Göring. A Biography

(Michael S) #1


Kreipe suggested the name of General Meister. “Meister,”
growled Göring, “is the same type as you. I don’t intend getting
any more black marks from the Führer.”
With Göring’s fighter defenses hamstrung by fuel short-
ages, the RAF now joined in the daylight raiding. On October
, while one thousand American heavies attended to Cologne, a
thousand more RAF bombers attacked Duisburg (and the same
number returned to Duisburg that night). Confronted now
with further “disgraceful failures” by air-force units on the
ground, Göring announced that “in headlong flight, cowardly
individuals  sometimes even entire units  have turned over
undamaged weapons to the enemy.” He again reminded every
soldier of his duty to apprehend such cowards. “Executions,” he
ordered, dropping a broad hint, “do not require prior authori-
zation from me.”
It was a sorry departure from the avuncular and compas-
sionate Hermann Göring who had ruthlessly carpeted generals
like Richthofen and Reichenau in  for arbitrary use of their
powers of life and death over their men.


On October , , the Third White Russian Front attacked
East Prussia  a gigantic force of thirty-five rifle divisions and
two armored corps. The province was defended by nine Ger-
man divisions and a brigade of cavalry. Göring returned to East
Prussia and turned up at Rosengarten wearing the clay-brown
uniform of the Hermann Göring Panzer Corps, which was to
defend this region. He ventured briefly over to the Wolf’s Lair
 now very much the domain of Bormann and Himmler 
then went hunting on Rominten Heath for one last time. After-
ward, he signed some documents that General Kreipe brought
over. “Very friendly reception,” observed the latter after a stroll
with the Reichsmarschall. “He commiserates with me, remarks

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