Göring. A Biography

(Michael S) #1
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literally from their morning Völkischer Beobachter that they had
been axed. Over at the Foreign Ministry Neurath was replaced
by the haughty Joachim von Ribbentrop, while the Ministry of
Economics  currently though inconspicuously held by Göring
himself  went to Walter Funk, who was indeed a well-known
homosexual.
Hitler consoled Göring with Blomberg’s old rank, field
marshal  no mean consolation, of course, since he thus out-
ranked every other officer in the Reich. For two hours on Feb-
ruary , Hitler offered his own account of these last weeks, while
his senior generals and admirals clustered in a semicircle around
him and Göring. Göring had appeared carrying a field mar-
shal’s baton. (It was probably the only such baton to be fished
out of a stinking bog of intrigue, the army’s illustrious Erich von
Manstein reflected.) Hitler spared no sordid detail of Fritsch’s
felonies before making the only announcement that really mat-
tered  that he had appointed himself supreme commander of
the Wehrmacht.
A few days later, brooding upon the circumstances of his
dismissal, General von Fritsch would surmise, “Above all, some-
body must have systematically and deliberately poisoned the
Führer’s confidence in me.” He suspected Himmler, and even
Blomberg. “For the last four years,” he meditated, “he [Blom-
berg] has not been honest with me. But there must be some spe-
cial reason  otherwise this lack of trust of the Führer and be-
trayal by Göring defy comprehension.”


Field Marshal Hermann Göring  how grand that sounded! 
would have to preside over the court of honor now convened to
hear the Fritsch case. Raeder, Brauchitsch, and two legal asses-
sors would assist him. But now his position was markedly differ-
ent from two weeks earlier. No longer in the running for either

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