(Stuttgart, 1992), 425-26.

3. Albert Speer, Inside the Third Reich, trans. Richard and Clara Winston (New York, 1981), 389.

4. See Muller, Stauffenberg, 487, for an enlightening description of the situation in which Fellgiebel found himself.

5. Hoffmann, Widerstand, 504.

6. Bernd Wehner, on Hava K. Beller’s television program “The Restless Con­science,” London, 1992.

7. Views differ considerably as to when and through whom Olbricht learned about the failure of the assassination attempt. Peter Hoffmann thinks that Thiele informed Olbricht shortly after the news from Fellgiebel arrived (Stauffenberg, 427, and Widerstand, 464-65). Helena P. Page, on the other hand, believes that Olbricht was not informed by Thiele until 3:15 p.m. (General Friedrich Olbricht: Ein Mann des 20 Juli [Bonn and Berlin, 1992], 276ff). According to her, Olbricht, accompanied by General Hoepner, went home at 1:00 p.m. as usual for lunch in order not to arouse suspicion. He returned to Bendlerstrasse shortly after 2:00 but still did not know what had happened in Rastenburg. There are some indications that General Wagner, who informed the conspirators in Paris around 2:00 p.m., also contacted Bendlerstrasse (see Eberhard Zeller, Geist der Freiheit: Der zwanzigste Juli [Mu­nich, 1963], 435-36).

8. Muller, Stauffenberg, 490. Whether the decision to issue the Valkyrie orders was made before or after Haeften’s telephone call is still a matter of controversy; see Muller, 606.

9. According to Schulenburg; see Spiegelbild, 97.

10. Hoffmann, Widerstand, 516.

11. Prozess gegen die Hauptkriegsverbrecher vor dem Internationalen Militargerichishof Nurnberg, 14. November 1945-1. Oktober 1946 (Nuremberg, 1949), vol. 33, 404.

12. Hans Bernd Gisevius, Bis zum bittern Ende (Zurich, 1954), 631.

13. Speer, Inside, 383.

14. Kunrat von Hammerstein, Spahtrupp (Stuttgart, 1963), 280, and Hoffmann, Widerstand, 592.

15. Hoffmann, Widerstand, 608 and 507.

16. Muller, Stauffenberg, 498. Muller accurately characterizes Hoepner’s behav­ ior as “frightful,” given the crucial role he was supposed to play in the coup. For the apathetic way in which Hoepner gave out information over the telephone at a very early point, see Schulenburg’s statements in Spiegelbild, 97.

17. Hoffmann, Widerstand, 601; Gisevius, Ende, 634- 35.

18. Spiegelbild, 22 and 336.

19. For accounts of the events in general, see Hoffmann, Widerstand, 619ff., and Muller, Stauffenberg, 505-06.

20. Gisevius, Ende, 649. My presentation ol events from Fromm’s reemergence to the proclamation of the court-martial decision largely follows the account Erich Hoepner provided to the People’s Court; see Prozess, vol. 33 (PS-3881), 417ff. and 505ff.

21. There has been controversy from the outset as to what Stauffenberg shouted into the salvo. Some witnesses understood him to say, “Long live sacred Germany,” while others heard only “Holy Germany” and still others “Long live Germany.” An informative overview, with the relevant sources, can be found in Hoffmann, Widerstand, 862-63.

22. Spiegelbild, 76.

23. Hans Speidel, Aus unserer Zeit: Erinnerungen (Berlin, 1977), 191.

24. Hoffmann, Widerstand, 586-87.

25. Walter Bargatzky, Hotel Majestic: Ein Deutscher im besetzten Frankreich (Freiburg, 1987), 127ff.

26. Count Dankwart von Arnim, Als Brandenburg noch die Mark hiess: Erinnerungen (Berlin, 1991), 208. The address Hitler delivered on the night of July 20-21, 1944, is reprinted in Max Domarus, Hitler: Reden und Proklamationen, 1932-1945, vol. 2 (Wurzburg, 1963), 2127.

27. Zeller, Freiheit, 415ff.

28. Gunther Blumentritt, in B. H. Lidell Hart, Jetzt durfen sie reden: Hitlers Generale berichten (Stuttgart and Hamburg, 1950), 527.

29. Ernst Junger, Strahlungen (Tubingen, 1949), 540 (entry of July 21, 1944).

30. Bargatzky, Majestic, 139. For Kluge’s denunciation, see Wilhelm von Schramm, Der 20. Juli in Paris (Bad Worishofen, 1953), 222.

31. Margret Boveri, Fur und gegen die Nation, vol. 2 of Der Verrat im XX. Jahrhundert (Hamburg, 1956), 51. For the accusation of “amateurism,” with its un­mistakable undertones of animosity toward Stauffenberg and the “count group,” see Gisevius, Ende, 647.

32. Speer, Inside, 388.

33. Dietrich Ehlers, Technik und Moral einer Verschworung: Der 20. Juli 1944 (Frankfurt and Bonn, 1964), 107.

34. Fabian von Schlabrendorff, Offiziere gegen Hitler (Frankfurt and Hamburg, 1959), 128-29.

35. Zeller, Freiheit, 416.

36. Gert Buchheit, Hitler der Feldherr: Die Zerstorung einer Legende (Rastatt, J958), 439.

37. Chester Wilmot, Der Kampf um Europa (Frankfurt, 1954), 780-81.

38. Rudolph-Christoph von Gersdorff, Soldat im Untergang: Lebensbilder (Frankfurt and Berlin, 1979), 151-52.

10. Persecution and Judgment

1. Eberhard Zeller, Grist der Freiheit: Der zwanzigste Juli (Munich, 1963), 435. See also Peter Hoffmann, Widerstand, Staatsstreich, Attentat: Der Kampf der Oppo­sition gegen Hitler, 3rd ed. (Munich, 1979), 632.

2. W. Scheidt, Gesprache mit Hitler, qtd. in Zeller, Freiheit, 538. See also Hitlers Lagebesprechungen: Die Protokollfragmente seiner militarischen Konferenzen, 1942-1945 ed. Helmut Heiber (Stuttgart, 1962), 588.

3. Zeller, Freiheit, 451.

4. Bodo Scheurig, Henning von Tresckow: Eine Biographie (Frankfurt and Ber­lin, 1980), 209-10. For Klausing, see Dietrich Ehlers, Technik und Moral einer Verschworung: Der 20. Juli 1944 (Frankfurt and Bonn, 1964), 31-32. For Trott, see Marie Wassiltschikow, Die Berliner Tagebucher der “Missie” Wassiltschikow, 1940-1945 (Berlin, 1987), 243-44.

5. Ger van Roon, Neuordnung und Widerstand: Der Kreisauer Kreis innerhalb der deutschen Widerstandsbewegung (Munich, 1967), 139, and Hoffmann, Wider-stand, 457.

6. Georg Kiessel, qtd. in Hoffmann, Widerstand, 628.

7. Werner Fiedler, a journalist for the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, memorized Schulenberg’s words-as recorded by the newspaper’s court reporter-and passed them along to his family; see Elisabeth Ruge, ed., Charlotte Grafin von der Schulenburg zur Erinnerung, privately printed, n.d., 38. For Hitler’s prohibition on reporting, see Count Detlef von Schwerin, Dann sind’s die

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