Archive/File: people/i/irving.david/libel.suit/transcripts/day008.11
Last-Modified: 2000/07/20
Q. Let us look at something a little bit more explicit, shall we?
A. But if you remember what I clearly allow is that from this
point on Adolf Hitler no excuse not to know because the
very next day these same gentlemen went to him and he
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spoke to them.
Q. My googolies are I think a little bit more subtle than you
sometimes think, Mr Irving. Can you turn on just for
reference in this bundle to the next document which is
after page 49 of Himmler's Posen speech. My Lord, it is
footnote 187.
A. My Lord, would be it be helpful if I pointed out that
after making this speech Himmler had everybody who was
present sign a list to agree that they had hear the
speech, or if they had not heard it to agree that they had
read it subsequently. All the SS Generals who were
present were required -- I have never seen that on any of
Himmler's other speeches.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: What do you say is the significance of that?
A. It is very interesting to speculate, my Lord. I think he
was making them into accomplices in his own mind. He was
saying: "There you are, now I have told you. Now we are
all in it together." It is a very interesting historical
document. I have never seen that on any of Himmler's
other speeches, that he listed all SS Generals present and
made them sign that they had been present and heard the
speech or if they not been present that they had read it
subsequently.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, Heinrich Himmler kept copies of these
speeches, did he not?
A. In various versions. There was the original raw
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transcript and then a corrected transcript.
Q. I know, I happen to have for the 5th May which we are
coming to in a minute, I happen to have both versions.
A. Yes. There are also his handwritten notes on the basis of
which he spoke.
Q. Yes, Mr Irving, your knowledge is extensive. I want to
know why you think it is that Himmler kept copies of his
speeches?
A. I keep copies of me speeches.
Q. But you do not talk about having given the order for the
extermination of millions of Jews, do you, in your
speeches?
A. I have not exterminated millions of Jews, Mr Rampton.
Q. Mr Irving, maybe it is late in the morning or something.
Heinrich Himmler's speech is not just this one. We had
the one earlier, the 4th October at Posen. We have this
one here. We have two more in May 1944, which are quite
explicit, at any rate about his role in the extermination
of the whole Jewish race?
A. Letting them vanish from the face of the earth, brutally
explicit.
Q. Yes, by killing them?
A. Brutally explicit, yes. As he says, by murdering, and not
just the men but the women and children too.
Q. Yes, I know that. Why would he keep those admissions of
guilt, particularly in 1943 and 1944 by which time he must
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have known that the German world was probably going to
come to an end?
A. Why would he have kept it to himself?
Q. Yes. Why did he commit these things to writing and then
keep them after he had uttered them to his Generals or his
Reichsleiters or whatever they are?
A. I think the problem is we are so often on exactly the same
side, Mr Rampton. Have I not frequently allowed in all my
books that from this point on Hitler had no reason not to
know?
Q. Hitler did know, come on.
A. On precisely this point I have said Hitler had no
justification for pleading ignorance, because everybody
else immediately around him had been informed, but also
you have to set this kind of speech in the context. This
is 5th October, 4th and 6th October 1943 rather, at the
height of the bombing campaign. There is a reason why
Himmler is making a speech like this to the disgruntled SS
Generals. Morale is at a low ebb and he is saying, "Hey,
we are hitting back, we're doing this to them".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am really puzzled. Can I explain why,
Mr Irving. When Mr Rampton was putting that passage from
the October 1943 speech, 4th October 1943 speech, you were
at pains to point out that Himmler was saying that it was
he who would have taken the decision, but if you are
accepting, as you have throughout, that by October 1943
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Hitler knew about the extermination policy ----
A. I say "from this point on", my Lord, because on the
following day ----
Q. But what is the significance of emphasising that it was
Himmler's decision if you accept Hitler was in on it?
A. Because Himmler is accepting the responsibility for the
job which has now been completed. Himmler is kind of
reporting ----
Q. I see, ex post facto.
A. Yes, saying, "We've done it all, the job has been done,
I had to take the decision, it was a difficult job for us,
but we done it, and I am proud of you, my SS men, for
having carried out such a difficult task."
Q. So the knowledge you say Hitler had from October 1943 did
not include knowledge of what had been going on in 1942,
is that what you are saying?
A. I am saying it is quite likely that he will have
ex post facto have learned about all these things,
particularly the Gauleiters who went to see him the next
day and the SS Generals who went to see him. The same
audience went effectively to see Hitler where he lectured
them, and it would be stretching the bounds of probability
too far to say that not one of them went up to Hitler, one
of the old veterans, and said, "Mein Fuhrer, we heard
something yesterday which rather disturbed me", but I do
not think it did disturb them. I think they rather
liked
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it. The eyewitness accounts we have of one of these
speeches says that there were roars of applause.
MR RAMPTON: It was ----
A. The Germans were like that.
Q. If you are right, it is something of which Himmler was
very proud, is it not?
A. He was proud of his men for having carried out those
extremely distasteful tasks.
Q. But he was pleased, if your interpretation is right, and
I am going to suggest it is not, but he was pleased to
announce to this august gathering that he personally had
made the decision to carry out this difficult task?
A. Would it not have been wonderful for him if he had said:
"The Fuhrer gave us this task and look how well we have
performed his duties for him.
Q. Of course he did.
A. The great temptation would have been there, but he does
not say this.
Q. He does not?
A. He says specifically: "I was the one who took the decision".
Q. So that being so you would not expect that in May 1944 he
would reveal that he done what he did in consequence of an
order, and the only person of course who could have given
an order is Hitler?
A. Mr Rampton, shall we get to that document when we get to
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it and look at the precise wording?
Q. Very well. Let us doing that now. I have it open.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is page 187.
MR RAMPTON: Page 187.
A. There are of course about ten such speeches and you have
just picked out two of them. In none of the others does
he make any suggestion that there is a Fuhrer order. So
it is not just one speech where there is no reference. It
is many speeches.
Q. He makes another such reference later the same month,
about three weeks later. We will come to that probably
after the adjournment.
A. Are we also going to look at Adolf Hitler's speech of I
think it was June 26th 1944?
Q. Yes, indeed I certainly am. Let us start with 5th May
1944. On page 18, tell me who this speech is made to, if
you will?
A. I think it is the military leader, the leadership, the top
brass, shall we say.
Q. The top brass.
A. I know the names of a number of people who were present.
General Stumpf was Air Force; General Reinicke was Germany
Army.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Generals of the Wehrmacht.
MR RAMPTON: These are not SS creatures. These are proper
soldiers; these are Generals of the Wehrmacht, are they
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not?
A. Yes, the top brass of the German armed forces.
Q. On page 28 it has been altered. One can see how these
pages evolve sometimes. Page 28. My Lord, it looks like
an 18, so one has to look at page 27 at the top, page 5 of
the file.
A. This is one of the most interesting pages I have ever
looked at.
Q. You can tell us everything you know about this page in
just a moment when I have referred you to the relevant
passage, which I think begins in the middle of the page:
The Jewish question has been solved within Germany itself
and in general within the countries occupied by Germany".
Is that roughly right?
A. Yes.
Q. I am going to read on in the English from Dr Longerich's
version.
"It was solved in an uncompromising fashion in
accordance with the life and death struggle of our nation
in which the existence of our blood is at stake." Yes?
A. Yes.
Q. Then elipse, if you do not mind. Have you got that?
A. Yes.
Q. "You can understand how difficult it was for me"?
A. "You can feel with me how difficult it was" yes.
Q. "To carry out this soldatischen befehl". What is that?
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A. Soldierly order or military order.
Q. "And which I carried out and went through with a sense of
obedience", which word is that? Translate the last part
of the sentence for me?
A. "Which I obeyed and carried out from obedience and from a
sense of complete conviction".
Q. Obedience to whom, Mr Irving, Hitler or his own sense of
what was necessary for the sake of the thousand year
Reich?
A. I think the sense of what is coming out of that paragraph
is a sense of duty.
Q. So it is the sense of duty, is it, that gives him the
soldatischen befehl?
A. Yes.
Q. A very odd choice of words, is it not, this soldierly
order?
A. Yes.
Q. The only person who can give Mr Himmler a soldierly order
is Mr Hitler?
A. Absolutely right.
Q. Pardon?
A. Yes.
Q. He is saying: "I did what I did because Hitler told me
to"?
A. Yes. I refer to this of course in my Hitler biographies.
I quoted this with the ----
. P-103
Q. Let me put to you the sort of expression you might use.
How do you get yourself out of that one then, Mr Irving?
A. By counting.
Q. By what?
A. Counting.
Q. Counting what?
A. Can I ask you to look at the previous page?
Q. Yes.
A. Can you see the number of the page at the top of the
page?
Q. Yes.
A. 27.
Q. Yes.
A. It is typed.
Q. The next one is an altered type. I already drew attention
to that.
A. All the following pages have been written in in
handwriting.
Q. So what?
A. And so what? Can you continue to count, please? Will you
count down on page 27 nine lines to the beginning of the
new paragraph.
Q. "In Deuchsland"?
A. Yes.
Q. Yes.
A. How many spaces is that paragraph indented by?
. P-104
Q. I have absolutely no idea. I am not a typist, Mr Irving.
A. I will count for you. Five spaces indented.
Q. You stop interrogating ----
A. Tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
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