Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
Pearl Harbor.
Still, Nazi Europe seemed entirely secure at this point. German submarines kept Britain under siege and slowed the American
deployment to Europe. In 1942, renewed German offensives pushed
the Third Reich’s boundaries to the Volga River. With a fi rm hold
over western Europe and its armies advancing steadily in Russia and
North Africa, the Nazi regime had the breathing space to begin the
process of organizing its conquests into a formal empire.
In terms of administration, the workings of the German metropole
remained largely unchanged from the prewar era, and the annexed
territories restored to the fatherland became
Gaue
. Based on the old
Reichstag electoral districts, these Nazi administrative units allowed
party luminaries to exercise sweeping executive powers. The conquered peoples living in the new
Gaue
became eligible for citizenship
if they were suffi ciently “German” or faced expulsion and enslavement if they were not.
The necessity of keeping the Vichy French regime compliant dissuaded the Nazis from formally annexing Alsace-Lorraine, but both
regions came under the authority of the adjoining German
Gaue
. Hitler ordered their
Gauleiters
to return the largely German-speaking
Alsatian population to their Teutonic roots. The result was a program
of forced Germanization that deported hundreds of thousands of Jews
and French-speakers to France, imposed German as the language of
administration and commerce, and imported uniformed teachers
from the Reich to staff the schools. The Germans stripped buildings
370 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
of French architectural features, pulled down statues of Joan of Arc,
burned French books, and decreed that wedding rings be worn on
the right hand, in the proper German fashion. Speaking French or
even wearing berets brought fi nes and imprisonment, but those who
embraced their new Germanness had the dubious privilege of becoming eligible for conscription into Hitler’s army.
The Reich Ministry of the Interior was responsible for creating a uniform administrative system for the occupied territories
that the Nazis did not annex. Not surprisingly, military viceroys
and civilian governors answered directly to Hitler, who tended to
make policy decisions based on personal whims. This meant that
there never was a coherent system of Nazi imperial rule. The Third
Reich actually governed Europe through a patchwork arrangement
of satellite states, puppet regimes, military governments, and civil
administrations.
In the occupied western territories Hitler was generally willing
to make a show of following the Hague Conventions on conquest
and occupation so long as their populations accepted their subject status passively. This policy produced the standard system of indirect
rule that was common to most empires. Werner Best, the chief of the
civil administration in France and Reich plenipotentiary in Denmark,
described the German version of governance in western Europe as
wenig zu regieren
(govern little). This approach was born of the
same realities that shaped earlier imperial administrative systems:
the Nazis lacked the manpower and resources to rule directly. With
only three thousand offi cials in all of occupied France, the German
administration had no choice but to rely on French bureaucrats and
policemen.19 This meant they had to temper their demands on subject
populations out of sheer necessity.
The Nazis treaded the most gently in Denmark and Norway
because they considered Scandinavians fellow Aryans. Overruling
the generals who lobbied for military rule, Hitler placed the Danes
and Norwegians under the German Foreign Offi ce. In Denmark, German troops had orders not to offend the Danes’ national honor, and
the government that surrendered in 1940 ran the country under German supervision until limited Danish resistance forced the Nazis to
assert more direct control in 1943. In Norway, King Haakon escaped
to Britain, but the Germans found willing allies in Vidkun Quisling
and a small group of Norwegian fascists. Quisling’s role in passing
France under the Nazis 371
Norwegian military secrets to the Nazis made him so unpopular that
his name became synonymous with treason, but the Germans still
managed to cobble together an effective government of Norwegian
ministers under his nominal supervision.
In the Low Countries, the Nazi regime similarly ruled through
senior bureaucrats after the Dutch and Belgian prime ministers
established governments in exile in London. Queen Wilhelmina of
the Netherlands also escaped, but King Leopold III let the Germans
capture him. His unexpected decision to surrender the Belgian army
during the Nazi invasion left the Allied forces vulnerable and cost
him much of his legitimacy after the Belgian government in Britain
repudiated his actions. The Austrian Nazi Party functionary Artur
Seyss-Inquart was the
Reichskommissar
in the Netherlands, while
Belgium’s strategic value as a staging area for the air war against
Britain kept it under direct military rule. The Germans had to carry
out the day-to-day administration of both countries through highranking civil servants in key government ministries and insisted on
direct control over only the police and security services.
While most western Europeans tried to keep the Nazis at arm’s
length, as in all imperial societies there were still individuals who
made themselves useful to the conquering regime. Some were committed fascists who enthusiastically sought an infl uential role in the
new Europe by forging an alliance with the Nazis, but Hitler distrusted them as potential competitors. They also lacked suffi cient popular support to play an effective role in indirect rule. The most useful
Nazi intermediaries were actually the civil servants who remained at
their posts. Some simply hoped to spare their countrymen from the
abuses of direct imperial rule, but others were apolitical functionaries who advanced their careers through service to the new regime.
Jacobus Lambertus Lentz, the head of the Inspectorate for Population
Registers, was one such opportunist who helped the Nazis implement
a highly effi cient identity card system in the Netherlands because the
Dutch government had blocked his plans for a similar system on the
grounds that it treated citizens like criminals.20
Eastern Europeans, by comparison, did not have the opportunity to
collaborate in similar fashion. While the Nazis created puppet regimes
in the Balkans, they followed a hybrid imperial/colonial strategy in
the east that aimed to either exploit the labor of subject populations
or destroy them entirely to create room for German settlers. These
372 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
agendas were obviously contradictory, for it was impossible to wring
wealth out of people that had been exterminated. As an army logistics
expert in the Ukraine warned: “If we shoot the Jews, let the prisoners
of war die, allow much of the big city population to starve to death,
we cannot answer the question: who will then produce economic
assets here?”21 The Nazis’ imperial incoherency was due primarily
to the competition between civil administrators, labor ministry offi cials, central planners, social scientists,
Gauleiters
, and SS ideologues
to advance their personal agendas in the occupied eastern territories.
The result was a sort of reverse eastward barbarian invasion with the
Nazis playing the role of the Goths and Huns who had preyed on the
Roman Empire.
The Poles were the fi rst to suffer the consequences of the German
eastern imperial agenda. Just as the delegates to the Berlin Conference redrew the political map of Africa, the Nazis reordered what was
left of Poland. To populate this new eastern frontier, Heinrich Himmler’s Commissariat for the Strengthening of German Nationhood
recruited two million ethnic Germans from throughout the region.
After carving out German settlement colonies, they left the Poles a
rump state called the General Government of the Occupied Polish
Territories. Rejecting the Poles’ right to nationhood, the Nazi imperial
regime set out to destroy them as a people. It banished the Polish language from government, cut wages, instituted crushing taxes, plundered bank accounts, and banned all cultural activities. Even though
they were burdened by Polish deportees from the annexed western
regions, the General Government’s population of eleven million still
shrank at the rate of three thousand per day as the Poles perished
from violence, disease, and starvation.22
Occupied Poland’s governor-general and Reich minister, Hans
Frank, alternatively depicted the Nazi rump state as part of the German fatherland and a model settlement colony. In fact, the Nazi
imperial regime in Poland was an incoherent mess. Frank could
not even decide whether he wanted to turn the Poles into helots
or exterminate them. It also proved embarrassingly diffi cult to fi x
the boundary between citizen and subject in a population where
intermarriage between Germans and Poles was not uncommon. To
further complicate matters, the Nazis discovered illiterate “renegade
Germans” who had betrayed their membership in the
Volk
by adopting elements of Polish culture. Frank’s offi cials therefore had to issue
France under the Nazis 373
special identity badges to distinguish who was really a German and
who was not.
The German imperial agenda in the Soviet occupied territories was
even more incoherent and bloody. Here too social scientists seeking
to prove their racist
Lebensraum
theories vied with fortune-hunting party functionaries and strategically minded generals to set the
agenda in the newly conquered lands. Imagining the possibilities of
a German version of the North American frontier, Nazi ideologues
came up with fantastically unrealistic but chillingly barbarous plans.
They envisioned eliminating as many as thirty million Slavs through
planned famines and mass prophylactic and sterilization programs.
In their place they expected to settle millions of ethnic Germans in
agrarian soldiers’ colonies based on the ancient Roman model. Hitler
spoke of linking these settlements to the Reich through enormous
raised roads and building double-decker trains to take German veterans to Crimean vacation resorts.
This was pure fantasy, and the Nazis struggled to institute the
most basic and rudimentary systems of imperial rule in the Soviet
east. Offi cially,
Reichsleiter
Alfred Rosenberg’s Reich Ministry for the
Occupied Eastern Territories (OMi) had authority over all territory up
to two hundred kilometers behind the front lines. Assuming that German troops would advance to the Urals by the end of 1941, the ministry planned to establish the Reich commissariats of Ostland, Ukraine,
Moscovy, and the Caucasus in the conquered lands. In keeping with
the standard geographical template of imperial administration, these
commissariats would be divided into provincial and district units. Not
content to wait for the expected fl ood of settlers from the Reich, the
Ethnic German Liaison Offi ce focused on organizing local communities of ethnic Germans into privileged settlement colonies.
In practice, the Nazis’ shifting military fortunes meant that they
were able to establish only the Ostland and Ukrainian commissariats.
The OMi was also profoundly impotent when it came to actual imperial rule. The ministry’s functionaries, whose yellow-brown uniforms
earned them the derisive nickname of “gold pheasants,” could not
control the
Gauleiters
who used personal ties to Hitler to turn the
commissariats into personal fi efs. Hermann Göring’s Central Offi ce of
the Four-Year Plan, Fritz Sauckel’s labor recruiting agency, and Albert
Speer’s armaments ministry also undercut Rosenberg’s authority by
following their own extractive agendas.
374 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Reichsführer
Heinrich Himmler, however, was the true power in
the east. Although it was technically subordinate to the OMi, his SS
exercised real authority in the Nazi commissariats through its control
of the police and security forces. Himmler’s troops operated independently in their campaign to murder Jews and Soviet commissars and
turned the Ukraine and Ostland into unoffi cial SS police states. The
Reichsführer
also pursued his own pet projects, such as the
Hegewald
(forest reserve) that was to be the prototype for a string of fortifi ed
SS colonies for ethnic Germans designed to hold the conquered territories against Soviet counterattacks.
Although the Nazis never realized their genocidal ambition to
wipe out the entire population of the east, they treated conquered
Slavic peoples as an exploitable and expendable resource. This was
a grim departure from the standard imperial model. Even the most
brutal empire builders in earlier eras recognized the inherent value
of suffi ciently pacifi ed subject communities. Furthermore, European
settlers in Australia and the Americas did not explicitly seek to exterminate indigenous populations; they merely took advantage of the