INTRODUCTION
Unexplored
Facets of Naziism
Since the early
1920s unsubstantiated reports have circulated to the effect that not
only German industrialists, but also Wall Street financiers, had some
role — possibly a substantial role — in the rise of Hitler and Naziism.
This book presents previously unpublished evidence, a great deal from
files of the Nuremburg Military Tribunals, to support this hypothesis.
However, the full impact and suggestiveness of the evidence cannot be
found from reading this volume alone. Two previous books in this series,
Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution1
and Wall Street and FDR,2 described
the roles of the same firms, and often the same individuals and their
fellow directors, hard at work manipulating and assisting the Bolshevik
revolution in Russia in 1917, backing Franklin D. Roosevelt for
President in the United States in 1933, as well as aiding the rise of
Hitler in pre-war Germany. in brief, this book is part of a more
extensive study of the rise of modern socialism and the corporate
socialists.
This
politically active Wall Street group is more or less the same elitist
circle known generally among Conservatives as the "Liberal
Establishment," by liberals (for instance G. William Domhoff) as "the
ruling class,"3 and by conspiratorial
theorists Gary Allen4 and Dan Smoot5
as the "Insiders." But whatever we call this self-perpetuating elitist
group, it is apparently fundamentally significant in the determination
of world affairs, at a level far behind and above that of the elected
politicians.
The influence
and work of this same group in the rise of Hitler and Nazi Germany is
the topic of this book. This is an area of historical research almost
totally unexplored by the academic world. It is an historical minefield
for the unwary and the careless not aware of the intricacies of research
procedures. The Soviets have long accused Wall Street bankers of backing
international fascism, but their own record of historical accuracy
hardly lends their accusations much credence in the West, and they do
not of course criticize support of their own brand of fascism.
This author
falls into a different camp. Previously accused of being overly critical
of Sovietism and domestic socialism, while ignoring Wall Street and the
rise of Hitler, this book hopefully will redress an assumed and quite
inaccurate philosophical imbalance and emphasize the real point at
issue: Whatever you call the collectivist system — Soviet socialism, New
Deal socialism, corporate socialism, or National socialism — it is the
average citizen, the guy in the street, that ultimately loses out to the
boys running the operation at the top. Each system in its own way is a
system of plunder, an organizational device to get everyone living (or
attempting to live) at the expense of everyone else, while the elitist
leaders, the rulers and the politicians, scalp the cream off the top.
The role of
this American power elite in the rise of Hitler should also be viewed in
conjunction with a little-known aspect of Hitlerism only now being
explored: the mystical origins of Naziism, and its relations with the
Thule Society and with other conspiratorial groups. This author is no
expert on occultism or conspiracy, but it is obvious that the mystical
origins, the neo-pagan historical roots of Naziism, the Bavarian
Illuminati and the Thule Society, are relatively unknown areas yet to be
explored by technically competent researchers. Some research is already
recorded in French; probably the best introduction in English is a
translation of Hitler et la Tradition Cathare by Jean Michel
Angebert.6
Angebert
reveals the 1933 crusade of Schutzstaffel member Otto Rahn in
search of the Holy Grail, which was supposedly located in the Cathar
stronghold in Southern France. The early Nazi hierarchy (Hitler and
Himmler, as well as Rudolph Hess and Rosenberg) was steeped in a
neo-pagan theology, in part associated with the Thule Society, whose
ideals were close to those of the Bavarian Illuminati. This was a
submerged driving force behind Naziism, with a powerful mystical hold
over the hard-core S.S. faithful. Our contemporary establishment
historians barely mention, let alone explore, these occult origins;
consequently, they miss an element equally as important as the financial
origins of National Socialism.
In 1950 James
Stewart Martin published a very readable book, All Honorable Men7
describing his experiences as Chief of the Economic Warfare Section of
the Department of Justice investigating the structure of Nazi industry.
Martin asserts that American and British businessmen got themselves
appointed to key positions in this post-war investigation to divert,
stifle and muffle investigation of Nazi industrialists and so keep
hidden their own involvement. One British officer was sentenced by court
martial to two years in jail for protecting a Nazi, and several American
officials were removed from their positions. Why would American and
British businessmen want to protect Nazi businessmen? In public they
argued that these were merely German businessmen who had nothing to do
with the Nazi regime and were innocent of complicity in Nazi
conspiracies. Martin does not explore this explanation in depth, but he
is obviously unhappy and skeptical about it. The evidence suggests there
was a concerted effort not only to protect Nazi businessmen, but also to
protect the collaborating elements from American and British business.
The German
businessmen could have disclosed a lot of uncomfortable facts: In return
for protection, they told very little. It is undoubtedly not
coincidental that the Hitler industrialists on trial at Nuremburg
received less than a slap on the wrist. We raise the question of whether
the Nuremburg trials should not have been held in Washington — with a
few prominent U.S. businessmen as well as Nazi businessmen in the dock!
Two extracts
from contemporary sources will introduce and suggest the theme to be
expanded. The first extract is from Roosevelt's own files. The U.S.
Ambassador in Germany, William Dodd, wrote FDR from Berlin on October
19, 1936 (three years after Hitler came to power), concerning American
industrialists and their aid to the Nazis:
Much as I
believe in peace as our best policy, I cannot avoid the fears which
Wilson emphasized more than once in conversations with me, August
15, 1915 and later: the breakdown of democracy in all Europe will be
a disaster to the people. But what can you do? At the present moment
more than a hundred American corporations have subsidiaries here or
cooperative understandings. The DuPonts have three allies in Germany
that are aiding in the armament business. Their chief ally is the I.
G. Farben Company, a part of the Government which gives 200,000
marks a year to one propaganda organization operating on American
opinion. Standard Oil Company (New York sub-company) sent $2,000,000
here in December 1933 and has made $500,000 a year helping Germans
make Ersatz gas for war purposes; but Standard Oil cannot take any
of its earnings out of the country except in goods. They do little
of this, report their earnings at home, but do not explain the
facts. The International Harvester Company president told me their
business here rose 33% a year (arms manufacture, I believe), but
they could take nothing out. Even our airplanes people have secret
arrangement with Krupps. General Motor Company and Ford do enormous
businesses/sic] here through their subsidiaries and take no profits
out. I mention these facts because they complicate things and add to
war dangers.8
Second, a quote from the diary
of the same U.S. Ambassador in Germany. The reader should bear in mind
that a representative of the cited Vacuum Oil Company — as well as
representatives of other Nazi, supporting American firms — was appointed
to the post-war Control Commission to de-Nazify the Nazis:
January 25. Thursday.
Our Commercial Attache brought Dr. Engelbrecht, chairman of the
Vacuum Oil Company in Hamburg, to see me. Engelbrecht repeated what
he had said a year ago: "The Standard Oil Company of New York, the
parent company of the Vacuum, has spent 10,000,000 marks in Germany
trying to find oil resources and building a great refinery near the
Hamburg harbor." Engelbrecht is still boring wells and finding a
good deal of crude oil in the Hanover region, but he had no hope of
great deposits. He hopes Dr. Schacht will subsidize his company as
he does some German companies that have found no crude oil. The
Vacuum spends all its earnings here, employs 1,000 men and never
sends any of its money home. I could give him no encouragement.9
And further:
These men
were hardly out of the building before the lawyer came in again to
report his difficulties. I could not do anything. I asked him,
however: Why did the Standard Oil Company of New York send
$1,000,000 over here in December, 1933, to aid the Germans in making
gasoline from soft coal for war emergencies? Why do the
International Harvester people continue to manufacture in Germany
when their company gets nothing out of the country and when it has
failed to collect its war losses? He saw my point and agreed that it
looked foolish and that it only means greater losses if another war
breaks loose.10
The alliance
between Nazi political power and American "Big Business" may well have
looked foolish to Ambassador Dodd and the American attorney he
questioned. In practice, of course, "Big Business" is anything but
foolish when it comes to promoting its own self-interest. Investment in
Nazi Germany (along with similar investments in the Soviet Union) was a
reflection of higher policies, with much more than immediate profit at
stake, even though profits could not be repatriated. To trace these
"higher policies" one has to penetrate the financial control of
multinational corporations, because those who control the flow of
finance ultimately control the day-to-day policies.
Carroll Quigley11
has shown that the apex of this international financial control system
before World War II was the Bank for International Settlements, with
representatives from the international banking firms of Europe and the
United States, in an arrangement that continued throughout World War II.
During the Nazi period, Germany's representative at the Bank for
International Settlements was Hitler's financial genius and president of
the Reichsbank, Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht.
Hjalmar Horace
Greeley Schacht
Wall Street
involvement with Hitler's Germany highlights two Germans with Wall
Street connections — Hjalmar Schacht and "Putzi" Hanfstaengl. The latter
was a friend of Hitler and Roosevelt who played a suspiciously prominent
role in the incident that brought Hitler to the peak of dictatorial
power — the Reichstag fire of 1933.12
The early
history of Hjalmar Schacht, and in particular his role in the Soviet
Union after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, was described in my
earlier book, Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution. The elder
Schacht had worked at the Berlin office of the Equitable Trust Company
of New York in the early twentieth century. Hjalmar was born in Germany
rather than New York only by the accident of his mother's illness, which
required the family to return to Germany. Brother William Schacht was an
American-born citizen. To record his American origins, Hjalmar's middle
names were designated "Horace Greeley" after the well-know Democrat
politician. Consequently, Hjalmar spoke fluent English and the post-war
interrogation of Schacht in Project Dustbin was conducted in both German
and English. The point to be made is that the Schacht family had its
origins in New York, worked for the prominent Wall Street financial
house of Equitable Trust (which was controlled by the Morgan firm), and
throughout his life Hjalmar retained these Wall Street connections.13
Newspapers and contemporary sources record repeated visits with Owen
Young of General Electric; Farish, chairman of Standard Oil of New
Jersey; and their banking counterparts. In brief, Schacht was a member
of the international financial elite that wields its power behind the
scenes through the political apparatus of a nation. He is a key link
between the Wall Street elite and Hitler's inner circle.
This book is
divided into two major parts. Part One records the buildup of German
cartels through the Dawes and Young Plans in the 1920s. These cartels
were the major supporters of Hitler and Naziism and were directly
responsible for bringing the Nazis to power in 1933. The roles of
American I. G. Farben, General Electric, Standard Oil of New Jersey,
Ford, and other U.S. firms is outlined. Part Two presents the known
documentary evidence on the financing of Hitler, complete with
photographic reproduction of the bank transfer slips used to transfer
funds from Farben, General Electric, and other firms to Hitler, through
Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht.
Footnotes:
1(New York: Arlington House Publishers, 1974)
2(New York: Arlington House Publishers, 1975)
3The Higher Circles: The Governing
Class in America, (New York: Vintage, 1970)
4None Dare Call It Conspiracy,
(Rossmoor: Concord Press, 1971). For another view based on
"inside" documents, see Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope,
(New York: The Macmillan Company, 1966)
5The Invisible Government, (Boston: Western
Islands, 1962)
6Published in English as The Occult
and the Third Reich, (The mystical origins of Naziism and the
search for the Holy Grail), (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1974).
See also Reginald H. Phelps, " 'Before Hitler Came:' Thule Society
and Germanen Orden" in the Journal of Modern History,
September 1968, No. 3.
7(Boston: Little Brown and Company, 1950)
8Edgar B. Nixon, ed., Franklin D.
Roosevelt and Foreign Affairs, Volume III: September
1935-January 1937, (Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1969), p. 456.
9Edited by William E. Dodd Jr. and Martha
Dodd, Ambassador Dodd's Diary, 1933-1938, (New York: Harcourt
Brace and Company, 1941), p. 303.
10Ibid, p. 358.
11Quigley,
op. cit.
12For more information about "Putzi" Hanfstaengl, see
Chapter Nine.
13See Sutton, Wall Street and the Bolshevik
Revolution, op. cit., for Sehacht's relations with Soviets and
Wall Street, and his directorship of a Soviet bank.