people.
On account of this answer I have been strongly attacked: because certain practices have gradually been
developed in democracies: namely, in democracies war may be advocated. There foreign regimes and
statesmen may be attacked, calumniated, insulted, sullied because there reign freedom of speech and the
press. In authoritarian States, on the other hand, one may not defend one's self because there reigns
discipline.
You know, of course, of those August days. I believe it would have been possible in those last August
days, without the British guarantee and without agitation by these warmongers, to have reached an
understanding. At a certain moment England herself offered to bring us into direct discussion with
Poland. I was ready. Of course it was the Poles who did not come.
I came to Berlin with my Government and for two days waited and waited. Meanwhile, I had worked
out a new pro- posal. You know it. I had the British Ambassador informed of it on the evening of the
first day. It was read to him sentence by sentence and the Reich Foreign Minister gave him a
supplementary explanation. Then came the next day and nothing occurred except for Polish general
mobilization, renewed acts of terror, and finally attacks against Reich territory.
Now in the life of nations, patience must not always be interpreted as weakness. For years I patiently
looked on these continuous provocations. What keen suffering I underwent in these years only few can
imagine, because there was hardly a month or week in which deputations from these districts did not
come to me depicting unbearable conditions and imploring me to interfere.
I have always begged them to try again. This continued for years, but I have recently also warned that
this could not go on forever. After again waiting and even receiving new proposals I finally decided, as I
declared in the Reichstag, to talk with Poland in the same language as they talked to us, or believed they
could talk to us - the language which alone they seem to understand.
Also, at this moment peace could have been saved. Friendly Italy and I1 Duce came in and made a
suggestion for mediation. France agreed. I also expressed my agreement. Then England rejected also
that suggestion and replied that, instead, Germany might be served with a two-hour ultimatum with
impossible demands. England erred in one thing. There once was a government in Germany in
November, 1918, that was kept by England, and they confound the present German regime with one
they kept and confound the present German nation with the misled and blinded nation of that time.
One does not send ultimatums to the Germany of today. - May London make note!
In the last six years I had to stand intolerable things from States like Poland - nevertheless I sent no
ultimatum. The German Reich is not inclined and will not be addressed in such a tone. I knew if Poland
chose war she chose it because others drove her into war, those others who believed they might make
their biggest political and financial killing in this war. But it will not be their biggest killing, but their
biggest disappointment.
Poland chose to fight and she received a fight. She chose this fight light-heartedly because certain
statesmen assured her they had detailed proof of the worthlessness of Germany and her armed forces, of
the inferiority of our armament, of the poor morale of our troops, of defeatism within the Reich, of a
discrepancy between the German people and its leadership.
The Poles were persuaded that it would be easy not only to resist but also to throw our army back.
Poland constructed her campaign on these assurances of the Western general staffs. Since then eighteen
days have passed, and hardly elsewhere in history can the following be said with more truth: The Lord
has struck them down with horse, with man and with wagon.
As I speak to you our troops stand along a great line from Brest-Litovsk to Lwow, and at this moment
endless columns of the smashed Polish Army have been marching as prisoners from that sector since
yesterday afternoon. Yesterday morning there were 20,000; yesterday afternoon 50,000; this morning
70,000. I do not know how great the number is now, but I know one thing: what remains of the Polish
Army west of that line will capitulate within a few days, they will lay down their arms or be crushed. At
this moment, our thankful hearts fly to our men. The German Army gave those genius-statesmen, who
were so well-informed as to conditions within the Reich, a necessary lesson....
At this moment we want to give the Polish soldier absolute justice. At many points the Pole fought
bravely. His lower leadership made desperate efforts, his middle-grade leadership was too unintelligent,
his highest leadership was bad, judged by any standard. His organization was - Polish...
I ordered the German Air Force to conduct humanitarian warfare - that is, to attack only fighting troops.
The Polish Government and army leadership ordered the civilian population to carry on the war as
francs-tireurs from ambush. It is very difficult under these circumstances to hold one's self back. I want
to stress that the democratic States should not imagine it must be that way. If they want it otherwise,
they can have it otherwise. My patience can have limits here also. . . .
So, we have beaten Poland within eighteen days and thus created a situation which perhaps makes it
possible one day to speak to representatives of the Polish people calmly and reasonably.
Meantime, Russia felt moved, on its part, to march in for the protection of the interests of the White
Russian and Ukrainian people in Poland. We realize now that in England and France this German and
Russian co-operation is considered a terrible crime. An Englishman even wrote that it is perfidious -
well, the English ought to know. I believe England thinks this co-operation perfidious because the cooperation
of democratic England with bolshevist Russia failed, while National Socialist Germany's
attempt with Soviet Russia succeeded.
I want to give here an explanation: Russia remains what she is; Germany also remain what she is. About
only one thing are both regimes clear: neither the German nor the Russian regime wants to sacrifice a
single man for the interest of the Western democracies. A lesson of four years was sufficient for both
peoples. We know only too well that alternately, now one then the other, would be granted the honor to
fill the breach for the ideals of the Western democracies.
We therefore thank both peoples and both States for this task. We intend henceforth to look after our
interests ourselves, and we have found that we best have been able to look after them when two of the
largest peoples and States reconcile each other. And this is made simpler by the fact that the British
assertion as to the unlimited character of German foreign policy is a lie. I am happy now to be able to
refute this lie for British statesmen. British statesmen, who continually maintain that Germany intends to
dominate Europe to the Urals now will be pleased to learn the limits of German political intentions. I
believe this will deprive them of a reason for war because they profess to have to fight against the
present regime because it today pursues unlimited political goals.
Now, gentlemen of the great British Empire, the aims of Germany are closely limited. We discussed the
matter with Russia - they, after all, are the most immediately interested neighbor - and if you are of the
opinion that we might come to a conflict on the subject - we will not.
Britain ought to welcome the fact that Germany and Soviet Russia have come to an understanding, for
this understanding means the elimination of that nightmare which kept British statesmen from sleeping
because they were so concerned over the ambitions of the present [German] regime to conquer the
world. It will calm you to learn that Germany does not, and did not, want to conquer the Ukraine. We
have very limited interests, but we are determined to maintain those interests despite all dangers, despite
anyone.
And that we did not permit ourselves to be trifled with in those past eighteen days may have been
proved sufficiently. How a definite settlement of State conditions in this conflict will look depends first
and foremost upon the two countries which there have their most important vital interests.
Germany has there limited but unalterable claims, and she will realize those claims one way or another.
Germany and Russia will put in place the hotbed of conflict in the European situation which later will be
valued only as a relaxation of tension.
If the Western Powers now declare that this must not be, under any circumstances, and if especially
England declares that she is determined to oppose this in a three- or five- or eight-year war, then I want
to say something in reply:
Firstly, Germany, by extensive yielding and renunciation in the west and south of the Reich, has
accepted definite boundaries. Germany tried by these renunciations to attain lasting pacification. And we
believe we would have succeeded were it not that certain warmongers could be interested in disturbing
the European peace.
I have neither toward England nor France any war claims, nor has the German nation since I assumed
power. I tried gradually to establish confidence between Germany and especially its former war
enemies. I attempted to eliminate all tensions which once existed between Germany and Italy, and I may
state with satisfaction that I fully succeeded.
That ever closer and more cordial relations were established was due also to personal and human
relations between Il Duce and myself. I went still further, I tried to achieve the same between Germany
and France. Immediately after the settlement of the Saar question I solemnly renounced all further
frontier revisions, not only in theory but in practice. I harnessed all German propaganda to this end in
order to eliminate everything which might lead to doubt or anxiety in Paris.
You know of my offers to England. I had only in mind the great goal of attaining the sincere friendship
of the British people. Since this now has been repulsed, and since England today thinks it must wage
war against Germany, I would like to answer thus:
Poland will never rise again in the form of the Versailles Treaty. That is guaranteed not only by
Germany but also guaranteed by Russia.
It is said in England that this war, of course, is not for Poland. That is only secondary. More important is
the war against the regime in Germany. And I receive the honor of special mention as a representative of
this regime. If that is now set up as a war aim, I will answer the gentlemen in London thus:
It is for me the greatest honor to be thus classed. On principle I educated the German people so that any
regime which is lauded by our enemies is poison for Germany and will therefore be rejected by us. If,
therefore, a German regime would get the consent of Churchill, Duff-Cooper and Eden it would be paid
and kept by these gentlemen and hence would be unbearable for Germany. That, certainly, is not true
with us. It is, therefore, only honorable for us to be rejected by these gentlemen. I can assure these
gentlemen only this: If they should praise, this would be a reason for me to be most crestfallen. I am
proud to be attacked by them.
But if they believe they can thereby alienate the German people from me, then they either think the
German people are as lacking in character as themselves or as stupid as themselves. They err in both.
National Socialism did not educate the German people in vain during the past twenty years. We are all
men who, in their long struggle, have been nothing but attacked. That only tended to increase the love of
our followers and created an inseparable union. And as the National Socialist party took upon itself this
years-long struggle, finally to win it, thus the National Socialist Reich and the German people take up
the fight and those gentlemen may be convinced: By their ridiculous propaganda the German people will
not be undermined. Those bunglers will have become our apprentices for many years before they can
even attempt propaganda.
If peoples go to pieces it will not be the German people, who are fighting for justice, who have no war
aims and who were attacked.
Rather, those peoples will break when they gradually find out what their misleaders plan, and gradually
grasp for what little reason they are fighting, and that the only reasons for war are the profits or political
interests of a very small clique. A part of it declared in Britain that this war will last three years. Then I
can only say: My sympathies are with the French poilu. What he is fighting for he does not know. He
knows only that he has the honor to fight at least three years. But if it should last three years, then the
word capitulation will not stand at the end of the third, and at the end of the fourth year the word
capitulation also will not be, and not in the fifth either, and also not in the sixth or seventh year.
These gentlemen should take note of the following: Today you have the Germany of Frederick the Great
before you. These gentlemen can believe this. The German people will not split up in this fight but
become more unified. If anything splits up it will be those States that are not so homogeneous, those
empires built on the oppression of peoples. We are fighting only for our naked beings. We are not able
ourselves to be misled by propaganda.
Just imagine! There are people who say there are those ruling in another land who do not please us, so
now we have war with them. Naturally they do not carry on the war themselves, but look about for
someone to conduct it for them. They provide cannon and grenades while others provide grenadiers and
soldiers. Such an utter lack of conscience!
What would be said if one of us should say that the present regime in France or Britain does not suit us
and consequently we are conducting a war? What immeasurable lack of conscience. For that, millions of
persons are whipped into death. These gentlemen can say that calmly, for they themselves never have
been on the battlefield for even an hour.
But we will see how long they keep nations at war. There can be no doubt of one thing. however. We
will take up the gauntlet and we will fight as the enemy fights. England, with lies and hypocrisy, already
has begun to fight against women and children. They found a weapon which they think is invincible:
namely, sea power. And because they cannot be attacked with this weapon they think they are justified
in making war with it against women and children - not only of enemies but also of neutrals if necessary.
Let them make no mistake here, however. The moment could come very suddenly in which we could
use a weapon with which we cannot be attacked. I hope then they do not suddenly begin to think of
humaneness and of the impossibility of waging war against women and children. We Germans do not
like that. It is not in our nature. In this campaign I gave an order to spare human beings. When columns
cross a market-place it can occur that someone else becomes the victim of attack.
In those places where insane or crazy people did not offer resistance not one windowpane was broken.
In Cracow, except for the air field, railroads and the railroad station, which were military objectives, not
one bomb fell. On the other hand, in Warsaw the war is carried on by civilian shootings in all streets and
houses. There, of course, the war will take in the whole city. We followed these rules and would like to
follow them in the future. It is entirely up to England to carry out her blockade in a form compatible
with international law or incompatible with international law. We will adapt ourselves thereto.
But there should be no doubt about one thing:
England's goal is not 'a fight against the regime' but a fight against the German people, women and
children. Our reaction will be compatible, and one thing will be certain: This Germany does not
capitulate. We know too well what fate would be in store for Germany. Mr. King-Hall [Commander
Stephen King-Hall, retired naval officer who writes a privately-circulated news letter] told us in the
name of his masters: A second Versailles, only worse.
What can be worse? The first Versailles Treaty was intended to exterminate 20,000,000 Germans. Thus
the second can only realize this intention. We received more detailed illustrations of what has been
intended, what Poland shall have, what crowns will be placed on what heads in France, etc. The German
people take notice of this and shall fight accordingly. . .
We are determined to carry on and stand this war one way or another. We have only this one wish, that
the Almighty, who now has blessed our arms, will now perhaps make other peoples understand and give
them comprehension of how useless this war, this d=E9b=E2cle of peoples, will be intrinsically, and
that He may perhaps cause reflection on the blessings of peace which they are sacrificing because a
handful of fanatic warmongers, persons who stand to gain by war, want to involve peoples in war.
Wilhelmshaven -- Speech of April 1, 1939
German Fellow-Citizens:- He who wants to have the deepest impression of the decay and resurrection of
Germany most vividly must go and see the development of a city like Wilhelmshaven, which today
reverberates with life and activity and which still a short time ago was a dead spot nearly without means
of existence and without prospects of a future - it pays to revisualize this past.
When this city experienced its first upward move it coincided with the rise of the German Reich after its
unification. This Germany was in a state of peace.
During the same time as the so-called peace-loving and Puritan nations led a great number of wars,
Germany then knew only one aim: To maintain peace, to work in peace, to raise the prosperity of its
inhabitants, and thereby to contribute to human culture and civilization.
This Germany of peace times has attempted, with unending diligence, with geniality, and with
steadiness, to form its life within and to safeguard outwardly - through participation in peaceful
competition with the nations - its due place in the sun.
Even though this Germany through the decades was the safest guarantor of peace, and even though she
occupied herself with peaceful things, she was unable to prevent other nations, and especially their
statesmen, from following this rise with envy and hatred and finally to answer with a war.
Today we know from the documents of history how the encirclement policy of those times was carried
on in a planned way by England.
We know from numerous findings and publications that in that country the conception was that it would
be necessary to bring down Germany militarily because its destruction would insure every British citizen
a greater abundance of life's possessions.
Certainly at that time Germany made mistakes. Its most serious mistake was to see this encirclement and
not to stave it off in time.
The only fault we can blame the regime of that time for is that the Reich had full knowledge of this
devilish plan of a raid and yet it did not have the power of decision to ward it off in time and could only
let this encirclement ripen until the beginning of the catastrophe.
The result was the World War. In this war the German people, although it had by no means the best
armaments, fought heroically. No people can claim the glory for itself to have forced us down - much
less so that nation whose statesmen today speak the greatest words.
Germany at that time remained undefeated and unconquered on land, at sea, and in the air - however, it
was Germany.
But there was the power of the lie and the poison of propaganda which did not balk at misinterpretation
and untruth.
This Germany faced the world in absolute defenselessness because it was unprepared.
When [President Woodrow] Wilson's Fourteen Points were published, not only many German fellow-
citizens but above all the 'leading' men saw in these Fourteen Points not only the possibility of ending
the World War but also the pacification of the world at large.
A peace of reconciliation and understanding was promised-a peace that was to know neither victor nor
vanquished, a peace of equal justice for all, a peace of equal distribution of colonial domains and equal
recognition of colonial desires, a peace that was to be finally crowned by a league of all free nations.
It was to be a guarantor of equal rights that would make it seem superfluous in the future for peoples to
bear the armaments that previously, so it was said, were so heavily burdensome.
Therefore, disarmament-disarmament of all the nations.
Germany was to go ahead as a good example. Everybody was obliged to follow this disarmament. Also
the age of secret diplomacy was to be ended. All problems henceforth were to be discussed openly and
freely.
First of all, however, the right of self-determination of nations finally was to have been settled and
raised to its proper importance.
Germany believed in these assurances. With faith in these declarations it had dropped its weapons. And
then a breach of a pledge began such as world history had never seen before.
When our nation had dropped its weapons, a period of suppression, blackmailing, plundering, and
slavery began. Not another word about peace without victor or vanquished, but an endless sentence of
condemnation for the vanquished. Not another word about justice, but of justice on your side and
injustice and illegality on the other.
Robbery upon robbery, oppression upon oppression were the consequences.
No one in this democratic world bothered himself any more about the sufferings of our people.
Hundreds of thousands fell in the war, not from enemy weapons, but from the hunger blockade. And
after the war ended, this blockade was continued for months in order to oppress our people still more.
Even German war prisoners, after an endless time, had to remain in captivity. The German colonies
were stolen from us, German foreign holdings were simply seized and our merchant marine taken away.
Added to that was a financial plundering such as the world had never before seen. The monetary
penalties which were imposed on the German people reached astronomical figures.
Of these an English statesman said that they could only be fulfilled when the German standard of living
was reduced to the lowest possible level and Germans worked fourteen hours daily. What German spirit,
German alertness, and German labor through decades and decades had collected and saved was lost in a
few years.
Millions of Germans were either torn away from the Reich or were prevented from returning to the
Reich. The League of Nations was not an instrument of a just policy of understanding among nations,
but is and was a guarantee of the meanest dictation man ever invented.
So was a great people raped and led toward a misery that you all know. A great people through a broken
pledge was cheated of its rights and its existence rendered practically impossible. A French statesman
coined the following expression: 'There are 20,000,000 Germans too many in the world!'
Germans ended their lives out of despair, others slid into lethargy and an inevitable destiny and still
others were of the opinion that everything must be destroyed; still others set their teeth and clenched
their fists in unconscious rage. Still others believed that the past should be restored - restored just as it
was.
Everyone had an idea of some sort. And I, as an unknown soldier of the World War, drew my
conclusions.
It was a very short and simple program. It ran: Removal of the internal enemies of the nation,
termination of the divisions within Germany, the gathering up of the entire national strength of our
people into a new community, and the breaking of the peace treaty - in one way or another!
For as long as this dictate of Versailles weighed upon the German people it was actually damned to go
to the ground. If, however, other statesmen now declare that right must rule on this earth, then they
should be told that their crime is no right, that their dictate is neither right nor law but above this dictate
stand the eternal rights of peoples to live.
The German people were not created by providence in order to follow obediently a law which suits the
English or the French, but rather in order to champion their right to live. That is why we are here! I was
determined to take up this battle of advocating the German right to live.
I took it up first within the nation.
In place of a great number of parties, social ranks, and societies, a single community now has taken its
place - the German national community! To bring it to realization and to deepen it more and more is our
task.
I had to hurt many in this time. However, I believe that the good fortune in which the entire nation is
participating today must richly compensate every single one for what he had to give up dearly on his
own part.
You all have sacrificed your parties, societies, and associations, but you have obtained in return a great
strong Reich. And the Reich today, thank God, is strong enough to take your rights under its protection.
We no longer are dependent on the good graces or disgraces of other States or their statesmen.
When, more than six years ago, I obtained power, I took over a wretched inheritance. The Reich seemed
to possess no more possibilities of existence for its citizens.
I undertook the work at that time with the one single capital which I possessed. It was the capital of your
strength to work.
Your strength to work, my fellow-citizens, I now have begun to put to use. I had no foreign exchange. I
had no gold reserve. I had only one thing - my faith and your work!
Thus we began the gigantic work of rebuilding based upon the confidence of the nation, instilled with
the belief and the confidence in its eternal values.
Now we have found a new economic system, a system which is this: Capital is the power of labor and
the coverage of money lies in our production.
We have founded a system based on the most sincere foundation there is, namely: Form your life
yourself! Work for your existence! Help yourself and God will help you!
Within a few years we have wrenched Germany from despair. But the world did not help us. If today an
English statesman says one can and must solve all problems through frank deliberations, I should like to
tell this statesman just this: An opportunity has been open for fifteen years before our time.
If the world says today that the nations must be divided into virtuous nations and into such as are not
virtuous - and that the English and French belong to the first class, and the Germans and Italians belong
to those not virtuous - we can only answer: The judgment whether a people is virtuous or not virtuous
can hardly be passed by a human being. That should be left to God.
Perhaps the same British statesman will retort: 'God has passed the verdict already, because He
presented the virtuous nations with one quarter of the world and He took everything away from the
nonvirtuous!'
The question may be permitted: 'By what means have the virtuous nations obtained for themselves this
quarter of the world.'
And one must answer: 'They did not apply virtuous methods!'
For 300 years this England acted without virtue in order now in maturity to speak of virtue. Thus it
could appear that during this British period without virtue 46,000,000 Englishmen have subdued nearly
one-quarter of the world while 80,000,000 Germans, because of their virtue, must live at a rate of 140 to
one square kilometer.
Indeed, twenty years ago, the question of virtue still was not entirely clear for the British statesmen
insofar as it concerned conceptions of property. One still held it compatible with virtue simply to take
away the colonies of another people that had acquired them through treaty or through purchase because
one possessed the power - this very power which now, to be sure, should be deemed as something
abominable and detestable.
I have only one thing to ask the gentlemen here: whether they believe what they say or do not believe it.
We do not know.
We assume, however, that they do not believe what they say. For if we should assume that they
themselves really believe it then we would lose every respect for them.
For fifteen years Germany patiently bore its lot and fate. I also sought in the beginning to solve every
problem through talks. I made an offer in the case of each problem and each time it was turned down!
There can be no doubt that every people possesses sacred interests, simply because they are identical
with their lives and their right to live.
When, today, a British statesman demands that every problem which lies in the midst of Germany's life
interest first should be discussed with England,. then I, too, could demand just as well that every British
problem first is to be discussed with us.
Certainly, these Englishmen may give me the answer: 'The Germans have no business in Palestine!' I
answer that we do not want anything in Palestine.
Just as we Germans have little to do in Palestine, just as little business has England mixing in our
German section of existence. And if they now declare that it involves general questions of law and
justice I could approve of this opinion only if it was considered as binding to both of us.
They say we have no right to do this or that. I should like to raise the counter-question: What right, for
example, has England to shoot down Arabs in Palestine just because they defend their homeland; who
gives them this right?
Anyway, we have not slaughtered thousands in Central Europe but instead we have regulated our
problems with law and order.
However, I should like to say one thing here: The German people of today, the German Reich of today
is not willing to surrender life interests, it also is not willing to face rising dangers without doing
something about them.
When the Allies, without regard or purpose, right, tradition, or even reasonableness, changed the map of
Europe, we had not the power to prevent it. If, however, they expect the Germany of today to sit
patiently by until the very last day when this same result would again be repeated - while they create
satellite States and set them against Germany - then they are mistaking the Germany of today for the
Germany of before the war.
He who declares himself ready to pull the chestnuts out of the fire for these powers must realize he
burns his fingers.
Really, we feel no hatred against the Czech people. We have lived together for years. The English
statesmen do not know this. They have no idea that Hradcany castle was not built by an Englishman but
by a German and that the St. Vitus Cathedral likewise was not erected by Englishmen but that German
hands did it.
Even the French were not active there. They do not know that already at a time when England still was
very small a German Kaiser was paid homage on this hill [Hradcany castle]-that one thousand years
before me the first German King stood there and accepted the homage of this people.
Englishmen do not know that. They could not know that and they do not have to know it. It is sufficient
that we know it and that it is true that this territory lay in the living space of the German people for over
a thousand years.
Despite this, however, we would have had nothing against an independent Czech State if, first, it had not
suppressed Germans, and, second, if it had not been intended as the instrument of a future attack on
Germany. When, however, a former French Air Minister writes in a newspaper that on the basis of their
prominent position it is the task of these Czechs to strike at the heart of German industry with air attacks
during war, then one understands that this is not without interest to us and that we draw certain
conclusions from it.
It would have been up to England and France to defend this airbase. Upon us fell the task of preventing
such an attack at all events. I sought to accomplish this by a natural and simple way.
When I first saw that every effort of that kind was destined to be wrecked and that elements hostile to
Germany again would win the upper hand, and as I further saw that this State had long since lost its
inner vitality - indeed, that it already was broken to pieces - I again carried through the old German
Reich. And I joined together again what had to be united because of history and geographical positions,
and according to all rules of reason.
Not to oppress the Czech people! It will enjoy more freedom than the suppressed people of the virtuous
nations.
I have, so I believe, thereby rendered peace a great service, because I have rendered innocuous in time
an instrument which was destined to become effective in war against Germany. If they now say that this
is the signal that Germany now wants to attack the entire world, I do not believe that this is meant
seriously: such could only be the expression of a bad conscience.
Perhaps it is rage over the failure of a far-flung plan, perhaps it is an attempt to create tactical
preconditions for a new policy of encirclement.
Be that as it may: it is my conviction that thereby I have rendered peace a great service and out of this
conviction I decided three weeks ago to name the coming party rally the 'Party Convention of Peace.'
For Germany has no intention of attacking other people. What we, however, do not want to renounce is
the building up of our economic relations. We have a right thereto and I do not accept any condition
from a European or a non-European statesman.
The German Reich is not only a great producer but also a gigantic consumer, just as we as a producer
will be an irreplaceable trade partner, so as a consumer we are capable of honorably and fairly paying
for what we consume.
We are not thinking about making war on other peoples. However, our precondition is that they leave us
in peace.
In any case the German Reich is not ready everlastingly to accept intimidation or even a policy of
encirclement.
I once made an agreement with England - namely, the Naval Treaty. It is based on the earnest desire
which we all possess never to have to go to war against England. But this wish can only be a mutual
one.
If this wish no longer exists in England, then the practical preconditions for this agreement therewith are
removed and Germany also would accept this very calmly. We are self-assured because we are strong,
and we are strong because we are united and because in addition we are looking forward. And in this
city, my fellow citizens, I can address the one exhortation to you: Look into the world and to all its
happenings with open eyes. Do not deceive yourselves about the most important precondition in life -
namely, the necessity to be strong.
We have experienced this for fifteen years. Therefore I have made Germany strong again and erected an
armed force, an army on land, at sea, and in the air.
When they say in other countries that they will arm and will keep arming still more, I can tell those
statesmen only this: They will not be able to tire me out. I am determined to proceed on this road and I
have a conviction that we shall proceed faster than the others. No power on earth will ever again be able
to entice the weapons from us through any phrase.
Should, however, somebody be craving for measuring their strength with ours, then the German people
also are ready at any time and I am ready and determined.
Just as we think, our friends also think, especially the State with which we are bound most closely and
with which we are marching now and will march under all circumstances forever.
If hostile journalists do not know of anything else to write, then they write about rents or breaks in the
Axis. They ought to hold their peace. This Axis is the most natural political instrument existing in this
world.
It is a political combination which owes its origin not only to reasonable political deliberation and the
desire for justice but also to the power of an ideal.
This construction will be more durable than the momentary ties of nonhomogeneous bodies on the other
side. For if some one tells me today that there are no philosophical or ideological differences of any kind
between England and Soviet Russia, then I can only say:
'I congratulate you, gentlemen!'
I believe that the time is not far distant in which the philosophical community between Fascist Italy and
National Socialist Germany will prove essentially different than the one between democratic Great
Britain and the bolshevist Russia of Stalin.
However, if there really should be no ideological difference, then I can only say: How correct, indeed, is
my position toward Marxism and communism and democracy! Why two phenomena if they possess the
same contents?
In these days we experience a very great triumph and a deep inner satisfaction. A country which also
was devastated by bolshevism, where hundreds of thousands of human beings, women, men, children,
and patriarchs have been slaughtered, has liberated itself, liberated despite all the ideological friends of
bolshevism who sit in Great Britain, France and in other countries.
We can understand this Spain only too well in its struggle and we greet and congratulate it for its
success. We Germans of today can express this with special pride, since many German young men have
done their duty there. They have helped as volunteers to break a tyrannic regime and to return to a nation
the right of self-determination.
We are pleased to note how fast, how extremely fast, the philosophical change came over the deliverers
of war material on the Red side. We note how much they now, all of a sudden, understand this National
Spain and how ready they are to conduct with this National Spain, if not philosophical, then at least
economic business.
This also is a sign showing the trend of development.
My fellow-citizens, I believe that all States will be facing the same problem which we have faced.
State after State will either fall under the Jewish bolshevist pest or it will defend itself.
We have done it and have now erected a national German people's State. This people's State wants to
live in peace and friendship with any other State but it will never again let itself be forced down by
another State.
I do not know whether the world will become fascist! But I am deeply convinced that this world in the
end will defend itself against the most severe bolshevistic threat that exists.
Therefore I believe that a final understanding between nations will come sooner or later. Only when this
Jewish wedge among peoples is removed can the establishment of co-operation among nations - built on
lasting understanding - be considered.
Today we must rely upon our own strength! And we can be satisfied with the results of this trust in
ourselves - inwardly and outwardly.
When I came to power, my fellow-citizens, Germany was divided and impotent internally, and
outwardly the sport of foreign designs. Today we are in order domestically. Our business is flourishing.
Abroad perhaps we are not loved, but respected. Yet we receive attention! That is the decisive factor!
Above all we have given the greatest possible good fortune to millions of our fellow-citizens - the return
into our Greater German Reich.
Second: We have given Central Europe a great piece of good fortune, namely, peace - peace that will be
protected by German might. And this might can no longer be broken by any world power. That is our
pledge!
So we will show that over two million citizens did not fall in the Great War in vain. From their sacrifice
came Greater Germany. From their sacrifice was this strong young German people that the Reich called
into being and that has now made itself felt. In the face of this sacrifice we shall not shy away from any
sacrifice if it is ever necessary.
Let the world understand that!
It can make pacts and draw up declarations as much as it wishes. I have no faith in paper, but I do have
faith in you, my fellow-citizens!
The greatest breach of faith of all time was committed against us Germans. Let us take care that our
people internally are never again in a position to be broken. Then no one in the world will threaten us.
Then peace will either be maintained for our people or, if necessary, peace will be enforced.
Then our people will bloom and flourish. Our people will be able to put their geniality, their ability, their
diligence and steadfastness into the works of peace and human culture. This is our desire. We hope for it
and we believe in it.
Twenty years ago that party was founded - at that time a tiny organization. Consider the road from that
time until today! Consider the wonders which have occurred about us.
Believe, therefore, because of this wonderful road, also in the course of the German people in its coming
great future!
Germany - Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!