Göring. A Biography

(Michael S) #1


At a Nuremberg rally early in September  Hitler had pro-
nounced, “In a few weeks the dice will roll!” At this rally he and
the right-wing paramilitary organization had set up the “Com-
bat League” (Kampfbund): Colonel Hermann Kriebel, who had
served on the staff of the redoubtable General Erich von
Ludendorff, took military command, and Dr. Max von Scheub-
ner-Richter, a pharmacist, was secretary general. The Combat
League united the private armies in Bavaria  Göring’s SA, the
Reich War Flag (Reichskriegsflagge) headed by Ernst Röhm, and
the Highland League (Bund Oberland); by the end of Septem-
ber  the latter two had agreed to obey the directives of the
SA and Adolf Hitler.
On September , in the rising economic emergency, the
Bavarian prime minister had appointed a General-
Staatskommissar with dictatorial power, and, like Hitler, this
man, Dr. Gustav von Kahr, began talking of using force to in-
stall a right-wing dictatorship in Berlin. General von Lossow was
initially dubious. But neither the general nor Kahr could afford
to hold the Nazis  Hitler’s National Socialists  at arm’s length
for long. When Berlin ordered Lossow to prepare to send Ba-
varian battalions to quell the Communist uprising in Saxony,
Kahr instructed General von Lossow to resume his previous
fruitful contacts with the right-wing organizations to fill the
gaps in his army.
Lossow eventually went further. He updated the opera-
tional plan called Spring Training and gave it a new code name,
Autumn Training. It shortly became clear that the enemy was
neither the French occupation force in the Ruhr nor the Com-
munists in Saxony, but Stresemann’s regime in Berlin. Kahr’s
deputy made this plain in a rabble-rousing speech to right-
wingers on October : “We don’t say ‘Let’s Dump Berlin!’ ” he

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