
What Hitler Knew is an incisive study of how the climate of fear in Nazi Germany influenced Hitler's advisers and shaped the decision-making process. Zachary Shore argues persuasively that the inherent instability of the Third Reich led its diplomats to manage and control their "information arsenal" with obsessive intensity, in a desperate battle to defend their positions and safeguard their lives. The result, Shore concludes, was a chaotic flow of information between Hitler and his advisers that may have accelerated the march toward war. In the process of tracing how information traveled in the corridors of Nazi power, Shore discovers surprising new facts relating to Hitler's major foreign policy decisions, from his seizure of power right up to the hours before the outbreak of war. Drawing on multinational primary research, including records from the KGB archives, Shore provides fresh insights into Hitler's daring recapture of the Rhineland, Germany's dramatic decision to align with Poland, the intrigues over arms deals with Ethiopia, and the fall of Hitler's first foreign minister. He also offers new and provocative interpretations of Stalin's decision to sign the Nazi-Soviet pact, and Chamberlain's intentions for a non-aggression pact with Hitler. Zachary Shore takes the reader into the tortured, uncertain world of the Nazi hierarchy, telling for the first time the compelling story of What Hitler Knew.
This book investigates how the pervasive climate of fear within the Nazi hierarchy distorted the flow of information and directly influenced Hitler's foreign policy decisions. Zachary Shore, a historian specializing in international relations and intelligence, utilizes a vast array of primary source material to examine the internal mechanics of the Third Reich. He argues that the instability of the regime forced diplomats to manipulate information to protect their own standing, creating a chaotic communication environment that accelerated the path to global conflict.
What You Will Find
Historians and scholars of the Third Reich frequently cite this work for its rigorous use of archival evidence to explain the failures of Nazi intelligence. The text is recognized as a significant contribution to understanding the intersection of bureaucratic survival and state-level foreign policy.
Page Count:
169
Publication Date:
2005-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199924074
ISBN-13:
9780199924073
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