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Revisiting The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich

Recently reissued, William L. Shirer's seminal 1960 history of Nazi Germany is still important reading

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  • By Ron Rosenbaum
  • Smithsonian magazine, February 2012, Subscribe
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Nazi rally in Nuremberg
William L. Shirer, who witnessed a 1934 Nazi rally in Nuremberg, would link the criminality of individuals to communal frenzy. (Corbis)

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The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany

by William L. Shirer
Simon & Schuster, 2011
(Fiftieth Anniversary Edition)

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Nineteen sixty: Only 15 years had passed since the end of World War II. But already one could read an essay describing a “wave of amnesia that has overtaken the West” with regard to the events of 1933 to 1945.

At the time, there was no Spielberg-produced HBO “Band of Brothers” and no Greatest Generation celebration; there were no Holocaust museums in the United States. There was, instead, the beginning of a kind of willed forgetfulness of the horror of those years.

No wonder. It was not merely the Second World War, it was war to the second power, exponentially more horrific. Not merely in degree and quantity—in death toll and geographic reach—but also in consequences, if one considered Auschwitz and Hiroshima.

But in 1960, there were two notable developments, two captures: In May, Israeli agents apprehended Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and flew him to Jerusalem for trial. And in October, William L. Shirer captured something else, both massive and elusive, within the four corners of a book: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. He captured it in a way that made amnesia no longer an option. The issue of a new edition on the 50th anniversary of the book’s winning the National Book Award recalls an important point of inflection in American historical consciousness.

The arrest of Eichmann, chief operating officer of the Final Solution, reawakened the question Why? Why had Germany, long one of the most ostensibly civilized, highly educated societies on earth, transformed itself into an instrument that turned a continent into a charnel house? Why had Germany delivered itself over to the raving exterminationist dictates of one man, the man Shirer refers to disdainfully as a “vagabond”? Why did the world allow a “tramp,” a Chaplinesque figure whose 1923 beer hall putsch was a comic fiasco, to become a genocidal Führer whose rule spanned a continent and threatened to last a thousand years?

Why? William Shirer offered a 1,250-page answer.

It wasn’t a final answer—even now, after tens of thousands of pages from scores of historians, there is no final answer—but Shirer reminded the world of “what”: what happened to civilization and humanity in those years. That in itself was a major contribution to a postwar generation that came of age in the ’60s, many of whom read Shirer as their parents’ Book of the Month Club selection and have told me of the unforgettable impact it had on them.

Shirer was only 21 when he arrived in France from the Midwest in 1925. Initially, he planned to make the Hemingway-like transition from newsman to novelist, but events overtook him. One of his first big assignments, covering Lindbergh’s landing in Paris, introduced him to the mass hysteria of hero worship, and he soon found himself covering an even more profoundly charismatic figure: Mahatma Gandhi. But nothing prepared him for the demonic, spellbinding charisma he witnessed when he took up residence in Berlin in 1934 for the Hearst newspapers (and, later, for Edward R. Murrow’s CBS radio broadcasts) and began to chronicle the rise of the Third Reich under Adolf Hitler.


Nineteen sixty: Only 15 years had passed since the end of World War II. But already one could read an essay describing a “wave of amnesia that has overtaken the West” with regard to the events of 1933 to 1945.

At the time, there was no Spielberg-produced HBO “Band of Brothers” and no Greatest Generation celebration; there were no Holocaust museums in the United States. There was, instead, the beginning of a kind of willed forgetfulness of the horror of those years.

No wonder. It was not merely the Second World War, it was war to the second power, exponentially more horrific. Not merely in degree and quantity—in death toll and geographic reach—but also in consequences, if one considered Auschwitz and Hiroshima.

But in 1960, there were two notable developments, two captures: In May, Israeli agents apprehended Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and flew him to Jerusalem for trial. And in October, William L. Shirer captured something else, both massive and elusive, within the four corners of a book: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. He captured it in a way that made amnesia no longer an option. The issue of a new edition on the 50th anniversary of the book’s winning the National Book Award recalls an important point of inflection in American historical consciousness.

The arrest of Eichmann, chief operating officer of the Final Solution, reawakened the question Why? Why had Germany, long one of the most ostensibly civilized, highly educated societies on earth, transformed itself into an instrument that turned a continent into a charnel house? Why had Germany delivered itself over to the raving exterminationist dictates of one man, the man Shirer refers to disdainfully as a “vagabond”? Why did the world allow a “tramp,” a Chaplinesque figure whose 1923 beer hall putsch was a comic fiasco, to become a genocidal Führer whose rule spanned a continent and threatened to last a thousand years?

Why? William Shirer offered a 1,250-page answer.

It wasn’t a final answer—even now, after tens of thousands of pages from scores of historians, there is no final answer—but Shirer reminded the world of “what”: what happened to civilization and humanity in those years. That in itself was a major contribution to a postwar generation that came of age in the ’60s, many of whom read Shirer as their parents’ Book of the Month Club selection and have told me of the unforgettable impact it had on them.

Shirer was only 21 when he arrived in France from the Midwest in 1925. Initially, he planned to make the Hemingway-like transition from newsman to novelist, but events overtook him. One of his first big assignments, covering Lindbergh’s landing in Paris, introduced him to the mass hysteria of hero worship, and he soon found himself covering an even more profoundly charismatic figure: Mahatma Gandhi. But nothing prepared him for the demonic, spellbinding charisma he witnessed when he took up residence in Berlin in 1934 for the Hearst newspapers (and, later, for Edward R. Murrow’s CBS radio broadcasts) and began to chronicle the rise of the Third Reich under Adolf Hitler.

He was one of a number of courageous American reporters who filed copy under the threat of censorship and expulsion, a threat that sought to prevent them from detailing the worst excesses, including the murder of Hitler’s opponents, the beginnings of the Final Solution and the explicit preparations for upcoming war. After war broke out, he covered the savagery of the German invasion of Poland and followed the Wehrmacht as it fought its way into Paris before he was forced to leave in December 1940.

The following year—before the United States went to war—he published Berlin Diary, which laid out in visceral terms his response to the rise of the Reich. Witnessing a Hitler harangue in person for the first time, he wrote:

“We are strong and will get stronger,” Hitler shouted at them through the microphone, his words echoing across the hushed field from the loudspeakers. And there in the flood-lit night, massed together like sardines in one mass formation, the little men of Germany who have made Nazism possible achieved the highest state of being the Germanic man knows: the shedding of their individual souls and minds—with the personal responsibilities and doubts and problems—until under the mystic lights and at the sound of the magic words of the Austrian they were merged completely in the Germanic herd.

Shirer’s contempt here is palpable, physical, immediate and personal. His contempt is not for Hitler so much as for the “little men of Germany”—for the culture that acceded to Hitler and Nazism so readily. In Shirer one can see an evolution: If in Berlin Diary his emphasis on the Germanic character is visceral, in The Rise and Fall his critique is ideological. Other authors have sought to chronicle the war or to explain Hitler, but Shirer made it his mission to take on the entire might and scope of the Reich, the fusion of people and state that Hitler forged. In The Rise and Fall he searches for a deeper “why”: Was the Third Reich a unique, one-time phenomenon, or do humans possess some ever-present receptivity to the appeal of primal, herd-like hatred?

Writing The Rise and Fall was an extraordinary act of daring, one might almost say an act of literary-historical generalship—to conquer a veritable con­­tinent of information. It remains an awe-inspiring achievement that he could capture that terrain of horror in a mere 1,250 pages.

If Shirer was present at the rise, he was also distant from the fall—and he turned both circumstances to his advantage. Like Thucydides, he had firsthand experience of war and then sought to adopt the analytic distance of the historian. Unlike Thucydides, Shirer had access to the kind of treasure previous historians always sought but mostly failed to find. After the German defeat, the Allies made available warehouses full of captured German military and diplomatic documents—the Pentagon Papers/WikiLeaks of their time—which enabled Shirer to see the war from the other side. He also had access to the remarkably candid interviews with German generals conducted after the surrender by B.H. Liddell-Hart, the British strategic thinker who has been credited with developing the concept of lightning offensive warfare (which the Germans adopted and called “blitzkrieg”).

And by 1960, Shirer also had those 15 years of distance—15 years to think about what he’d seen, 15 years to distance himself and then to return from that distance. He doesn’t pretend to have all the answers; indeed, one of the most admirable attributes of his work is his willingness to admit to mystery and inexplicability when he finds it. Later historians had access—as Shirer did not—to knowledge of the Enigma machine, the British code-breaking apparatus that gave the Allies the advantage of anticipating the movements of German forces—an advantage that changed the course of the war.

Rereading the book, one sees how subtle Shirer is in shifting between telescope and microscope—even, one might say, stethoscope. Within the grand sweep of his gaze, which reached from the Irish Sea to the steppes beyond the Urals, he gives us Tolstoyan vistas of battle, and yet his intimate close-ups of the key players lay bare the minds and hearts behind the mayhem. Shirer had a remarkable eye for the singular, revealing detail. For example, consider the one Eichmann quote he included in the book, in a footnote written before Eichmann was captured.

In Chapter 27, “The New Order” (whose title was intended as an ironic echo of Hitler’s original grandiose phrase), Shirer takes up the question of the actual number of Jews murdered in what was not yet widely called the Holocaust and tells us: “According to two S.S. witnesses at Nuremberg the total was put at between five and six millions by one of the great Nazi experts on the subject, Karl Eichmann, chief of the Jewish office of the Gestapo, who carried out the ‘final solution.’” (He uses Eichmann’s first name, not the middle name that would soon become inseparable from him: Adolf.)

And here is the footnote that corresponds with that passage:

“Eichmann, according to one of his henchmen, said just before the German collapse that ‘he would leap laughing into his grave because the feeling that he had five million people on his conscience would be for him a source of extraordinary satisfaction.’”

Clearly this footnote, mined from mountains of postwar testimony, was intended not merely to substantiate the number of five million dead, but also to illustrate Eichmann’s attitude toward the mass murder he was administering. Shirer had a sense that this question would become important, although he could not have imagined the worldwide controversy it would stir. For Shirer, Eichmann was no bloodless paper pusher, a middle manager just following orders, as Eichmann and his defense lawyer sought to convince the world. He was not an emblem of “the banality of evil,” as the political theorist Hannah Arendt portrayed him. He was an eager, bloodthirsty killer. Shirer will not countenance the exculpation of individual moral responsibility in the “just following orders” defense.

In fact, Shirer had a more encompassing objective, which was to link the obscene criminality of individuals to what was a communal frenzy—the hatred that drove an entire nation, the Reich itself. What distinguishes his book is its insistence that Hitler and his exterminationist drive were a distillation of the Reich, a quintessence brewed from the darkest elements of German history, an entire culture. He did not title his book The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler (although he did a version for young adults by that title), but The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.

It was a bold decision: He wanted to challenge the “Hitler-centric” point of view of previous treatments of the war. Hitler may have been a quintessential distillation of centuries of German culture and philosophy, but Shirer was careful not to let him or that heritage become an excuse for his accomplices.

“Third Reich” was not a term of Hitler’s invention; it was concocted in a book written in 1922 by a German nationalist crank named Arthur Moeller van den Bruck, who believed in the divine destiny of a German history that could be divided into three momentous acts. There was Charlemagne’s First Reich. That was followed by the Second Reich, the one resurrected by Bismarck with his Prussian “blood and iron”—but then betrayed by the “stab in the back,” the supposed treachery of Jews and socialists on the home front that brought the noble German Army defeat just as it was on the verge of victory in November 1918. And thus all Germany was awaiting the savior who would arise to restore, with a Third Reich, the destiny that was theirs.

Here Shirer opened himself to charges of exchanging Hitler-centrism for German-centrism as the source of the horror. But it doesn’t strike me that he attributes the malevolent aspect of the “Germanic” to an ethnic or racial trait—the mirror image of how Hitler saw the Jews. Rather, he sought scrupulously to trace these traits not to genetics but to a shared intellectual tradition, or perhaps “delusion” might be a better word. He tries to trace what you might call the intellectual DNA of the Third Reich, as opposed to its ethnic chromosomal code.

And so in tracing the formation of Hitler’s mind and the Third Reich, Shirer’s magnum opus focuses valuable attention on the lasting impact of the philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte’s feverish series of nationalist speeches beginning in 1807 after the German defeat at Jena (speeches that “stirred and rallied a divided and defeated people,” in Shirer’s words). Hitler was still a youth when he came under the spell of one of his teachers at Linz, Leopold Poetsch, and Shirer brings forth from the shadows of amnesia this nearly forgotten figure, an acolyte of the Pan-German League, who may have been the most decisive in shaping—distorting—the pliant young Adolf Hitler with his “dazzling eloquence,” which “carr[ied] us away with him,” as Hitler describes Poetsch’s effect in Mein Kampf. It was undoubtedly Poetsch, the miserable little schoolteacher, who foisted Fichte on Hitler. Thus, Shirer shows us, fanatical pro-Germanism took its place beside fanatical anti-Semitism in the young man’s mind.

Shirer does not condemn Germans as Germans. He’s faithful to the idea that all men are created equal, but he won’t accede to the relativistic notion that all ideas are equal as well, and in bringing Fichte and Poetsch to the fore, he forces our attention on how stupid and evil ideas played a crucial role in Hitler’s development.

Of course, few ideas were more stupid and evil than Hitler’s notion of his own divine destiny, forbidding, for instance, even tactical retreats. “This mania for ordering distant troops to stand fast no matter what their peril,” Shirer writes, “...was to lead to Stalingrad and other disasters and to help seal Hitler’s fate.”

Indeed, the foremost object lesson from rereading Shirer’s remarkable work 50 years on might be that the glorification of suicidal martyrdom, its inseparability from delusion and defeat, blinds its adherents to anything but murderous faith—and leads to little more than the slaughter of innocents.

And, yes, perhaps one corollary that almost need not be spelled out: There is danger in giving up our sense of selfhood for the illusory unity of a frenzied mass movement, of devolving from human to herd for some homicidal abstraction. It is a problem we can never be reminded of enough, and for this we will always owe William Shirer a debt of gratitude.

Ron Rosenbaum is the author of Explaining Hitler and, most recently, How the End Begins: The Road to a Nuclear World War III.

Adapted from Ron Rosenbaum's introduction to the new edition of The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. Copyright © Ron Rosenbaum. Reprinted by permission of the publisher, Simon & Schuster.


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Comments (55)

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I know a WWII survivor who has a large collection of the magazines "Das 111 Reich" and they are in perfect condition. They go from NR. 6 to NR.23, then 39-42, and 53-57. Please let me know if you are interested in these historical documents/ artifacts or if you know who would be interested in purchasing them. Ann Kelly for Signalman Second Class Robert Gleich

Posted by Ann Kathryn Kelly on December 23,2012 | 03:33 PM

Sarah Vickery affirms that another person's: "...juxtaposition of Auschwitz and Hiroshima is beyond bizarre. Auschwits was indeed the epitome of all that is evil. In stark contrast, the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki were used in the hope of ending the bloodshed of World War II." I, too, would not want to equate the Nazis' attempted genocide with the bombs dropped on Japan. However, this once fairly widespread view of a stark contrast because the bombs were paradoxically the only means to peace, or even the most expeditious route to it, fell into considerable disrepute some time ago. Several historians have shown quite convincingly that peace efforts were already underway with the Japanese, and that they were no longer reluctant to grant an unconditional surrender -- the purported stumbling block to peace, and thereby the indirect raison d'etre for Hiroshima and Nagasaki. While peace on such terms was no longer an obstacle, this was deliberately cited after the event as the reason for having dropped the bombs. So let's not muddy the picture further, when attempting to draw distinctions, by treating one horror as a sign of evil and the other as well-intentioned. It has been argued -- again, plausibly in my view -- that the real intention was to set Stalin's Soviet tyranny straight about who had come out ahead at the end of WW2, and to warn them about their expansionist aims. Others confine this apportioning of blame to a need to soften for the US public the horror that their nation had committed. One or both of these seem far likelier than the claim of the best of intentions via (non-genocidal) mass incineration. But about this we might want to reserve final judgement. Either way, let's not perpetuate a claim that has now been debunked to underscore that other evils are the worst ever (yet) perpetrated in our technological age. Bert Bailey, in Ottawa

Posted by Bert Bailey on May 1,2012 | 03:20 PM

"...B.H. Liddell-Hart, the British strategic thinker who has been credited with developing the concept of lightning offensive warfare (which the Germans adopted and called “blitzkrieg”)." This has been debunked. Even Wikipedia has mention of his subterfuge in connection with this notion. Bert Bailey, in Ottawa

Posted by Bert on May 1,2012 | 02:47 PM

I have read several books concerning Hitler and the events leading up to the 2nd World War in an effort to understand how such horrible events could have happened. It seems to me that Shirer paints the clearest picture of how this came about. He has done exhaustive research and that added to his firsthand knowledge makes it a very credible history. Although it was essentially an extension of WWI aggravated by the dire circumstances of the German people, there remains the desire for more power and territory. I am still searching-how could such hatred for other human beings exist?

Posted by Janice Markuson on April 28,2012 | 12:01 AM

"but also in consequences, if one considered Auschwitz and Hiroshima" I hope the author is not making a moral equivalence between the Nazi execution camps and our use of the atomic bomb to hasten the end of the war.

Posted by Thomas K on April 10,2012 | 07:50 PM

I view Shirer's Germany works as a kind of trilogy, beginning with "Berlin Diary", followed by "Return to Berlin Diary", and only then summed up with "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich". "Berlin Diary" has an immediacy of pre-war and early war events being documented as they happened (and were witnessed firsthand my Mr. Shirer), with a huge sense of foreboding, and a somewhat clear concept of where things were headed, even before the U.S. was directly involved in World War II. The concern about people reporting to work camps and then "disappearing", late in the work, is absolutely chilling, now that we know so much more about what was happening at the time. "Return...", written after the war, has the sense of fatigue and waste, tinged with a want for explanation and retribution, that was no doubt a significant element of worldwide feeling at the time. It is a melancholy and profoundly sad work, documenting the post war agonies of the German people and the establishment of the war crimes trials. "The Rise and Fall.." is the more scholarly and carefully researched volume, which seeks to pull together the larger picture of German Naziism in comprehensive fashion, as opposed to the "you are there" witness of the first two books. All three are important works, and form a sort of continuum when read in order.

Posted by Dutch 1960 on April 2,2012 | 09:42 PM

One of two books about war that I retain (the other is "War Through The Ages"). Shirer writes a personal account of what he heard and saw; this isn't something that was translated by the news media to him. This book is an intimate look within the Third Reich. Nazi propaganda was/is very effective. Previous comments mention that the reparations from WWI were a cause for WWII but this is just Nazi propaganda! Anti-semitism didn't begin with the Nazi's (even Martin Luther believed that the Jews should be annihilated because they murdered Jesus) and it remains strong today as evidenced by the ravings against Israel by Iran's president. Attempts at ethnic cleansing (even mentioned in the Old Testament) continues today and we Americans (along with Europeans before us) aren't completely innocent as can be seen in our treatment of American natives. Normal Germans lost everything twice in 25 years when the government allowed the country to go bankrupt so that it could get out of paying war reparations and again to become dept free to prepare for WWII. This book shows how Hitler and the Nazi Party were able to use these and other events to brainwash the German public. The 'Sitzkrieg' shows they also were effective in brainwashing people in other countries and cultures. Governments and others continue to manipulate people for various reason but especially to prepare for war or other aggressive actions. Evil didn't begin or end with Hitler or the Third Reich but it seems to have culminated there! Each of us must purge racist thoughts from our minds, be aware of manipulation by individuals, governments, religous groups, or other organizations and ultimately we must speak-out when abuses occur. We know that people are 'herd animals' and sometimes we can join the comfort of the 'herd' but there are times when we must as individuals go against the flow. *Note: I am married to a German; live in Germany; work in a German hospital; and Major USAF Retired.

Posted by James Senn on March 18,2012 | 06:27 AM

I am profoundly grateful to Mr. Rosenbaum for solving one of the mysteries of my childhood. As an eleven year old at summer camp in 1972, I read the book, "The Rise and Fall of Adolph Hitler", desperate to understand how human beings could have committed such atrocities. I couldn't stop wondering, if my great grandparents had not emigrated from Germany, would they and my parents have believed or done these horrible things? The book gave me a place to begin and I have never forgotten it. However, so many people have told me over the years that no such book existed, that I started to doubt a very clear memory. Now I understand that it was a book that Shirer wrote specifically for young adults and can look forward to its more famous and complete parent.

Posted by Susan Kohm on March 5,2012 | 08:26 AM

Shirer's book is a great read from a great journalist; yet as history it has it's shortcomings. It fails to see WWII as an extension of WWI. It doesn't take into consideration the effects of Prussian militarism, the treaty of Versailles, the great depression. Lastly it doesn't come to grips with the fact that Hilter failed to get 66% of the voters ballot in the last free election of the German republic; attributing a specific evil to the German people which would exist in any society where opposition results in imprisonment or death. Hitler and his minority captured the German state- they weren't a creation of the German people.

Posted by Rufus on March 2,2012 | 09:22 PM

The review of the book needed a critical analysis of what the book was missing. Hitler rose to power in the context of what happened in Germany post World War I. One main purpose of The Treaty of Versailles was to humiliate and punish Germany. Germany was given the choice to the either to sign the treaty or be invaded. As we see with individuals, so we see with countries – a country or a person that is shamed and humiliated with no hope of being accepted or reintegrated will never become a better person or a better country. In fact the situation will be worse. In this interconnected world, then and now, all nations can either allow something like the Holocaust to happen or nations can work to prevent it from happening. Why don’t other nations look at their role in allowing the Holocaust to happen in the first place? The US was more about punishing Germany after WWI than about creating a place that is safe for everyone.

Posted by Caroline on February 24,2012 | 10:26 PM

On page 94 of the February 2012 issue, in the article about the Third Reich you assert that the knowledge of the Enigma machine, the British code-breaking apparatus gave the Allies the advantage of anticipating the movements of German forces. This is incorrect. The Enigma machine was developed by the German military as an adaptation of a commercial encryption machine invented by Arthur Scherbius. Different versions were used by the army, the navy, and the air forces. Several Polish mathematicians deconstructed the Enigma machine and constructed a rudimentary mechanical device to “break” the Enigma code. (See “Enigma - How the Poles Broke the Nazi Code” by Wladyslaw Kozaczuk and Jerzy Straszak). The Poles and their code-breaking machines were evacuated from Poland just days before the German invasion, and eventually made their way to England, via France. Once at Bletchley Park, the British Code Breaking School, Alan Turing and his team developed an electro-mechanical machine which they called the “bombe” to speed up the de-coding process. A later development was “Colossus,” a completely electronic version that was the first programmable digital computer. The Enigma was the German code-making system. The Colossus was the British code-breaking machine. The Germans were never aware that the Enigma encryption had been compromised.

Posted by Charles G. Gray on February 20,2012 | 01:59 PM

Regarding Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," in my sentiment is a 'short and condensed good read' which only touches the surface of the issues and problems that plagued the German people and nation before and after WWI. Your readers should aim to delve into Richard J. Evans' three volume compendium; "The Coming of the Third Reich," "The Third Reich in Power" and "The Third Reich at War." A masterpiece of astonishing in depth and detailed understanding of the cultural milieu in Germany at the time. A 'Sine Qua Non,' for history lovers of Nazism.

Carl C. Zellie, Jr.

Posted by Carl C Zellie Jr on February 16,2012 | 12:49 PM

I wish to point out a factual error in the otherwise flawless article. The Enigma machine was not "the British code-breaking apparatus" that allowed the British to read the Nazi's coded messages. It was the machine that the Nazis used to create those encoded messages in the first place. Luckily, the British had gotten their hands on an early model of the machine before the start of the war, courtesy of the Polish underground, and used it to create their own code-breaking machines. The Enigma underwent improvements as the war progressed, and the British were forced to guess how these might work. The extent to which they were successful is detailed in a number of books on the subject. The initial work on the code-breaking was done by a group of Polish mathematicians, who gave their work to the British -- and received no credit for it after the war.

Posted by Dana Mathewson on February 15,2012 | 09:57 AM

Re:Ron Rosenbaum's article "Explaining Evil"
After reading Ron Rosenbaum's superb review of Wm Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich", I'm wondering if it's necessary to read the book. To quote Mr Rosenbaum "It ("The Rise and Fall") remains an awe- inspiring achievement that he (Shirer) could capture the terrain of horror in a mere 1250 pages." Mr. Rosenbaum appears to have done it in SIX pages! Every single paragraph of the review is informative and even profound in explaining, or trying to explain the national psychosis that was Germany. The one concept that most impacts on me is that it wasn't Hitler's Germany- It was Germany. As Rosenbaum said, the " little men of Germany" This concept is almost never addressed,except,perhaps in Daniel Goldhagen's book, "Hitler's Willing excecutioners", namely, that many, many Germans knew! I've observed that on most TV military channels, reference is frequently made to NAZI Germany, not Germany. This is like calling the US -Republican US or Democrat US. Nazi Germany is redundant!Germany without the prefix "NAZI" was collectively guilty, and that fact should forever be remembered!

Posted by Richard Fitterman,DDS on February 13,2012 | 08:17 PM

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