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The Bunker is an account, written by
American journalist James P.
O'Donnell, of the history of the Führerbunker in early 1945, as well as the
last days of German dictator Adolf Hitler. It was first published in
1978.
With works by Hugh Trevor-Roper and Joachim Fest, The
Bunker is considered one of the defining works on Hitler's
last days. However, unlike many other accounts, O'Donnell spent
considerable time on other, less-famous residents of the bunker.
Additionally, unlike the more academic works by historians, the book
takes a journalistic approach.
Creation
During World War
II, O'Donnell worked in the U.S. Army Signal
Corps. On July 1, 1945, he was mustered out and immediately
took a position as German bureau chief for Newsweek magazine. On July 4, he arrived
in Berlin with instructions to
get details on Hitler's last days, as well as information on Eva Braun (whose existence
was just emerging).
Soon after arriving, he traveled to the bunker, which was mainly
overlooked by troops (who were more interested in the Reich Chancellory). He found it guarded by
two Russian soldiers, and for
the price of two packs of cigarettes, he gained access to it. He
found the bunker a flooded, cluttered, stinking mess.
Ironically (and essential, given his later work), the bunker had
not, even at this late point, been systematically investigated by
the Russians. Lying around for anyone to pick up were such historic
items as Hitler's appointment book, Martin Bormann's personal diary, the
battle log for Berlin, and segments of Joseph Goebbels' diary. Right in front
of O'Donnell, a British colonel took as a "war souvenir" a blueprint for a
reconstruction of Hitler's hometown Linz, in Austria. This historic document (brooded over
by Hitler during his last days) ended up over the colonel's fireplace in Kent.
As the new bureau chief, O'Donnell wrote about developments,
such as the Russian discovery and identification (after several
mistakes) of Hitler's body in mid-May of the same year. In August,
he came upon a strange sight - the Russians were apparently making
a documentary reconstructing Hitler's
final days.
Although the bunker fell within the Russian sector of Berlin,
and even though many of the survivors were captured by the Soviets,
it was the Western powers who revealed the first accurate account
of Hitler's death. The British historian Hugh Trevor-Roper, on
November 1, held a press conference
(covered by O'Donnell) where he revealed the generally-accepted
theory of Hitler's death.
While O'Donnell agreed with Trevor-Roper's account save for some
minor details (and, in The Bunker, continues to agree with
it), he was unsatisfied with this account. Some reasons he gave
were:
- Trevor-Roper only had access to two witnesses - Erich Kempka,
Hitler's chauffeur, and
Else Krüger,
Bormann's secretary. When he wrote The Last Days of Hitler
the following year, he only had access to two more witnesses -
Hitler secretary Gerda Christian and Hitler Youth leader
Artur Axmann.
- The vast majority of the major witnesses were captured by the
Soviets and, without being charged with any crimes, spent the next
ten years in Russian captivity. Because the Soviets kept denying
that Hitler was really dead, they refused to release their
interrogation notes to the other Allies.
- Accounts of the bunker centered on major figures, such as
Hitler and Goebbels, while paying scant attention to more minor
figures. Usually, such accounts stopped after the death of Hitler
(or, in some cases, Goebbels). Except for people looking for
Bormann (who, for many years, was thought to have survived), nobody
bothered writing an account of the "bunker breakout" after
Goebbels' death.
In 1969, O'Donnell met Albert Speer, who had just published his
memoirs
(he wrote an article on Speer for Life, published
in 1970). At this point, O'Donnell realized that many of the
aforementioned witnesses had long since been released by the
Soviets. He began to track them down.
Over the next six years, O'Donnell narrowed his list of
witnesses to about 50, and embarked on a project to collate their
stories. He usually had these witnesses read his work to verify its
authenticity. The book was the result.
Witnesses
While O'Donnell had 50 witnesses, some saw more than others.
Below is a rough list of his main sources. He singled out these
sources by eliminating individuals who never saw Hitler after April
22, 1945.
The below observers were captured by the Soviets and held for a
decade, and were thus unavailable for many of the initial accounts
of Hitler's death.
While most people were cooperative, a few didn't speak to
O'Donnell. Johanna
Wolf, another Hitler secretary, declined to talk since she was
a "private" secretary. Walter Bormann also refused to cooperate, in
this case because of family connections (he was Martin Bormann's
brother). Many people who had been close to Hitler in the final
days, most notably Ambassador Walter Hewel, an old
friend of Hitler's, committed suicide after the break-out. Many more
witnesses died in Soviet captivity, such as Dr. Werner Haase, the
last physician to attend Hitler, who had already been gravely ill
with tuberculosis.
Likewise, other important witnesses, such as Johann
Rattenhuber, survived Russian captivity, but died so soon after
their release that they could never be properly interrogated.
Timeline
and Overview
O'Donnell established the following timeline, which corresponds
with most other accounts of the bunker.
- 1945 January 16. Hitler returns to Berlin and enters the
bunker.
- March 19. Speer visits Hitler in an attempt to stop his
"scorched earth" policy. He fails, but later goes on to sabotage
the programme.
- April 12. American and British troops stop marching towards
Berlin, allowing the Russians free rein, much to the horror of the
bunker inhabitants. Also, Franklin D. Roosevelt dies,
creating a short-lived euphoria among top Nazis.
- April 15. Eva Braun arrives at the bunker.
- April 20. Hitler's 56th birthday. In a short, one-hour
ceremony, Nazi leaders such as Hermann Göring and Heinrich
Himmler, gather in Berlin to celebrate, then leave immediately
afterwards, never to see Hitler again.
- April 22. Hitler suffers a nervous breakdown
and finally admits that Germany will lose the war. He transfers
most of the bunker staff to Berchtesgaden, and allows the German High
Military Command (under Wilhelm Keitel and Alfred Jodl) to leave
as well. He resolves to commit suicide, although a visit from
Goebbels apparently causes him to hold off on this for a few days.
Magda Goebbels
brings all six of her children to live in the bunker.
- April 23. Hitler expels Göring from the Nazi Party after an apparent
misunderstanding.
- April 24. Speer returns to say good-bye to Hitler, Braun, and
the Goebbels.
- April 28. Hitler learns (via a newswire) of Himmler's attempt
to betray him and negotiate a separate peace treaty. Hitler expels
him from the Nazi Party, and has his representative, Hermann
Fegelein, killed the next day.
- April 29. Hitler marries Braun shortly after midnight. He
dictates his last will and testament.
- April 30. In the afternoon, Hitler and Braun hold a farewell
ceremony and commit suicide together. Their bodies are inexpertly
burned.
- May 1. Magda Goebbels drugs her six children, then kills them
with cyanide. Afterwards,
Joseph and Magda Goebbels commit suicide together outside the
bunker. Their bodies are, like those of the Hitlers, inexpertly
burned.
- May 1-2. The breakout. The remaining members of the bunker
staff escape in three separate groups, each to a different
fate.
- May 2. Around noon, Russian troops first enter the bunker,
finding Johannes Hentschel the sole
remaining occupant.
Some of the above dates can be confusing, as Hitler kept unusual
hours - he typically slept until noon, went to bed around dawn, and
held his military conferences around midnight.
See also Hitler's death.
Methodology and
Controversy
O'Donnell based the book on interviews. When witnesses
disagreed, he evaluated them based on the "reliability" of their
other statements, the agreement/disagreement with other witnesses,
and with his intuition. Many critics
(especially those from academic backgrounds) have taken issue with
this methodology. Anticipating this, O'Donnell wrote in the
prologue:
-
- Just how close this composite account comes to historical
truth, to the kind of documentation an academic historian insists
on, I simply cannot say. Nor is it overtly important to my purpose.
I am a journalist, not a historian. I ring doorbells; I do not
haunt archives. What I was looking for is what I believe many
people look for, psychological truth.
O'Donnell asserted that his method - interviewing the witnesses
- is superior to the methods used by academics, noting that much of
the written documentation was burned or otherwise destroyed in the
final days of the war. Also, written accounts do not allow the
writer to "read" a person's expression. O'Donnell even noted that
many of the people he interviewed, to make a point, would literally
"act out" scenes, a touch not found in historical archives.
Furthermore, he disputed the reliability of the interrogations
of witnesses in 1945, which are used as primary sources by most
historians. He argued that these interrogations, because of the
recent occurrence of the bunker events, the end of the war, and
worries over possible criminal charges, were about as accurate as
"asking the shell-shocked to describe exactly the burst of
artillery." Moreover, many witnesses admitted that they either lied
or withheld information during their 1945 interviews, mainly due to
pressure from their interrogators (this was especially true of
those captured by the Soviets). O'Donnell argued that the witnesses
needed time to "digest" their experiences.
However, many critics dispute whether this method was the most
reliable. The most cited example was O'Donnell's complete
acceptance of Albert Speer's claim to have tried to assassinate Hitler. While many professional
historians dispute this claim due to lack of evidence, O'Donnell
wrote about it unquestioningly. It is arguable that, if one
compares the accounts written in The Bunker with those in
Inside the Third Reich,
that O'Donnell presents the supposed assassination attempt as more
dramatic and purposeful. Admittedly, O'Donnell befriended Speer,
and interviewed him 17 times for the book, more than any other
witness.
O'Donnell also used hearsay evidence. He used Dr. Schenck for this
on numerous occasions, first to discuss Hitler's health (since the
doctor at the scene, Haase, died in Russian captivity), and to
discuss Hitler's final conversation with his friend Walter Hewel
(who committed suicide right in front of Schenck).
O'Donnell makes several departures from other theories of the
bunker events, many of which are criticized because of the above
methodology. To name a few:
- He held that the Russians completely botched the investigation
into Hitler's death. As he saw firsthand, the Soviets did not
properly evaluate the "crime scene." Also, in his capacity as a
Berlin journalist, he argued that either paranoia or a desire to
embarrass the West led Joseph Stalin to deny Hitler's death, and
with it, to deny the May 15, 1945 autopsy of Hitler's corpse, which
was verified by dental records. O'Donnell holds that whatever
remains of Hitler still existed by this date were cremated and
scattered, and that any parts of the corpse the Russians claimed to
have afterwards were fabricated to satisfy Stalin (part of this
theory was disproven by DNA tests of bone fragments after
O'Donnell's death).
- He holds that Magda Goebbels was alone responsible for the
deaths of her children, although someone must have given her the
cyanide, and her husband was supportive of this. He bases this on
Madga's personal correspondence, as well as interviews with the
survivors. Some historians don't believe Magda Goebbels was capable
of those actions alone.
- From his interviews, he concludes that Hitler did indeed die
from shooting himself in the head while simultaneously biting into
a cyanide capsule. For the ones who claim this type of suicide was
near impossible, he sardonically pointed to Walter Hewel's suicide
a few days later - he killed himself in the same way, after
receiving the same instructions Dr. Haase gave Hitler.
- He claims that nobody heard the shot that killed Hitler.
Whenever he asked witnesses who were standing by the double doors
to Hitler's study, which were thick enough to muzzle such a sound,
they claimed they heard nothing. He put forth that ones who did
make this claim in 1945 withdrew it, saying that Allied
interrogators pressured them into saying it. Some people who claim
to have heard a shot were not even present at the scene.
One of the most unusual claims made by O'Donnell involve the
death of Hermann Fegelein, which has never been
fully resolved. Witnesses claimed that he was killed partly because
Hitler suspected his mistress at the time was a spy. O'Donnell created an
entire theory out of this, and makes the claim that Fegelein's
mistress actually was a spy, possibly a Hungarian working for British intelligence.
However, he could not uncover a single scrap of evidence to support
his theory, and the British Official Secrets Act deadline in 1975
passed without any corroboration. O'Donnell clung to the theory,
claiming that perhaps something would come up after the 1995
deadline; but this passed too without any further evidence before
O'Donnell died in 1990.
Although O'Donnell died before Soviet accounts of the
interrogations became available to Western scholars, he made clear
that he was extremely suspicious of the contents of the Russian
archives. In addition to such testimony being based on
politically-biased preconceptions, many of the Soviet-captured
witnesses told him they were coerced into making statements and
admissions that were entirely false. Unlike the Americans or
British, the Russians apparently had no qualms about using extreme
methods to gain information (or obtain the type of answers they
wanted to hear).
The
Breakout
O'Donnell's main contribution to Führerbunker literature was his
account of the "breakout" that occurred on the night of May 1-2,
1945 - no other historian (or writer) attempted to describe this
event before him. He devotes two chapters to it.
The survivors divided into three groups (a trio of
higher-ranking military men, including General Hans
Krebs, stayed behind to drink, sing, and commit suicide). The
three groups left on the evening of May 1, each waiting a period of
time after the others left. Their plan was to head underground, in
the city's subway line, to emerge to the northwest,
outside of the Russian-occupied zone of Berlin. The three groups
were:
- Group 1, led by Wilhelm Mohnke. This group awkwardly
made its way north to a German army hold-out on the Prinzenallee,
and included Dr. Schenck and the female secretaries. The
secretaries, upon reaching the outpost, broke off with the help of
a Luftwaffe lieutenant;
they were all later raped numerous times by Russian soldiers,
although they eventually made it to the British/American lines.
However, Traudl
Junge suffered a fractured skull as a result of her resistance
during her gang rape. She was later held for several months as the
"personal prisoner" of a high-ranking Russian officer.[1] Mohnke
and several other men stayed and were captured by the Russians,
then treated to dinner with General Vladimir Alexei Belyavski, who
tried to get them drunk with vodka to get information on Hitler's death. They
didn't talk, and were shipped off to Moscow.
- Group 2, led by Johann Rattenhuber. This group made
it to Invalidenstraße northwest of the
bunker, but many of its members were captured by the Russians.
- Group 3, led by Werner Naumann, and is most notable for
including Martin
Bormann. This group completely missed a turn off Friedrichstraße and walked right into
Russian gunfire. Bormann and his companion, Dr. Ludwig
Stumpfegger, were almost certainly intoxicated, and
apparently committed suicide with cyanide capsules after realizing
the group had run into trouble (this was confirmed by the 1972
discovery of their bodies, which was cinched by DNA tests in 1999). Most surviving members of this
group were captured by the Russians. Hans Baur, Hitler's pilot, was severely
wounded and almost committed suicide. Instead, he was captured, and
the Russians put him through many brutal interrogations based on
speculation that he might have flown Hitler or Bormann to safety at
the last minute.
Misch and Hentschel remained behind in the bunker. Misch left
(with Hitler's portrait of Frederick the
Great) on the morning of May 2, but was soon captured by the
Russians. Hentschel stayed in the bunker, helping some female
Russian army officers loot Eva Braun's room around noon before he
too was taken by the Russians and flown to Moscow.
Trivia
- According to Mohnke, Hitler had wanted to survive until May 5
before committing suicide, so that he could symbolically die on the
same day as Napoleon
Bonaparte, who he admired. However, Mohnke told Hitler that it
was unlikely that Berlin could hold out that long. Moreover, Mohnke
warned Hitler that May 1, being May Day, was a day of symbolic importance for
the Soviets, and that he expected the final Russian push to come
then. This remark apparently caused Hitler to choose April 30 as
his suicide date, before May Day.
- Even decades after 1945, O'Donnell found that many witnesses
retained grudges against each other, and this caused difficulties
in trying to create a composite account - he sarcastically remarked
that there was no "Bunker Reunion Party" for this reason. One of
the main points of contention was actually loyalty to Hitler - even
in the 1970s, many of the witnesses still retained some loyalty to
him, although some changed their minds in later years. Even
individuals who had publicly denounced Hitler retained grudges -
Speer remained unhappy at Hitler's valet, Heinz Linge, because he apparently allowed
Hitler's clothes to fall into disarray. All the bunker
survivors were extremely angry at Speer because of his (claimed)
contemplation of Hitler's assassination - had Speer introduced nerve
gas into the bunker as he claimed to have considered, he would
have ended up killing everyone else in the bunker as well.
- None of Hitler's secretaries married or re-married after
Hitler's death. Junge, a widow
by 1945, never re-married. Christian, who was married at the time,
actually divorced her husband because he escaped
Berlin, and she remained with Hitler (she subsequently never
remarried). Wolf also remained single. The only secretary to get
married was Krueger, who worked for Bormann, not Hitler
(ironically, according to the other secretaries, Krueger was
Bormann's mistress; she later married her British interrogation
officer). O'Donnell, noticing this pattern, somewhat cruelly
suggested that "Sigmund Freud" might have something to
say about this, but didn't go into a psychological
explanation himself.
- In the movie version of The Bunker, the escape itself
is not shown, but Mohnke is shown with a map of Berlin, on which he
has traced a red line to mark a planned escape. This map is a
duplicate of the one O'Donnell included in his book and,
ironically, does not represent Mohnke's planned escape route, but
rather, the unsuccessful escape route he took.
- Although, in the book, O'Donnell claimed that Rochus Misch ended up
with Hitler's portrait of Frederick the Great, he later learned
that Hans Baur took it with him (and subsequently lost it when
captured by the Russians). Although this mistake was never
corrected in the book (even in reprints), it was corrected in the
film version.
- In the book, O'Donnell takes a highly dramaturgical approach to
the events, suggesting several times that a playwright such as Bertolt Brecht might be better suited to
tell the story than a historian or journalist. He also, at various
points, goes off on tangents, such as quoting the Roman historian
Tacitus and comparing the
Roman court with the "Hitler court." Within the movie, Nicholaus von Below becomes O'Donnell's
mouthpiece in this area.
- Despite trying to retain objectivity, O'Donnell
admitted in the book that, at times, he had difficulty putting up
with the people he interviewed, as well as other writers who
disagreed with him. He especially expressed frustration when
interviewing several of Hitler's secretaries who, at the time of
his reporting, retained admiration for Hitler, and who were
constantly telling him to let "history be the judge" of his
actions. He also got into an argument with Hannah Arendt and takes a swipe at her theory
of the banality of evil, although he never directly names
Arendt. He also attacks Holocaust denier
David Irving
during a section when he documented the burning of numerous
documents in the bunker before Hitler's death. In response to
Irving's claims that no documentation exists that explicitly
records Hitler ordering genocide, he sarcastically remarked that "a
man capable of burning millions of innocent people was more than
capable of burning a few documents."
- One unusual variance in accounts of Hitler's suicide involve
Magda Goebbels - a few people who were present at Hitler's study
claimed she interrupted his and Braun's solitude, only to be
brushed off. However, all the other witnesses present at the scene
reported that Magda was not present at all. The variance was
unusual because, as O'Donnell noted, it is unlikely that people
standing in the same room would have failed to see that. He
concluded that this scene was added by individuals who were trying
to make Magda look better, as it implies that, a day before she
killed her children, she was still trying to make Hitler change his
mind and leave Berlin (unlike The Bunker, the movie Der
Untergang included this scene, despite its historical
dubiousness).
See also
References
- ^
The Hitler Book: The Secret Dossier Prepared For Stalin From
The Interrogations of Hitler's Personal Aides, New York, 2005,
ISBN 1-58648-366-8