Helsinki, Finland, September 15,
2004 Taking
part in the conversation secretly recorded
on the 75th birthday celebrations of
Marshal Mannerheim were Adolf Hitler
(left), Finnish Prime Minister Jukka
Rangell, President Risto Ryti (back toward
the camera), and Mannerheim himself
(right).
The
Hitler - Mannerheim
Conversation
IN reaction to your
article about Hitler's secret visit to
Finland I thought you might be
interested in hearing the audio of
Hitler's private conversation with
Mannerheim for yourself (provided of
course you haven't had the chance to do so
yet). The tape is still in the Finnish
hands and available also here: http://koti.mbnet.fi/~tkwok/aatu.mp3. The attached
file is in .wav format (playable on
any windows media player) and contains
only Hitler/Mannerheim private talk in the
original German audio without any Finnish
translation over it. What one finds
shocking is the sheer size of firstly
manufactured and then destroyed (if both
figures are to believed) most of the
Russian tank production - up to 35,000 in
the first year of the war alone!!! That is
almost unimaginable and I would appreciate
if anyone could clarify whether Hitler was
just trying to impress his Finnish
counterpart or whether he actually spoke
the truth!? The transcript starts with Hitler
talking as follows, italics were used to
emphasize the heightening of their voices
in the original voice recording. I also
have removed all the "uh's" and repeated
words to make the dialog easier to
read.
Hitler: ...a very serious danger,
perhaps the most serious one - it's whole
extent we can only now judge. We did not
ourselves understand - just how strong
this state [the USSR] was
armed. Mannerheim: No, we hadn't thought of
this. Hitler: No, I too, no. Mannerheim: During the Winter War -
during the Winter War we had not even
thought of this. Of course... Hitler: (Interrupting) Yes. Mannerheim: But so, how they - in
reality - and now there is no doubt all
they had - what they had in their
stocks! Hitler: Absolutely, This is - they had
the most immense armaments that, uh,
people could imagine. Well - if somebody
had told me that a country -
with...(Hitler is interrupted by the sound
of a door opening and closing.) If
somebody had told me a nation could start
with 35,000 tanks, then I'd have said:
"You are crazy!" Mannerheim: Thirty-five? Hitler: Thirty-five thousand tanks. Another Voice In Background:
Thirty-five thousand! Yes! Hitler: We have destroyed - right now -
more than 34,000 tanks. If someone had
told me this, I'd have said: "You!" If you
are one of my generals had stated that any
nation has 35,000 tanks I'd have said:
"You, my good sir, you see everything
twice or ten times. You are crazy; you see
ghosts." This I would have deemed
possible. I told you earlier we found
factories, one of them at Kramatorskaja,
for example, Two years ago there were just
a couple hundred [tanks]. We
didn't know anything. Today, there is a
tank plant, where - during the first shift
a little more than 30,000, and 'round the
clock a little more than 60,000, workers
would have labored - a single tank plant!
A gigantic factory! Masses of workers who
certainly, lived like animals and... Another Voice In Background:
(Interrupting) In the Donets area? Hitler: In the Donets area. (Background
noises from the rattling of cups and
plates over the exchange.) Mannerheim: Well, if you keep in mind
they had almost 20 years, almost 25 years
of - freedom to arm themselves... Hitler: (Interrupting quietly) It was
unbelievable. Mannerheim: And everything - everything
spent on armament. Hitler: Only on armament. Mannerheim: Only on armament! Hitler: (Sighs) Only - well, it is - as
I told your president [Ryte]
before - I had no idea of it. If I had an
idea - then I would have been even more
difficult for me, but I would have taken
the decision [to invade] anyhow,
because - there was no other possibility.
It was - certain, already in the winter of
'39/ '40, that the war had to begin. I had
only this nightmare - but there is even
more! Because a war on two fronts - would
have been impossible - that would have
broken us. Today, we see more clearly -
than we saw at that time - it would have
broken us. And my whole - I originally
wanted to - already in the fall of '39 I
wanted to conduct the campaign in the west
- on the continuously bad weather we
experienced hindered us. Our whole armament - you know, was - is
a pure good weather armament. It is very
capable, very good, but it is
unfortunately just a good-weather
armament. We have seen this in the war.
Our weapons naturally were made for the
west, and we all thought, and this was
true 'till that time, uh, it was the
opinion from the earliest times: you
cannot wage war in winter. And we too,
have, the German tanks, they weren't
tested, for example, to prepare them for
winter war. Instead we conducted trials to
prove it was impossible to wage war in
winter. That is a different starting point
[than the Soviet's]. In the fall
of 1939 we always faced the question. I
desperately wanted to attack, and I firmly
believed we could finish France in six
weeks. However, we faced the question of
whether we could move at all - it was
raining continuously. And I know the
French area myself very well and I too
could not ignore the opinions, of many of
my generals that, we - probably - would
not have had the élan, that our
tank arm would not have been, effective,
that our air force could not been
effective from our airfields because of
the rain. I know northern France myself. You
know, I served in the Great War for four
years. And - so the delay happened. If I
had in '39 eliminated France, then world
history would have changed. But I had to
wait 'till 1940, and unfortunately it
wasn't possible before May. Only on the
10th of May was the first nice day - and
on the 10th of May I immediately attacked.
I gave the order to attack on the 10th on
the 8th. And - then we had to, conduct
this huge transfer of our divisions from
the west to the east. First the occupation of - then we had
the task in Norway - at the same time we
faced - I can frankly say it today - a
grave misfortune, namely the - weakness
of, Italy. Because of - first, the
situation in North Africa, then, second,
because of the situation in Albania and
Greece - a very big misfortune. We had to
help. This meant for us, with one small
stoke, first - the splitting of our air
force, splitting our tank force, while at
the same time we were preparing, the, tank
arm in the east. We had to hand over -
with one stroke, two divisions, two whole
divisions and a third was then added - and
we had to replace continuous, very severe,
losses there. It was - bloody fighting in
the desert. This all naturally was inevitable, you
see. I had a conversation with Molotov
[Soviet Minister] at that time,
and it was absolutely certain that Molotov
departed with the decision to begin a war,
and I dismissed the decision to begin a
war, and I dismissed him with the decision
to - impossible, to forestall him. There
was - this was the only - because the
demands that man brought up were clearly
aimed to rule, Europe in the end.
(Practically whispering here.) Then I have
him - not publicly...(fades out). Already in the fall of 1940 we
continuously faced the question, uh: shall
we, consider a break up [in relations
with the USSR]? At that time, I
advised the Finnish government, to -
negotiate and, to gain time and, to act
dilatory in this matter - because I always
feared - that Russia suddenly would attack
Romania in the late fall - and occupy the
petroleum wells, and we would have not
been ready in the late fall of 1940. If
Russia indeed had taken Romanian petroleum
wells, than Germany would have been lost.
It would have required - just 60 Russian
divisions to handle that matter. In Romania we had of course - at that
time - no major units. The Romanian
government had turned to us only recently
- and what we did have there was
laughable. They only had to occupy the
petroleum wells. Of course, with our
weapons I could not start a, war in
September or October. That was out of the
question. Naturally, the transfer to the
east wasn't that far advanced yet. Of
course, the units first had to
reconsolidate in the west. First the
armaments had to be taken care of because
we too had - yes, we also had losses in
our campaign in the west. It would have
been impossible to attack - before the
spring of 19, 41. And if the Russians at
that time - in the fall of 1940 - had
occupied Romania - taken the petroleum
wells, then we would have been, helpless
in 1941. Another Voice In Background: Without
petroleum... Hitler: (Interrupting) We had huge
German production: however, the demands of
the air force, our Panzer divisions - they
are really huge. It is level of
consumption that surpasses the
imagination. And without the addition of
four to five million tons of Romanian
petroleum, we could not have fought the
war - and would have had to let it be -
and that was my big worry. Therefore I
aspired to, bridge the period of
negotiations 'till we would be strong
enough to, counter those extortive demands
[from Moscow] because - those
demands were simply naked extortion's.
They were extortion's. The Russians knew
we were tied up in the west. They could
really extort everything from us. Only
when Molotov visited - then - I told him
frankly that the demands, their numerous
demands, weren't acceptable to us. With
that the negotiations came to an abrupt
end that same morning. There were four topics. The one topic
that, involved Finland was, the, freedom
to protect themselves from the Finnish
threat, he said. [I said] You do
not want to tell me Finland threatens you!
But he said: "In Finland it is - they who
take action against the, friends, of the
Soviet Union. They would [take
action] against [our] society,
against us - they would continuously,
persecute us and, a great power cannot be
threatened by a minor country." I said: "Your, existence isn't
threatened by Finland! That is, you don't
mean to tell me..." Mannerheim: (Interrupting)
Laughable! Hitler: "...that your existence is
threatened by Finland?" Well [he
said] there was a moral - threat being
made against a great power, and what
Finland was doing, that was a moral - a
threat to their moral existence. Then I
told him we would not accept a further war
in the Baltic area as passive spectators.
In reply he asked me how we viewed our
position in, Romania. You know, we had
given them a guarantee. [He wanted to
know] if that guarantee was directed
against Russia as well? And that time I
told him: "I don't think it is directed at
you, because I don't think you have the
intention of attacking Romania. You have
always stated that Bessarabia is yours,
but that you have - never stated that you
want to attack Romania!" "Yes," he told me, but he wanted to
know more precisely if this guarantee...(A
door opens and the recording ends.)
Website Hitler
dossier-
Audio
recording in full in wav format,
Gerrman text only, no Finnish
commentary.
-
Helsinken
Sanomat article on this
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