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Ernst Roehm.
Ernst Julius Röhm, (November 28, 1887 –
July 2, 1934) was an Imperial German army officer and later a Nazi leader. He was a co-founder
of the Sturmabteilung ("Storm Battalion";
SA)[1],
the Nazi Party militia and
later was the SA commander. In 1934, he was executed on Hitler's orders as a
potential rival, although this was done ostensibly as a reaction to
Röhm's well-known homosexual tendencies[2].
Early
career
Ernst Röhm was born in Munich. He was serving as an Oberleutnant (1st
lieutenant) in the 13th Infantry Regiment of the Bavarian Army when World War I began in August 1914. The
following month he was seriously wounded in the face in Lorraine, France and carried the scars the rest of his
life. An efficient officer, he received the Iron Cross and was
promoted to Hauptmann
(Captain) before the war's end.
After the armistice on 11 November 1918, Röhm joined the Freikorps, one of many
private militia
organisations formed in Munich, to put down a Communist insurrection.
He joined the National Socialist German Workers Party
(NSDAP) in 1920 and helped organise the Sturmabteilung (SA). The SA was a
political army that protected the party leadership, battled
opponents such as the Communist Red
Front and terrorised Jews. Röhm
had met Adolf
Hitler the previous year and they became political allies and
close friends.[3]
Following the failed Munich Beer Hall Putsch in early November
1923, Röhm, Hitler, General Erich von
Ludendorff and five others were brought to trial in February
1924 on charges of treason.
Röhm was found guilty and dishonourably discharged from the Reichswehr. He was
sentenced to one year and three months in prison, but was released
immediately after sentencing, on a promise of good behavior.[4] Hitler
also was found guilty and was sentenced to five years imprisonment,
though he only served eight months.
In April 1924, while Hitler was in prison, Röhm helped to create
the Frontbann as a legal
alternative to the then-outlawed SA. He then served in the Reichstag as a member of the
renamed National Socialist Freedom Party. But then differences
arose between them. Röhm resigned from the Reichstag in 1925 and
emigrated to Bolivia. There
he served as a military advisor to the Bolivian army.
SA leader
In September 1930, as a consequence of the Stennes Revolt in
Berlin, Hitler assumed supreme
command of the SA as its new Oberster
SA-Führer. He sent a personal request to Röhm, asking that he
return to serve as the SA's chief of staff. Röhm accepted this
offer and commenced his new assignment in early January 1931. Röhm
brought radical new ideas to the SA and appointed several of his
close friends to its senior leadership.
The SA now numbered over a million. Its traditional function of
party leader escort had been given to the SS, but it continued its street battles
with "Reds" and attacks on Jews. The SA also attacked or
intimidated anyone deemed hostile to the Nazi programme: editors,
professors, politicians, uncooperative local officials or
businessmen.
Under Röhm, the SA also often took the side of workers in
strikes and other labour disputes, attacking strikebreakers and
supporting picket lines. SA intimidation
contributed to the rise of the Nazis, breaking down the electoral
activity of the left-wing parties. However, the SA's
reputation for street violence, heavy drinking and quasi-socialist radicalism was a hindrance.
Another hindrance was the more or less open homosexuality of
Röhm and other SA leaders such as his deputy Edmund Heines. [5][6] In
1931, the Munich Post, a Socialist newspaper,
obtained and published Röhm's letters to a friend in which Röhm
discussed his sexual affairs with men. This resulted in a national
scandal.
By this time, Röhm and Hitler were so close that they addressed
each other as du (the German familiar form of "you"). Besides Röhm,
Hermann
Göring and Joseph Goebbels were the only Nazis who
used du with Hitler and only Röhm addressed Hitler as
"Adolf," rather than "mein Führer."
As Hitler secured national power in 1933, SA men became
auxiliary police and it was the SA that marched into local
government offices to force officials to hand over authority to
Nazis.
Second
revolution
Röhm and the SA regarded themselves as the vanguard of the
"National Socialist revolution." After Hitler's takeover, they
expected radical changes in Germany, with power and rewards for
them. However, Hitler's use of the SA as storm troopers was a
political weapon he no longer needed.
Röhm had been one of the most prominent members of the party's
"socialist" faction. This group took the words
"Sozialistische" and "Arbeiter" ("worker") in the
party's name literally. They largely rejected capitalism (which they associated with Jews)
and pushed for nationalisation of major industrial firms,
expanded worker control, confiscation and redistribution of the
estates of the old aristocracy and social equality. Röhm spoke of a
"second revolution" against "reactionaries" (the National Socialist
label for conservatives), as the National Socialists
had previously dealt with the Communists and Socialists.
All this was threatening to the business community, which had
supported Hitler's rise to power. So Hitler swiftly reassured
businessmen that there would be no "second revolution." Many "storm
troopers" were of working-class origins and had expected a
socialist programme. In fact, it was often said at the time that
members of the SA were like a beefsteak ("brown on the outside and red on the
inside" because many of them were former Communists). They were
now disappointed by the new regime's lack of socialist direction
and also failure to provide the lavish patronage expected. Röhm
even publicly criticized Hitler for his failure to carry through
the National Socialist revolution.
Furthermore, Röhm and his SA colleagues thought of their force
(now over three million strong) as the future army of Germany,
replacing the Reichswehr and its professional officers,
whom they viewed as "old fogies" who lacked "revolutionary spirit."
Röhm wanted to be made Minister of
Defense. In February 1934 he demanded that the Reichswehr
(which under the Treaty of Versailles was limited
to 100,000 men) be merged into the SA to form a true "people's
army."
This was horrifying to the army, with its traditions going back
to Frederick the Great. The army
officer corps viewed the SA as a brawling mob of undisciplined
street fighters and were also concerned of the pervasiveness of
homosexuality and corrupt morals within the ranks of the SA. The
entire officer corps opposed Röhm's proposal, insisting honour and
discipline would vanish if the SA gained control. And it appeared
that the SA would settle for nothing less.
Hitler privately shared much of Röhm's animus toward the traditionalists in the
army. But he had gained power with the army's support and he wanted
the army's support to succeed the ailing 86-year-old Paul von
Hindenburg as President.
Meanwhile, Hitler had already begun preparing for the struggle. In
February he told British diplomat Anthony Eden that he planned to reduce the
SA by two thirds. Also in February, he announced that the SA would
be left only a few minor military functions.
Röhm responded with further complaints about Hitler, and began
expanding the armed elements of the SA. To many it appeared as
though the SA was planning or threatening a rebellion. In March,
Röhm offered a compromise whereby a few thousand SA leaders would
be taken into the army, but the army rejected it. [7]
On 11 April 1934, Hitler met with German military leaders.
Hitler informed them of Hindenburg's declining health and proposed
that the Reichswehr support him as the next president. In exchange
Hitler offered to reduce the SA, suppress Röhm's ambitions and
guarantee the Reichswehr would be Germany's only military force. William L.
Shirer asserts Hitler also promised to expand both the army and
navy.
However, both the Reichswehr and business conservatives
continued their anti-SA complaints to President Hindenburg. In
early June 1934, defense minister Werner von Blomberg, on
Hindenburg's behalf, issued an ultimatum to Hitler: unless
political tension in Germany ended, Hindenburg would likely declare
martial law. Hitler
was shocked to hear this from Blomberg, who up to that point had
displayed a near lackey-like attitude toward him. However, when
Hitler went to see the President himself, Hindenburg confirmed the
ultimatum and knowing such a step could forever deprive him of
power, Hitler decided to carry out his pact with the Reichswehr to
suppress the SA. This meant a showdown with Röhm. In Hitler's view,
the army and the SA constituted the only real remaining power
centres in Germany that were independent — not reduced to
submission to the National Socialist state.
The army was willing to submit. Blomberg had the swastika added to the army's
insignia in February and ended the army's practice of preference
for "old army" descent in new officers, replacing it with a
requirement of "consonance with the new government."
Death
Although determined to curb the power of the SA, Hitler put off
doing away with his long-time comrade to the very end. A political
struggle within the party grew, with those closest to Hitler,
including Prussian
premier Hermann Göring, Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels
and SS
Chief Heinrich Himmler positioning
themselves against Röhm. As a means of isolating Röhm, on 20 April
1934, Göring transferred control of the Prussian political police
(Gestapo) to Himmler, who, Göring believed, could be counted on to
move against Röhm. Himmler, Heydrich and Göring used
Röhm's published anti-Hitler rhetoric to support a claim that the
SA was plotting to overthrow Hitler. Himmler and his deputy
Heydrich, chief of the SS Security Service (the SD), assembled a
dossier of manufactured evidence to suggest that Röhm had been paid
twelve million marks by France to overthrow Hitler.
Leading officers were shown falsified evidence on June 24 that Röhm
planned to use the SA to launch a plot against the government
(Röhm-Putsch). [8]
By this time, these stories were officially recognised. Reports of
the SA threat were passed to Hitler and he knew it was time to
finally act. Meanwhile Göring, Himmler, Heydrich and Victor Lutze (at Hitler's direction) drew
up lists of people in and outside the SA to be killed. Himmler and
Heydrich issued marching orders to the SS, while Sepp Dietrich went
around showing army officers a purported SA execution list.
Meanwhile, Röhm and several of his companions went away on
holiday at a resort in Bad Wiessee. On June 28, Hitler phoned Röhm
and asked him to gather all the SA leaders at Bad Wiessee on June
30 for a conference. Röhm agreed, apparently unsuspicious.
The date of June 30 marked the beginning of the Night of the Long Knives. At
dawn on 30 June, Hitler flew to Munich and then drove to Bad Wiessee, where he
personally arrested Röhm and the other SA leaders. All were
imprisoned at Stadelheim Prison in Munich. From 30
June to 2 July 1934, the entire leadership of the SA was purged,
along with many other political adversaries of the Nazis.
Hitler was uneasy authorizing Röhm's execution and gave Röhm an
opportunity to commit suicide. On July 2, he was visited by
SS-Brigadeführer Theodor Eicke (then Kommandant of the Dachau concentration camp)
and SS-Obersturmbannführer Michael
Lippert, who laid a pistol on the table, told Röhm he had ten
minutes to use it and left. Röhm refused and stated "If I am to be
killed, let Adolf do it himself."[9] Having
heard nothing in the allotted time, Eicke and Lippert returned to
Röhm's cell to find him standing. Röhm had his bare chest puffed
out in a gesture of defiance as they shot him.[10] He was
buried in the Westfriedhof (Western Cemetery) in Munich.
The purge of the SA was legalized the next day with a
one-paragraph decree: the Law Regarding Measures of State
Self-Defence. At this time no public reference was made to the
alleged SA rebellion; instead there were generalised references to
misconduct, perversion, and some sort of plot. John
Toland noted that Hitler had long been privately aware that
Röhm and his SA associates were homosexuals; although he
disapproved of their behaviour, he stated that 'the SA are a band
of warriors and not a moral institution.' [11]
National Socialist propaganda now made use of their sexual
orientation as justification of the executions.
A few days later, the claim of an incipient SA rebellion was
publicised and became the official reason for the entire wave of
arrests and executions. Indeed, the affair was labeled the
"Röhm-putsch" by German historians, though after World War II it has
usually been modified as the "alleged Röhm-putsch" or known as the
"Night of the Long Knives." In a speech on July 13, Hitler alluded
to Röhm's homosexuality and explained the purge as chiefly defence
against treason. [12]
See also
References
Notes
- ^ Simkin, John. "Ernest Roehm". Spartacus
Educational. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/GERroehm.htm. Retrieved
2009-03-12.
- ^
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Homosexuals_and_the_Third_Reich.html
- ^
Steakley, James. "Homosexuals and the Third
Reich" Jewish Virtual Library
- ^
Robert Payne, The Life and Death of Adolf Hitler, p. 192
(Praeger Publishers, 1973).
- ^ Machtan, Lothar (2002). The Hidden
Hitler. Basic Books. p. 107. ISBN
0465043097.
- ^
William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of
the Third Reich, p. 120 (Simon and Schuster, 1960).
- ^ Fest, Joachim. Hitler.
pp. 467–470. ISBN ISBN
0-15-602754-2.
- ^ Evans, Richard. The Third Reich in
Power. p. 30. ISBN ISBN
0-14-303790-0.
- ^
Shirer (1960), p. 221.
- ^
Evans (2005), p. 33.
- ^
Irving, David. Hitler's
War.
- ^
Fest, Joachim. Hitler.
pp. 473–487. ISBN ISBN
0-15-602754-2.
Bibliography
- Evans, Richard J. (2005) The Third Reich in Power ISBN
1-59420-074-2
- Fest, Joachim (2004) Inside Hitler's Bunker: The Last Days
of the Third Reich, ISBN 0-374-13577-0
- Irving, David Hitler's War. London: Focal Point
Publications. ISBN 1-872197-10-8.
- Shirer, William L. (1960). The
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York: Simon &
Schuster. ISBN
0-671-72869-5.
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