The Times: Hitler gave first order for Holocaust, SS commander reveals
The Jewish Chronicle: New Nazi recordings confirm the Holocaust was ordered by Hitler
Is this true? Let's see the material for ourselves. There are two two-sided interview tapes: 1977 January 17 and 1977 July 18. They are poorly transcribed and translated, so I apologize for the many errors. I am writing only about the first tape, side A, which begins mid-conversation. Already at 56 seconds Streckenbach said of Erwin Schulz:
That last word is clearly a mistake in the transcription, and it's a pretty critical one since it tells us what the topic of discussion here is. Someone who speaks the language will have to clarify. I suggest "Juden auswerfen" to replace it. In that case, they were talking about expulsion, not murder, which sets the stage for understanding or misunderstanding the rest of the interview. He continued from there:And one day he sent me a letter from his deployment in Russia like a courier and said, "If you can arrange it, ask me to come to you. I want to speak to you." And he came to me in Berlin and told me about Jewish ships [Judenschiffen].
As garbled as this passage is, it's clear that Streckenbach was retelling how surprised he was to hear for the first time about an action against the Jews. Does it make sense for Streckenbach to only learn about this here, from a lower-ranked soldier in the Einsatzgruppen, especially when he is supposed to be the authority responsible for having communicated the Hitler Order to the Einsatzgruppen and for helping to carry out that order himself? Obviously not.Erwin Schulz, who loved being a soldier and the military, was so soft at heart after the Kurdwitz cradle, that is probably why he was pushed aside, he was simply completely thoughtful. I said, "You're crazy. That was out of the question. That's murder [Mord]. You can't, as a representative of a civilized state, send [hinschicken] people there every now and then in an organized manner in the 20th century. So that's how it should be. Like that." The trembling man, as trembling as I am now, Schulz was trembling back then, and he said, "What do we do?" I say, "I can't do anything, I can't get you out of there, you know, you know the mad order".
He said "That's murder." Is this a smoking gun? No. "That's murder" is something normally said in reaction to something that is not outright murder. He mentions sending people away, which may be a reference to expulsions. A likely explanation for this remark is that Schulz was involved in a march or train trip that caused many Jews to die.
From there, Streckenbach described a conversation with Reinhard Heydrich in which Heydrich told them Hitler had issued an order which had to be followed. This happened in August 1941, at least two months before the alleged Hitler Order to commit the Holocaust was given, so it can't be that. A roughly parallel description of all these events is given on the Wikipedia page for Erwin Schulz. That page claims Schulz was responsible for executions in the numbers of tens, hundreds, or thousands. Logically, the order Heydrich referred to must have pertained to those executions or possibly to other tasks given to his Einsatzgruppe, not to some theoretical total extinction order.
Following that, Schulz left the Einsatzgruppen. The story continues at 03:44:
This is a rather explicit denial. The interview continues on like this with various denials from Streckenbach and the people he was speaking with. Streckenbach denied or pled ignorance to the supposed Hitler Order several times. Here's one more excerpt from 28:48:So, and then it was over. I never heard anything again. When was the conference? Did I show the Russians for the first time? And all such stories.
Heidemann: There was nothing about liquidation at that point.
No, there was no talk of liquidation at all. No.
Heidemann: Even when Göring-Heidrich called for the solution of the Jewish question to be pushed forward, he didn't mean liquidation, but rather deportation.
Yes, yes [overlapping with above].
What a prescient comment. David Irving's name comes up here. All this is being said in 1977, two years after Irving's Hitler und seine Feldherren, which (if I'm not mistaken) was the first time he published his explosive hypothesis that Hitler was ignorant of the Holocaust. That Irving's name is used here makes it obvious that this entire conversation developed out of the greater public debate around Irving's hypothesis. It thus becomes totally illogical to claim that what was said here constitutes proof opposite that hypothesis.Who did it? Who said it?
Heidemann: Yes, I mean, I just said that as an example for you. Not because it keeps coming up.
Yes, of course.
Heidemann: Whether the Führer knew about it or not.
The topic will not be settled.
Heidemann: It will never be settled. It will never go away, because, of course, if there's nothing in writing, Irving will be assumed. You tell him that now, if we know, then he'll say, "Yes, and?" These are people who told it because we were right, because it hasn't been in writing for so long. Will this still be discussed in 50 years or 100 years?
The Times article linked above actually refutes its own headline in the body. Streckenbach is quoted as asking the question "did he give the order?" As such he did not know the Hitler Order was given.
In conclusion, the headlines are totally fake and risibly so, for these reasons:
- The story is mere hearsay 35 years removed.
- The storyteller was 75 years old and admitted to memory troubles.
- It's not even new info, just an alternate perspective of known events.
- It refers to conversations had in August of 1941, prior to the supposed Hitler Order.
- Streckenbach learned about executions from the lower-ranked Schulz instead of a higher-up.
- Streckenbach denied and pled ignorant to the supposed Hitler Order.