Hitler's Plan to Attack America
by Gerhard Weinberg
Gerhard L. Weinberg is emeritus
professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the
author of A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II (Cambridge
University Press, 1994).
Editor's Note (1999): In his new
book, A Republic, Not an Empire, Patrick Buchanan claims that as of mid-1940
Hitler "was driven by a traditional German policy of Drang nach Osten, the
drive to the East." He did not want war with the West, insists Buchanan.
(Pp. 268-69.) Why then did Hitler, following Pearl Harbor, declare war on the United
States? Buchanan insists this was the irrational act of a madman. In fact,
insists Gerhard Weinberg, it was consistent with an objective Hitler had long
nourished.
It had been an assumption of
Hitler's since the 1920s that Germany would at some point fight the United
States. As early as the summer of 1928 he asserted in his second book (not
published until I did it for him in 1961) that strengthening and preparing
Germany for war with the United States was one of the tasks of the National
Socialist movement. Both because his aims for Germany's future entailed an
unlimited expansionism of global proportions and because he thought of the
United States as a country which with its population and size might at some
time constitute a challenge to German domination of the globe, a war with the
United States had long been part of the future he envisioned for Germany either
during his own rule of it or thereafter.
During the years of his
chancellorship before 1939, German policies designed to implement the project
of a war with the United States had been conditioned by two factors: belief in
the truth in the stab-in-the-back legend on the one hand and the practical
problems of engaging American military power on the other. The belief in the
concept that Germany had lost the First World War because of the collapse at
home -- the stab in the back of the German army -- rather than defeat at the
front automatically carried with it a converse of enormous significance which
has generally been ignored. It made the military role of the United States in
that conflict into a legend. Believing that the German army had not been beaten
in the fighting, Hitler and many others in the country disbelieved that it had
been American participation which had enabled the Western Powers to hold on in
1918 and then move toward victory over Germany. They perceived that to be a
foolish fable, not a reasonable explication of the events of that year. A solid
German home front, which National Socialism would ensure, could preclude defeat
next time; the problem of fighting the United States was not that the
inherently weak and divided Americans could create, field, and support
effective fighting forces, but rather that they were so far away and that the
intervening ocean could be blocked by a large American fleet. Here were the
practical problems of fighting America: distance and the size of the American
navy.
To overcome these practical
obstacles Hitler built up the German navy and began work on a long-range bomber
-- the notorious Amerika Bomber -- which would be capable of flying to New York
and back without refueling. Although the bomber proved difficult to construct,
Hitler embarked on a crash building program of superbattleships promptly after
the defeat of France. In addition, he began accumulating air and sea bases on
the Atlantic coast to facilitate attacks on the United States. In April 1941
Hitler secretly pledged that he would join Japan in a war on the United States.
This was critical. Only if Japan declared war would Germany follow.
As long as Germany had to face the
United States essentially by herself, she needed time to build her own
blue-water navy; it therefore made sense to postpone hostilities with the
Americans until Germany had been able to remedy this deficiency. If, on the
other hand, Japan would come into the war on Germany's side, then that problem
was automatically solved.
Hitler was caught out of town at the
time of Pearl Harbor and had to get back to Berlin and summon the Reichstag to
acclaim war. His great worry, and that of his foreign minister, was that the
Americans might get their declaration of war in ahead of his own. As Joachim
von Ribbentrop explained it, "A great power does not allow itself to be
declared war upon; it declares war on others." He did not need to lose
much sleep; the Roosevelt administration was quite willing to let the Germans
take the lead. Just to make sure, however, that hostilities started
immediately, Hitler had already issued orders to his navy, straining at the
leash since October 1939, to begin sinking American ships forthwith, even
before the formalities of declaring war. Now that Germany had a big navy on its
side (Japan's), there was no need to wait even an hour.
_____
This article is excerpted from
Gerhard Weinberg's Germany, Hitler, and World War II (Cambridge University
Press: 1995). It is reprinted with permission of the author and publisher and
was reposted at TomPaine.com in 1999.
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