Holocaust Versus Wehrmacht: How Hitler's ""Final Solution"" Undermined the German War Effort
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Specificatii
In 1941, as Nazi Germany began its disastrous campaign against the
Soviet Union, Hitler's other campaign, to exterminate European
Jewry, was also commencing in earnest. What began with organized
executions carried out by the Einzatsgruppen evolved into
systematic genocide, reaching its frenzied final moments just as
the Wehrmacht was meeting defeat on the military front. These
campaigns--and Germany's failure--were inextricably linked, Yaron
Pasher tells us in Holocaust versus Wehrmacht. Pasher argues, in
fact, that the major share of the logistical problems faced by the
Wehrmacht during World War II stemmed from Hitler's obsession with
securing the resources--especially from the Reichsbahn
railway--needed to implement the Final Solution. To a degree never
fully recognized or understood, Hitler's anti-Semitic ideology was
his war's undoing. Through four major Wehrmacht military
campaigns--Moscow, Stalingrad, and Kursk in the east and Normandy
in the west--Pasher explores this fatal contradiction in Hitler's
efforts to dominate the European continent. As Operation Typhoon,
the sequel to the German invasion of the Soviet Union, got underway
in November 1941, organized train transports began carrying Jews to
the East--with the last trains taking Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz
just as the Allies invaded Western Europe and moved inexorably to
encircle the Third Reich. In these years, this book shows us, the
trains transporting Jews could have carried men, machines, and fuel
to depleted and trapped divisions in the Caucasus, and later, to
the Western Front. As the Germans moved deeper into Soviet
territory, they became increasingly dependent on train
transport--which entailed converting Soviet railway line to German
specifications; and yet, however successfully this conversion was
completed, the trains that might run on these rails were working
elsewhere in service of the Final Solution, leaving the Wehrmacht's
overextended armies without the resources to survive, let alone
win, their final battles. In the end, what Hitler called the Jewish
problem was his downfall. In documenting the distribution of
Germany's resources and operational capabilities through four major
campaigns, Holocaust versus Wehrmacht offers a clear picture of the
Nazis' military objectives as inseparable from--and finally,
fatally susceptible to--Hitler's and his henchmen's other,
ideological war to rid Europe of Jews.
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