PROCEEDINGS - DAY THREE
DAY 3 Thursday, 13th
January 2000
MR DAVID IRVING, Recalled
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, Mr Irving?
MR IRVING: May it please the court, with your Lordship's permission, I
have brought the bundle of the documents that we were referring to last night.
Unless your Lordship would see any reason against, I propose rapidly stepping
through these documents, pausing at the ones which are significant as far as we
can determine so far from the direction and thrust of the cross-examination.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. You are in the middle of your cross-examination.
So, in the ordinary way, we will wait and see when the documents became
relevant to Mr Rampton's questions.
MR IRVING: They have been in discovery throughout, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I follow that. But I suspect most of them are going to
become relevant to the answers you are going to be giving to some of the
questions Mr Rampton is asking.
MR IRVING: I do apprehend it will be useful to the court, I appreciate
that it is your Lordship's court, but I believe it will be useful.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You may well be right. I cannot really tell, I have
only glanced at it. Shall I ask Mr Rampton -- because he is cross-examining,
so, on the face of it, he has the right to continue to cross-examine.
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MR RAMPTON: I have no objection. In a sense, it is either
evidence-in-chief in anticipation of cross-examination, or it is what one might
call "premature re-examination".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: One way or the other it is going to make no difference.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If you are happy I will not stand in the way. Before
that happens I wonder if I could mention one or two administrative points? The
first is, I think we are all agreed through nobody's fault, this is not a very
suitable court and I am very concerned that there are members of the public
who, I think, are not able to get in and listen and want to. Having made
enquiries, as I said I would, I think there are two possible courts to which we
could move which were not available or were not thought to be available when we
started. One is court 73, which I have looked at and looks to me to be much
better than this in almost every respect. There is, apparently, another one,
which is in Chichester Rents in Chancery Lane, which is even bigger. I think I
would have some slight personal preference for 73, but what I wanted to ask you
is that I think we should move anyway, because this is not satisfactory and it
seems to me, unless you are going to tell me there are insuperable problems,
tomorrow is the day to do the move. Are you in agreement that that is the right
thing to do?
P-3
MR IRVING: I would have suggested doing it over the weekend although I
have no logistical problems myself --
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, I think they have a lot of problems ahead of
them, but I think it is better to do it now than to struggle on and regret it
every day from hereon.
MR RAMPTON: That would suit us awfully well, if we could make a fresh
start in what I call a "proper big court" on Monday morning.
MR IRVING: Not a fresh start.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: We will decide -- not a fresh start.
MR RAMPTON: No, thank you.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: We will decide during the course of today which it is
going to be and, obviously, let you know. We will take it that on Monday we
will be in a different court.
MR RAMPTON: May I ask where exactly 73 is?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is where all those new Court of Appeals are.
MR RAMPTON: In the East Building.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: In the end I would have to say, my Lord, it is a matter for
you.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think it is, if you have strong feelings.
MR RAMPTON: No, I do not know Chancery Lane much at all anyway.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is point one.
P-4
The next relates to the
TA Law Transcripts which are being done. Really, I think I am saying this on
behalf of the lady who is doing the transcribing. She is having the most
appalling task. She is here all day, and she is by herself, as it were. It
would help her if we could slightly slow down. Mr Irving, you speak fairly
rapidly anyway. That is not a criticism at all.
MR IRVING: I thought I was speaking slowly.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If you can bear in mind there is somebody trying to
take down what you say, if we can try to remember to spell out the German names
when they crop up for the first time. That is going to make everybody's life
much easier. There is one other point on the transcripts. The Day 2 transcript
starts at page 104. My own feeling (and I do not know whether you share it, Mr
Rampton) is that it would be better if every day started at 1, so you have Day
2, page 1, rather than page 104. I am told that is physically possible. So that
is what I think we will have in the future. That is all that I wanted to raise
except that, Mr Irving, I have seen (and I do not know whether Mr Rampton has)
your letter about the letter to me about the article in the Stuttgart press. Do
you know about it?
MR RAMPTON: No.
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MR IRVING: I was going to ask, my Lord, I might, having given the
Defendants time to consider it, if I might address the court briefly on the
matter after the lunch adjournment?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If you would like to do that, that is fine. Mr Rampton?
MR RAMPTON: I have no comment until I have seen it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I do not suppose you will, even when you have.
MR RAMPTON: I see. My Lord, the only thing I would mention about the
transcript, I do not know what the cure is. Is that, normally speaking, of
course, one can deduce what it was, but here and there -- this is not a
criticism of the transcriber, far from it -- one sees in square brackets the
word "German" which represents something that has been said in
German. That is going to repeat itself indefinitely in that case. I do not know
what cure is. Whether the word should be spelt out each time. It is a terribly
laborious way of dealing it, or whether we supply at some stage when it is
important a list of what we suppose was the word used. As I say, most of the
time one can deduce it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Is it actually going to be all that much of a burden to
spell it out or, at any rate, spell out the key words in the document? I am
thinking yesterday "liquidierung". One can spell that out.
MR RAMPTON: There is going to be more of that today.
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: I follow.
MR RAMPTON: Perhaps spell it out?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am inclined to think so. I think that is the best
way. It is going to slow things down. Would you prefer it, both of you?
MR RAMPTON: Yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is going to slow things down, but it needs to be
done that way. So, Mr Irving, would you like to take me through the...
MR IRVING: Page 1, my Lord, this is a letter -- the sole purpose of this
letter is that it indicates the date when I really made use of the Himmler
telephone notes, being 1974; some 25 years ago, 26 years ago.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just ask you this? You there transcribe
judentransport, J-U-D-E-N-T-R-A-N-S-P-O-R-T, in the singular, and that is in
1974.
MR IRVING: We have check the original in the German. You are absolutely
right, my Lord. You are absolutely right.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Right.
MR IRVING: In a very vague, and, of course, I am still considering
myself to be under oath as I make these remarks, in a very vague way my
recollection is that time I regarded the word "transport" as not just
meaning like a transport train or one consignment, or a transport ship in the
way that you would talk about a convoy of 26 transports but also in the sense
that transportation.
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I consider that the
words judenstransport meant "transportation of Jews".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I note that you make that point.
MR IRVING: This is an alternative inference but now I am quite happy to
accept that this particular discussion from external evidence only referred to
one particular transport of Jews, and I am indebted to your Lordship for having
reminded, or took me back into the mind set of 26 years ago.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: As you know, my presumption is, I will just read the middle
paragraph that Hitler had become an active knowledge bearer or accomplice in
the destruction of the Jews only in 1943. This is of course a translation of
the following page, my Lord. From the attached page, which is a facsimile,
which we will see in a minute, it is evident that Himmler, arriving at midday
on November 30th, 1941, in the Wolf's Lair, which I explain was Hitler's
headquarters in East Prussia, after a brief conversation with Hitler
immediately had to telephone Heydrich in Prague, and then comes the phrase,
"judentransportest aust Berlin keine liquidierung", which I believe
the shorthand writer already had from us. If you take this in conjunction with
various other entries, e.g. that of 17th November 1941, in which Heydrich
informs the Reich Fuhrer, that is Himmler, on
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conditions in the
general Uberman, Poland.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is SS Reich Fuhrer.
MR IRVING: Well, Reich Fuhrer SS would be the full title. There was only
one Reich Fuhrer in German -- conditions in the general government
Poland-geting rid of the Jews, Beseitigung, this can only indicate that Himmler
has been rapped across the knuckles by Hitler. This conversation note has until
now evidently slipped through the fingers of the historical research community,
as you might call it. Then the other two lines at the bottom are not without
interest in the chain of documents I refer to, my Lord. Himmler had to issue a
similar "holt" order in April 1942 on account of the liquidation of
the gypsies, again after a brief visit to Hitler. "I thought this might be
of interest to you." You will see that document too, my Lord, in this bundle.
Because it is false to try and draw inferences from one document without
looking at other documents in the series. I appreciate in court it is difficult
to do this. My Lord, the next document I am going to draw your Lordship's
attention to is 03 at the foot of the page. This is another document that was
in discovery.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I have read that. That is you asking Professor Hinsley
whether he has any more information.
MR IRVING: Yes, my Lord, except that at that time it does
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indicate at that time he
did not have the German originals.
MR RAMPTON: I am sorry, Mr Irving. I beg your pardon. May I intervene to
ask your Lordship to insert it in that bundle? It comes from Mr Irving's
discovery. There is no mystery about it. Professor Hinsley's reply.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It was not there.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, we have it now.
MR IRVING: I could not find it last night, my Lord. In is Professor
Hinsley indicates that he has obviously not yet seen himself the German
originals of the British intercepts.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: It is quite interesting.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: The postscript is perhaps of some significance.
MR IRVING: It is interesting the British Official Historian and British
Secret Service had either not been allowed to see or had not found in general
chaos the documentation, these are the originals, which are now in the Public
Record Office. But the German originals are very, very informative in their
scope, breadth and depth. That, my Lord, is 04. This is the first of the notes
of the telephone conversations from Himmler's telephone log to the Chief of the
SS, and the one on which I rely is the one timed 12.15. It is the fourth
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conversation. I am
afraid I have not attached a translation of it, but I will do a translation on
reply on the one or two lines that matter. It is a 15 minute conversation with
Heydrich who on that day was in Berlin. We do not know who initiated the
conversation, my Lord, but Heydrich phoned Himmler or Himmler phoned Heydrich.
We never see them. We have to infer. Conference with Rosenberg, conditions in
the government general, getting rid of the Jews, beseitigung of the Jews, and
then the third line -- the fourth line rather, juristen nuralseerater, roughly
lawyers just as advisers. Nothing else on that page to which I will refer. Merely
it shows there were conversations going on between these two gentlemen on
liquidation or getting rid of the Jews.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: What is the significance for my purpose of that?
MR IRVING: It is the context in which the principal document is
embedded, my Lord. The inference that has been drawn against me is that I have
one cardinal document and I would go around the world waving this document and
saying "here it the proof". It is, in fact, showing that they were
constantly talking about getting rid of the Jews, using --
MR JUSTICE GRAY: There is no issue, is there, that that was something
that both Himmler and Heydrich were intent upon
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doing.
MR RAMPTON: Yes. The word " beseitigung" is interesting. You
can look at it either this way or that way, literally as getting rid of, which
can be sweeping under the carpet or liquidation. I am quite happy to accept
that here they were talking about liquidation, these two gentlemen. It now
becomes more interesting, my Lord, on page 5.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can you just let me highlight?
MR IRVING: We come to the intercepts and Mr Rampton does not wish me at
this point to bring in this material. I am quite happy to turn the page, but I
think it is useful to bring it in all in chronological sequence.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: When you "intercept" --
MR IRVING: This is the Bletchley Park intercept of the --
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Messages to Berlin.
MR IRVING: Messages between Berlin and the Eastern Front for police
commanders, and also a whole number of other SS units, but these are the ones I
rely on. No. 35 is a message addressed from Berlin on November 17th, that same
day as the previous conversation, to the commander of security police, Dr
Lange, L-A-N-G-E, in Riga, concerning, and I use the next word in original
German -- these are my translations, concerning the evakierung of the Jews.
"Evakierung", my Lord, is one of those words we will probably tussle
over. The literal translation is "evacuation", but I am perfectly
ready to
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accept for the purposes of this action that "evakierung" is
occasionally used by the SS as a euphemism for a more ugly means of disposing.
But in this particular case what is significant is that the man in Berlin is
telling the recipient in Riga, on November 17th, in other words, that same day,
at 6.25 p.m., transport train No. DO 26 has left Berlin for Kovno or Kornas,
with 940 more Jews on board. That was usually the rough size of each train load
of Jews, about 1,000 Jews. Transport escorted by two Gestapo and 15 police
officers. Transport commander is Criminal Overassessor Exner, the man's name,
who was two copies of the transport list with him. Transport provided with
following provisions, and this is interesting part, my Lord, 3,000 kilogrammes
of bread, three tonnes of bread for a two or three day journey. 27 kilogrammes
of flour, nearly three tonnes of flour; 200 kilogrammes of peas; 200
kilogrammes of nutriments; 300 kilogrammes of corn flakes; 18 bottles of soup
spices. They continue in the next message; 52 kilogrammes soup powders, 10
packets of something or other, we do not know; 50 kilogrammes of salt; 47,200
Reich Marks in crates. Signed Gestapo Headquarters, Berlin. Quite an
interesting document, my Lord. It
is the first kind of thing we come across in my view to show that these trains
were actually well-provisioned. It is a bit of a dent, a tiny dent in
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the image that we have,
the perception, as Mr Rampton calls it, of the Holocaust today. The next one,
page 6, is a message intercepted on 20th November. It is unimportant for our
purposes on what day it was decoded. It was decoded 10 days. It takes 10 days
to decode it. The actual message is dated three days later, 20th November 1941,
again, dressed do commander of order police and the SS in Riga, concerning
evacuation of Jews. The same kind of thing, transport train No. DO56. Has left
Bremen, destination Minsk with 971 Jews on 18th November. Escort command
regular police Bremen, transport commander Police Meister Bockhorn,
B-O-C-K-H-O-R-N, is in possession of two lists of names and 48,700 Reich Marks
in cashiers' credits. Jews are well-provisioned with food and appliances. My
Lord, on the next page you will see the actual intercept, page 7 is what the
actual intercept looked like. They are headed "Most Secret". It is
the second paragraph, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: "Most secret" is put on at Bletchley, is it
not?
MR IRVING: Indeed, of course. There is no indication on the intercepts
themselves, as intercepted here, what security classification they have. But I
want to draw attention only to the word "gerat" in the fifth or sixth
line of the intercept, which means appliances. Any German speakers in
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the room I am sure would
agree the word "gerat" is the tools of the trade, roughly, they are
being sent to the East with food, with provisions, and with the tools of their
trade.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You have translated that as what?
MR IRVING: Appliances. It is a rough cover all, tools of the trade would
be a little bit too specific, I am sure Mr Rampton will probably eventually
object. But the sense of gerat, if a cameraman comes into this room he would
bring his gerat with him, his appliances with him. The next one is No. 15, I
rely on this because it shows in the first line, I am sorry I am still on page
6, my Lord, the second message on page 6 SS Obergruppen Fuhrer Jeckelm,
transferred from Kiev to Riga. So that was the day this criminal was
transferred to Riga, round about November 20th, and in fact it is a pretty low
level message. They are worried about what happened to motor cars and things
like that if I remember correctly. If we can now turn straight over to page 9,
my Lord, I took the trouble during the night to dig out of my files, the war
diary of Hitler's headquarters, which I have. These are all my documents. All
my documents when I obtained them for the book, I had bound in these volumes
because I anticipated perhaps Mr Rampton would say, well, we have no proof that
Hitler was in his headquarters, that he was at home on the day of crucial
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message November 30th.
MR RAMPTON: No, he would not say that, my Lord, because Himmler recalls
that he had lunch with Hitler on that day.
MR IRVING: Well, I am just dotting the Is and crossing the Ts.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: The point is not made, so we need not trouble with
that.
MR IRVING: It also talks about the arrival of the Fuhrer's train that
very morning. On the following day is the photocopy from the page of war diary
at Hitler's headquarters. We then come to the crucial document we were talking
about yesterday evening, which I ...
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I still have your copy of that.
MR IRVING: I put it in the bundles for sake of completeness. It is
referred to in the third conversation. I draw attention only to the first
lines, which says: "Telephone conversation on November 30th 1941".
The next line "Wolf stanche" means Wolf's Lair. The next line
"ausdemzung" it means from the train. Himmler is still in the train
going to Hitler's headquarters. Three lines down, ausdembunker, from the
bunker, he is at the bunker now, in the Wolf's Lair, 13.30 he telephones
Heydrich, as we know only the third and fourth line of the notes are important,
"Jew transport from Berlin, no liquidation".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: If I may proceed now to page 13, my Lord. This is
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the one that I am
alleged mysteriously to have misread and the implication being I deliberately
misread it or deliberately changed word the Gerhartens Fuhrer (?) into
"juden", which would be quite a feat. My Lord on the page 13 the
question of the line, the contentious line is third from the bottom, haben
zubleiben.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Have to remain.
MR IRVING: You will notice, my Lord, the word "haben" has
obviously been retyped, a bit of squeeze getting it in. It was retyped by my
when I realized my error in transcription. That typewriter was disposed of some
or ten or 15 years ago. That is how early I realized my error. I do not know if
it is significant one way or the other, it may count against me. I do not know.
It is also significant to see in the following line, my Lord, I have written
the words "truppenschuhe", and this is another misreading by me.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It does not really matter, does it.
MR IRVING: My Lord, I am just trying to say as you will see from the
next page, which I now ask you to turn.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Before you leave that, I thought there was another
point made on this document, which is your translation of the words --
MR IRVING: That is Verwallueys Fuhrer.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Am I not right about that?
P-17
MR IRVING: This was the point Mr Rampton sought to make, and I corrected
him, my Lord, and said that was not the word that I misread. It was the word on
the following line haben, which I misread as Juden, and this is why I was going
to ask your Lordship, respectfully, to turn to the next page, page 14, where
you will see the words in question, three lines from the bottom on the right,
that is the quality of the original I was working from. I do not know if your
copy is highlighted, the crucial word is not perhaps...
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, it is. What did you originally transcribe that as?
MR IRVING: Juden, I would submit this is a perfectly reasonable kind of
mistake to make. If I was to labour the point I would draw your Lordship's
attention to all the other versions of the word "Juden" that are
correct, you will see they are very similar indeed in the German Gothic
handwriting. So what we have, my Lord, to recap at this point, November 30th
Himmler for some reason in a telephone conversation with Heydrich saying that
train load of Jews from Berlin is not to be liquidated. I believe that is a
fair expansion of that sentence. On the following day he has that telephone
conversation with SS Gruppen Fuhrer Poll, I am back on page 13, at 4.45 p.m.
They touch on Depervartens (?)
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Fuhrer, but more
important now is the conversation, again, with Heydrich about the same time as
the previous one, on the previous day, 13.15 on that page 13. He has a
conversation with Prague first of all about his scribes, the female scribes
and, secondly, "executionen", like "executions", in Riga. I
am sure I do not have to translate that. So it is now very much in the air that
something has gone on in Riga, my Lord. On page 15, that same day, we are well
in the chronology, my Lord, this is a telephone conversation at 7.15 a.m. on
that Monday morning, December 1st, 1941. This is coming from Jeckelm to Berlin.
This is a very ugly one indeed, my Lord. He is saying in English: "I need
by next available air courier 10 Finnish", Finland, in other words,
"military pistols with two drum magazines each. Execution of sonder
aktionen", special actions, S-O-N-D-E-R A-K-T-I-O-A-N, "request radio
telegramme reply. Senior SS and Police Command, North Russia".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Who is this addressed to in Berlin then?
MR IRVING: The main leadership Hauptamt, would be the body concerned
with the procurement of such armaments. The significance of this, my Lord, if
you remember the harrowing description by General Bruns of the shootings on the
edge of the pit where the men were using machine guns, tommy-guns, and he has
run, he has not enough tommy-guns,
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he needs more. You can
see the actual intercept of that, my Lord, on the next page. What is the answer
he gets? Page 17, again my translation my Lord, Himmler himself contacts him,
either in person, that is the second message, or through his Adjutant,
Grothmann (who is still alive in Germany now). He sends this message to that
same criminal, Jeckelm, at 7.30 p.m. on December 1st: To SS Obergruppenfuhrer
Jeckelm, Senior SS and Police Commander, Osla, Riga. Reichfuhrer SS Himmler
summons you to him for a conference on December 4th. Please state when you will
arrive here and by what means you will be travelling". In other words, he
had been summoned urgently to the Headquarters. The very next message explains
what is going to happen. "SS Obergruppenfuhrer Jeckelm" -- this is
the message we dealt with yesterday, my Lord -- "The Jews being outplaced
to Osland", to the Baltic, "are to be dealt with only in accordance
with the guidelines laid down by myself and/or by the ... (reading to the
words) ... on my orders. I would punish arbitrary and disobedient acts",
signed Himmler. A most incredibly important message, I think, for many reasons.
He is not talking about a Hitler order here. He is saying: "The guidelines
issued by me", by Himmler, "or by the Reichssicherheits
Hauptamt" who is Heydrich", his telephone conversation partner.
Jeckelm, out on the Eastern front, has overstepped the guidelines.
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He started shooting
thousands of Germans. He had been summoned to Himmler's headquarters, to
Rastenburg, in East Prussia to account for himself.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Where do we find the guideline?
MR IRVING: My Lord, we will hear in the course of this trial that these
intercepts are not wall to wall. We do not have everything that they sent.
There is an enormous mass of trivia, people whose cars have been towed and that
kind of thing, people whose wives have died. Occasionally embedded in the
trivia, like in a goldmine, in the slurry, there are diamonds like this. The incredible
thing is, although this document has now been in the public domain for about
five or six years, the historians and the world have not leapt on this document
and said,"Irving was right. This proves that the Fuhrer's headquarters
were not only indignant, but were calling people to account. In the way that
the wars are, although he is brought back from the Front and he is wrapped on
the knuckles, he is sent back to the Front to carry on with his job. He is not
dismissed from service; in rather the same way as I know General Patten, for
example, went to the Front when General Patten had been liquidating prisoners.
He was called before Eisenhauer and called to account. He was put on ice for
two or three months and then he was given command of one of the best armies,
the 3rd American Army, because good men are hard
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to come by in a war.
That is, undoubtedly, the way the Nazis viewed this criminal. May I proceed, my
Lord?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, thank you.
MR IRVING: We can see on page 21 the arrival of the unfortunate
criminal, the arrival of the unfortunate criminal, SS Obbergruppenfuhrer
Jeckelm in Himmler's appointment book, in other words, at Hitler's
headquarters. One notices at 1300 they are driving over Hitler's headquarters.
Then Himmler visits the barber and the dentist. He sees Hitler at 5 p.m. and at
7 p.m. he sees other SS Generals. At 8 p.m. he has dinner in part of Hitler's
headquarters with Jeckelm and at 9.30 he hauls Jeckelm over the carpet, the
Jewish question, the SS brigade, economic business. So that is the actual
visit.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Would it be a fair interpretation of this document that
the original plan was that Jeckelm should be present with Hitler and Himmler at
5 o'clock in the afternoon?
MR IRVING: I cannot be specific on that, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It looks like it, does it not?
MR IRVING: I do not want to speculate, but these are grey areas. The
documents do not tell us everything we would dearly love to know. What we do
know is the final two pages I put in the bundle. My Lord, you will see that the
last page has some red print on the bottom, the very last
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page. This is the
German, I would say, official transcript of Himmler's diary which, my Lord, the
Defendants also have on the desk in front of them. It is published this year.
It is enormously expensive. It is a very good and highly dependable
transcription of Himmler's diaries and appointment book. They put that in as a
footnote at 104, I believe, in which they say: "After these signals were
exchanged", which, oddly enough, they do not elucidate to the degree that
I have, "the killings of German Jews stopped for many months". I have
no further submissions to make about these documents.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You have lost me a little. Where do I find after these
messages ----
MR IRVING: The very last line of the red text. This is the comments by
the editors, who are a team of German historians, on the Himmler diaries which
they have annotated most expertly, and they too have drawn finally on these two
mysterious messages that we intercepted.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But the point that may be made, I do not know, on this
is that it is the mass shootings of German Jews that ceased.
MR IRVING: I agree, my Lord. This is why I have been very careful to
make a distinction in my evidence and, indeed, in my books.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That suggests to me -- tell me if I am wrong
P-23
about this -- that the
guidelines mentioned in the earlier message were guidelines relating to German
Jews.
MR IRVING: This is quite possible, my Lord. I would only ask you in
reading, as undoubtedly you will, and re-reading passages from my books on
which the Defendants seek to rely, you ask yourself this question, has Mr
Irving, the so-called Holocaust denier, at any time implied that this kind of
massacre did not go on, and that it was systematic and it was carried out on
guidelines from above?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: But you will notice that Mr Himmler talks about "orders
that I have issued and the Reichssicherheits Hauptamt". He never says,
"On the Fuhrer's instructions" which, obviously, there would be a
strong temptation in a message like this to say, "You have not only upset
me, but you have put Adolf's nose really out of joint". So, I mean,
obviously, I am going to submit that if documents like this exist of a quality
like that, to imply that I was speaking off the wall in some way with no kind
of documentary basis for the submissions that I make in my books, it would be
unfair, unjust and perverse.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. You have taken me through, and thank you for that
----
MR IRVING: I ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: --- this little bundle. I am making this point at this
stage because it is going to crop up time
P-24
and again. I am rather
anxious not to have little one issue bundles cropping up at odd stages because,
frankly, in a case of this length, it is all going to get lost and tangled. I
imagine that all these documents are in one or other of the existing files.
MR IRVING: They are in this cover, my Lord, but not in such pristine
condition as that. I want to very great trouble last night to prepare this
particular bundle in the hope that you would say to yourself, well, if he was
able to come up with evidence like this on this matter, no doubt he will be
able on any other matter ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Do not misunderstand me. I am not critical. I think it
is helpful to have a bundle prepared like this, but what I need to be sure of
is that I know where these documents can be found in the existing files. What I
will ask somebody on the Defendants' side to do, if they would be good enough,
if they can do this, is to provide me with the cross-reference. Could you ask
somebody to do that?
MR RAMPTON: We will think about that. The trouble is at the moment that
our files are ordered according to the experts' reports.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, but most of these documents would be relatively
easily traced?
MR RAMPTON: Most of them, I think, are referred to in the expert reports
anyway. Whether they are copied in quite that form, I am not sure; I think
probably not.
P-25
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You see why I need to have what I am asking for.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I do. My immediate idea is just to put them with a
separate numeration at the back of Professor Browning or that report. It is
apparently ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think that is not a bad idea, to put them into J,
otherwise there is going to be proliferation of...
MR IRVING: My Lord, I am using an alphabetical system which requires
that there are going to be less than 26 such files over the entire case that I
would anticipate putting in of this nature. If you will bear with me, the
reason I called this just "Himmler" is that I was intending to
produce further documents, for example, the Schlegelberger series (which I am
sure your Lordship is familiar with). I would also put that into that binder.
So there will just be an Irving series, Irving A, Irving B, Irving C. This is,
after all, my case, my Lord, and I do not want my structure to be subsumed into
the case for the Defendants.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I entirely agree with that. This may all seem very
boring, but, believe me, in a case like this you ----
MR IRVING: "Boring" is not a word I would use.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: --- really do have to watch the sort of housekeeping.
Just so that everybody knows where I have it, I am putting it into J.
MR RAMPTON: Tab C.
P-26
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I have not got a tab C.
MR IRVING: My Lord, I would propose that we now continue where we left
off last night.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am going to treat what you have told me in the last
20 minutes or so as being part of your evidence, although you told me from
counsel's bench. It is up to you; I think you probably ought to go back, if you
would be good enough, into the witness box. Cross-examined by MR RAMPTON, QC,
continued.
THE WITNESS: My Lord, there is just one other document there that I
forgot to refer to and this is No. 23. I will just read it out to you. There is
no need for your Lordship to see it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I had better follow it.
A: A telephone conversation of exactly the same kind from Himmler's
telephone log: On Hitler's birthday, at midday with Heydrich, again that is
H-E-Y-D-I-C-H, a conversation with Heydrich in which the last line reads:
"Kindly", "Keine vernichtungd. Zigeuner", K-E-I-N-E V-E-R-N-I-C-H-T-U-N-G-D.
Z-I-G-E-U-N-E-R.
Q: That is "gypsies", is it
not?
A: That is right, my Lord.
Q: How would you translate "vernichtungd"?
A: Literally "destruction" and that is how I will leave it.
"No destruction of the gypsies"; the significance being that on this
day at mid-day, Himmler is with Hitler
P-27
celebrating a birthday
party. It was Hitler's birthday, April 20th. Once again he has had to telephone
his chief executioner, so to speak, Heydrich, and say, "The gypsies are
not to be liquidated" and yet they were liquidated.
Q: You say Himmler was with Hitler at 12 o'clock?
A: Quite definitely. It was Hitler's birthday and I would be happy to
lead evidence to prove that, but I am sure Mr Rampton will not dispute that the
head of the SS ----
Q: And this is a phone call to Heydrich from Himmler?
A: It is a telephone conversation between them.
Q: Yes, I take that point.
A: Of significance, it is one more document in that chain that I
occasionally refer to.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Thank you.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, as to that, Mr Irving, the "no liquidation of the
gypsies", again that was before there was any meeting between them, was it
not, on that day, which is 20th April 1942, Himmler's log said that he met
Fuhrer at 12.30?
A: This may well be. It may well be what his log says.
Q: Whereas the telephone call is at noon, I think.
A: Yes.
Q: Rather like 30th November?
A: Yes.
Q: 1941?
A: Yes.
Q: Can we go back to 30th November 1941, please? Did you get
P-28
a transcript of your
evidence of the proceedings yesterday -- have you got a copy that looks like
this, Mr Irving?
A: Yes I have.
Q: With a quarter page like that?
A: Yes.
Q: Could you turn, please, to the page numbered 289? It is the top
left-hand block on one of the pages.
A: Yes.
Q: I was asking you if you remember why it was that you had translated
"Judentransport", a singular word, as Jews in general?
A: Yes.
Q: You had said, you can see it there, can you not, that it was a silly
misreading of the word. You said at line 19: "I admit I made a mistake in
the transcription"?
A: Yes.
Q: This was your sworn evidence on oath yesterday?
A: Yes.
Q: Now would you please turn to the first page of your new bundle?
A: Yes.
Q: The translation you have made for us kindly ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- 23rd January 1974, where you have transcribed it correctly?
P-29
A: Yes.
Q: The answer you gave yesterday was wrong, was it not?
A: That is correct.
Q: Why was it wrong, Mr Irving?
A: Because we are talking about events almost 30 years ago. I was
writing this book 32 years ago. I received these documents 35 years ago. I probably
transcribed it, as you can see from the letter, round about 1974. It is very
difficult to put myself back into my mind set of 25 or 26 years ago. You asked
me what the reason for that was and my first presumption was that I misread the
word, but ably challenged by his Lordship, questioned by his Lordship, on this
matter, I recalled also that at the time I looked at it, the word
"transport", "Judentransport", to me also could be
translated as "transportation of Jews". Indeed, it can be translated
that way and I refined it later on when I was informed by Dr Flemming, as he
then was, who is an expert on the Holocaust, that there was one very clear
train load of Jews to which reference was being made. That is so, I think, an
accurate answer which should really replace yesterday's answer.
Q: I dare say it should, Mr Irving. Whether I accept it, of course, is
quite another question, even in its remodelled form.
A: Yes.
P-30
Q: The answer is, of course, that I do not. Mr Irving, I would like you
to think a little bit about what you have just said. You heard me open this
case on Tuesday afternoon, did you not?
A: Yes.
Q: Yes. You have to say "yes" just for the recording. That is
all. Nodding or so will not do. You had a copy of the written document that I
read out, did you not?
A: Which document are you referring to?
Q: My opening statement in this case?
A: Yes.
Q: That was on Tuesday afternoon.
A: Yes.
Q: You realized then ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- that this is one of the points that I was going to make against
you, did you not?
A: Yes, that has been repeatedly made, yes.
Q: It has been repeatedly made, has it not? Yet, when you come into the
witness box to answer questions on oath, you simply pluck an explanation out of
the air, do you not?
A: Mr Rampton, may I explain to you that in the last four days I have
had six hours sleep? Is this a satisfactory answer to why one occasionally
makes slips of the memory in the witness box? If not, then I will go into it in
greater detail.
P-31
Q: What is the truth, Mr Irving? You did not misread it, that is clear.
A: Yes -- not this particular word.
Q: No. So yesterday's answer was a false answer.
A: Misinterpreted.
Q: You now say, "Well, I may have mistranslated it, but my
translation was, on the face of it, legitimate"?
A: Well, in this case it is not a translation that is needed, it is an
interpretation because it is a cryptic word. "Transport" can mean
several different things. There are many words that can mean several different
things, and you have to look at the context and you have to take other
documents and possibly later information into account in arriving at which of
those words is the correct translation. None of the words would be a wrong
translation at the time you first make it. You then refine the translation on the
basis of external evidence.
Q: Would not a more natural way of putting it in German to be to put it
in the plural "Judentransporte" with an "e" on the end?
A: It can also be done that way, yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Would part of the context be that there did happen at
this time to be a train load of Jews setting out from Berlin to Riga?
A: There were many train loads sitting out. By this time, by November
30th, there had been five trainloads of Jews
P-32
heading for Riga or
Minsk.
Q: Over what sort of period?
A: One week, round about that time -- no, I am sorry, two weeks would be
a closer approximation. They were given numbers, "D" for Germany,
"O" for East or German, rather, and "O" for East. That is
what the numbers in the intercepts are.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, another of the things that you and I disagreed
about yesterday was your unequivocal categorical assertion in your various
publications that that order from Himmler to Heydrich on that day was given at
the instigation of Hitler. You say it was, or at least that is a reasonable
inference; you called it a "judgment call", I think, did you not?
A: I called that, the reason I used it, or referred to it in that -- I
think we ought to see the actual wording I used. If you say that I said it on a
number of occasions, it would be helpful to see the actual wording that I used.
Q: For example, let us just look at how you put it in "Hitler's War
1991". My Lord, that is bundle D1(v). It is in two halves. This is the
second half. At page 427, Mr Irving, if you are using the published edition?
A: I am just looking at the 1977 one to pre-empt you.
Q: We will look at that first, if you will. I think there it is round
about 300 and something.
P-33
A: At 1.30 p.m.
Q: Well, his Lordship may not have it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I have.
MR RAMPTON: Have you got 1977, my Lord? 332.
A: Yes. I think, with respect, it makes more sense to take it from the
chronology that I wrote the various editions.
Q: I was not actually going to look at all the references, but if you
wish me to do so, I do not mind in the slightest.
A: Well, it is like a building, the way a building changes over the
years, that tells us something also.
Q: "Himmler's personal role is ambivalent. On November 30th 1941,
he was summoned to the Wolf's Lair for a secret conference with Hitler in which
the fate of Berlin's Jews was clearly raised". Pause there. What evidence
that Himmler was summoned to the Wolfsschanze the Wolf's Lair?
A: My very great expertise on this matter.
Q: What?
A: My very great expertise on this matter. Do you wish me to elaborate?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I think you had better; I am not quite sure I
understand the answer.
MR RAMPTON: I asked for evidence, not expertise.
A: Well, the evidence is that if you go to the archives and work through
the files of Hitler's Chancellory, you will find every year, two or three
times, the head of his
P-34
Chancellory, Hans
Lammers, issued an edict to all the Reich ministers and all the senior Nazi
officials informing them that nobody was permitted to visit Hitler, just
ringing the door bell and saying, "Mein Fuhrer, can I drop in and see you
for a moment?" They had to have a specific summons and invitation because
Hitler was constantly being beseiged by junior and senior officials who were
ringing his doorbell in that way and asking to see him. Eventually, it had to
be forbidden, first of all, by Lammers and then by an edit of Martin Bormann.
So you could not visit Hitler unless you were summoned.
Q: Mr Irving, I am not going away from that topic, believe me, I am not,
but it may be we had better get this sorted out earlier rather than later in
this case. Where do you place Himmler in the Nazi hierarchy?
A: Nowhere in the hierarchy that it would just turn up on Hitler's
doorstep.
Q: Please, we will come to that I promise I not leaving the topic, where
do you put him?
A: He had the rank of a Reichsminister, the rank of Reischminister was
equivalent to a field marshal, so it would be the equivalent rank of four star
general. He had Hitler's ear, he took orders directly from Hitler, there was no
intermediary, is that sufficient?
Q: -- yes, I am going to go a little bit further. This is not hostile
interrogation, Mr Irving, this is an attempt
P-35
to see if we can agree
on some broad general facts which may be of use in this case. Himmler was, was
he not, one of the original putschists of 1923?
A: He is there to be seen marching in the ranks.
Q: Wearing Nazi uniform.
A: One of the old guard.
Q: Have you read Ian Kershaw's book?
A: Whose?
Q: Ian Kershaw's book?
A: I do not read books.
Q: You do not read books. Of course not. He is one of old guard, is he
not?
A: Yes.
Q: So was Goring?
A: Yes.
Q: And so was Goebbels?
A: On and off, if you see what I mean.
Q: Yes, I do see what you mean. Is there anything which leads you to
suppose --
A: In connection with Goebbels, of course, he was not one of the
putschists, he came in several years later.
Q: -- Rosenberg was perhaps, I do not know. Is there anything you know
of that prevents one from supposing that Hitler might have telephoned as he
apparently was able to use the telephone on the train, was he not?
A: Himmler, you are talking about?
P-36
Q: Himmler I mean, telephoned the Wolf's Lair and said "can I come
and talk to you about something"?
A: No reason to suppose that at all, yes.
Q: So why you do use the word "summon"?
A: Because then Hitler would have said "all right, come and see
me".
Q: You see in the context, do you agree, the word "summoned"?
A: Yes.
Q: Means that he is being summoned in order to discuss the fate of the
Berlin Jews?
A: In the context.
Q: Yes. Amongst other things, perhaps?
A: No, I disagree with you Mr Rampton, on November 30th, he, Himmler was
summoned to the Wolf's Lair for a secret conference with Hitler at which the
fate of Berlin's Jews was clearly raised.
Q: By whom?
A: We do not know.
Q: Then you go on, at 1.30 p.m. Himmler was obliged to telephone from
Hitler's bunker?
A: Yes.
Q: Who could have obliged, that is to say compel, Himmler to do such a
thing?
A: His own inner conscience.
Q: That is what it was, was it?
A: That is why I used word "obliged" otherwise I would have
P-37
said
"ordered".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: The reality of the way, would you not accept, Mr
Irving, of the way it is put in your book is that the reader is going to infer
that that was an order from Hitler to him?
A: My Lord, I use my words with utmost care when I write passages like
that. I will go backwards and forwards over them looking for a word which I
considered to be justified by the evidence but not implying or imputing or
inferring too much. If I used the word "obliged" then it was because
I hesitated to use the word "order" but for some reason he made the
telephone conversation. He did not wait until he got back to his own
headquarters, he immediately phoned Heydrich from Hitler's bunker without even
getting over to the local phone box, he phoned Heydrich with these instructions
saying "stop the killing".
MR RAMPTON: That is what you intended to convey in that passage of that
page of Hitler's War 1977?
A: That is all that I felt it was safe to convey on the basis of the
very skimpy evidence I had at that time. At that time, of course, I did not
even have the decodes, but now the decodes confirm me.
Q: So you say. Let us turn to page (xiv) of the introduction to this
book, may we?
A: Yes.
P-38
Q: Perhaps for completeness start at the bottom of page 13: "Many
people, particularly in Germany and Austria had an interest in propagating the
accepted version of the order of one mad man originated the entire
massacre." We are talking here about Holocaust in the old sense, old, in
the Irving history.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am so sorry, Mr Rampton, I am lost, page 13.
MR RAMPTON: (Xiii) of the introduction.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Thank you.
MR RAMPTON: I will start again. Last two lines bottom of page 13:
"Many people, particularly in Germany and Austria had an interest in
propagating the accepted version that the order of one mad man originated the
entire massacre." That is to say the massacre of the Jews, those are my
words, my Lord. "Precisely when the order was given in what form has
admittedly never been established. In 1939? But the secret extermination did
not begin operating until December 1941. At the January 1942 Bunzig conference?
But the incontrovertible evidence is", note those words, Mr Irving, in the
light of your recent answers, "the incontrovertible evidence is that
Hitler ordered on November 30th 1941 that there was to be 'no liquidation' of
the Jews (without much difficulty I found in Himmler's private files his own
handwritten note on this)." In the light of that, Mr Irving, would you
care to revise the
P-39
answers you gave a
moment ago?
A: No.
Q: Well, what do those words mean? Do they speak for themselves or do
they not, that I have just read?
A: I have done exactly what any normal editor would do, you present the
evidence and then you draw conclusions. I present the evidence in the body of
the book. I even in this one case print a facsimile of the document which is
pivotal to this particular argument and then in the introduction (as a good
author should) I put my principal conclusions. Here I am putting my principal
conclusion as the author, David Irving, that I draw the conclusion from this
episode that Hitler had intervened to stop -- and here is the error, the
liquidation of the Jews. What I should have written is "the liquidation of
a transport of Jews". That was the state of my knowledge at the time I
wrote this version of this book. Subsequently of course I amended it.
Q: I think you told me yesterday that the only evidence you had for the
order of Hitler was that Himmler was there at the time?
A: The only evidence that I had for an order of Hitler?
Q: Yes, was that Himmler was at the Wolfsschanze at the time?
A: I think we would have to see exactly what I testified before I would
agree to that brief summary.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think it is right, but if you want to be
P-40
referred to it then no
doubt you should be.
MR RAMPTON: A summary?
A: I hate to agree with vulgarised versions of what I testified.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Let us have a look and see what you did say.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, one could start at line 20 on page 285 perhaps?
A: 285?
Q: 285, line 20, I am trying not to take too much of it. I suppose it
really begins at line five on page 285, but I hope I summarized it fairly?
A: I do not think you did, but I will certainly stand by what I stated
on those two pages.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Look at line 286, line 3 and onwards.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, please.
A: This is the question, of course, and not the answer.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, but there is an answer after the question.
MR RAMPTON: At line nine there is an answer.
A: Yes.
Q: My summary was a fair one. There is no evidence beyond the fact that
Himmler was at the bunker that day and had lunch with Hitler an hour later, is
there?
A: Evidence for what?
Q: For an order from Hitler that Jews -- that the train load of Jews,
let us stick with that for the moment?
P-41
A: This is --
Q: Should be not liquidated?
A: -- I do not mean this offensively, but this is the common sense
interpretation of the evidence lying before us, rather the perverse
interpretation. We will always has versions or two interpretations, one is the
obvious one, which is -- and the other is the perverse one. The obvious one is
if Himmler goes to Hitler's headquarters and is handed a phone at some time on
his way out and he then has to make phone call to Heydrich saying, "stop
killing the Berlin Jews", then there is some close connection between that
and the fact he has seen Hitler that day.
Q: That is a possible interpretation, we in this court, and I do not
know about the court of history, we in this court when we say
"evidence" we mean "evidence" not "inference".
A: The issues that are being pleaded are mistranslation, or distortion,
deliberately mistranslation, distortion, manipulation and I do not think that
the particular avenue we are going down leads in the --
Q: I will put it bluntly to you and then I will leave it, you can deny
it, because you will deny it, I am sure; (a) you deliberately mistranslated it,
you inflated from one train load into Jews generally, that is number one; and
(b) you inserted an order from Hitler for which there was no evidence?
P-42
A: -- I will take those two allegations seriatim; that I inflated it
deliberately, there is not a shred of evidence for that. The evidence is quite
clear, that as soon as Dr General Flemming brought to me the evidence there was
one train load of Jews which was in trouble that day, I immediately and in
subsequent editions of the book revised it to the narrow interpretation of the
word "transport" rather than the wider interpretation.
Q: And you are sticking with the Hitler order answer?
A: As being the reasonable rather than perverse analysis of the
documents at that time before us. I emphasise of course it has now been very
amply confirmed by the intercepts I read out in my bundle this morning.
Q: Very well, then, we must look at another document. This is one of
your documents?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Before you do can I ask one rather mundane question.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, of course.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But I think you will understand why I ask it, Hitler's
headquarters or the Wolf's Lair, how big a building or collection of buildings
was that?
A: At that time it was not a big formidable complex which exists today,
huge concrete bunkers. There were one or two air raid shelters, but it was
mostly in the form of wooden barracks scattered around in a compound of a 2 or
3 kilometres area with minefields and forests.
P-43
Q: How many people would work there?
A: Probably in the order of one thousand people including all the
escorts and security. It had various inner areas and so called
"sperrkreise", which were the security zones and he was in security
zone A. But if it is ausdembunker, from the bunker, then it is from Hitler's
bunker.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: By which you mean an office or --
A: No, Hitler --
Q: -- a part of the compound where Hitler was himself based?
A: -- in the security zone A there was the bunker in which Hitler
resided, lived and conducted his conferences. Later on it was massively
reinforced after the Allied air raids started.
MR RAMPTON: This is all on the same topic, Mr Irving, so that the
document you are will next need is to be found in bundle D8(iii), somebody will
give it to you (same handed).
A: Very well.
Q: The page I want is 1042.
A: Yes.
Q: At the same time could I give you and his Lordship -- I have composed
a page of the reprinted Himmler logs for Sunday 30th November 1941 and Monday
1st December 1941, I have taken from that Witte book. I have taken out the
footnotes because I wanted the text. I wanted the text to appear unvarnished.
First of all would like you to look
P-44
at the page in D8(iii)
page in D8(iii), 1042. This is taken from your website; do you recognize it?
A: Yes.
Q: You do, Mr Irving. At the bottom of the page the last entry starts:
Meanwhile another page from the Himmler file in the Moscow archives obtained by
David Irving on Sunday May 17th 1998, reveals the Reischsfuhrer's appointments
for November 30th 1941, see above. The day of the telephone call with
Heydrich". Turn over now to page 1043. "This suggests that Mr
Irving's original theory that Himmler discussed the matter with Hitler before
phoning Heydrich is wrong. Himmler saw SS Sturmbannfuhrer Gunther d'Alquen, a
journalist, from 12 to 1 p.m. (Reisebericht uber SS Pol Division [that is short
for politzei] u. [that is an abbreviated U stop] Totenkopfdivision) then worked
for an hour ('gearbeitet') during which he made the phone call, received
General Dietl from 2 to 2.30 p.m." I will not bother to read the next bit.
"And only then, at 2.30 p.m., went for lunch until 4 p.m. with Hitler
('Mittagessen b. Fuhrer') that is short for bei, yes ?
A: Yes.
Q: That is your account, must postdate the 17th May 1998, must it not?
According to that entry anyway it does, if
P-45
you look at the first
page?
A: Yes. I did not understand the question, last question, it was what?
Q: Well, if you say that you arrive at this conclusion in consequence of
the discovery of a Himmler, a file page on 17th May 1998, this, what shall we
say, "confession" must postdate that, must it not?
A: Perhaps I should explain to his Lordship, if your Lordship is
wondering why it is written in the third person. This is a page.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I do not think that matters at all.
A: No, right. But in other words I wrote that. This is what is
important.
Q: I follow you wrote it.
MR RAMPTON: I had assumed you wrote that. This is why I called it a
confession. A Confession implies that something is wrong.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Put the substance, Mr Rampton.
MR RAMPTON: It is quite inconsistent with the version you have been
giving us in this court?
A: It is absolutely consistent with my methods as an historian as saying
here is one version, but the audience should know there is an alternative
version. This is absolutely consistent with -- you remember how I sent that
letter to The Times in 1966 saying there are other figures on Dresden and it is
right that the public knows this.
P-46
I know it is unusual for
historians to do this, but I do that kind of thing.
Q: But you did not say, but on reflection I think this suggestion that I
was mistaken is probably wrong, and I adhere to my original thesis that it was
a Hitler order?
A: I draw attention to the first two words on page 1043 "this suggests".
Q: I know that?
A: It does not say "this confirms" or "proves".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But to be blunt about it, Mr Irving, what I think is
the suggestion made on the basis of your website entry is that it was because a
journalist tipped off Himmler what had been going on that the message went out
to Riga; have I understood it correctly?
A: I think I would be reading very much between the lines, my Lord.
Q: That is what you are saying here, is it not, Mr Irving?
A: No, not at all. I am saying exactly what happened. What his timetable
was.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, the position is this, you quite properly in this
website entry recognize the possibility, I would say the probability, it does
not matter, that your original thesis, that it was an order from Hitler was
wrong, do you not?
A: Well, you say "probability" and "possibility"; I
would say what I am saying here is it is important that the learned
P-47
public, academics and
others who are accessing this website realize there are documents which
indicate a discrepancies in The Times. However, we should not lay every word on
the gold balance, as the Germans say, because it is quite possible and indeed
highly probable that as soon as Himmler arrived at Hitler's headquarters he did
not go and have a shower or something, he went straight in to see the boss, and
said "boss I am here, what time shall I come past" and the boss said
"oh by the way Heydrich I will have to tear a strip off you because of
what is happening at the Eastern Front".
Q: Mr Irving, who reads these books of yours? Do not take that as a
suggestion that nobody does, at all, I do not mean that, but who are they aimed
at?
A: How would I know.
Q: Who do you write your books for? When are you writing a book, if I
write something to my wife I do not use the kind of pompous language I use in
court, I hope. So you know, you have an audience?
A: Obviously, I am trying to write for as wide an audience as possible
so that it is both learned enough for the academics to use as a source book, in
the case of the Goebbels biography but also entertaining enough for the general
public to look at and read from end to end without putting it down at the end
of a chapter.
Q: Exactly. It is meant to be readable and it is also
P-48
scholarly and
authoritative, is it not?
A: Yes.
Q: All three of those things. Do you not think, Mr Irving, that the
respectable approach to this problem of the Himmler telephone call, for problem
it is, historically?
A: Yes.
Q: Would have been to put both possible "theories", as you
call them, in this website into your book?
A: Well, here you have another time discrepancy, Mr Rampton, because the
book was delivered to the publishers in 1995, and this Moscow diary came to my
hands in 1998, three years, so it would have been quite a feat of imagination
to imagine what was in the archives and I had not at that time seen.
Q: No, but you had assumed without more, had you not?
A: This is not the point you were just trying to make, you were trying
to imply I concealed what I knew, which would fall within the grounds of
manipulation and mistranslation.
Q: What I put to you is this, that you inserted an order from Hitler
without evidence?
A: I inferred an order from Hitler with very strong evidence.
Q: You state it as a categorical fact?
A: In my introduction to the book, yes, I draw conclusions.
Q: And also in the text, if I may say so.
A: No, in the text I state exactly what the documents say.
P-49
Q: And you mistranscribe the word Judentransport so as to make Hitler
appear the more merciful because that is what it is about?
A: No, I applied the wider interpretation of the "transport"
rather than the narrow interpretation, which one could subsequently apply once
one knew more about the history of that particular train load.
Q: You do not agree now that you have been caught out by the full entry
in the Hitler log?
A: Mr Rampton, historians are constantly being caught out by fresh
documents that come into their purview and one is -- I am personally very
satisfied how infrequently I am caught out. I the entire Goebbels biography
initially, for example, without access to the diaries in Moscow. I was pleased
to find out how much I managed to work out correctly from secondary sources. So
it is with particular episode, the decodes only came into our possession within
the last four or five years and yet they confirmed exactly what I inferred 20
years, 25 years ago. I do not think it is a question of being caught out. If
one revises and updates information it is not because one has been caught out,
with all pejorative implications.
Q: I am afraid they are pejorative. I would like to know why you say
that the decodes (we will go it now, I will come back to where I was in a
moment) why the decodes confirm your account?
P-50
A: I think I have gone through the little bundle this morning in some
detail, I am glad I did.
Q: You show me the decode, I suppose mean the one on page 17?
A: December 1st.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Rampton, you are moving to a slightly different
topic, may I ask one more question?
MR RAMPTON: Yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is back to your website, looking at it now, forget
what you have written in the past, but looking at it now, it is obvious that
there was some sort of discussion or meeting between Himmler and the
journalists; is that not right?
A: My Lord, I regard this meeting between Himmler and the journalist as
being a matter of very low priority, I just put it in purely because it shows
what he was doing that morning. It never occurred to me that Gunther d'Alquen
who is in fact still alive, I believe -- no, he died three or four months ago
in fact, that he would brought to Himmler any kind of serious information about
was going on. I have never heard that implied or inferred. D'Alquen has been
questioned on very many occasions, both by the courts and by journalists, and I
am sure that that kind of information would have come into my possession, if it
had had I would have immediately used it.
Q: The entry does suggest that this journalist did have some news to
give to Himmler, does it not?
P-51
A: I shall go straight home and change the wording of the entry, my
Lord, because was that not what I intended as the author of this passage.
Q: What is Reisebericht?
A: It is a travel report. He has been travelling around, presumably on
the Eastern Front and he comes back to Himmler. He reports back to Himmler,
tells him what he has seen, when he visited the SS police divisions and
whatever --
Q: How would you translate Totenkopfdivision?
A: -- Death's Head Division, which is a division on the Eastern Front
which was not connected, as I understand it, with the killing operations, it
was actually operating on the Eastern Front. I am prepared to be corrected on
this but I believe that the Death's Head Division was one of the elite SS
divisions which was fighting on the Eastern Front at Moscow at this time of
course in severe difficulties.
Q: Yes, thank you very much. I am sorry, Mr Rampton.
MR RAMPTON: It is of no matter, my Lord.
THE WITNESS: I would be very willing to write material in between the
lines here if I thought it assisted the evidence that on this particular case,
on the balance of probabilities beyond putting the name in, that is all one can
safely do. But your Lordship will notice that I do not hesitate to publicise
information which is possibly
P-52
hostile to my own
interests.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I see that.
MR RAMPTON: The original of I imagine the two documents that you are
talking about when you are talking about the -- is on page 20 of your little
bundle; do you have the little bundle there?
A: Yes.
Q: Items 24 and 25; is that right?
A: 24 and?
Q: 25, items 24 and 25 on page 20?
A: Is this April 20th, you are talking about?
Q: No, I am sorry, this is the summons to Jeckeln?
A: Would you give me the page number.
Q: Page 20.
A: Yes.
Q: Items 24 and 25.
A: I see, this is actual the intercepts.
Q: Yes, we go back to page 17 for the English.
A: Yes.
Q: It is quite clear, is it not, I mean I agree with you, that Himmler
was very cross with Jeckeln for what had happened?
A: For overstepping the guidelines.
Q: Sure. We do not know what guidelines are you tell us?
A: I do not know what the guidelines are, no.
Q: It is common ground for once between you and me and the
P-53
people who inform me,
teach me, educate me, that following that incident because no doubt the meeting
took place between Himmler and Jeckeln on 4th December 1941, yes?
A: Yes.
Q: Probably following receipt of the telegram or whatever it was on the
1st December.
A: Mr Rampton, may I remind you of the very lengthy Bruns Report I read
out.
Q: I am coming to that.
A: Can I answer.
Q: Certainly remind me of that if you wish, yes.
A: Yes. In which there is talk in the Bruns Report of Bruns saying we
sent an urgent message to Hitler's Headquarters, how could we do it, then the
word comes back to the Riga front to the young SS man, he said, we received
orders, this kind of thing has to stop. This is the kind of extraneous
information one takes on board when one draws inferences from documents.
Q: Mr Irving, I think sometimes you set traps for yourself.
A: I try not to.
Q: Actually what Bruns said was mass shootings on this scale have got to
stop, this has to be done more discreetly?
A: Yes.
Q: That is quite different?
A: That is what the local SS officers said to him.
Q: It is quite different, is it not, it is not the same thing
P-54
at all?
A: They wanted to carry on, yes, they wanted to carry.
Q: No, no, Bruns's report of the order through the mouth of Altemeyer
was that the order which had come from Berlin was that mass shootings of this
kind on the scale have to stop, that has to be done more discreetly?
A: This is Bruns' version four years later of what the 22 year old SS
officer who wanted to carry on killing Jews told him. He said, we have gone
been told by East Prussia we have to stop, however, the way he phrased it was,
they have to stop on this scale and we are going to carry on doing it in a more
discreet way because that is what they wanted to do. But of course they did
not, they did not carry on, they stopped, as that footnote shows.
Q: We will come to it in a moment. They did stop for a time. They
stopped doing what Himmler did not like that Jeckeln had done which was mass,
if you like, semi public shootings of people as they go off the trains?
A: The footnote which I printed at the end of bundle says "the
killing of German Jews stopped for several months after this exchange".
Q: Yes, that is common ground between you and me, the killing of German
Jews by this method. Maybe it stopped --
A: Mr Rampton, you are putting words in which do not exist --
Q: -- we are coming to your use, I add, your use of the Bruns evidence
in a moment, but before we do that, I want you to
P-55
look at these two
messages, these two intercepts. There is no evidence in that of any
intervention or participation by Hitler, is there?
A: -- no.
Q: It is all between Himmler and Jeckeln?
A: Yes.
Q: If you look at the log for the 1st December 1941, I have given you
the composite version, having lost --
A: Composite version, yes. This is a composite because it is made up
from three or four different sources by the editors.
Q: -- by "composite" I meant composed from different pages in
the book.
A: Yes, December 1st.
Q: December 1st. We see when he is making a telephone call he puts
"T" is that the editors or is that Himmler?
A: That is the editors who put that.
Q: That is the editors. At quarter past one on the 1st there is an
entry, it must be a telephone call because Heydrich is in Prag?
A: It is in my bundle two.
Q: The German for Prague is P-R-A-G I take it; is that right?
A: Yes.
Q: At quarter past 1 he rings SS Obergruppenfuhrer Heydrich in Prag?
A: If I may interrupt, we do not know he rang Heydrich, all
P-56
we can say is there was
a conversation.
Q: Heydrich might have rung him, of course?
A: Yes.
Q: The first word is scribedamen; is that secretaries?
A: That is correct.
Q: They have a talk about secretaries, it seems, then they talk about
the executions in Riga?
A: Yes.
Q: Is there any inconsistency in that entry and the suggestion that what
they actually talked about was the fact that Jeckeln had not followed the
guidelines because he was doing it too publicly?
A: That is perfectly consistent. I might add this is the document 24 in
-- I am sorry, document No. 14 in my bundle, the original.
Q: Yes. You see there is no evidence in that that that phone call to
Heydrich, or from Heydrich, is in any way involved or prompted by Hitler, is
there?
A: No, none at all, but you are setting a trap for yourself I am afraid.
Q: Why?
A: Because if I may refer back to the second of the messages, page 17 in
my bundle, one in which Himmler contacts Jeckeln on December 1st and reads the
riot act to him.
Q: Yes, we looked at that.
A: It says: "The Jews being outplaced to the Ostland are to
P-57
be dealt with only in
accordance with the guidelines laid down by myself and/or by the
Reichssicherheitshauptamt on my orders." No mention of Hitler here.
Q: No.
A: So this is vitally important to me. I rely on that to prove that
Hitler was not involved in this order. The ordering procedure was not Hitler's.
The guidelines were not Hitler's.
Q: Mr Irving, one would not expect, given the way in which Hitler's
so-called orders and, they are very rarely orders, they are more often just an
airy speech at some dinner table, the words "Hitler's orders" in quotes,
were, as it were, dispersed down the hierarchical column of the Nazis, you
would not expect Hitler to issue precise guidelines about how the Jews were to
be treated on arrival or how they were to be killed, would you?
A: This is your, evidence you are leading or a question?
Q: I am putting it to you that that is right, is it not?
A: I rely only on my interpretation of this document that Himmler in a
secret message says, they are my order and my guidelines and you have
contravened them. When the temptation would surely have been to say you have
contravened the Fuhrer's orders and the Fuhrer's guidelines, which is a very
strong point I would make because this is the centre point of my own
contention.
Q: Do you not think that in light of Bruns's evidence the
P-58
guidelines were whatever
you do you must make sure it does not come to public attention because public
opinion in Germany will not stand for it if it does, and that that is precisely
what was discussed between Himmler and the journalist on the train or wherever
it was on the 30th November?
A: I think that public opinion in Germany would have stood from it from
what I know of the Germans -- most Germans would not have batted a eyelash at
the knowledge that these mass killings of the Jews were going on.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, they were German Jews, I think you agreed earlier
on?
A: German Jews.
MR RAMPTON: They were Berlin Jews.
A: Yes, there was certainly nothing that would have caused the Germans
problems on the scale that the euthanasia killings were causing in public
morale problems. Maybe my interpretation of the morale in Germany is wrong, you
will lead evidence later on to contradict me.
Q: I think that probably is right.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am not sure I follow the logic of that, the
euthanasia programme did cause unrest to use a neutral term?
A: It caused so much unrest, my Lord, that Hitler had to intervene and
stop it.
Q: Would not the shooting of large numbers of, to put it
P-59
bluntly, healthy Jews,
have caused even more unrest, or at any rate as much unrest?
A: They are very -- they are parallel programmes and in very many
senses. A lot of the killing operations were conducted by the same
organizations and the same experts, but the campaign of Dr Goebbels against the
Jews, propaganda campaign had, been conducted with very much more vehemence and
personal commitment by Dr Goebbels and it had converted a large element of the
German, population in my opinion, to anti-Semitism of a vicious and poisonous
degree. Whereas his attempt to achieve the same results against the crippled
and disabled had been limited just to one or two films and articles. There a
film called "Ich Klagean", which was a film about the -- it was a
film in which the mentally disabled and crippled were portrayed in a repulsive
manner so the public would accustom themselves to idea of putting them out of
the way, and this kind of propaganda totally failed with the German public. The
doctors went along with it but the general public when they found out about it
resisted very strongly euthanasia killings. Whereas the Jews were considered to
be, I think, in Germany fair game as a result largely of Dr Goebbels'
propaganda.
Q: How good is your facility with Heinrich Himmler's spidery Gothic
handwriting?
A: The handwriting on these pages is not only Himmler, it is
P-60
also his Adjutant who
still alive in Munich.
Q: Never mind. Let us be precise then and put impersonally, with the
spidery handwriting, Gothic handwriting on these pages?
A: On these pages, I will have a shot at it, Mr Rampton.
Q: No, I just wonder how used you are to looking at it.
A: Not recently, but over the last few nights I have had to strain my
eyes once again, thanks to your imputations.
Q: When did you first see these pages which, apparently, you did not see
the whole of the page for 30th November 1941 until 17th May 1998, is that
right?
A: He maintained three separate continuous records. He kept the pocket
diary. Those pocket diaries are scattered around the world. Some are in Israel
now, some are in Russia. I found two in the United States and gave them to the
German government. He also maintained a telephone log which was a sheet of
paper on his disk, like the ones in front of us, on which he would write down
on one side the name of the person he was talking to and on other side what
they were talking about. Either he or his adjutant would also keep a daily
agenda of whom he was to see and when and what they would talk about or what
they had talked about. The fourth series of documents by Himmler you will also run
into is when he went to see Hitler, he would write down on a sheet of paper his
discussion points.
P-61
Q: We are coming to one of those later on today, Mr Irving. Can you turn
to page 12?
A: I should also explain that these are on microfilm originally in the
United States which is the way I used them and accessed them originally in the
1970s.
Q: I wan to be clear what it was you had seen when you wrote your books.
Can you turn to page 12 in your little bundle?
A: Right. This is the telephone conversations of November 30th.
Q: Bear with me, if you do not mind, just allow me to ask some
questions. What is this a page a copy of? Page 12?
A: I just stated that he would have on his desk a sheet of paper on
which he would either type or insert in handwriting the words "telephon
gesprach" which is T-E-L-E-P-H-O-N G-E-S-P-R-A-C-H.
Q: So that is his what we can ----
A: This is his telephone log.
Q: What we could perhaps imprecisely call his telephone log?
A: Yes.
Q: Would you turn over then to ----
A: I was the first person to find and make use of these.
Q: That is as may be.
A: Well, it is important.
Q: On page 14?
A: Page 14, yes.
P-62
Q: I ask the same question: is that the same document? It looks
different.
A: It looks different because that is a photocopy from my blue volume of
these which is on the desk at the other end of your bench.
Q: I see.
A: Whereas the page previously, when I used it as a facsimile in my book
"Hitler's War", I had it rephotographed by the German Government from
the original in their archives as a photograph rather than as a photocopy.
Q: So, looking at page 14, somebody has typed "telephon gesprach
Reichsfuhrer SS" from 1st December 1941?
A: Yes.
Q: Who typed that?
A: That was typed by his adjutant. A blank sheet of paper would be typed
for him and laid before him with that heading already prepared.
Q: But the other one, the earlier one, has not got that?
A: He did not have it, no. That is taken straight off the microfilm. I
can show that to you on the bound volume.
Q: I follow that. Let us understand it. The second one is the thing that
he probably keeps in his office?
A: I do not think so. He would sometimes use a presheet -- pretyped
sheet that his adjutant had typed and sometimes he would just a take a blank
sheet of paper if he was in a hurry and write the headings himself.
P-63
Q: Which may be something of the character of the first one.
A: That is correct. They are all in the same file, those ones.
Q: What I want to know is what you had when you wrote your books. Was it
this these two sheets of paper?
A: I had those two sheets.
Q: You did not have the fuller version which we can now compose?
A: It is not a question of the fuller version. The other page that you
are referring to was not his telephone log, but his daily agenda, his
appointment book, which is in Moscow and which only became available in 1998.
Q: We really would get on quicker if you would let me finish the
question. I said the fuller version which we can now compose from different
sources. As the editors of the Witte book have done, they have used a number of
different sources to make a diary for the day.
A: Well, they have. They have constructed an artificial diary, yes, a
calendar.
Q: Exactly, but in the days when you were writing your books, the books
which we are talking about, this is all you had, was it?
A: Yes. The Witte book, which is the one to the left of your box ----
Q: That is new, that one?
A: Yes. It costs about £70 -- not as much as law books, of
P-64
course, but still quite
expensive.
Q: I did not buy it.
A: It was only published last year. I only obtained it about four months
ago.
Q: Well, now this is not in any sense a trick or an examination question
or anything. Can you look at page 12?
A: Yes.
Q: And the last entry which I think is probably quarter past 6 -- it
might be anyway, might it not?
A: The last line or the last entry?
Q: No, the last entry.
A: 6.15.
Q: It looks like it, does it not? Then across the line?
A: "SS Gruppenfuhrer ... Berlin".
Q: What is the first word of the entry
in the right-hand column?
A: "Transport Nachersatz".
Q: It is the "a" of
transport which I ask you to look at.
A: Yes, that is the real problem.
Q: No, it is not.
A: It is because the "a" looks exactly like the "e"
in Gothic handwriting.
Q: Exactly. In fact, you might think to an English eye it looks like a
"u"?
A: No.
P-65
Q: "Trunsport"?
A: I will explain why it does not.
Q: No, no.
A: Well, no, please.
Q: It might be thought to an English person -- just bear with me, answer
my person -- it might be thought to look like a "u", might it not?
A: Yes. My Lord, do you have the facsimile in front of you?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. I am following.
MR RAMPTON: Now could you turn to page 14, please?
A: 14, yes.
Q: In fact, that thing that looks like a "u" to an English
person in "transport" is an "a", is it not?
A: Yes.
Q: Now look at the word which you say you mistranscribed as
"Juden" which is three lines up from the bottom of the right-hand
column ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- on page 14.
A: Yes, I have it.
Q: It is plainly "haben"; it is the same thing, it is an
"a", is it not?
A: That is what we call Monday morning quarter back ring. It is somebody
who knows what the answer is. If I had given this page to you, say, six months
ago, Mr Rampton, and said, "Would you mind reading that word?"
P-66
Q: I would not have had a clue. I cannot read hardly any of it.
A: That was the position I was in 34 years ago when I looked at this.
Q: Why? But you have never gone back to it?
A: I must have gone back to it in the 1970s because I retyped it on my
transcript.
Q: The third letter, you think that is a "d" or you thought it
was a "d"?
A: If you look at the word "Juden" which I would ask you to
look at variously, for example ----
Q: We will look at it on page 12, if you want?
A: Yes. About eight lines from the bottom. In the third line of that
entry you have "Judentransport", admittedly, it is a bit ----
Q: It is obscured?
A: --- obscured by the word above it.
Q: I agree.
A: But you can already begin to see that there are distinct similarities
in the outline.
Q: I am afraid I cannot accept that. Anyway, the point is this, is it
not ----
A: Yes, you hasten on, yes.
Q: -- you say, you tell us, that you read that word, that entry as
reading: "Verwaltungsfuhrer der SS Juden zu bleiben"?
P-67
A: Yes, and I can produce my contemporary index card on which I made
that transcription which shows at that time as "Juden zu bleiben".
Q: Turn, please, to page 13 of this bundle and there you have it
correctly?
A: I have corrected it, yes.
Q: You tell us to look at the word "haben". One can see if one
looks that the letters are squashed?
A: It has been typed in subsequently with tippex, yes.
Q: Yes, or whatever was existing then because you say that was retyped
on a typewriter which you threw away more than 15 years ago?
A: Well, between 10 and 15 years ago -- an old IBM typewriter I had.
Q: Yes, but before 1991?
A: Yes.
Q: Now can you take "Hitler's War 1991", please?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just ask you this, Mr Irving? You are fluent in
German. If you are trying to write that somebody has to stay somewhere, whether
it is Jews or whoever, you would not say "haben zu bleiben", would
you?
A: They have to stay, "haben zu bleiben" would be the German.
Just the same as in English, has to stay, has to remain.
Q: Is that right?
A: Yes. But, on the other hand, the line "Juden zu bleiben"
would be also grammatically correct.
P-68
Q: That is abbreviation, but if you are using a verb at all, you would
say "haben" would be appropriate?
A: Yes, and you could equally well say the word above it which is
"Verwaltungsfuhrer" was a line by itself and a topic by itself which
is what I assumed it was in the original transcript.
MR RAMPTON: Can you turn now to Hitler's War on page 427, 1991 edition?
A: I do not have it in front of me, but if you would just read out the
passage.
Q: D1(v). I do not have to read very much. My Lord, page
427.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Thank you.
MR RAMPTON: At the end of the last complete paragraph on page 427 -- is
that 1991 you have there?
A: You will not believe this, but I am only person who does not have a
copy of that book. People visit my house and they think, "Well, that is
nice". It has gone!
Q: 1991, volume 2, it is D1(v).
A: I would be quite ready to concede what you are about to say. We do
not really need to go into this.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I probably ought to know what you are about to concede.
MR RAMPTON: Yes. I do not think we should communicate by telepathy, Mr
Irving!
A: Very well.
P-69
Q: Now, we have read the first part of this earlier this morning about
"Hitler being obliged to telephone from Hitler's bunker to Heydrich the
explicit order that these Jews were 'not to be liquidated'". Then you go
on after the semi-colon ----
A: Can you tell me what page you are on?
Q: I am sorry, 427. I beg your pardon.
A: Yes.
Q: "... and the next day Himmler telephoned SS Oswohl Pohl, overall
chief of the concentration camp system, with the order 'Jews are to stay where
they are'." When that was published, you knew it was wrong, did you not?
A: Published what.
Q: When that was published, you knew it was wrong?
A: No.
Q: Why not?
A: When it was published, yes. You must appreciate this text you are
looking at here was set by the Americans, by the American publisher, A1 Books
Limited, in probably 1985 or 1986. They published it round about that time, and
two or three years later, round about 1990, we approached the English
publishers and had this American edition photographed and what is called
offset, and reprinted in our own edition which Mr Bateman is holding there,
what you call the 1991 edition. So there is very little connection between the
P-70
actual year given as the
year of publication and the date when text goes into its final cast in stone
form.
Q: Tell me that chronology again, Mr Irving. It is rather interesting.
When was the American edition of this work written?
A: Written or?
Q: Written.
A: I have to piece it together from extraneous information. I was in
Quay West, I was in Florida. It would have been 1985 and 1986 because I did it
before I wrote the Rudolf Hess book which was 1987 published, so it was 1985.
Q: So when were the references to the Holocaust removed from it?
A: The references to the Holocaust?
Q: Yes.
A: That is a good question. That is a good question because that would,
in fact, bring it forward to 1988.
Q: Oh, really?
A: Yes.
Q: You see, Mr Irving, let me put my cards on the table, as I habitually
do, your Holocaust conversion, if I can call it that, happened as a result,
largely speaking, perhaps, of your encounter with Mr Leuchter and his laboratory
analyses?
A: Reading the laboratory reports, yes, which was April 6th 1988.
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Q: 1988?
A: Yes.
Q: As a consequence of that, we have been told by you, not in this court
but elsewhere and you will, no doubt, confirm it in due course, this book in
that respect ----
A: So the sequence of books is different. I wrote the Rudolf Hess book
first and then I went to revise this.
Q: If you say so.
A: Yes.
Q: It was radically altered in that respect as compared with the 1977
edition?
A: Taking out the word "Holocaust", yes.
Q: Now, here you have an entry, also as you know accept ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- completely wrong, but it does not ----
A: Yes, but is it not exactly the same wording?
Q: It does not get changed. It is exactly the same wording.
A: In other words, I have not actually actively put in something; I have
just left something to stand.
Q: No, you could have taken it out?
A: I could have taken it out, yes. If somebody had come to me and had
said at the time, "Oh, Mr Irving, by the way, do you not remember you
misread that word and we have now got a better reading", then, believe me,
I would have taken it out and I would have contacted the Americans and changed
it. But that is not what happens in real life.
P-72
Q: You came to believe in 1988 that the so-called Holocaust, as you call
it, so-called, did not happen?
A: I have never used the phrase "so-called Holocaust", Mr
Rampton.
Q: No, no. I am in the difficulty, as you perfectly well understand, Mr
Irving, there is no way in the world that I am going to concede that it did not
happen. That is not what this case is about. I call it "so-called"
because in your eyes by then it was the "so-called Holocaust"?
A: You said the "so-called Holocaust, as you call it".
Q: No. As you characterize it?
A: Yes.
Q: Yes -- had not happened so you took steps to have the book altered
for its second edition to remove the references to that ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- alleged event?
A: Yes.
Q: You did not bother to remove something which was, first of all,
important and, secondly, completely wrong?
A: This is a very subordinate matter in the book. It is a piece of
secondary information which adds very little to the principal argument. The
argument turns out now to have been correct on the basis of the decodes. This
is a book of probably half a million words. One word, admittedly, I should have
changed because I had some years
P-73
earlier realized that I had misread it. In all the 500,000 words it never
occurred to me that there may be words which I still had not actually changed yet.
You are absolutely right.
Q: Yes. Then I suggest that your failure to remove it, as you could
easily have done, it now appears ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- was deliberate because you wanted to keep this picture of benign,
magnanimous Adolf Hitler holding up his arm to save the Jews before the public?
A: I do not think so, and I do not think you can suggest that just on
the basis of that one line. The Jews have to remain, have to remain where? Have
to remain in concentration camps.
Q: Where they are?
A: Have to remain in the East, have to remain in the west. It is a
pretty meaningless sentence as it is.
Q: In that paragraph it is by no means meaningless, is it?
A: Yes, but now I would certainly replace it with the decodes instead
and, in fact, in the latest edition I have. That sentence is out and is
replaced by absolute diamond evidence, the decodes, showing that I am right all
the way down the line.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Am I right in thinking that the entry in the log was
one of what you have described as the "chain of documents"?
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A: This particular one, I never referred to, not the "haben zu
bleiben". It is totally immaterial and unimportant. My Lord, people
imagine that books are written in a very precise, military kind of way, but
they are written in an extraordinarily ramshackle way. They go back and forth
across the Atlantic with all sorts of different people setting their hands to
them, including lawyers and readers and experts and sub-editors and publicity
people, and it is a miracle that anything finally comes off the end of the
line.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, you thought it sufficiently important an event,
and it is in the context of an order from Hitler, according to you, the Jews
are to stay where they are, it is a coder showing, not only did Hitler say that
they are not to be killed, not to be liquidated, an explicit order, but they
are actually to stay where they are, they are not to be shunted around from one
place to another and they are certainly not to be brought to places of
execution. That is why it is there, is it not?
A: No. It is there purely because it was the next entry in the Himmler
telephone log as I had misread it at the time.
Q: And is sufficiently important in your mind for you to put an asterisk
footnote, is it not?
A: Saying that the facsimile of November 30 telephone conversation is
reproduced as a facsimile.
Q: I imagine the reason you did not -- I do not know what the
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verb is from "facsimile" -- you did not reproduce a facsimile
of the note of 1st December is that you will say that is because it was not
sufficiently legible on the copy?
A: This is what you imagine, is it? Is your imagination what you are
leading as evidence now?
Q: Yes. I am asking you, what is the reason why -- you had a lot of
pictures in the second edition, did you not?
A: In the 1991 edition?
Q: Yes.
A: Yes.
Q: Why did you not put a facsimile of this message in?
A: I had something like 3,000 pictures to draw upon, Mr Rampton, and it
is a judgment call which photographs you use. One facsimile of a first line document
where an order is going out, "the transport of Jews not to be
liquidated" is for more important than a meaningless sentence like
"had to remain".
Q: Now, I want to go to, if I may ----
A: But I would like just to round up that argument between us by saying
that I do not think that you have established that I have deliberately
manipulated or deliberately distorted or deliberately mistranslated anything.
It is a sin of omission. The sin of omission is that I should sometime five
years down the road, having realized the misreading, it should have occurred to
me that one word
P-76
had been misinterpreted or misread and that I should take that out of the
500,000 other words.
Q: I will be clear about it, Mr Irving, I will lay it out for you. You
can deny it. It is not my function at this stage to persuade his Lordship that
I am right. That comes later on. You invented a Hitler order. You deliberately
inflated it into an order to protect the whole of the Jews?
A: I have not invented a Hitler order, Mr Rampton. I have hypothesized
the Hitler order in the way that a scientist should and I have then supported
the hypothesis with evidence.
Q: Mr Irving, this is one occasion on which a "yes" or
"no" will do. You invented it in the sense that you made an
hypothesis (and I do not say it is an unreasonable hypothesis) you made it into
a categorical assertion of fact. Now, do you agree with that or not?
A: Yes, in the introduction.
Q: And do you agree with that as being an irresponsible, deliberately
deceptive manner for a historian to proceed?
A: Quite the contrary on the basis of evidence that I have led this
morning from my little bundle.
Q: When did you have those Jeckhelm messages?
A: The intercepts?
Q: Yes.
A: Within the last four weeks I have seen the originals.
P-77
Q: You did not have them at the time when you wrote this book?
A: No, but if you have a clean mind when you set out to write a book,
untrammelled by what you have seen on the TVs and on the movies or read in
other people's book like that by Mr Kershaw, if you start out with a clean mind
and you read documents that meet your criteria, you are probably going to be
nudged in the correct path that you arrive at the right conclusions.
Q: It may happen, Mr Irving, from time to time in life that you tell what
you intend to be a lie and subsequent events, that wonderful friend hindsight
shows that you were telling the truth all along. Mr Irving, we are not using
hindsight. I am concerned with your state of mind when you wrote these books.
A: You a tell a lie and it turns out to be the truth all along?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Tell what you intend to be a lie.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, you tell what you intend to be a lie and it turns out
to be the truth.
A: Why would I intend something to be a lie?
Q: Because you are trying to exonerate, exculpate Adolf Hitler.
A: Well, this is your opinion, Mr Rampton, and I do not think that this
can be sustained on the evidence.
Q: No. There are four limbs to this which you can say, "Yes,
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it is right" (which you will not) or "No, it is not right"
(which you will). The second limb to this is that you deliberately distorted
the original German so as to inflate one transport of Jews from Berlin into the
whole of the German Jews?
A: I am not going to respond to that because I have made a response to
that argument.
Q: Exactly. The third step is that you did not misread by accident the
word "haben" as "Juden"; you knew all along that it was
"haben" but you wrote it in as "Jews"?
A: I am not going to respond to that because I have stated my position
very fully on that too.
Q: The fourth proposition is that in any event, on your own account, by
the time this version of the book, the 1991 edition, comes out, you know for a
certainty, even if you did not before, that it was wrong and you deliberately
chose not to change it?
A: On the contrary, you could use the word "deliberate" if I
put it in at this time. A failure to take something out is an omission, a sin
of omission, and not a sin of commission, if I may put it that way. I
respectfully suggest that it was a sin of omission and a failure to take a word
out of 500,000 words is ----
Q: I do not think it matters what words one uses.
A: --- it would be improperly and unjustly described as being the kind
of distortion that you are trying to impute.
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Q: Indeed I do. To allow a falsehood once told to remain on the record
is just as reprehensible as to have invented it in the first place, is it not?
A: I object to the word "falsehood".
Q: Well, it is a false statement.
A: A misreading of a word which is a perfectly legitimate misreading of
a word which, I suppose, every person in this room would have read that way if
they had been in exactly the same situation.
Q: These books, Mr Irving, are in some sense, are they not, history
books?
A: Which books?
Q: These, the Hitler's War books?
A: They are ----
Q: They are meant to be?
A: --- works of history, yes.
Q: --- meant to be history books. They are meant to be a history of the
Second World War seen not through Hitler's eyes, I do not mean that, but with
an angle on it that perhaps others have not treated before, that is to say, the
Hitler angle. Hitler is at the centre of these books, is he not?
A: Yes.
Q: You use what in the second edition it appears by the time it appears
you know to be a false statement of fact about history?
P-80
A: By the time the second edition appears, it is true that five years
earlier I had known that a word had been wrongly read. If you know -- when one
publishes successive editions of the book, if one is in the fortunate position
that I am, you are in the position that you can, if you have the chance,
constantly upgrade and update and polish and refine. The latest edition that we
put out, before it goes to the printers, I have had it on the Internet for the
last six weeks, and I have invited people around the world to spot errors
precisely like that, and I have increased the reward to a present $8 per error.
I have had to shell out 2 or $3,000 already. I am not in the least bit ashamed
because one wants to turn out a work that is as perfect and as error free as
possible; but even so, errors go in. There is a very famous case where a man
did exactly the same and he offered a very large reward if anybody could spot a
typographical error in a book that he had produced, and it turned out that the
very title on the title page had been -- can I point out, Mr Rampton, another
very serious error?
Q: I am listening; it is just that I have to get ready for my next
question. Do continue, yes.
A: I will continue rambling on. There is a very serious error in the
book "Hitler's War" which is before you, the 1991 edition, and this
is that my name does not appear on it. That you would consider is a most
serious error that
P-81
an author can face, that his name does not appear on his own book.
Q: It depends, rather, on one's point of view, Mr Irving, I would have
said. Mr Irving, can we turn please to -- what is that? That seems to have your
name on it but maybe this is the wrong edition.
A: Not on the jacket, but actually in the book, Mr Rampton, you will not
find it.
Q: I have not, I confess, looked, nor do I think I ----
A: I mean, I confess that I am the author for the purposes of this
action.
Q: Nor do I think that I will spend the court's time doing it now. Thank
you very much. Mr Irving, I want to return to General Bruns. How do you
pronounce it, in fact?
A: Bruns, B-R-U-N-S.
Q: With no umlaut though?
A: No umlaut.
Q: If that is the right word. Do you have your two-page English
translation?
A: I think I know it virtually off by heart.
Q: I would rather you had it.
A: It is in my opening statement. I have it, yes, I have the opening
statement version.
Q: Maybe I should use that. It will make it easier for everybody. I have
the TRO version.
A: It is on page 22. You say that Bruns' account has
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verisimilitude?
A: Yes.
Q: Account of what he said he saw?
A: I marked that because later on under oath in the witness box in
Nuremberg he said he had not been there, I find that hard to believe.
Q: I agree with you, I think it has verisimilitude for what it matters.
It is an horrendous account of an unpleasant -- more than an unpleasant event
in human history. That is not what I am interested in. Given that it has
verisimilitude, if you look in the middle of page 22, one of the things that
Bruns was overheard saying to whoever he was speaking to was this, middle of
the page: "I told that fellow Altemeyer?" In fact, Altemeyer, whose
name I shall always remember and who will be added to the list of war
criminals, listen to me they [that is Jews] represent valuable manpower.
Altemeyer: Do you call Jews valuable human beings, sir? I [that is Bruns said]
Listen to me properly, I said valuable manpower, I did not mention their value
as human beings. He said [Altemeyer said] Well, they are to be shot in accordance
with the Fuhrer's orders! I said: Fuhrer's orders? He said, yes, whereupon he
showed me his orders." Now that has never appeared in any of your books,
has it?
A: Too true, yes, absolutely right.
P-83
Q: Why not?
A: I discounted it.
Q: Why?
A: Because I am familiar with other sources where people claim to be
acting on Hitler's orders because it was the ready answer to shut anybody up if
somebody came and complained then the senior officer or the other officer would
say: "Do not start criticising me, this is the Fuhrer's orders", and
I discounted the subsequent sentence about "then he showed it to me"
for exactly the same reason that I discounted the statement at Nuremberg that
Eichmann claimed that the -- rather Wisliceny claimed that Eichmann had showed
him the orders. There are no orders. They have not been found. We have now been
in the archives, in and out of the archives of the world for the last 50 years,
since the end of World War II, 55 years and no primary or secondary or tertiary
evidence of the existence of these orders has been found as regards the war
years. I concede that in interrogations and in War Crimes Trials and elsewhere
everyone else is happy to talk about Fuhrer's orders but the fact remains had
there been any such order or any such document, and you are tapping this one,
this is what I will put in the category of "interrogations", had
there been any such order, it would have surfaced by now.
P-84
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You put this in the category of
"interrogations", did you say?
A: It is at the end of war, my Lord, he is in the enemy hands.
Q: He is being surreptitiously...
A: I appreciate that, my Lord, but it is in a grey area. He is in the
enemy's power and custody and I draw attention to the line a bit earlier up
where he says: "His name I shall always also remember and who will be
added to the list of war criminals". That is a gentle hint to me that
perhaps he is not entirely unaware that somebody may be listening.
MR RAMPTON: What do you know --
A: You must appreciate that, my Lord.
MR RAMPTON: What do you know General Bruns?
A: -- what do I know of him?
Q: What do you know of him, yes.
A: Only what I know from this document and from the writings of Gerald
Fleming. I suppose we would describe him now as been an anti-Nazi by the time
the war ended, but then a lot of people were anti-Nazi by the time the war
ended.
Q: --- what if they happened to be an anti-Nazi all along, there were
such people in German during the 1940s, were there not.
A: Undoubtedly, yes.
Q: Quite a lot of the ordinary army, I am not talking about
P-85
the SS, who are not army at all, really, were anti-Nazi?
A: Is this the evidence that you are leading, I am not familiar with any
statistical basis for that.
Q: I am suggesting you could give me the answer "yes"?
A: I have not seen any documentary evidence of that. I do not think
GALLUP Polls are conducted among the Wehrmacht soldiers who still support
Adolf. I always want to see this kind of evidence and if I can just -- if I can
just add here we have got very high quality evidence of the morale and opinions
of the Germans. We have the SD stinnungsberichge, which were the morale reports
where Gestapo agents would hang around in bars listening to what people said.
We have sacks and sacks of captured mail, captured by the Allies when a troop
ship were caught or when positions were overrun. We know exactly what these
people were writing. So we are very well informed about what was going on. I
have never seen any kind of statistical analysis.
Q: If this is not an interrogation, which it plainly is not?
A: Yes.
Q: And if General Bruns does not know that he is being recorded, and if
it be the case that he simply is chatting to his fellow prisoners in German,
which he is, am I right?
A: While you just read that, may I just add a further point, we are
dealing here with a 22 year old young man called
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Altemeyer who has been put in SS uniform.
Q: I am sorry, Mr Irving, there are times when you may make speeches and
times when you must answer my questions, this is one of them; you said
yesterday, no, I think this is on Day One?
A: I will come back to what I was about to say when you have finished.
Q: "This document has, in my submission, considerable evidentiary
values... it is not self-serving, the General is not testifying in his own
interest, he is merely talking, probably in a muffled whisper to fellow
prisoners at a British interrogation centre and he has no idea that in another
room British experts are listening to and recording every word. We also have
the original German text of this document. I might add my, Lord ... "
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That, I think, was Mr Irving's speech.
MR RAMPTON: That is Mr Irving's speech. That is on page 46 --
A: Can I make it easy for you, Mr Rampton, and say I accept Altemeyer
did say those words.
Q: -- right.
A: Or as best as Bruns recalls them.
Q: The whole of Bruns' account in this regard has the ring of truth
then?
A: Yes.
Q: So it is likely also then, is it, one cannot be certain, one was not
there.
P-87
A: It is very likely that the SS officer concerned used those words.
Q: It is likely also he used the words at the end of this extract on the
bottom of page 24 of your opening: "Here is an order, just issued,
prohibiting mass shootings on that scale from taking place in future" --
A: Have we now left that previous passage, if so --
Q: -- I am coming back to it, but I want to try and be consistent, if
you are saying that we can believe that Altemeyer used the words in the first
passage, can we also believe that Altemeyer said this: "Here is an order,
just used, prohibiting mass shootings on that scale from taking place in
future"?
A: -- that I believe.
Q: "They are to be carried out more discreetly."
A: That I attach less credibility to.
Q: Why?
A: It is the kind of throw away line that soldiers would use,
particularly in captivity, adding a gag, looking for a bit of a snigger from
someone, saying not to be done on a mass shooting, of course, has to be done a
bit more discreetly. If I can draw a comparison, you very rightly read out a
passage of a speech I made in Calgary where I protested that I had been called
a mild fascist by the newspapers and I said I do not like that word
"mild" it is a throw away line, you are looking for a laugh.
P-88
Q: I do not --
A: You then attach great weight to the fact Mr Irving obviously accepts
he is fascist, which is untrue. But these things happen in conversation, Mr
Rampton. It calls for judgment and integrity before you use any particular part
of a sentence.
Q: -- no, you misjudge me, Mr Irving, you should re-read what I actually
said and you will find what you just said is a misrecollection. However, that
matters not in the slightest.
A: Can I now go back to the previous part you are relying on in that,
where he says "here are the Fuhrer's orders" and he showed it to me.
Q: He did not say that. He said "whereupon --" this is
important, Mr Irving, you must be accurate, this is an important distinction:
"Whereupon he showed me his orders"?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is Bruns speaking, not Bruns quoting Altemeyer?
A: Altemeyer says, well, they are to be shot in accordance with the
Fuhrer's orders, Bruns said: Fuhrer's orders? Yes, says Altemeyer, whereupon he
showed me his orders.
MR RAMPTON: His orders?
A: Yes.
Q: That does not mean the Fuhrer's orders, that means Altemeyer's
orders?
P-89
A: I am grateful to you for drawing that to my attention. If you wish to
infer from that that he showed to Bruns orders from Hitler, or orders quoting
orders from Hitler, because he later on talks about the Fuhrer's orders, can I
now comment on that?
Q: I am not going to comment on a suggestion I have not -- I am not
going to invite you to comment on a suggestion I have not made.
A: May I nevertheless comment?
Q: No, Mr Irving, you may not. If his Lordship permits it, why, yes. My
question is a completely different one; my question is this, it is credible
that Altemeyer said what he is here reported as having said?
A: Yes.
Q: It is also credible, is it not, that he showed Bruns a written order
saying that these people were to be shot?
A: Yes.
Q: Good, thank you very much. Put those two things together, and there
is evidence here which needs to be taken into account; do you agree?
A: Discounted or taken into account, yes.
Q: Take into account, brought to the attention of the public or the
historians so that they can make up their own minds whether or not this is
evidence of a Fuhrer order for these shootings?
A: You are absolutely right .
P-90
Q: Thank you.
A: Can I continue?
Q: Yes.
A: I have done precisely that.
Q: Where?
A: On my website.
Q: Yes, but what about your books?
A: I am not writing books about the Holocaust, Mr Rampton, I am writing
books about Adolf Hitler. The book is already 1,000 pages long. If I was to
start going into that detail then I would be sternly reprimanded by the editors
saying, Mr Irving, when I wrote the Hermann Goring biography, the American
publishers came to me and said Mr Irving will you please cut out 2,000 lines
from the printed text. This happens. We do not have a problem that our books
are too short, we have the problem that our books are too long.
Q: Yes. Mr Irving --
A: But the entire document is on the Internet and I am the one who
placed it there.
Q: -- Mr Irving, you have made reference to this Bruns testimony in your
published books?
A: As I said in my opening speech, again and again, it is the most
harrowing account and element of the Holocaust.
Q: But without ever mentioning either of these verbal exchanges in their
entirety?
P-91
A: Absolutely right.
Q: Why not?
A: Because this is descending into a level of textual analysis which
would bore the pant off an audience, which would be totally out of place in a
book about Adolf Hitler for which I am perfectly prepared to discuss here in
court if you attach importance to you, but you do not want me to discuss it.
Q: I am not trying to prove a case about Adolf Hitler one way or the
other?
A: But you will not allow me to discuss it here.
Q: Of course I allow you discuss it here.
A: You stopped me.
Q: I interested in why it makes no appearance --
A: Because I have reasons for discounting it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Discounting bits of it I suppose would be more
accurate.
A: -- I am discounting the bit about being shown the Fuhrer's order, or
being shown orders implicating Hitler.
MR RAMPTON: Why do you discount it?
A: Ah, at last. Because other evidence shows that Hitler had not issued
the order; firstly I said that nowhere in all the documentation of all the
world's archives has any such order turned up.
Q: That not evidence, that is an absence of evidence?
A: It is evidence in a very powerful sense.
P-92
Q: It is a negative piece of evidence?
A: I hate to remind you of the basic principle of English law that a man
is innocent until proven guilty; am I right?
Q: Hitler is not on trial, alas.
A: Is Hitler somehow excluded from this general rule of fair play?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think that is a slightly --
THE WITNESS: Mr Rampton talks about absence of evidence not counting,
all the world's archive are effectively now open to us, there has not come
forward any collateral evidence and as for a 22 year-old SS man's word being
believed when he has the power of life and death over thousands of Jews who
have just been ordered shot, this SS man obviously has more front than
Selfridges, he is going around saying, yes, we have orders, I have orders, do
not come critising me, that is what is going on here. That is the way I read
that and that is the way any responsible historian should read it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Let us move on. You accept a lot what is in here?
A: -- I do indeed.
Q: But you do not accept that particular --
A: Certainly not to the degree --
Q: As it was reflecting the reality?
A: -- that one general's recollection of what a 22 year old SS man told
him in Riga should be taken discounting the
P-93
negative evidence as Mr Rampton calls it of all the world's archives.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, I am not going to take you up on that; you can
argue with my experts about that if you like. I am interested in the way you
write your books. Both in the Nuremberg book, and we will not need to look at
them, because we are looking for a black hole, both in the Nuremberg book and
in the Goebbels book you mention, either in the text or in a footnote, or both,
the Bruns, call it what you like?
A: Yes, I consider my duty to draw everyone's attention to this report.
Q: But nowhere in either of those books do you mention either of these
exchanges that Bruns reported he had with Altemeyer?
A: You are repeating yourself, I will repeat the answer.
Q: You repeat your answer, yes, please.
A: No, I did not.
Q: No, you did not. You actually have done this with the Altemeyer
passages; may I show you? Can you find, please, file D3(i), I think it is tab
27 that I want. I will tell you where to look in a moment, Mr Irving, I just
want to remind you and his Lordship of what Bruns actually said on Altemeyer's
return with an order from Berlin after the shootings had been reported.
"Here is an order, just issued, prohibiting mass shootings on that scale
from
P-94
taking place in the future." That is your translation of the German.
A: Yes.
Q: It is one that I agree with.
A: This is from my introduction?
Q: Yes, but then it goes on, does the sentence reported by General
Bruns: "They are to be carried out more discreetly." That is the full
text of General Bruns' words as a report of what he was told by Altemeyer. Will
you please look at page 415 of the document which is at tab 27 which is a
written introduction by you in the Journal of Historical Review, to your new
edition of "Hitler's War". At the end of that article there are some
footnotes on page 415.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Why are we looking at it there as opposed to in the
copy?
A: That is what I am wondering.
MR RAMPTON: Copy of which book?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: We have the whole of "Hitler's War".
MR RAMPTON: It is not in the book.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I thought you said it was.
MR RAMPTON: No.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I thought this was the introduction to the 1991
edition.
MR RAMPTON: Well, I do not think it is. It is an edition I have not got,
that is why. That is why we have it
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separately.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I follow.
THE WITNESS: We also have a date on that, January 1989.
Q: Two dates '76 and '89.
A: That answers the point.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Two editions.
MR RAMPTON: Anyhow, if you look at the footnotes in the right hand
column on page 415, footnote 7 says this: "The most spine chilling account
of... methodical mass murder of these Jews [that is the Berlin Jews] at Riga is
in ... 1158 in file etc. in the Public Record Office, Major General Bruns, an eyewitness,
describes it to fellow generals in British captivity in April 25th 1945 unaware
that hidden micro phones are recording every word. Of particular significance
his qualms about bringing what he had seen to the Fuhrer's attention and the
latter's [that is Hitler's] renewed orders that such mass murders were to stop
forthwith"?
A: Yes.
Q: As an account of what Bruns is recorded as having said that is
completely dishonest, is it not?
A: Does it say that the Bruns account is the only source for that final
paragraph, that final sentence?
Q: It purports to be an account of what Bruns said, does it not, Mr
Irving?
A: It references the Bruns' file as the source of that
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material in the main text, and it adds the comment: "Of particular
significance his qualms about bringing about what he has seen to the Fuhrer's
attention and the latter's renewed orders that such mass murders were to stop
forthwith". In other words, that was of particular significance.
Q: Of particular significance in the Bruns's eyewitness testimony.
A: I do not say that.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Read it through to yourself again.
MR RAMPTON: Read it through.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: And consider that answer, Mr Irving.
A: Of the particular significance his qualms about bringing what he had
seen to the Fuhrer's attention and the latter's renewed orders that such mass
murders were to stop forthwith. I see no objection to that as being an
encapsulated version of Bruns's report -- may I read out from the Bruns' report
the sentences on which I would rely?
MR RAMPTON: No, you may not, Mr Irving. I would like you to read the
whole of that footnote and I shall repeat my question, and we will have a
"yes" or "no" if you please.
A: You will not let me read out these sentences in the Bruns report on
which I rely?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: In a moment. Just do what Mr Rampton is asking at the
moment.
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A: Very well. "The most spine killing account --"
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, read it to yourself.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I did not mean.
A: Well, because I am accused of being a Holocaust denier it is
interesting that I am repeatedly saying this kind of thing, including in
journals like this. You do not me read it out loud?
Q: I would like you to read it yourself.
A: You do not want public to hear what I wrote.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It has just been read out.
A: Yes, I have read it.
MR RAMPTON: You have read it. Now I will repeat my question; do you not
agree that read as a whole, as one most read it as a whole, not selecting those
little bits which one would rather ignore, and you are relying on the ones you
want to be heard, reading that as whole, do you not agree that that is a
singularly dishonest account of what Bruns was recorded as having said?
A: I do not agree.
Q: Why?
A: Can I now draw attention to the sentences in the Bruns Report on which
I rely?
Q: Whatever you wish in answer to my question.
A: I will summarize them and you can tell me if it is a false summary.
They had difficulty, he did not want to write the report himself, he persuaded
a junior army officer to
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go down the road and have a look and come back and write up what he had
seen. The question then was who is going to bring it to the Fuhrer's attention;
they work out a way to bring to the Fuhrer's attention involving Vice-Admiral
Canaris, shortly the orders come back, such mass murders have to stop. Am I
totally wrong in drawing the perfectly justified inference that as a result of
this army officer's report being drawn to the Fuhrer's attention the orders
come, which we have seen in the intercepts that such mass murders have to stop.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, can I put it to you straight, as it were,
because this is the suggestion.
A: Yes.
Q: That what you have said as being of particular significance, namely
the renewed orders that such mass murders were to stop forthwith, totally
perverts the sense of Bruns' conversation in captivity because Bruns makes
clear that Altemeyer said that the killings were to continue?
A: I think I have explained the reason why I discounted that part of his
remark, my Lord, this was the...
Q: Yes, but are you giving particular significance to a proposition
which is the opposite of what one finds in the document?
A: The decision of the little man on the spot in Riga is of no
significance to the argument that Hitler had given the
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order quite clearly that such killings had to stop.
Q: Yes.
A: Have I made it plain, my Lord.
Q: Yes, you have.
A: Thank you. I think that --
MR RAMPTON: Do you think, Mr Irving, that if General Bruns were here
today he would think what you have done with what he said was fair and honest?
A: -- taken in elements, stage by stage, yes.
Q: Do you? I see. You said it again in that same file you have got
there, I think it is at -- it is at tab 30, this is a paper, I think, presented
by you at the Institute of Historical Review, a talk given by you?
A: A talk?
Q: Yes, a talk, in October 1992, and the passage which matters is again
an account of the Bruns evidence on page 24, ignore the stamped number at the
bottom of page, 24 of the article. I think this is an answer to a question very
likely. Yes, it is. It is in the bottom part of the left-hand column on that
page' does your Lordship have it?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I have.
MR RAMPTON: This is the last thing, my Lord, I do before the adjournment
if that is convenient. "But other reports unfortunately have the ring of
authenticity. Most of these SS officers, the gangsters that carried out the
mass shootings were I think acting
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from the meanest of motives. There was a particular SS officer in Riga
who is described in the report by Bruns in which Bruns said the difficulty for
us was how to decide to draw what he had seen what we had seen to the Fuhrer's
attention, and eventually they sent a lieutenant down the road and got him to
write what he saw and they sent this report signed by the lieutenant up to the
Fuhrer's headquarters through Canaris. Two days later the order comes back from
Hitler 'these mass shootings' [in quotes notice, Mr Irving] these mass
shootings have to stop at once so [and this is now you again] Hitler intervened
to stop it." As a quotation from the evidence of General Bruns those words
in quotes: "These mass shootings have got to stop at once", is a
complete perversion, is it not, of what Bruns actually said?
A: What is the difference?
Q: He said these mass shootings have got to stop at once, they have to
be done more discreetly?
A: The 22 year old SS man allegedly said that to Bruns --
Q: That is what Bruns is reported as having told his fellow officers?
A: -- yes.
Q: He did not say this, did he, that you have written here?
A: I gave the essential part of the information, which was that the
orders -- we are talking about here the chain of
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command from Hitler downwards and that the killings were carried out
there, the SS officers on the spot and I make this very clear distinction, the
gangsters were in the SS who did the killings on the Eastern Front and for that
there is any amount of evidence, a lot of which you have in your own files but
the evidence of Hitler's involvement is very tenuous and goes in the direction
which I indicated from my small bundle. My I also draw your attention to the
fact this is a question and answer session, Mr Rampton.
Q: Yes, I follow that.
A: So there is no script. I am not reading out from a document.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I think the point on the quotation marks is not a
fair one given that this is which you said in a speech because whoever
transcribed it may well have just added the quotation marks?
A: Not just but obviously when one is answering questions from the floor
one is giving an encapsulated version of the essence of a document as one
recalls it.
Q: I follow that.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, there are two minutes, so it might help.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, why not use them.
MR RAMPTON: If might help if we looked at the original German of Bruns
said that Altemeyer had said.
A: It does sometimes vary from the translation.
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: Where do we find that?
MR RAMPTON: It is bundle H1(vii), some of Professor Evans documents?
A: It is actually from my discovery.
Q: No, I do not know where it comes from.
A: If it has a number written on the top right hand corner.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Unfortunately, I have not brought that particular file.
THE WITNESS: I was the person who discovered this document.
MR RAMPTON: The page, have you got that?
A: Not in front of me.
Q: You do not have the German?
A: No.
Q: It is 233, which looks to me like the British transcript it is the
transcript of Bruns' actual words -- before I ask the question I must look in
the dictionary because I have not got my own.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: "Massen" is underlined, is it underlined in
the translation?
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I do not know who did that.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, it looks original.
A: It is original.
MR RAMPTON: Shows how important it is, Mr Irving, to go back to source,
does it not.
A: That is a "yes".
Q: Do you know how those transcripts were made? They were
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secretly recorded, presumably by some hidden microphone.
A: It is still very secret but in the next door room everything was
taken down outsize large disks like the old fashioned 78s.
Q: Now can we assume that this is an accurate transcript; there is no
reason to doubt it, is there?
A: They are normally very accurate transcripts. They had research teams
who would have extensive catalogues and indices to check on words and names.
Q: Let us look at the German, you will help me when my German strays off
course as it very likely will, the relevant passage is at the bottom of page
233. It is line beginning der Altemeyer something triumphantly said quotes:
"Hier ist eine Vorgugung" that is an order?
A: Not necessarily, that is a strange kind of order. It is more of an
ordinance.
Q: Yes. Here is an ordinance come, just come?
A: Yes.
Q: That says, yes?
A: Yes.
Q: To the effect that, let us say, shall we, dass?
A: Yes.
Q: This kind of or these kinds of "derartige"?
A: That kind of, yes.
Q: These kind of?
A: Mass shootings.
P-104
Q: Mass shootings, do you hear how I read it, mass shootings?
A: Yes.
Q: In future, in Zukunft... which means must not take place any more,
does it not?
A: Yes.
Q: "Das soll vorsichtiger gomacht worden"; that means this
shall in future be more cautiously or discreetly done? Yes?
A: Very good, Mr Rampton, yes.
Q: Well, not very good, but it is not very difficult, is it, two things
about it?
A: Yes.
Q: It translates not as "shootings on this scale", it
translates as "shootings of this kind"?
A: Yes.
Q: And the word "mass"?
A: Yes.
Q: Is underlined. Do you agree that that is likely to reflect the
transcriber's impression of the emphasis which Bruns placed upon that word when
he spoke it?
A: Yes.
Q: Good. It is a very significantly different version from the one you
have, if I may use a colloquialism "been punting"?
A: You mean by leaving off the corollary?
Q: Yes, it fits in with the last part of the sentence, "it
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must be done more discreetly"?
A: Yes.
Q: Does it not?
A: Yes.
Q: Now why do you reject the second half of that message and embrace the
first half?
A: We have been over this, but we will attack it from a different angle.
We are dealing not with a verbatim transcript of what Altemeyer said, we are
dealing with the recollection by a German army general four years later of what
Altemeyer had said. We are dealing with a triumphant SS young officer,
triumphantly he declaims this. The SS were eager to kill Jews. They were very
indignant when orders had come down from whoever that this killing had to stop.
They were eager to carry on somehow and so they were eager to find some kind of
loophole that they allowed them to go on bumping off their enemies. So he tells
the army officer, well, we have the orders but we are going to carry on doing
it anyway.
Q: Nudge nudge, wink wink, we are going to do it more quietly.
A: Yes.
Q: It is perfectly plausible.
A: I am glad you accept this.
Q: That is quite a different thing from suppressing it entirely and
perverting its meaning into something
P-106
different.
A: I do not accept that I have done that.
Q: Which is what you have done.
A: I do not accept that.
Q: Very well.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Whatever it means, it is not Altemeyer saying, well, we
are going, as it were, off our own bat, carry on as before, because the words
make it plain it is part of the order that the mass shootings shall be carried
out more discreetly in the future.
A: When I am writing this up, and also when I am talking about it, I am
not just taking this document into account, I am taking into account what we
know at both other ends and also the killing of the Germans thereupon stopped.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. Right.
A: Thank you.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Will you show Mr Rampton if you want to pursue the
Stuttgart business.
A: After lunch.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Provide it to him. 5 past 2
(Luncheon adjournment)
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving and Mr Rampton, it is court 73 as from Monday.
There were problems about Chichester Rents that made it unsuitable.
MR IRVING: Thank you very much, my Lord. My Lord, first, one minor
matter. I have one minor application to make which
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I would make about this time tomorrow concerning the date of one of the
witnesses who is appearing on summons that it would be proper to make to your
Lordship.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I know.
MR RAMPTON: He may mean Monday, may he not, my Lord?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, Monday.
MR IRVING: Thank you very much, Mr Rampton.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: We are going to review whether we sit on Fridays, but
for the moment I think it probably is, in everybody's interests to have, not
least yours, Mr Irving, actually.
MR IRVING: Thank you very much, my Lord. My Lord, you will have seen the
press clipping which I put to you this morning ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I did.
MR IRVING: --- from the German newspaper. I will not read it out.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Have you seen it, Mr Rampton?
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I have.
MR IRVING: It refers to the year 1996. According to this press clipping,
the German government have asked for my extradition to Germany on an
allegation, an alleged offence that I committed in 1990. The substance of the
allegation is neither here nor there. I am only concerned with the coincidence
of time; the fact that after 10 years suddenly this should have occurred now,
just as our action
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here is being heard.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I do not want to cut you short, but I rather sympathise
with your view that it is unlikely to be a pure coincidence, but what on earth
can I do about it?
MR IRVING: Put my mind at rest, my Lord. If we could ask the Defendants
whether they have had any advance or prior knowledge in any way at all of this
or whether they were contacted at all with the prosecuting authorities in
Stuttgart, or whether they contacted the prosecuting authorities. The reason I
have to say this, my Lord, is because, as my discovery shows, one of the bodies
which I mentioned in my opening statement has corresponded in the past with both
the German Embassy and the Austrian Embassy asking for my arrest.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am not going to compel Mr Rampton to stand up and
give an answer to that question. There are two ways in which you can deal with
it if you want to pursue it, and I do not myself feel that you would be well
advised to do so, but if you want to pursue it, you can either lay the
foundations in your own evidence for me to draw the inference that it must have
had something to do with the Defendants -- that is one way of dealing with it
-- or you can cross-examine whichever of the Defendants' witnesses you think
would be able to answer your questions on this topic.
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I appreciate you understand that Professor Lipstadt will not be being
called to give evidence so you will not be able to ask her, but there may be
other witnesses, I do not know, who are going to be called by the Defendants
whom you could ask. But, to be candid, my feeling is that we have quite enough
to gnaw on this in this case without really going down what are effectively
side alleys.
MR IRVING: Very well I did wish to draw it to your Lordship's attention
in case the morning should arrive when this end of the bench was suddenly
empty.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If that were to happen (which I think is unlikely) I
will do my best to prevent it. Does that help?
MR RAMPTON: So indeed would I. Although your Lordship said you are not
going to compel me to answer, but if I may respectfully say so, rightly, Mr
Irving did ask me to ask. I did ask and the answer is no.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: There you are. You do not have to accept that, but that
is what you are told.
MR IRVING: Quite clearly, I am sure that Mr Rampton would not have made
that statement if it was in any way ^^-- I will accept that assurance, but I
will also advance this particular episode as an instance of the kind of hatred
that I have faced and the problems that I have faced in view of the allegations
and the repugnant suggestions made
P-110
by this Defendant and others.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You have dealt with that very clearly in your evidence
and, of course, I have that well in mind.
MR IRVING: It has a certain actuality about it which is quite
impressive.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is true. Yes, if you would like to go back?
MR DAVID IRVING, continued. Cross-Examined by
MR RAMPTON, QC, continued.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Rampton, have we finished, at any rate for the time
being, with H17, because if so I will hand it back because I have your copy.
That is the German version of Bruns' statement.
MR RAMPTON: Yes. I am afraid I have not quite finished with Bruns. I
thought I had, but, as usual, that is the trouble with adjournments; things
occur to one that one might have asked and did not. But, for completeness, I
will ask. (To the witness): Mr Irving, do you still have there the file D3(i)
which is the file of published articles or talks by you?
A: D3(i), yes.
Q: I am looking at tab 30 which is the print of your speech, the JHR
conference in October '92.
A: Yes.
Q: And the questions which followed it. You remember -- you need not look
it up, but it is on page 24, if you want of
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tab 30, internal page 24, not final page 24 -- I drew your attention
towards the bottom of the left-hand column to the words in quotes as a report
of what Bruns had said that Altemeyer had said: "These mass shootings have
got to stop at once". Do you remember that this morning?
A: Yes.
Q: And I think your answer was to this effect, that it was justified
anyway but you could not rely on a transcript of an extemporary answer to a
question. I am summarizing. I am not quoting your words directly.
A: On this transcript of my extemporary answer?
Q: Yes, on this example?
A: Yes, that it would be -- yes, continue.
Q: Is it right, Mr Irving, that, in fact, before this version of your
words as printed in this way, you went through them and approved them?
A: Occasionally I did.
Q: This particular article?
A: I am sure, Mr Rampton, you will be able to refresh my memory; if I
did, then I did.
Q: You have recently told us so in your answers to our requests for
information.
A: I do not want to be specific about this one, and I am not being
clever, but frequently they would send me a transcript to read, and sometimes I
would proof read it and send it back and sometimes I would not.
P-112
Q: You are right to be cautious, Mr Irving, not because I am setting
traps, but because memory is fallible. You served on us, that is to say, our
side, something called ---
A: "Answers to requests for information".
Q: "Some answers".
A: Yes.
Q: Fair enough because there were only some answers, on 27th December of
last year?
A: Yes.
Q: And one of the answers was this. This is No. 13 on page 5, my Lord.
It is tab 9 of the main pleadings bundle, A1.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I do not think I have it.
MR RAMPTON: No, but it does not matter; it is very short. Is very short.
(To the witness): "In October 1992 I spoke at an IHR conference"?
A: Is that this one?
Q: Yes. It is the only one I know of in October 1992. "As on
previous occasions, I attended my booked table and paid no attention to the
other speakers. Once again I corrected the text of my talk before it was
published."
A: Very well, yes.
Q: Also it is right to say, is it not, that the whole of that, including
the questions and answers, appears on your web site?
A: The whole of this?
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Q: Yes.
A: No, it is not correct to say that.
Q: It is not?
A: No, it is not correct.
Q: That particular passage does, does it not?
A: Will you give me the web site address?
Q: Yes, I will. In fact, I had better you see the hard copy.
A: Www.
Q: File D2(iii). It is HTP.www.fpp.co.uk.speeches. Speech ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- 111092 HTML?
A: In that case, that is correct, but does this particular passage also
appear on that or just the speech?
Q: Yes, it does. I have the page here. By all means, I will pass it up.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think you will take that on trust, I suspect, will
you not?
MR RAMPTON: You can trust me if I say something like that.
A: No, the reason I say that is because in some of the witness reports
things have been said to be on my web site whereas, in fact, they are just
links on my we site somewhere else.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Anyway, do not let us take more time on this. I think
it is accepted it is on the web site.
MR RAMPTON: I think the answer is yes.
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, it is.
MR RAMPTON: So, first of all, you corrected the transcript of the talk
before ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- it was published and, secondly, you put the whole thing in that
form on to the web site?
A: Without in any way reviewing it.
Q: No, I understand that, but the fact is we can then take it that you
have no quibble with the quotation marks around the words "These mass
shootings have to stop at once"?
A: Not the kind of thing I would quibble about, I do not think, no.
Q: Quite, good, I an glad to hear. There is one more, slightly more
substantial point that I want to go back to which I apologise for having missed
this morning. I am grateful it has been drawn to my attention. Have you got
your 1977 "Hitler's War" with you there?
A: 1997?
Q: In 1977?
A: Yes, I have.
Q: I am apt to '97 when I mean 1977, excuse me.
A: This is the English edition of it, yes.
Q: Yes. I think the words are probably the same though, are they not?
A: The English and American, yes.
Q: Page 332?
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A: Yes.
Q: I am not going to read it again. We have heard it too often. In the
middle of the page, there is the passage dealing with the Berlin Jews, is there
not?
A: Yes.
Q: You have written: "The fate of Berlin's Jews was clearly
raised". So the context of that passage is, at any rate, foreshadowed as
being Berlin's Jews, is it not?
A: The context of the paragraph is the prior responsibility of the SS
for the murders and not Hitler.
Q: Sure.
A: Yes.
Q: But we are talking here in this little bit about a discussion about
Berlin's Jews between Hitler and Himmler?
A: Yes, in that sentence.
Q: Yes. Then you say in the next sentence: "At 1.30 p.m. Himmler
was obliged to telephone from Hitler's bunker to Heydrich the explicit order
that Jews were not to be liquidated"?
A: Yes.
Q: Let me ask you this. You remember what you put in the introduction?
A: Yes.
Q: When you wrote that, did you mean to say that these Berlin Jews or
Berlin's Jews in general were were not to be liquidated, or that Hitler had
made a general prohibition
P-116
against the slaughter or murder of Jews anywhere?
A: It is nit-picking.
Q: It is not.
A: What I am about to say is nit-picking.
Q: Oh, I see.
A: But there is a period after the word "Judentransport aus
Berlin", Jew transport from Berlin. In other words, there is a full stop
at the end of that and a new line. Then comes the phrase "Keine
Liquidierung" as a separate phrase. Operating as we were at that time,
1977, totally in the darkness about this particular -- we now know a lot more,
but at that time we were operating totally in the darkness. I was going through
a jungle of new documents that no other historian had set foot in. It was
perfectly rational to say, is the "Keiner Liquidierung" a phrase
which is attached to the line above, or is it a separate subject; just in the same
way, if you look, there are four lines in that facsimile. The first one is -- I
will say it in English so we have no problem -- arrest of Dr Jakelius. The next
line after a period is "Apparently son of Molotoff" or "apparent
son of Molotoff". The next line is "Jews transport from Berlin",
full stop. The next line is "No liquidation".
Q: Yes.
A: I appreciate that in the light of our present knowledge the fourth
line clearly refers to the third line. Are you
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with me, Mr Rampton?
Q: I am absolutely with you, Mr Irving. Carry on.
A: But in the state of my knowledge in 1977, when I am still in darkest
jungle of new documents, it was perfectly reasonable to accept the fourth line
as being as detached from the third line line as were the first and second
lines from each other and from the rest.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So answer to Mr Rampton's question is that you were
conveying in that passage what you thought was an explicit order relating to
Jews generally, not just Berlin Jews?
A: Based solely on the fourth line with Jews being the topic of
conversation, my Lord, yes.
MR RAMPTON: I am coming back to that.
A: That is why the full stop is so important.
Q: You say that, but it has this possible effect as well which is
something evidently you did not even pause to think about; it might not have
had anything to do with Jews at all, might it?
A: You are absolutely right.
Q: You inflated it on the basis of what one might call a speculative
inference into a general order against the liquidation of Jews in general, did
you not?
A: I object to the word "inflated". I said that I interpreted
that line from the clear evidence that the previous topic of conversation had
been Jews.
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Q: Berlin's Jews?
A: Yes, Jews all the same. I interpreted the fourth line as being a
reference to "no liquidation". We now know that this was, in all
probability, a reference purely to that train load.
Q: We do not want to get ahead of ourselves, at least I do not want to
get ahead of myself, Mr Irving, though you should not feel sorry for me.
A: Right, but please do not forget that full stop in the line above.
Q: Of course I do not forget it. I can see it in the original.
A: We had a lot of discussion about whether the "K" of
"Keine" was actually a large "K" or a little "k"
among historians, believe it or not.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If you have a full stop, it does not matter?
A: Well, people wondered if that was a full stop or a blemish, my Lord.
This is the kind of level to which one sinks.
MR RAMPTON: The fact is, Mr Irving, that full stop or no, the first line
of those two lines concerns Jews from Berlin, as it happens, one transport?
A: Well, it concerns Jew transport or transportation from Berlin.
Q: The second line, if it is to be read disjunctively from the first
line, refers to "no liquidation". No
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liquidation of what? Businesses, gypsies?
A: It would have to be a very perverse mind indeed which accepted there
was no connection between the fourth and the third lines, general topic.
Q: The natural meaning of those two lines taken together, whether you
insert the full stop or not, is that there is to be no liquidation of the Jews
from Berlin?
A: You say whether you accept the full stop or not; the full stop is
there.
Q: No difference. It might have been a ----
A: Pardon?
Q: There might have been nothing. It is a note in a man's handwritten
telephone log.
A: I agree. One cannot put it on the gold balance.
Q: If you say, Mr Irving, the "liquidieren" refers to Jews at
all, then it is most probable, most probable -- I do not have to deal in
certainties, you see, Mr Irving -- that it refers to the Jews referred to in
the previous line, is it not?
A: Yes.
Q: Yes. So why, what was the warrant for your inflating this (and I use
that word advisedly because it is an inflation, objectively regarded) into a
prohibition against the liquidation of all Jews anywhere?
A: I remind you of your previous question; you are saying it is most
likely that it was, and you are talking in the
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present tense, but was it most likely in 1977 when I wrote the book or
published the book?
Q: I am looking at the German as it was written in 1941.
A: No, are you asking me was it most probable that the fourth line
referred to the third line in the 1960s when I wrote the book? The answer to
that is it not so likely, it is not so evident because at that time we did not
have the documents that we do now.
Q: Ignore the extraneous material completely, if you will, Mr Irving.
A: You cannot when you are writing books.
Q: I will. I am trying to get back to your state of mind in 1970 something
when you first wrote this passage which got replicated in 1991. I look at what
you had in front which you told us this morning was just the sheet. You did not
have the surrounding material. German is an ordinary, Western European
language. They think like us, they speak somewhat like us, and the entry is:
"Jew transport from Berlin", full stop, "no liquidation".
Now, if the "liquidation" refers to Jews, it refers to those Jews and
no other Jews?
A: Mr Rampton, you have four topics referred to in that conversation,
one, two, three and four. One, two and three are all totally different topics
from each other, and it is very reasonable to assume that the fourth topic is
probably also yet another fourth topic.
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Q: That is interesting.
A: But you say there was no other document before me at that time. Of
course, there were the rest of these telephone logs. For example, the reference
to "no destruction of the gypsies" which clearly shows the way which
decisions are going at the top.
Q: So you mean the fourth line, "Keine Liquidierung" could
refer to the verhaftung of Dr Jakelius?
A: Equally.
Q: What is the verhaftung of Dr Jakelius?
A: The arrest of Dr Jakelius. Dr Jakelius, my research has established,
was an euthanasia doctor in Vienna who had been arrested for some reason.
Q: OK. He has been arrested. What is the Angleblich Molotoff?
A: Somebody who was, apparently, claiming to be a son of Molotoff.
Molotoff, the Foreign Minister, had no sons.
Q: And then there is the "Judentransport aus Berlin"?
A: Then come -- yes.
Q: Then the fourth line is "Keine Liquidierung", so this could
mean that none of those three groups, categories, is to be liquidated. Is that
what you are telling us?
A: I do not think I said that. I am saying that all four lines can be
taken separately because the first three lines are quite clearly separate
topics from each other.
Q: Let us go through it. Plainly, it is an utter nonsense to
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talk about the "angeblich sohn Molotoff" as being subject to an
injunction against liquidation, is it not?
A: Subject to?
Q: Being subject to an injunction against liquidation?
A: Well, very clearly it is. If somebody was the son of a prominent
Soviet leader, they would definitely be kept in a very special confinement.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: He was thought at one time to have been on that train.
A: The usual trick was that a prisoner would be taken and he would claim
to be Churchill's son or nephew or cousin or something like, and knowing that
they would not be able to kill him. But it would be dangerous to read too much
just into three words. All we know is that Molotoff had no sons and that,
obviously, there is no connection between the Jakelius and Molotoff.
MR RAMPTON: No, but, of course, there is no full stop after
"Jakelius" either, is there, so it might be asserted that he was
arrested because he was pretending to be the son of Molotoff, might he not?
A: I am not sure how much time the court wishes to...
MR RAMPTON: Well, this is fanciful.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am wondering whether we have not thrashed through
this document sufficiently.
MR RAMPTON: Is it not? The "Keine Liquidierung" refers to the
"Judentransport aus Berlin" whether there is a full stop
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or not.
A: This is your opinion, but it is not mine, Mr Rampton, when I am
writing my book in early 1970s and ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It comes to this. In the early 1970s you took that, as
you now accept wrongly, to have been a reference to Jews generally?
A: At large or at larger than is justified. I took it to be
transportation, the transporetation of the Jews as ----
MR RAMPTON: No, in the introduction it is "at large", not
"at larger". In the introduction it is all Jews.
A: Yes. This was the inference that I drew ----
Q: This is the incontrovertible evidence that Hitler had ordered, no
liquidation of any Jews anywhere.
A: Into account I take when writing that sentence my entire expertise
based on all the other documents that we have by that time already collected,
and, of course, now we know a great deal more which proves I was absolutely
right to write what I wrote at that time.
Q: Mr Irving, we are not here to find out whether you were right or
wrong; if we were, we would be here until the next Millennium.
A: I doubt it.
Q: No doubt. We are here to test your credentials, your honesty and your
integrity, as an historian, a chronicler of these events. The proposition which
I put to you for you to deny is that you deliberately distorted the sense
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of these two lines so as to make the reference to "Keine
Liquidierung" without any warrant whatsoever appear to be a reference to
Jews everywhere?
A: This sentence would only stand up in court, in my view, if you were
able to establish that at the time I wrote those sentences I knew different and
better. I think it would be very difficult to make that stand. To show that one
makes a mistake in interpreting a translation of the word
"transport", that one chooses the wider interpretation rather than
the narrow narrower definition that we now know to be correct from the other
documentation, this is not a deliberate wilful and perverse distortion or
manipulation or translation of a document.
Q: I put it to you, Mr Irving, that, on the contrary, it quite plainly
is -- shall we leave it there -- which you deny? Just while we are on the
question of full stops, since you have raised it, if we go to page 14 in your
little bundle, we see the rather worse photograph, I agree, of the same sort of
document that the log for the beginning of December, the first day of December?
A: Precisely, yes.
Q: Yes, and I do not know, this is not a very good copy, are you certain
whether or not there is a full full stop after word ----
A: "SS"?
Q: --- "Verwaltung", yes, "SS"?
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A: The second rune, you know what I mean by the rune, the lightening
flash that the SS ----
Q: Yes, SS thing.
A: --- the second rune is right off the photocopy.
Q: I know.
A: So we cannot tell if there is a full stop or not.
Q: Have you got the original?
A: I have got it in my volume at the end -- the blue volume marked
"Himmler Diary".
Q: Have you got that printed transcript of these documents?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is in this file, is it not?
A: Well, I am afraid that I do not trust this ----
Q: OK.
A: --- to that degree. Let me just explain why I will not trust this for
being that kind of evidence. On two or three occasions I spotted instead of
writing "u." for "und", they have written out
"Und" in full.
Q: My fault entirely. I used the wrong document. One does make mistakes.
I quite agree. Turn back to page 13 of your own documents, will you? This is
your carefully retranscribed version of the Himmler log?
A: Yes.
Q: Where you correct the mistake "Juden" to read properly
"haben"? A. "Haben" with a small "h".
Q: And there is no full stop after "SS", is there?
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A: It would have been highly improper of me to have put a full stop in
if there was not one visible on the photocopy.
Q: Exactly. What would in German the sentence or phrase (because is not
really a sentence) "VerwaltungsFuhrer der SS haben zu bleiden" mean
-- I mean "Juden zu bleiden", I beg your pardon. What would it mean?
A: Jews to remain.
Q: No, no. I will read it in English: "Administrative officers,
leaders, of the SS Jews to remain"?
A: Read like that, it would mean nothing at all. It would be quite
meaningless.
Q: Exactly. It would be a complete nonsense, would it not?
A: Yes.
Q: Thank you. Be patient with me, Mr Irving. I am just going to a new
topic now. Mr Irving, you are conscious, I suppose and, in fact, I know you
are, that Adolf Hitler made a speech I think to Reich and Gauleiters in Berlin
on 12th December 1941. I am still in the same period of short period of
history.
A: 4th December?
Q: Yes, 12/12/41.
A: Yes.
Q: We know that because there is a report of it in Goebbels' diary for
13th December, is there not?
A: There is a reference to it.
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Q: Yes. Well, there is rather more than that, I think. Have you got --
have you got your Goebbels book there?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: The answer is "no" can he be provided with a
copy?
MR RAMPTON: Yes, please somebody give him a Goebbels.
A: It is here. I have it here.
Q: If you turn to page 383 you see in the first complete paragraph you
start like this: "Addressing the... whilst still in Berlin Hitler opted
for greater candour. He confessed that he had spent sleepless nights... whether
he was doing the right thing in declaring war on Roosevelt." Then you
quote Goebbels: "The Fuhrer" Goebbels reported to his diary "is
convinced that he would have had to declare war on the Americans sooner or
later. Now the conflict in the Far East drops into our laps as an added
bonus". "He viewed the battle of the Atlantic" etc. etc. down to
the end of paragraph "an unavoidable hitch". Footnote 72. In footnote
72, which is on page 646, you explain that those references are taken from Goebbels
diary on 13th December.
A: That is correct, and that is true.
Q: Yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Rampton, I am sorry, what page?
MR RAMPTON: 646, the footnote.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, what page in the text?
MR RAMPTON: 383, I am so sorry.
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A: The second paragraph.
Q: Then I ask you to note, I will wait until his Lordship has it, I ask
you to note on the same page in the second part of the next paragraph these
words, because I am coming back to this: "Returning by train on December
16th to the Wolf's Lair" yes?
A: Yes.
Q: So that you are saying means that -- I take it what are you saying
means that Hitler having addressed the Gauleiters on the 12th went back to the
Wolf's Lair in East Prussia on the 16th?
A: Yes, I can easily check it from the war diary.
Q: No. I am sure you are right about that, I am not about to dispute it,
you will be surprised to hear. Could you now please be provided with a copy of
Professor Evans' report? No, I am sorry that is the wrong reference I beg your
pardon. Can somebody retrieve that mistake by me, and give Mr Irving Professor
Longerich.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: This point is dealt with by Evans?
MR RAMPTON: I know it is, but I have not got the reference in Evans.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think it is page 320.
MR RAMPTON: I have put it away.
A: I am looking forward to it actually.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: What?
A: I am looking forward to it.
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MR RAMPTON: It is very well known passage in Goebbels diary, or seems to
be. Thanks perhaps in part to Mr Irving, I know not. If you have got Dr
Longerich's report now, could you turn to page 61 of the first part?
A: Yes, I have it.
Q: We are on 12th December still. His report reads as follows, at the
bottom of page 61, paragraph 17.3: "One day after the declaration of war
on the USA on 12th December Hitler addressed the... of the party"; so far
is that correct, Mr Irving?
A: That is correct, yes.
Q: "In this speech he returned once again to prophecy of 30th
January 1939", that is the one in the Reichstarget about the fate of Jews,
is it not?
A: Yes.
Q: "And now announced the approaching extermination of the Jews
living under German domination, as we can read in the Goebbels diaries."
Now please look at footnote 156, and I am not going to read it out because that
is a strain for me and worst still for the transcribers. It is the original
German. Tell me if it is accurate, your German is very good.
A: The German text is accurate apart from the fact it has transcribed
some of the diacriticals incorrectly.
Q: Fair enough.
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A: German SZ, things like that.
Q: You have read it now, have you?
A: I read it and I disapprove of the translation, but we will reach that
moment.
Q: We will come to that because that is over the page, but --
A: It is a tendentious translation.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But nothing wrong with the German?
A: -- nothing wrong with German --
MR RAMPTON: I will come back, because the translation will be important
many times during in the course of the case. Dr Longerich translates it at the
top page 62.
A: -- he is, of course, German translating into English.
Q: I know he is, but it may be, I know not, you can ask him when he
comes to court. He had some help. His English is pretty good, but not perfect:
"As concerns the Jewish question the Fuhrer is determined to make a clean
sweep"; what I suggest we do, Mr Irving, is to take out page 61 and
fortunately the German text is on a separate page.
A: Right.
Q: As we go through the English you can tell me in answer to my
questions where you think Dr Longerich has gone wrong in his translation.
A: Yes.
Q: "As concerns the Jewish question the Fuhrer is determined to
make a clean sweep" (German spoken)?
A: Tabula rasa they say in Latin.
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Q: Maybe, but this is fortunately in these courts we do not speak much
Latin any more.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, but it is closer actually, the Latin than the
English.
MR RAMPTON: Probably.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is the point are you making.
A: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, a tabular rasa is a blank surface.
A: So I am more accurate than yourself --
MR JUSTICE GRAY: There is no distinction in terms of the sense of it, is
there.
MR RAMPTON: I do not know.
A: -- does the word tabula rasa exist in English?
MR RAMPTON: Yes. It is frequently used by people who do not know what it
means, as so much Latin is. But if you wish tabula rasa is rather a perhaps
stronger word than "clean sweep".
A: Cleansing.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Do you dispute clean sweep gives sense?
A: Not at all, perfectly good line.
MR RAMPTON: "He had prophesied to the Jews that if they once again
brought about a world war they would experience their own extermination."
The words in German are (German spoken); what do those words mean?
A: Well, of course, to translate "vernichtung" as
extermination is highly tendentious.
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Q: Why?
A: If you look in your yellow dictionary, see what
"vernichtung" says.
Q: I think I will.
A: I have no idea. I am prepared to say meaning No. one is
extermination.
Q: You do not have to say that, Mr Irving. The root of the word is
"making to nothing" annihilating, is it not? Let us see what that
says. I have very little knowledge of German, but it seems to me obvious, but
it means, according to Langscheidt, annihilate, destroy, exterminate,
eradicate-shatter.
A: It is the third possible meaning and he has chosen the third meaning
rather than the first.
Q: Did you see a distinction --
A: Yes --
Q: In this context -- weight between annihilate and exterminate?
A: -- I am not going to put the words on the gold balance because this
is not Hitler speaking, this is Goebbels reporting, am I correct?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No.
MR RAMPTON: Apparently --
A: On the following day.
MR RAMPTON: Unless it come from Goebbels diary?
A: -- this is Goebbels diary. This is a third person report
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by Goebbels of what Hitler said the previous day.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: He is reporting what he recalls him having said.
A: Yes, so it is rather meaningless to attach too much importance to the
actual words contained in the diary.
MR RAMPTON: On the contrary, Mr Irving, often enough in the course of
your books you attach a kind of uncritical credulity to the utterances of Dr
Goebbels.
A: Yes.
Q: Notwithstanding he is merely reporting what somebody else has said.
Furthermore why should -- Dr Goebbels in December 1941 misreport what his
leader had said?
A: Because if you had read my book with the assiduity that I am sure you
have you will remember that Dr Goebbels is an evil little genius who is capable
of lying in the most malicious and perverse verse way and he will translate
every single statement through his own distorted brain.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: In his own diaries?
A: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: Why?
A: This is the way people do things. They have a tendency to write down
things they wished they had heard. If he wished to heard Hitler talking about
the extermination of the Jews, then he would prefer to use that word when for all
we know Hitler may have used a different one. I have no objection at all, Mr
Rampton, when you bring to me the
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verbatim transcripts of which there are any number of Hitler actually
said when he says things that are very similar.
Q: We do not have --
A: We should not rely on this kind of second order evidence on matter of
this importance.
Q: -- you do it repeatedly when it suits your book, Mr Irving.
A: You are accusing me of double standards.
Q: Yes, I am most roundly.
A: I disagree. I am very careful with the criteria I apply. In a matter
like this of such importance I look at the actual translations with greatest
detail and if they are, I mean in law too you have to give somebody the benefit
of the doubt when they are ambiguities. You certainly do not go for the third
meaning of the word rather than first meaning.
Q: You see, you continually assume that I am using one document, one
utterance, to prove the guilt of Adolf Hitler. In fact I am trying to do
neither, Mr Irving. What I am trying to do is to suggest to you that the
convergence of the evidence of which this is just one small example.
A: Yes.
Q: Is that on the balance of probabilities, as though it were a civil
case at court, the reasonable historian would say:
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on the balance of probabilities the evidence is that Adolf Hitler was at
the heart of all of this? Do you follow me?
A: It is a rather vague sentence, that Hitler was at the heart of all
this.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think it probably clear what Mr Rampton is getting
at, can I put a related question, I would be interested to know what your
answer is; do you "vernichtung" would be a word that would be likely
to be used if what was being talked of was deportation to Madagascar or
anywhere else?
A: I agree it would not and there are definitely cases where word
"vernichtung" is used in the sense of murder. For example, in the
German phrase ( German spoken), the destruction of people who are not entitled
or should not be allowed to live. It is quite definitely a killing operation,
but there are so much better sources where you have the actual transcript of
what people are speaking that I hesitate to waste the court's time looking at
the kind of document when undoubtedly you have the verbatim transcript of what
Hitler said where he uses similar words or the same words.
MR RAMPTON: Fortunately for everybody, Mr Irving, it is not in your
hands whether the court's time is wasted. If I try to waste the court's time I
will be told not to, if I am thought not to be wasting the court's I will not be
told.
A: If I was sitting there wearing a wig I would have jumped
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to my feet and made this point.
Q: You have made it.
A: I am wearing my other hat if I say that.
Q: If you want to invite his Lordship to stop this line of
cross-examination please do so.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Come on, I think you are not asking me to and if you
did, I would not.
MR RAMPTON: Thank you. Now then you do not like Dr Goebbels use of the
word "vernichtung". You are not certain that that is a word Adolf
Hitler would have used on that occasion.
A: Well, we know exactly what speech Hitler made on January 30th 1939,
there we have the verbatim text.
Q: Turn back to page 38 of the same report.
A: We know exactly what Hitler said there, so why we are using a second
hand version of a version of it repeated four years later.
Q: For the very fact that it was repeated on 12th December --
A: Hitler constantly repeated this speech.
Q: -- please, Mr Irving, be patient and listen to my questions. Its
importance you may agree is that it occurs again on 12th December 1941 at the
time when the German Jews were being transported in large numbers to the East?
A: Yes.
Q: Right. If you go back to 811 of Dr Longerich's report you find the
relevant English of the Reichstag speech on 30
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January 1939?
A: I know the speech off by heart.
Q: In that case you will agree that the last words in citation are:
(German spoken); which means the annihilation, extermination or eradication of
the Jewish race in Europe, does it not?
A: Can we just be absolutely certain what German words he uses.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is same word, take it from me.
A: In German, very well, my Lord, yes.
MR RAMPTON: It is at the bottom of the page in German (German spoken)?
A: In this case I would say that the word "race" implies that
he is not talking about an actual killing operation and certainly January 1939
nobody was talking about killing Jews.
Q: What does word "genocide" mean, Mr Irving?
A: Genocide?
Q: Yes, genocide.
A: An English word genocide?
Q: No, it is not English, it is Latin.
A: It is not a Latin word, you mean Latin origin?
Q: Yes. What does it mean?
A: You explain to the court.
Q: No, you tell me if you know what it means.
A: Killing of people by virtue of their race.
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Q: Yes, it means killing of a race of people.
A: Yes.
Q: Is it any different from the "vernichtung" of a
"rasa"?
A: You destroy races in other ways than killing them. Nobody in January
1939 and I would be very surprised if you can establish the opposite was
talking about killing Jews.
Q: Yes. I am going to go on with this little comparison between --
A: Yes.
Q: -- if you forgive me and as long as I am not told by his Lordship it
is waste of the court's time, but there is little comparison between what Dr
Longerich has written in English and what the original German of Dr Goebbels
diary was. We have finished with the word "vernichtung erleben
geben", which means "they would experience", this was not just
an empty phrase. The German is: "Das is keine frazig vasen"?
A: That is correct.
Q: What does that convey to you? This was --
A: Dr Goebbels is saying that is not an empty phrase. This is not Hitler
saying this is an empty phrase, this is Goebbels saying it is an empty phrase.
Q: -- so you say.
A: Well, this is Goebbels diary.
Q: How do you know it is not a report what Hitler said?
A: Let me educate you in the German language. If this was
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Goebbels saying this is Hitler saying it would have been in the
subjunctive. German language reports reported speech in the subjunctive. It
would be (German spoken) not (German spoken) I am sure every German in this
room would agree with me.
Q: Everything in the rest of this quotation is not attributable to
Hitler; is that your position?
A: We are taking this sentence by sentence; is that correct?
Q: Let go on, the world war is there, the extermination and again the
words are (German spoken) that is of Jewry, Jews in general if you like, must
be the necessary consequence. (German spoken)?
A: Here he has the same word, vernichtung, but he has given it a totally
different translation, extermination, am I right?
Q: What do you mean?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No.
MR RAMPTON: I see the two words "extermination" one on top of
other.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think you mean different from the 1939 translation.
A: Yes, but the word that is different of course is Judentums what does
your Langscheidt tell us about that?
MR RAMPTON: I doubt it has it in, I am not going to bother with it.
A: Can I ask that you look in Langscheidt because I do not
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have a copy here.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You accept "Jewry" is the right translation?
A: Jewry, Judaism, but not Jews. If somebody talks about wiping out
Christianity that would be the parallel, my Lord.
MR RAMPTON: This is only Dr Goebbels speaking, does it matter?
A: What is the standard dictionary?
Q: You cannot -- we cannot believe a word Dr Goebbels says, can we?
A: This is your Judentums.
Q: I am just looking to see if it is in, it may be Jewry collective...
there is a choice Mr Irving, which would you like to choose?
A: Wiping out Jewry, wiping out Judaism, it is not the same as
exterminating the Jews this is a manipulated translation.
Q: It has Jewry?
A: He is saying that this is evidence of the wiping out of the Jews.
Q: No, look at it "Jewry" big letters, extermination of Jewry?
A: Extermination of Jewry.
Q: Yes.
A: Is not the same as annihilating Judaism.
Q: No, but the two meanings are both there?
A: He has chosen once again the tendentious meaning, which
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highly is disreputable for an historian to do.
Q: Perhaps that is because it is consistent with the rest of the text?
A: No, it is incumbent upon an historian, just as a lawyer to give the
benefit of the doubt to the person you are impugning; am I correct?
Q: No, you are not correct. Not in this case.
A: In an ambiguity.
Q: No, there is not ambiguity here --
A: There is a total ambiguity.
Q: Mr Irving, I go back: "He had prophecised to the Jews that if
they", nothing to do with Judaism, "once again brought about a world
war they would experience their own" that is to say the Jews own extermination
"vernichtung", the same word in the next sentence.
A: This is Dr Goebbels, right?
Q: Yes, yes.
A: OK.
Q: No, that is Hitler.
A: Hitler as reported four years later by Dr Goebbels.
Q: By Dr Goebbels. The world war is there. The extermination of Jewry
must be the necessary consequence. The one flows quite naturally and logically
from the other.
A: In the first case he has taken the third meaning of the word. In the
second case he has taken the second meaning
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of the word. In neither case has he taken the primary meaning of the
word, primary translation. If I was to do that I think I would be hearing about
it shortly in this court.
Q: Eradication, extermination, annihilation all mean the same thing --
A: I do not think so. I gave an example if one talked about eradicating
Christianity, drug addiction, you do not go about wiping out the drug addicts.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think I have the point.
A: -- I think there is room for manoeuvre on something like this and it
is incumbent on people not to take the evil meaning of a word when there are
much better sources.
MR RAMPTON: There is only room for manoeuvre for those who want to find
room to manoeuvre?
A: Like people who pay witnesses for expert cases like this.
Q: I must make a note to prompt you to put that allegation to Dr
Longerich --
A: I shall, to all the witnesses.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Let us press on with the translation.
MR RAMPTON: This question must be seen without sentimentality "die
frage ist ohne jede sentimentalat so betrachten" correct?
A: -- that is a fair translation.
Q: Good. We are not here in order to have sympathy with the Jews,
"wir sind nicht dasu da, mitlied mit den juden"
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correct so far?
A: Yes.
Q: "Sondern nur mitleid mit unserem deutschen volk so haben"?
A: Just to have sympathy.
Q: Rather we should sympathise with our own German people?
A: A loose translation, but I am not tendentious.
Q: If the German people have now once again sacrificed as many as
160,000 dead in the eastern campaign, then the authors of this bloody conflict
must pay with their lives (German spoken) authors?
A: Yes.
Q: (German spoken) of this bloody conflict, therefore -- with their
lives -- account for, must account for or pay for?
A: Yes, this is Dr Goebbels.
Q: It may be?
A: I am sorry it is, because it is not in the subjunctive. If it is not
in reported speech. If he was reporting what Hitler had said, it would be not
"hat" but "ete", that is the way reported speech is done in
German.
Q: You see no ground for thinking that Hitler said anything like this?
A: This is Dr. Goebbels' gloss on what Hitler had said.
Q: You think it is just a gloss on what Hitler said. Do you think it is
a invention?
A: That is what the language tells us Mr Rampton it is not in
subjunctive, so it is not him reporting what somebody else
P-144
said.
Q: Could you answer my question.
A: I have given you the answer.
Q: Do you think it is an invention?
A: Is what an invention? He is writing down his own opinions. Goebbels
--
Q: None of this is attributable to what Hitler said on this occasion
when he addressed the Reich and Gau leaders on 12th December --
A: -- Mr Rampton, you do not know and I do not know because we do not
have a transcript of that speech.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: How much do you say Mr Irving of this little snippet is
a report of what Hitler said to the gaulieter?
A: -- as I say, in all my editions of Hitler's War, Hitler made the
original speech on January 30th 1939 and he repeatedly and ominously repeated
and recorded what he had said on that occasion, saying I prophecised then and I
will say it again and those who laughed then they are laughing on the other
side of their faces now. This kind of thing. He said it something like eight or
nine times during the war on 8th November 1942 and so on.
Q: Answer my question.
A: It was one of his stock speeches. So I know with a pretty fair degree
of certainty how much of this quotation Hitler actually said because Hitler was
always saying the same thing and how much is probably Goebbels adding his own
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private gloss.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But this is something, this is in part at any rate a
report by Goebbels of what Hitler said in 1941 to the gaulieter?
A: I appreciate that, yes.
Q: Nothing to do with 1939. My question, if I can ask you for an answer,
is how much do you say of this snippet from Goebbels' diary is a report of what
Hitler said to the gaulieter?
A: I would say half is.
Q: Which half? Half in reported speech and half where he repeats exactly
the kind of sentence that Hitler had said so many times before, but what I will
not accept is that he necessarily used the word vernichtung, when Hitler
frequently used other equally vague and ambiguous words and indeed euphemisms.
I am quite happy to accept that. And personally I would consider it deeply
shocking if an historian was to pin any kind of hypothesis just on this third
order information which is what this actually is. I know it has been done quite
recently by Dr Christian Gerlach who is a young Hungarian historian. He has
tried to pin a major hypothesis on it, but he is on the wooden path as the
Germans says, and the fact that the sentences are not in the subjunctive makes
it quite plain that Goebbels is not reporting what Hitler said. We can ask Dr
Longerich this on the question of language if I am
P-146
right about the subjunctive.
MR RAMPTON: You will have the opportunity to do that and you can ask
Professor Evans too whose German is probably as good as yours.
A: I doubt it but I would prefer to ask Dr Longerich.
Q: He wrote it. Tell me this, is it your belief that Hans Frank,
Governor General, was a Poland, Eastern Poland, at this meeting on 12th
December?
A: He was a Reichsleiter. This was a speech to the Garleiters and the
Reichsleiter, so the likelihood is that he was present.
Q: And the word "vernichtung" is not really capable of what we
might call being characterized as a Goebbels' invention or exaggeration because
it was after all the word that Hitler used in his speech in the Reichstager in
1939?
A: Yes.
Q: So it would not be the least bit surprising if Hitler had used the
same word on this occasion, would it?
A: Yes.
Q: Why?
A: The word "vernichtung" is not killing. It is not
unambiguously killing. It is destruction.
Q: So you say. You say that. I do not know accept that answer?
A: It is the primary meaning of the word.
Q: Whether you call it extermination or annihilation, which
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are his two primary senses, it is a literal ----
A: Excuse me, extermination was not the primary sense.
Q: No annihilation was?
A: It was the third sense. You said extermination or annihilation which
are its primary senses. Extermination is not. It is number 3.
Q: What difference do you see between annihilation and extermination?
A: Can you read out the three meanings?
Q: No, I ask you in English. What difference do you see?
A: I have been annihilated by these books but I have not been
exterminated. Is that sufficient for you?
Q: Yes, and I annihilate you in cross-examination but I do not
exterminate you, I hope! Of course I see the difference. Seriously, Mr Irving,
please, annihilation of the Jewish race, come, it is not difficult. German is
not a mystery language any more than English. What does it mean, be honest?
A: If Adolf Hitler was considering annihilation to be the biological
liquidation of the Jewish race, why would he have been talking the entire time
about the Madagascar? Plan.
Q: He talked about the Madagascar plan I think as late as sometime in
1942 by which time he had already issued an order that the Madagascar plan was
to be put to sleep?
A: He talked about it on July 24th 1942.
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Q: Yes, and it was a dead duck?
A: This is your word, but why would Hitler talk about even in private
with his staff?
Q: Because Hitler it would appears, if one reads his table talk ----
A: He is talking about it in a conversation with Bormann and Himmler,
the people who we know were the actual murderers.
Q: It is not to be taken seriously. It cannot be. The Brits had occupied
Madagascar in May of 1942?
A: The British had occupied large parts of the world which the Germans
subsequently reoccupied.
Q: Like Crete. So your thesis is that Hitler had it in mind the German
Navy would travel all the way to the East Coast of Africa, that huge island,
and spend a lot of ships and men capturing the island so they could put the
Jews on it in 1942?
A: I know I am not supposed to ask you questions, but you are not
suggesting that the table talks are fake, are you?
Q: No, no that they are fake, no, far from it. On the contrary, the
table talks are very good evidence of a man who sometimes waffles, sometimes
deceives, sometimes talks at endless length about nothing very much?
A: Rather like counsel in this case!
Q: If you say so.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Do not let us let it descend into...
A: Mr Rampton -- my Lord, I am not sure if I can say this,
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but Mr Rampton rather left the innuendo in the air -- I am not sure if
you are returning to this -- but I had this diary passage in front of me and
ignored it when I wrote the book.
MR RAMPTON: Indeed.
A: Are you going to state that?
Q: I was going to ask you. You can be personal about it if you like, I
do not mind, but I am going to ask you whether you knew about this at the time
you wrote these books.
A: Thank you very much indeed. The answer is no.
Q: Why?
A: I did not have it.
Q: You did not have it?
A: No. This was part of the diaries that were in Moscow.
A: Goebbels', typical Goebbels' diary entry would run to 70 or 50 or 100
pages. One Goebbels' diary entry in September 1943 is 143 pages of typescript
for one day. In Moscow, we were extremely limited for our time, the days we
were allowed to view these pages. I did, by chance, look at these pages around
the German declaration of war on the United States as it was a matter of
interest. My commission from The Sunday Times was to obtain the material
relating to Germany's declaration of war on the United States, obviously for
commercial reasons. I read those passages, those pages, copied them down.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, I just want to make sure I am
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understanding what the question is directed to. Are you saying that you
did not have the passage quoted ----
A: By Longerich.
Q: --- in Longerich ----
A: That is correct.
Q: --- at page 61, 62, when you wrote Goebbels?
A: Indeed, my Lord, yes I did not have it. It has only recently been
published by the Institute of History in Munich. They obtained the diaries in
1992, shortly after I obtained take them, and it has taken them six or seven
years to make them available to the general public. I still have not received
the volumes that I ordered from the publishers.
MR RAMPTON: I am not sure what you did have.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just pursue this? I am still a little bit
puzzled. You do make reference though in Goebbels to the speech that Hitler
made to the Gauleiter?
A: Purely because we know that there was a speech from Martin Bormann's
diary.
MR RAMPTON: You quote from it?
A: And because Goebbels being a typical diarist, he kept on rambling
back and forth as he dictated the diary to his Private Secretary, and he kept
on coming back to the previous day's speech, but not the passage there.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So what are you saying -- just bear with me -- I am
trying to follow.
P-151
MR RAMPTON: I am sorry, my Lord. I will shut up!
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If I can just speak for a minute? Are you saying that
what you say about Hitler's speech to the Gauleiters in your book, Goebbels,
comes from Bormann's diary?
A: No, my Lord. It comes from a previous passages of the Goebbels'
diary. Had I read all 100 pages, I would have stumbled across this paragraph
too; but I can make it very easy for your Lordship and for the Defendants by
drawing their attention to the fact that in my discovery were the entire
Goebbels' diaries that I obtained from Moscow. They could have come to court
producing the pages which they had found in my discovery, proving that I had
had them at the time I wrote both Goebbels and Hitler, and saying, "Here,
he had them here, and yet he ignored them when he wrote that", and the
answer is they have not done so because those pages are not in my documents
because I did not get them.
Q: I am still puzzled. What exactly did you base what you write in
Goebbels about the Gauleiters speech upon?
A: I read the Goebbels' diary for December 13th 1941, just a few pages.
On each page there would be about 200 pages in a big typeface. I read all the
pages relating to the German declaration of war on the United States which had
just been made that day; and then Goebbels mentions the fact that the previous
day Hitler had delivered a speech
P-152
to the Gauleiters, and he mentions it in the terms that I have quoted in
full -- believe me, I quoted everything that I had in my hands when I came back
from Moscow because it was interesting material. Had I read on another 30 or 40
pages in the diary for that day, I would probably have come across the full
length description, the report of the Gauleiters' speech on which Longerich is
relying. But I have not seen it from the Moscow day in 1992 to about the middle
of last year when it was finally made available and quoted by Christian Gerlach
in his book and elsewhere. I am still not very impressed by it, but I do wish
to make the point in case it was going to be inferred that I had had the
material and not made use of it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think I understand.
A: It would have been in my discovery and it was not.
MR RAMPTON: How long are these daily entries in Goebbels' diary? I have
not understood it.
A: They vary in length depending on what is happening.
Q: How long is this entry for 13th December? It reports the previous
day's events. How long is the entry for the speech of Hitler?
A: I have no idea. I have not seen it.
Q: Well, you quoted from it.
A: The previous entry?
Q: No, you quoted from it on page 383 of Goebbels. This is
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what I find baffling.
A: Yes, but, you see, he kept on coming back to it, something like that
he would keep on coming back to as things occurred to him. He is sitting in the
room with his Private Secretary, Dr Richard Otte, his chief stenographer,
dictating the following morning the events of the previous day and he would
keep coming back to something. The diaries were not really intended for
publication in that form; they would have been edited. I came across an earlier
reference to it in the diaries which I then have used here; but to this day I
have not seen any full length description of the Gauleiters' speech.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: How do you know it is 30 or 40 pages further on?
A: Well, presumably it was because, anyway, it was not on the glass
plate that I had, my Lord. The glass plate would have had 45 pages on it. The
glass plate was either five times five or six times eight, depending on when it
was made, pages per glass plate, and they were in complete disarray. So I would
have had the plate which contained the bits I used, but not the bits which contained
the speech on it. I had no commission from The Sunday Times to look into this
kind of thing.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, may I take some instructions because I have just
been given a rather important document?
P-154
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Do you want to have five minutes?
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I think I need five minutes actually because it is not
a document I am not aware of.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think, bearing in mind the transcribers' task, but
shall we say quarter past? (Short Adjournment)
MR RAMPTON: I am grateful to your Lordship. Can I say this? I will say
it to Mr Irving, if I may? Mr Irving, I say two things now and I undertake to
come back to it on Monday, not more this afternoon because I am not clued up
enough yet, but I will be. First, I do not accept that the failure to use a
subjunctive is necessarily a bar to the written material being a report of what
somebody else says in German. You do not have to comment on this. I tell you
this so that you will know what is coming. Second, that the Goebbels' diary entry
which you quoted in the book is not as long as you said that it was. All right?
A: I am sorry. I do not understand the second part of that, the
Goebbels' diary entry which I quoted? The original entry you mean?
Q: Yes.
A: The original entry from which I quoted.
Q: I do not know because I have not looked at your discovery. That is
one of the things I want to do, is how long is the entry from which you quoted.
I also want to
P-155
find out for certain what proportion of that bears to the whole of the entry?
A: Can I suggest, therefore, that when we resume on Monday I bring the
entire December 1941 Goebbels' Diary that I brought back from Moscow with me
and can see what I had and what I did not because it was in the discovery and
you must have seen.
Q: I have not seen it, but I am sure we must have it.
A: Well, if you did not see it, it is not my fault. It was in your
discovery and it was available.
Q: I am not criticising you, Mr Irving. I am quite happy to take blame
for negligence, idleness, whatever you like. Mr Irving, I want, therefore, to
pass away from that, if I may, and, if his Lordship will allow me, to come back
to it on Monday when I have done my homework and ask you about something else,
which, as you said, it is probable that Hans Frank as one of the Reichleiters?
A: He was ----
Q: He was General ----
A: --- he was a Reichleiter and he would have been of the rank to attend
that meeting.
Q: Surely he would; he was General Governor, was he not?
A: Yes. In fact, he went to Berlin for the meeting, so there is no
reason to dispute he was there.
Q: The odious (and it is not really meant to be a pun) Globocnik was one
of his subordinates?
P-156
A: Of Hans Frank? At this time he was the Police Chief in Lublin, I
believe.
Q: Yes.
A: Yes -- no, this is not true. The SS was -- they conducted an
independent existence in the Government General.
Q: Right, OK. It does not matter. It is not important.
A: Do you wish me to expand on that?
Q: No, not now.
A: No? There was no hierarchy bringing the two together. The name is
Globocnik -- G-L-O-B-O-C-N-I-K.
MR RAMPTON: Odilo Globocnik.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think the surname will suffice.
MR RAMPTON: Otherwise known as "Globos". May Mr Irving please
be provided please with Professor Browning's report?
A: Have we finished with Dr Goebbels?
Q: I have finished with that for the moment. As I say, I am coming back
to that later on. I am trying to keep some semblance of chronological order. I
am still in December 1941. Have you got Dr Browning there?
A: Page 30 and 31?
Q: 30 and 31, correct. Dr Browning also quotes the speech of Hitler, but
in abbreviated form, in other words, he does not quote as much of the Goebbels'
diary entry as does Dr Longerich.
A: Yes.
Q: Do you see that?
P-157
A: Yes.
Q: He goes down as far as saying (which you agree is a correct
translation, well, I do not know if you do), that was no figure of speech, top
of 31, "The World War is here. The Vernichtung", whether it is
destruction, extermination, annihilation or whatever, "of the Jews must be
the inevitable consequence".
A: Well, that is again a contentious and tendentious translation.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, we have been through that I think sufficiently.
MR RAMPTON: We have been through that. That is why I used the word
"vernichtung"?
A: Well, but it is the word "Jews" also that we have to look
at there, is it not? Destruction of the Jews. But this is ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is quite plain because he refers to "des
Judens", so there really cannot be any argument about that, can there?
A: No. "[German].. Judentums", no.
Q: There is not reference to "Judentums".
A: It is the fifth line, so he has allowed himself a lot of poetic
licence in his translation. My Lord, I have to be careful about what I accept
here I cannot be heard to accept something that is not ...
Q: You are quite right. I think I was wrong. You are quite
P-158
right?
MR RAMPTON: You were in that respect, my Lord, but not, in fact, in the
earlier part of which forms the context. "Zeeda ... [German] ...
Vuren" and "ihre" there is "their" which is the Jews'
is it not?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But in connection with "Vernichtung", it is
"Judentum".
MR RAMPTON: Both have "vernichtung" attached to them.
A: But I believe it is the next part you wish to continue with.
Q: It is the next part. It is what Hans frank is reported as having said
when he got back to the General Government on 16th December 1941. This is
printed in what one might call the official common place book, would it be
right? It is the Tagesbuch. That is an official record, is it not, of some
kind?
A: It is the abridged version of the multi-volumed diaries and
conference records of the General Governor, Hans Frank.
Q: And you have used it yourself?
A: I used the original manuscript, yes. I did not use the printed
edition. It is in my discovery.
Q: You have used this passage?
A: I have indeed and I used the original manuscript and not the printed
version.
Q: Maybe so. At the end of this first page, 31, in
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translation, perhaps here the German does not really matter, perhaps you
will agree. The first complete paragraph at the bottom of -- sorry, last
paragraph on the page: "What is to happen to the Jews? Do you believe that
they will be lodged in settlements in Osland?" That is the Baltic
countries, is it not, Osland?
A: Yes.
Q: "In Berlin we were told, 'Why all this trouble? We cannot use
them in the Osland or the Reichcommissariat either. Liquidate them
yourselves!'". Then goes on, apparently, Governor Frank: "We must
destroy the Jews wherever we encounter them and wherever it is possible in
order to preserve the entire structure of the Reich". I would ask you to
turn over the page, Mr Irving, where at the bottom of page 32 you will find the
German of ----
A: That is what I have just been reading, yes.
Q: Yes. Has Professor Browning translated it correctly?
A: Yes. I used a different translation in my own book, but this is an
adequate translation.
Q: That is right, is it not?
A: Yes.
Q: But he has not translated the last two lines on page 32. Would you
please read those and tell us what they mean?
A: Well, it is an incomplete fragment.
Q: He has put an ellipsis?
P-160
A: He has put what?
Q: He has put an ellipsis in, has he not, to show that ----
A: Yes, but it is the second half of a sentence and, as you know, in
German, the Germans put their verbs at the end, so it...
Q: Yes. Be kind enough just to translate what we have.
A: "But if we then undertake incursions which in some way lead to a
destructive result or success and, indeed, in connection with the measure -- in
connection with the great measure which is to be conferred upon at the
Reich" -- this is a reference to the coming Bunzig conference, presumably.
Q: That is right.
A: It is a truncated sentence it is difficult to find your way into
without the beginning. "Vernichtungs Erfolg" is the word you want to
see. V-E-R-N-I-C-H-T-U-N-G-S E-R-F-O-L-G.
Q: Does it mean this, Mr Irving, at any rate the last part of that first
of the two bottom lines: "It will anyway come to a complete or successful
destruction", "Vernichtungs Erfolg"?
A: That would be a rigid and unacceptable translation. I would say,
"If we succeed in wiping them out".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Which does "Erfolg" mean?
A: "Success", "If we succeed in wiping them out",
"Vernichtung" or "If we succeed in destroying them".
P-161
MR RAMPTON: A successful wiping out?
A: A successful wipe out, yes, but German sentences you frequently have
to break up and recast in order to make them acceptable.
Q: I am not playing tricks. I will try to find the whole of that.
A: I am trying to help you, Mr Rampton.
Q: I am being passed ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just be clear? Are you accepting that what Hans
Frank is recording here is what Hitler said in Berlin to the Gauleiter?
A: Yes -- no, he has not made a reference to the Gauleiters specifically.
Q: I know he has not made a reference to it ----
A: No.
Q: --- but he says: "In Berlin we were told", and I rather
inferred that Mr Rampton was suggesting that that was from Hitler's speech to
the Gauleiter?
A: I think it would be quite a dangerous leap to make.
Q: Am I wrong about that?
A: It is put in ----
MR RAMPTON: No, it is not quite what I had put because I do not have the
evidence to make that kind of suggestion. I am suggesting that while Hans frank
was in Berlin, somebody told him, and he was there probably amongst other
reasons for the occasion of Hitler's speech ----
P-162
A: Yes.
Q: -- somebody told him, it might have been Hitler, it might have been
Heydrich, that they have to see to the liquidation of the Jews themselves in
the East. That does mean that, does it not?
A: I do not think the word they use is "liquidation". He says
"wipe out", "If we have a success in wiping them out, destroying
them", "Vernichtung", which can done in a number of ways as I
gave the instance with Christianity or with drug addiction.
Q: I am not sure you are right about that. The word is "liquidiet
zi selbe"?
A: I am sorry, I was looking at the wrong part.
Q: No the quote is: "Man hut uns in Berlin gesagt", "We
were told in Berlin"?
A: Oh, unquestionably, yes.
Q: "Liquidate them yourselves"?
A: Yes.
Q: So ----
A: And the reason that Browning knows about this is because he found
this quotation in my books. I am the first one to have dug it out.
Q: Brownie points to you, Mr Irving, but the fact is that Hans Frank is
saying on this occasion when he gets back to Poland -- I think this took place
in Krakow, did it not?
A: His headquarters is in Krakow, yes.
P-163
Q: He is saying: "When we were in Berlin" ----
A: "They told us".
Q: --- "they told us, 'We can't solve the Jewish problem for you.
We can't house them. Liquidate them yourselves"?
A: Yes. Berlin, of course, was the seat of the Reichssicherheits
Hauptamt, of Reinhardt Heydrich.
Q: I know, that is Heydrich's headquarters too.
A: Hitler's headquarters, well, in East Prussia, not in Berlin.
Q: Certainly it is though, whether Hitler took part in those discussions
or not, I cannot tell you. I do not propose that he did. I do not ----
A: I think it is a very interesting fragment, a verbatim transcript to
which one can attach a great deal of importance rather than reported third
person subjunctive, non-subjunctive stuff. This is Hans Frank's actual words
taken down by a stenographer and that is why I was very pleased to quote them
in full.
Q: Yes, surely. We are not here necessarily, Mr Irving, talking about
the Jews that the Einsatzgruppen found in Russia; rather the contrary, do you
not think?
A: The German Jews.
Q: We are talking about two groups of Jews if we are talking about Hans
Frank and the General Government?
A: Yes.
Q: We are talking about German and other Jews, Slavakia or
P-164
wherever else, French, Dutch, Belgium and so on, that were shipped to
East, transported I mean, but we are also talking about the indigenous Jews at
Poland, are we not?
A: Primarily at this time the indigenous Jews. I do not think that any
major shipment of Jews had started from Western Europe in Poland or the General
Government at this time.
Q: Do you agree that Eichmann said at the Bunzig conference, I think it
was he, it may have been somebody else, it may have been somebody else who gave
the figure, there were roughly two and quarter, two and a half million Jews
living in Poland at that time in early 1942?
A: That is almost certainly the right figure, but Eichmann did not speak
at the Bunzig conference. He just kept the minutes as I understand it.
Q: But that is the figure that was given at the Bunzig conference?
A: I will take your word for it, Mr Rampton.
Q: You have read it. I am sure you have read the protocal, the minute or
whatever it is. So what Hans Frank is saying here is: "The Jews that we
are responsible for (getting rid of) numbering roughly two and a quarter
million, we have been told by Berlin we have to liquidate ourselves". That
is what it is saying, is it not?
A: No. What he is saying is: "Do not start dumping Jews on us. We
have got no room for the ones we have got. Solve
P-165
your own problems".
Q: No, "in Berlin we were told"?
A: Yes.
Q: Not, "I said to the people in Berlin"?
A: Yes.
Q: "Man hat" is passive?
A: Yes.
Q: "Uns gesagt" means "they told us in Berlin"?
A: "Why all this bother? Why all this fuss and bother?"
Q: That is right.
A: They are talking about what they are going to be doing with the Jews
that people are talking about now tossing out of Western Europe, and Hans Frank
has been fighting hand and foot at having any dumped in his domain.
Q: Yes. He has been told he has got to do it himself?
A: No, he has been you take what you are given. He is saying, "I
don't want them." I know the background to this story, Mr Rampton.
Q: What do the words mean, I am sorry, Mr Irving, I thought you had
agreed this was an accurate translation?
A: It is accurate.
Q: "In Berlin we were told, 'Why all this trouble? We cannot use
them in the Osterland or Reichskomissariat either. Liquidate them
yourselves.'"?
A: No. No one is talking about shipping Jews from the Osterland or the
Ukraine into Berlin. The shipment is
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going other way round.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: What Mr Rampton is putting to you is that that phrase
"liquidate them yourselves" is in effect a direction from Berlin to
the General Government.
A: No, sir. I read it differently both in the original and even now.
This is Hans Frank recalling what he told the Berliners saying, "Stop
dumping your Jews on us, you solve your own problems, you liquidate them
yourselves".
MR RAMPTON: I am going to refer you to the full text of what Hans Frank
said in a moment. Can you first of all read your own version of this, please,
on page 428 of Hitler's War 1991.
A: Can we look at it in the earlier version because it is totally
unchanged?
Q: No, it is not in the earlier version so far as I know.
A: It definitely it is. It is in every book that I have written. Which
page, Mr Rampton?
Q: If you want the earlier version, I am not sure it is in the earlier
version, but I will check that. Yes, it is. If you want to use the earlier
version, first, I have no problem with that. Page 332.
A: Yes, "Yet the blood purge continued".
Q: Yes. I am waiting for his Lordship's file to emerge.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Hitler's War.
MR RAMPTON: It is 1977 Hitler's War, my Lord, I think the first volume.
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MR RAMPTON: It is I think more or less identical to what is in the 1991
edition.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Have you got a reference for that?
MR RAMPTON: Yes, that is page 427 it starts, the last large paragraph,
the last three lines. I will read. It immediately follows the reference to the
Himmler telephone note of 1st December. Mr Irving writes: "Yet the blood
purge continued".
A: Shall I read it? It is my book.
Q: No, Mr Irving. No, I will read it: "Yet the blood purge
continued. The extermination programme had gained a momentum of its own. Hans
Frank announcing to his Lublin Cabinet on December 16th 1941, that Heydrich was
calling a big conference in January on the expulsion of Europe's Jews to the
East, irritably exclaimed: Do you imagine they are going to be housed in neat
estates in the Baltic provinces! In Berlin' - and with Hitler in East Prussia
this can only be taken as a reference to Heydrich's agencies -" -- I am
coming back to that -- "they tell us", they, the people in Berlin,
"tell us", the people in charge in the General Government: Why the
caviling? We've got no use for them either ... liquidate them yourselves!"
The "yourselves" are the people in Poland?
A: Yes. Well, no, not necessarily. Of course I would just like to
comment. That is an odd passage for a Holocaust denier to put into a book, is
it not, this entire passage;
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somebody who is allegedly denying the Holocaust he puts in this extraordinary
passage?
Q: It is there, is it not?
A: It is indeed, and I am accused of being a Holocaust denier.
Q: Maybe. Mr Irving, the true sense of that is that Hans Frank was told
while he was in Berlin that it was his problem how to liquidate Poland's two or
three million Jews, is it not?
A: Mr Rampton, I am sure you have read any number of transcripts of
verbatim conferences. Hans Frank is quite clearly not speaking from a prepared
script. He is addressing a meeting, his mind darting here and there. He is
giving snatches of what he was told in Berlin by them. He is giving snatches of
what his retort was. He is not telling the stenographer, "close quotes,
open quotes, close quotes again", and the stenographer is taking it down
as it said.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That may be, but you would have to accept, would you
not, that the way you have recorded this in Hitler's War is that Frank was
talking about what Berlin had told him and the General Government?
A: I cannot say, my Lord. I do not know who what is talking to whom in
that final three words, "liquidate them yourselves". It is not
evident on the transcript either. So I have left it, I saw no reason to be
specific in my
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book as to who was talking to whom. I would have introduced probably an
ambiguity one way or the other. So I left it just as it was in the transcript
which I thought was the most accurate thing I could do. We do not know if it is
Poland talking to Berlin or Berlin talking to Poland.
Q: But if you are disassociating Hitler from what is said, as you
plainly are, does that not indicate that you must be seeking to conveying to
readers that the instructions are coming from Berlin?
A: It is unimportant to me, my Lord, which way those instructions are
coming. It is coming all at the same level. Berlin is shrieking at Krakow and
Krakow is shrieking at Berlin, and Hitler is somewhere else. This is a
biography of Adolf Hitler. It is not a book about the Holocaust.
Q: If there were instructions going from Krakov to Berlin there would be
no point in disassociating Hitler from it?
A: Hitler was not in Berlin, my Lord. Hitler at this time, December
16th, was in his headquarters in East Prussia.
Q: I think you understand the question.
A: That is the point I make.
MR RAMPTON: Mr Irving, that simply will not do. In Berlin you break off
to parenthesize, if I can invent that word, "and with Hitler in East
Prussia this can only be taken as a reference to Heydrich's agencies (in
Berlin)"?
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A: Yes.
Q: "They" Heydrich's agencies "tell us: Why the caviling?
We" in Berlin "have no use for them either. Liquidate them
yourselves", you, the people in Poland?
A: These are your interpolations you are putting in of course.
Q: No, I am reading your words, Mr Irving?
A: No, I did not put in those interpolations.
Q: That is what it means though, is it not?
A: That is what you submit.
Q: Do you disagree?
A: I rest entirely on the way that I quote this very ambiguous fragment
of stenographic text without making any interpolations one way or the other. As
I explained in the Hitler biography, I did not consider it to be necessary
really to point out or to try to work out who was talking to whom. I found it
such an extraordinary ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So your evidence is, I am sorry to interrupt you, that
this is capable at any rate of meaning that Krakov was telling Heydrich in
Berlin "liquidate them yourselves", that is your evidence?
A: This is the far more logical interpretation, because I know from all
the other documents at this time that Hans Frank was hysterical at the mention
that train loads of Jews would be sent to the Governor General where he had
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problems housing and feeding people anyway, and he was saying to Berlin:
"Stop trying to shift your problems into Poland. We are not just a dumping
ground for your Jews." This comes up in very many of the conferences at
that time. There is one particular record I remember taking by Martin Bormann
in October 1941, and that emboldens me in putting the alternative
interpretation, the alternative arrow direction, shall we say, on that final
three words, but rather than get involved in that rather irrelevant discussion
in this book which is about Hitler, I just left this extraordinary fragment of
stenographic record, this transcript, as it is, because it is so pregnant with hatred
and brutality and total callousness towards human life, and it indicates the
kind of level at which these decisions were taken and the kind of gormless
mentality of the people who took these decisions who were later quite rightly
hanged for it.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, I am not going to push that particular point any
further. I am going to come back, perhaps not today, to the full text of what
Hans Frank said for context. I am getting some clever people to translate it as
I speak.
A: Mr Rampton, can I then in that case bring on Monday the text I have,
which may or not be identical with the text that you have.
Q: I think you certainly should.
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A: It may be shorter or longer. This is the reason why I say it.
Q: You certainly should.
A: I have the pages in the original photocopy.
Q: That is absolutely fine. Bring whatever you like you feel you need to
defend yourself with. It is right, is it not, that having written both in 1977,
as I say if you want to check it, on pages 427, 428 of 1991 Hitler's War, which
I think is identical ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- having written "man hat uns gesagt" or "in
Berlin" and then a quote, on page 386 of Goebbels you write this.
A: Yes.
Q: I will read it out: "Hans Frank's Government General was flatly
refusing to accept any more", Jews that is. "Frank had exclaimed
irritably at one of his cabinet meetings in Krakov that Berlin was telling them
they got no use for the Jews either, 'liquidate them yourselves', was his, that
is Frank's, retort?
A: Yes.
Q: I notice, and perhaps you did too, as I read that there is no
reference there to Heydrich's agencies or to Hitler being absent, is there?
A: We are talking about Berlin and we are talking about Frank retorting.
Having now advanced something like ten years down the road of research and read
a very large number of
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further documents relating to this particular context and these
questions, I am that much more certain that the arrow goes from East to West
rather than from West to East as far as those three words are concerned.
Q: Be honest, Mr Irving, in Hitler's War ----
A: Excuse me, I am speaking here on oath, I am being honest.
Q: I do not believe you are. In Hitler's War the arrow went firmly from
West to East. You changed the account for Goebbels, did you not? That is why
there is no reference to Hitler or to Heydrich in this text?
A: I do not accept that contention at all. In Hitler's War I gave the
transcription exactly as it occurs in the records and I left it for the reader
to make up their own mind. Here I am that much more certain which way the arrow
went.
Q: Why did you insert in Hitler's War the parenthesis "and with
Hitler in East Prussia this can only be taken as a reference to Heydrich's
agencies"?
A: This is like an obiter from on high where the judge says to the jury,
"I think that you need to take account of this but of course make up your
own mind", and where you are telling the reader, well, make up your own
mind, here is what is what the transcript says, but just in case you have
forget it, Adolf Hitler lives in East Prussia and he is not in Berlin on the
day this speech is being made.
Q: He was not in Berlin on 16th December 1941, Mr Irving?
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A: Yes.
Q: Because on 16th December 1941 he went to the Wolf's lair, did he not?
A: He was certainly, at the time that Frank was speaking here Hitler was
back in East Prussia.
Q: On page 383 ----
A: May I also say that if he was referring to Hitler by the use of the
word "man", which is the equivalent of the French "on".
Q: I did not say that.
A: If he was referring to Hitler then he would have said, "at the
very highest level we have been told". He would not have used the rather
offensive "man".
Q: "On" in French, I do not know any German but I have quite
good French, Mr Irving, "on" in French is not the least bit offensive.
It is merely a form of expressing a passive sense.
A: Yes, but he would have been specific. He would have said "uns
getstella(?)" or [German spoken] but more likely "uns
getstella(?)" at the highest level.
Q: According to your first version, "Heydrich's agencies".
A: Had he wished to refer to Hitler by that, yes.
Q: To what?
A: If by the use of the word "man" in Berlin he would not have
used the very impersonal version of saying "man".
Q: Anyway, you have got Hitler away from whatever Frank was
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told because you have got him in East Prussia?
A: Continue, yes.
Q: Yes. In fact he did not go to the Wolf's lair until 16th December,
did he?
A: He probably left Berlin on the night of the 15th, took the overnight
train back to East Prussia. I could tell you from the Hitler's War, the
headquarters' war diary which I have in the blue volume there.
Q: All I can tell you is that in Goebbels Mastermind of the Third Reich
on page 383 you write this: "Returning by train on December 16th to the
Wolf's lair"?
A: Yes.
Q: "Hitler dictated a famous order", something like that?
A: Yes, but I can tell you whether he left Berlin on the night of the
15th or not.
Q: So he was in Berlin when Hans Frank was in Berlin receiving this
instruction?
A: You are now referring to 12th December?
Q: Whenever. He did not leave Berlin until the night of the 15th or the
morning of the 16th. Hans Frank has got to go further. He has got to go all the
way back to Krakov which is further than East Prussia?
A: I am sorry to admit I am now totally at sea. Which times in Berlin
are we talking about?
Q: Hans Frank is reporting what he was told in Berlin. When he was ----
P-176
A: Yes, by somebody whom we have not identified.
Q: Maybe, but Hitler was in Berlin at that time?
A: He was in Berlin on, well, he was in Berlin on the 12th, 13th and
14th definitely.
Q: Yes, and probably on the 15th as well?
A: Yes, but we do not know if he is referring to Hitler. He says
"man". "We have been told in Berlin". Berlin's population
is two million.
Q: I wish you would not make speeches, Mr Irving, but listen to my
questions. Why was it relevant to observe, if it is perfectly certain or more
or less certain or as certain as an historian would like, that Frank and Hitler
were in Berlin at the same time, why do you say "in Berlin" close
quotes, " - and with Hitler in East Prussia this", that is to say
Berlin, "can only be taken as a reference to Heydrich's agencies"?
A: In Berlin people tell us -- had it been Adolf Hitler who had told him
this, he would not have said the slightly depricating "in Berlin people
tell us", certainly not in the company of Reichsministers and
Reichsleiters. Somebody would have reported back.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You are slightly at cross purposes. I think all that Mr
Rampton is putting at the moment is that they were in Berlin at the same time?
A: This I accept.
Q: Namely, Frank and Hitler.
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A: This I accept.
Q: So your point on "man" and whether that is significant is a
different point.
A: Perhaps I am jumping the gun on that, yes.
MR RAMPTON: You are. You are not seeing, whether deliberately or not I
know not, you are not seeing what I am putting to you. What I am putting to
you, and I will put it directly, although I would have thought it was pretty
obvious, is that with this little phrase in Hitler's War both editions and with
Hitler in East Prussia, this can only be taken as a reference to Heydrich's
agency, "continue, they tell us", etc., "to liquidate them
yourselves". By doing that what are you actually telling the reader is that
Hitler was not in Berlin at the time when Hans Frank was given this
instruction?
A: I think probably the parenthesis should have been shifted forward two
or three words to include "also people tell us", "in Berlin
people tell us", so that i makes it quite plain that I am relying on the
parenthesis both on the "in Berlin" and the rather depricatory world
"people tell us".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is not quite an answer to the question.
MR RAMPTON: It is not.
A: Very well. Yes, I will accept the point which you make, yes.
MR RAMPTON: Had you sought historical accuracy, that parenthesis would
have been attached to December 16th
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1941, would it not, at the top of the page: "Announcing to his
Lublin cabinet on December 16th 1941 Hitler was in East Prussia at the
time", if it was of any interest to anybody. What you have tried to do,
you have distorted the chronology in order to make perfectly certain that
Hitler cannot have anything to do with this appalling instruction to Hans
Frank?
A: I have not distorted any chronology at all. The dates are perfectly
certain. On December 16th, at the time of this speech by Governor Frank to his
cabinet, Hitler is in the Wolf's lair in East Prussia, as I said.
Q: Mr Irving, perhaps you are tired, perhaps I am tired.
A: I am not so tired that I do not remember dates that I have written in
books.
Q: Mr Irving, I am sorry, it is not the problem that you do not remember
the dates. I am afraid I think you remember them only too well. I will try once
again then and I am going to leave it. Why do you not have the text of Hitler's
War in front of you?
A: I have it open, yes.
Q: 428, it does not matter which edition: "Hans Frank announcing to
his Lublin cabinet on December 16th 1941 that Heydrich was calling a big
conference in January on the expulsion of Europe's Jews to the East, irritably
exclaimed", blah-blah-blah "! 'In Berlin' and with Hitler in East
Prussia, this can only be taken as a reference to
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Heydrich's agencies", blah-blah-blah, "liquidate them
yourselves."
A: Yes.
Q: Now that is apt to suggest to any person who is even marginally
literate that Hitler was not in Berlin at the time when Hans Frank was and was
given that instruction?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You have got a "yes" to that already, Mr
Rampton.
MR RAMPTON: I have, have I?
A: I fully understand the point you are trying to make and that is a
narrow interpretation of those words which you are trying t slant or guy rope
in the direction you want them. The point I am making is that Hitler's
headquarters is historically in East Prussia. The seat of the
Reichssicherheitshauptamt under the SS is in Berlin, and Governor Frank making
his speech is in Krakow. When he talks about Berlin he is talking about the SS.
When he wants to talk about Hitler he will say "East Prussia". When
he says, "in Berlin they tell us this or tell us that", he is not
talking about a specific meeting or a specific event where they have been given
these instructions. He is just talking about these block heads, these mutton
heads in Berlin who imagine that life can be made so easy that they just put
the people on trains and send them to Poland.
Q: Yes, Mr Irving. Then why insert the reference to Hitler
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at all in relation to what Frank was told in Berlin?
A: Because I was trying to put into one terse line of text given the
constraints of writing a book that is going to be less than 1,000 pages what I
just set out to you in probably ten lines of text.
Q: Why? What has Hitler got to do with this?
A: This is his Hitler's biography. This is about Adolf Hitler.
Q: Unless there is evidence that Hitler said this to Frank himself, you
would not bother even to mention Hitler?
A: It may be that ignorant people will assume that because Adolf Hitler
is the Reichschancellor and his capital is Berlin, therefore, the reference to
"people" is Adolf Hitler. I am trying to make sure that ignorant
people do not draw the wrong reference.
Q: In order that ignorant people should not have to have it explained
why it is not likely this order came from Hitler, I beg to differ with you
about that, but in order that ignorant people, as you call them, should have
that explained to them neatly, you actually tell a neat little fib. You get
Hitler out of Berlin when in fact he was there?
A: But there is nothing that is the least bit wrong about the sentence I
put in there. With Hitler in East Prussia, his headquarters were in East
Prussia, the references to Berlin can only be taken as references to the SS,
the
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Heydrich's agencies, who were in fact wholly responsible for these
operations. As we know from other sources, Hitler was intervening constantly to
stop these things being done.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I have got the point anyway.
MR RAMPTON: Yes, I am not going on.
A: It is the reference to general geography; not to specific meetings or
conferences that you have only recently heard about, no matter how dramatic
these discoveries may be or made to seem.
Q: Will your Lordship forgive me a moment? May Mr Irving please be given
bundle H3 (ii). I think these are Professor Browning's documents.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: That is one I have not got here I am afraid.
A: This is the actual conference.
MR RAMPTON: At tab 11, no sorry.
A: 10.
Q: It is open at the right place but I just want to identify the
document.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Tab 9, page 458.
MR RAMPTON: It is called "Footnote 88" which is the Hans Frank
extract which is printed in Professor Browning's report at paragraph 5.1.13 on
pages 31 and 32. He has quoted some of that diary, but there is another passage
here which I would like you to look at in the German, please, Mr Irving, while
I read slowly a translation.
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A: Presumably the second paragraph?
Q: The first complete paragraph on page 458. This is the Hans Frank
so-called "diary". Correct me as soon as I go wrong. No, I will read it
once and then when we go through it again you tell me how this translation is
in error, if it is. "For us the Jews are also particularly useless, might
be damaging, consumers of food, mouths. We have approximately 2.5, perhaps with
those related to Jews and all that belongs to that 3.5 million Jews. We can't
shoot these 3.5 million Jews. We can't poison them. But we will, however, be
able to undertake interventions which in some way lead to a successful
annihilation, and indeed in connection with the large scale measures to be
undertaken from the Reich and to be discussed. The General Government must
become just as free of Jews as the Reich is. Where and how that happens is a
matter for the institutions which we must put into action and create here and the
effectiveness of which I will report on to you in good time." Is that
roughly an accurate translation of that paragraph?
A: Just two minor beefs, as I would call them. I would say in connection
with, where he says "in connection with the measures to be discussed from
the Reich", I would say "in the context of" is probably a more
apposite description.
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When he talks about "the institutions", "is a matter for
the institutions", "instansun(?)" would be more accurately
translated as "departments" in the sense of government departments.
Q: Yes. I am happy to wear that correction for the moment. I do not know
whether the translator is. I will find that out later. Does that not, Mr
Irving, completely demolish the idea that in Berlin it was Frank who was telling
the people in Berlin "liquidate the Jews yourselves"? Is he not here
expanding on the instruction from Berlin, "liquidate them
yourselves"?
A: May I first of all make plain that I had not seen this passage at the
time I wrote the book. So this is not something that lay before me when I wrote
my books. Can I make that quite plain on oath?
Q: Yes.
A: You will find this when I produce the materials that I had that were
given to me by the Institute from the Hans Frank diaries. Secondly, it confirms
what I said about them already having more Jews in the Government General than
they could handle. They could not feed and house the ones they did have and
they were very indignant at any more being dumped on them given the problems
they had of feeding the mouths they already had.
Q: He is saying: "We have got two and a half, maybe three and a
half million Jews in this part of the Reich occupied
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territories, we cannot shoot them all, we cannot poison them."
A: He says "we can't shoot them". He does not say "all".
There is a subtle difference there.
Q: Is it?
A: Yes.
Q: Oh.
A: Yes, otherwise it implies they can shoot some. If I am saying I
cannot shoot all the people in this room, that implies half the people in this
room have a rather bleak lookout.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, but making the place phrase "Judenfrage"
is pretty unambiguous.
A: No, the actual phrase that has been translated here, he says:
"These 3.5 million, we can't shoot them. We can't poison them", and
Mr Rampton just slid in the word "all".
MR RAMPTON: Oh, no. I am paraphrasing. Be kind to me, Mr Irving.
A: You put in the word "all". We all heard you say it.
Q: Of course it does, but that is what it means?
A: No. What it means is quite plain. "We can't shoot them".
Q: How do you make the General Government "Judenfrage" if you
do not get rid of all the Jews, if you do not achieve a vernichtung serfolg?
A: I do not want to labour the point. If you say that we cannot shoot
them all, that implies we can shoot some of
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them. If he says we cannot shoot the Jews that implies we cannot shoot
any of them.
Q: That will do. We cannot poison them. We cannot shoot 3.5 million. We
cannot poison 3.5 million?
A: But we will be able to do something, he goes on to say, which will
lead to wiping them out, getting rid of them, vernichtung.
Q: Getting rid of?
A: Vernichtung.
Q: Vernichtung is to get rid of?
A: I am just saying the sense of this sentence is, "we can't kill
them, we can do something that will get rid of them."
Q: It is not.
A: He just said, "We can't poison, we can't shoot them".
Whatever ways would you suggest?
Q: Gas, Mr Irving, gas?
A: Vergeltung? It sounds like poisoning to me, poison gas.
Q: "Gift gas" is poison gas. Vergeltung is poison?
A: That is right, he says "we can't do it".
Q: Yes. He does not say anything about gassing. This is an evolutionary
document.
A: No point using gas if it is not poison gas.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, I am not sure I got your answer to the
initial question which was, does this or does it not show that the instructions
were from Berlin to the General Government as to what was to be done in the
General
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Government?
A: I am sorry, my Lord, if I did not make myself plain. I thought that
this in fact supported my version that Hans Frank was saying that they already
had all the Jews they could handle. They could not even feed the ones they had
got: "So please don't send us any more, get rid of them yourself".
MR RAMPTON: So the word "vernichtung serfolg" is not talking
about a liquidation?
A: If you want to wipe out Christianity you do not have to liquidate the
Christians.
Q: I do not see anything about Judaism in this passage. It is all about
Jews, numbers of Jews, 3.5 million?
A: He says here explicitly, "We can't kill", he says, I will
translate it for you and it is exactly the same as your translation there.
"These 3.5 million Jews, we can't shoot them, we can't poison them, but we
will be able to do something which will one way or another lead to a successful
wipe out, destruction".
Q: Annihilation?
A: "We will get rid of them". We are back on that word
vernichtung again, which Germans who like using these words in the knowledge
they are going to be providing endless humour for lawyers 50 years down the
road.
Q: I do not think it is very humorous, Mr Irving, I am bound to say, not
humorous at all.
P-187
A: That is why I prefer to sit on documents where it is absolutely
unambiguous where we do not have to waste time about the meanings of words.
Q: You mentioned I think, whether it was this morning or yesterday I am
afraid I cannot remember, somebody called Wisliceny?
A: Wisliceny, W-I-S-L-I-C-E-N-Y.
Q: Yes. He was I think on Eichmann's staff, was he not?
A: A member of Eichmann's staff who was responsible for the Final
Solution in Slovakia and other countries.
Q: He made some statements after the war, did he not?
A: Under duress, yes.
Q: What do you mean by duress?
A: In Allied captivity, inside the gallows, which is about as much
duress as you can imagine.
Q: You are not saying he was tortured?
A: Good Lord no.
Q: You say that Rudolf Hess was tortured, do you not?
A: I say that he was maltreated. He had a torch rammed into his mouth.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Let us stick with Wisliceny for the moment otherwise we
are going to get confused.
MR RAMPTON: That is my fault, my Lord.
A: He richly deserved it, people like that.
Q: No, I do not agree with that as it happens, Mr Irving. Can you see if
you still have Professor Evans' report
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there? It was handed to you in error earlier.
A: Yes.
Q: I am sorry. Let us turn to page 344, will you?
A: Yes.
Q: Evans' report. It is at letter G and Professor Evans writes this, Mr
Irving. I will not read the heading except to say it says "Testimony of
Dieter Wisliceny".
A: It also says: "Manipulation and Suppression of Evidence".
Q: I was going to save your blushes. Yes, it does, does it not?
A: Yes.
Q: "As described above, Irving claims that Dieter Wisliceny, one of
Eichmann's top officials, described Goebbels' article in Das Reich as a
watershed in the Final Solution of the Jewish problem. Once more Irving makes
it very difficult to verify claims. According to his footnotes, Wisliceny's
postwar report of 18th November 1946 can be found in the IFZ file F71/8.
However, this file does not exist and Wisliceny's report has to be located elsewhere."
It is a minor point, Mr Irving. Do you accept that you gave a wrong reference?
A: No. I saw this file probably 30 years ago, probably before Professor
Longerich was born.
Q: This is not Professor Longerich. This is Professor Evans.
A: Well, even more to the point. That being so, it is
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extremely likely that they changed the reference number since the
archives are constantly changing reference numbers.
Q: It is a small point. "In his report Wisliceny states that after
the invasion of the USSR in June 1941 Nazi policy against the Jews was
transformed dramatically in a step-by-step process, completed in the Spring of
1942. One these radicalisng steps was taken in late 1941. As Wisliceny
reported: 'The second wave of radicalization began after the USA entered the
war. This could clearly be felt in the internal German propaganda too.
Externally it was expressed in the introduction of the yellow star as a mark of
the Jews. Reference in this connection also to the Goebbels' article that 'Jews
are guilty' in an edition of the magazine Das Reich'. "In this period of
time, after the beginning of the war with the USA, I am convinced must fall the
decision of Hitler which ordered the biological annihilation of European
Jewry" -- biologische vernichtung des europaischen Judentums befahl.
A: Yes.
Q: You are well aware of that passage?
A: Yes, and I draw attention to the fact that in order to emphasis that
the word "vernichtung" here means killing he adds the adjective
"biologische", biological, because without that it does not mean it
with sufficient emphasis.
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: Do not let us go back on that.
MR RAMPTON: You can argue about it. Eventually, you see, Mr Irving,
whatever you may think and whatever I may put to you, his Lordship will make a
decision about what the natural meaning of the word is in these various
contexts.
A: But without input from me he will only hear input from you.
Q: Of course you must say what you think it means. Whether I or anybody
else accepts what you say is quite another matter.
A: But I think it is quite useful to say it here in view of the fact
that this man obviously thought that "vernichtung" does not mean
killing unless he adds the word "biologische" in front of it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I do not think that is right actually, but I have the
point. It is obvious what it means if it has "biological" attached to
it. If it has not, you say it does not mean extermination. Mr Rampton says it
does. I think we really have thrashed that one.
MR RAMPTON: I am afraid I am going to take up, argumentative person that
I am, one little point on this. You notice, do you not, that although you
stress the use of the word "biologische" to qualify
"vernichtung", what is it that is being biologically annihilated?
A: Judentums.
Q: Judentums?
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A: Yes.
Q: European Judentums?
A: Yes.
Q: What is "Judentums"?
A: In this case quite clearly he is talking about the Jews because he
has added the word "biological in advance" and you cannot have
biological in reference to provision.
Q: There is no rule of German which says that the word must mean
Judaism. It can easily mean Jewish people or Jewry as a collective, can it not?
A: I do not want to labour the point, but this is why dictionaries give
orders of priority for the meanings of words, the first meaning, second meaning
and third meaning and so on.
Q: Wisliceny thinks or says that he things, is reported as saying that
he thinks, that the order for the biological annihilation of the European Jews
came from Hitler. He is saying that, is he not?
A: He could set that conviction of his to music and play it to the mass
bands of the Cold Stream Guards, but it does not make it proof.
Q: He says it again and again. Is it right that you have consistently
ignored what he said?
A: What is the date of this report, Mr Rampton?
Q: It is 1946, 18th November 1946.
A: Just two or three weeks after the unfortunate Nazi
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gangsters have been hanged at Nuremberg. Where is he writing this report?
Q: Is the answer to my question, yes? Give the explanation afterwards, please,
Mr Irving. The answer to my question is, yes, you have ignored it. Now the
reason ----
A: No. The answer to the question is that I have discounted that kind of
evidence as being the fact that he does not say he saw an order. He is saying
it is his opinion. He thinks that, yes, there must surely have been some such
kind of order. What kind of evidence is that given by a man sitting in the face
of the gallows just after the Nazi leaders have been hanged at Nuremberg, and
he is sitting in Czech Slovac prison knowing that he is going to be hanged as
well, and he is sitting down there writing the first thing that comes into his
head, and he says: "Well, surely Hitler must have given an order."
What kind of evidence is that? What kind of historian would I be who in the
absence of any kind of documentation whatsoever of any concrete diamond value
of the war archives then decides to pollute his work with relying on this kind
of documentation? Material that Wisliceny himself is an expert on -- I remind
you of the Trevor Roper criteria, something that he himself has experienced,
something that he is in a position to know. That I would accept, but for him to
speculate, as he clearly is here, that is neither here nor there. It is
information of janitorial level.
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Q: Yes. Janitorial, this is to anticipate something we are going to come
to perhaps next week or the week after, Mr Irving, but "janitorial
level" is a phrase you often use. Is not "janitorial level" very
often the place you expect to find the diamonds?
A: Janitorial level is not the kind of place that I frequently inhabit,
Mr Rampton.
Q: That is very patrician of you, Mr Irving. If you are an historian you
must look even in the basement, the sewer, if you want to find the gems, must
you not sometimes?
A: If one fails to find the gems, my opponents and my jealous rivals
they have gone down among the sewers looking for things, but I found the gems
because I have done the work.
Q: You saw some of them, did you not, in Professor van Pelt's report,
"janitorial gems"?
A: We shall have great enjoyment discussing this with van Pelt when the
time comes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just understand why Wisliceny is being put into
the janitorial category at all? He is one of Eichmann's top officials.
A: He is one of Eichmann's top officials.
Q: And Eichmann was one of the senior officials within the Reich
carrying out the extermination programme.
A: Mr Wisliceny is a man who is in deep trouble. First of all he is
facing ----
Q: That is a different point, if I may say so. He is not a
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janitor.
A: He is also a man of very dubious character. He is a man who has been
not an officer in the SS, but he has been involved in corrupt schemes, in
stealing and robbing and disposing of stolen Jewish property and all sorts of
things that got him in trouble even with the SS. He is a man whose character I
would not give a fig for. He is sitting in a prison cell in a Slovac prison
knowing that he is going to be put on trial for his life.
Q: That is a different point.
A: I am sorry, let me cut to the bottom line and say what he is actually
saying here, I have lost it, he is not saying "I know this for a
fact"; he is just saying, "I speculate that probably this
happened." I have lost it totally, the actual reference.
Q: "I am convinced it must fall the decision of Hitler".
A: Yes, but his conviction that something must fall within, I mean, that
is not evidence of any kind at all, my Lord, and I am sure no court would
accept that kind of evidence in a matter of great seriousness, somebody's
conviction that something must surely have happened, not in the total absence
of any kind of qualifying documents.
MR RAMPTON: I am sorry, Mr Irving. Sometimes my questions involve quite
a lot of paper chasing. You are quite content to use Dieter Wisliceny when it
suits your purposes, are you not?
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A: If it fits the criteria which I mentioned earlier.
Q: If it fits the bill, I would suggest, Mr Irving.
A: That is not what I said. I said if it fits the criteria.
Q: Have you got your Goebbels' book there?
A: Yes.
Q: You say on page 379 -- has your Lordship got one?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I have. 379, you say?
MR RAMPTON: Yes.
A: Yes, I have that.
Q: We are talking here about an article written by, or probably written
by, Dr Goebbels?
A: It is one of the two most important articles he wrote.
Q: You say that; it was written and published, I think, on 16th
December?
A: November.
Q: I am sorry, November?
A: 1941.
Q: 1941, as virulently anti-Semitic as anything that Hitler ever said?
A: Far more so.
Q: You say that, do you?
A: Far more so.
Q: You say here on page 379 in the last paragraph, the complete
paragraph, on the page: "Dieter Wisliceny, one of Eichmann's closest
associates, would describe the Goebbels' article in Das Reiche", that is
the one I
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have just mentioned, as a watershed in the Final Solution of the Jewish
problem". Then footnote 40 is a reference to the Wisliceny Report, date
November 18th 1946. That is to be found on page 645. You go on in the text ----
A: I also reference his interrogations I see.
Q: You did.
A: Yes.
Q: "The SS took it as a sign from above Adolf Eichmann would admit
in his unpublished memoirs it is quite possible that I got orders to direct
this or that railroad to Riga", and I don't know where we go from there
quite. Yes, I will read the whole paragraph. "On the last day of November,
on the orders of the local SS Commander, Friedrich Jeckelm, 4,000 of Riga's
unwanted Jews were trucked five miles down" -- the Germans called that
Dinoberg, I think, did they not?
A: Dunoberg, yes.
Q: -- "a highway to Skiaturbe plundered and machine-gunned into two
or three pits. According to one army colonel", this is Bruns, is it
not----
A: It is.
Q: --- who witnessed it, a trainload of Jews from Berlin, those expelled
three days before, arrived in the midst of this aktion. Its passengers were
taken straight out to the pits and shot. This happened", and here we go
again, even has Hitler's hundreds of miles away, "Hitler", I
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emphasise, hundreds of miles away in the Wolf's Lair, "was
instructing Himmler that these Berlin Jews were not to be liquidated. I am not
going back to that hoary old chestnut, you will be glad to hear, but I do want
to take you back to the beginning of this paragraph.
A: It is a remarkable paragraph for a Holocaust denier to write, is it
not?
Q: I have no idea, Mr Irving, and anyway I am not going to answer your
question. "Dieter Wisliceny, one of Eichmann's closest associates, would
describe the Goebbels' article in Das Reich as a watershed in the Final Solution
of the Jewish problem"?
A: Yes.
Q: Where did he give that description?
A: What, whether he actually used the word watershed?
Q: Yes.
A: You see that I reference his manuscript written in Bratislava or
Presburg and I also reference the interrogations in the associated footnote.
Q: But if you read what we find here in Professor Evans' report which is
an English translation of some part of the Wisliceny report, what you
immediately realize, you do not learn it from Mr Irving's books, you learn it
from Professor Evans' report, what you immediately realize is that Dieter
Wisliceny did not see the Reich article as a watershed. He saw the watershed as
being an order from
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Adolf Hitler?
A: Can we have a look at the passage you are relying on, please?
Q: The which?
A: The passage of the Wisliceny report you are relying upon in the
Evans...
Q: One would have to go back now to ----
A: I no longer trust your paraphrases, you see, Mr Rampton.
Q: --- where I was.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It is page 340, I think.
MR RAMPTON: Yes. 345, sorry, my Lord. The passage -- I am not going to
read it again, I have read it once already. Read what is said there. The German
is at the bottom of the page, so if you are going to criticise Professor Evans'
translation, say so now.
A: The English is a slightly vague translation. I am looking at the
paragraph at the top of page 345, where he says this is just simply
"reference in this connection also to the Goebbels-article" ----
Q: Yes?
A: --- "'The Jews are guilty'".
Q: What does the German say?
A: The German says: "In this connection, I draw attention also to
the Goebbels-article 'The Jews are to blame' in an edition of the newspaper Das
Reich" which is possibly a slightly more coherent way of translating it.
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Q: But he is talking about German propaganda, that is to say, domestic
propaganda, is he not?
A: Yes.
Q: After 11th December when Hitler, perhaps rather stupidly, declared
war on the United States?
A: Yes.
Q: He is talking about the Yellow Star and he is talking about the
article in Das Reich as examples. He then said: "In this period of time,
after the beginning of the war with the USA, I am convinced must fall the
decision of Hitler which ordered the biological annihilation of European
Jews". So how is it, if that is the piece you were referring to, that that
gets converted into Dieter Wisliceny saying that the article by Goebbels in Das
Reich was a watershed?
A: I beg to differ with you. I think that even this source bears me out.
He said the words you omitted in your summary, he says: "The second wave
of radicalization began" and the instance of this he gives is the
publication of the article. This is what triggered off the off the second wave
of radicalization. But you have also overlooked, and I am sorry I tripped you
up on this when you referred to the Goebbels' Diaries, would you like to read
out the reference for the passage that I gave you? You implied that it relies
only on the Wisliceny report.
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Q: No, you refer to something else, but so what? Sorry, I am not following
you.
A: If you look in the source reference, it clearly says: "Wisliceny
report and interrogations of Wisliceny in the national archives" which
Professor Evans has obviously not bothered to look at.
Q: I am quite open-minded, Mr Irving. If you tell me that in the
interrogations, as opposed to the report, there is a positive statement by
Wisliceny to the effect that Goebbels' article was the watershed or a
watershed, then I will accept it, if you tell me to find it?
A: Mr Rampton, I am under oath and I am not going to make a statement
from memory for something that I cannot back up without going home and checking
the files All that I do say is that Professor Evans has made no reference to
the fact that I used other sources to justify that one sentence and that he,
apparently, has not bothered to go and have a look at those interrogations of
Wisliceny because they are so many thousands of miles away.
Q: We may just have time to go over to the other side of this page in
Evans' Report, 346 at paragraph 4. This is a further extract, says Professor
Evans -- of course, you may prove that he is wrong about it -- this is an
extract from the same document, apparently, where Wisliceny says this:
"According to Eichmann's own report, which he
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made to me, Globocnig (sic) was the first to use gas chambers for the
mass extermination of humans. Globocnig had set up big labour camps for Jews in
his area of command, and he got rid of those who were unable to work in the
manner described. As Eichmann explained, this 'procedure' was 'less
conspicuous' than the mass shootings". The German is
"Massenerschiessungen". Do you remember those words? Do they ring a
bell?
A: Yes, indeed.
Q: Something to do with General Bruns? Does that ring a bell?
A: Well, there were mass shootings occurring all over the Eastern Front.
It is not specifically a reference just to that one. There were mass shootings
at Riga, there were mass shootings at Minsk, mass shootings elsewhere in the
Ukraine. So it would be specious just to say this is a reference to the Bruns
Report.
Q: My point is a slightly different one. Indeed, it is not a reference
to the Bruns Report.
A: Well, you mentioned the Bruns.
Q: Exactly, and I will tell you why. What Bruns said he was told by
Altemeyer was to precisely the same effect, "These mass shootings, or mass
shootings of this kind, mass shootings, must stop. That must be done more
discreetly"?
A: Yes.
Q: It is almost a mirror image of what Wisliceny reports
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Eichmann having said, this procedure, gassing, was less conspicuous,
"unauffalliger" ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- than the "Massenerschiessungen"?
A: This was the tendency in the SS; they did not like shooting people.
Shooting took it out of them.
Q: Sure.
A: Yes.
Q: And that is why they took to gassing people, is it not?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But you accept, do you, Mr Irving, that ----
A: Gassing did occur, yes.
Q: --- the Bruns Report corresponds with what is, apparently, recorded
in Eichmann's report?
MR RAMPTON: In Wisliceny's report, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Sorry, in Wisliceny's report.
MR RAMPTON: It is double hearsay, if you like, but so what if you are an
historian.
A: It is indeed and the word "report", of course, is slightly
sharpening it up. He is actually just saying, "According to what Eichmann
said", he is saying.
MR RAMPTON: Do they not echo one another?
A: Yes.
Q: Bruns is talking about shootings in the Osland in Latvia?
A: Yes.
Q: Here Wisliceny is talking much more generally, is he not?
A: Indeed, yes, and we do not know about what period he is
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talking about, we do not
know about what region he is talking about.
Q: Do you not detect in the convergence of those two completely
otherwise unrelated pieces of evidence ----
A: Yes.
Q: --- even a hint of a suggestion that the reality was that mass
shootings were embarrassing because they could get out because it upset the
soldiers too much, because it was expensive in bullets, a shift in policy from
shooting to a more discreet means of disposal, that is to say, gassing?
A: I am afraid that was such a long question that I had lost you halfway
through again.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Well, I think it is the end of a longish day for Mr
Irving and I think we will...
MR RAMPTON: I will repeat the question first thing on Monday morning.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Will you?
MR RAMPTON: It will be on the transcript.
A: Can you put it in two halves so that ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It was a long question. Anyway, we are adjourning now.
A: --- a bear of limited brain can follow it, but I lost it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So it is 10.30 on Monday in court 73
(The court adjourned
until 10.30 p.m. on Monday, 17th January 2000)
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