| . |
Four Year Plan and the appointment of Göring as
the Plenipotentiary in charge. Göring was already engaged in
building a strong air force and on 8 July 1938 he announced to a number
of leading German aircraft manufacturers that the German Air Force was
already superior in quality and quantity to the English. On 14 October
1938, at another conference, Göring announced that Hitler had
instructed him to organize a gigantic armament program, which would make
insignificant all previous achievements. He said that he had been
ordered to build as rapidly as possible an air force five times as large
as originally planned, to increase the speed of the rearmament of the
navy and army, and to concentrate on offensive weapons, principally
heavy artillery and heavy tanks. He then laid down a specific program
designed to accomplish these ends. The extent to which rearmament had
been accomplished was stated by Hitler in his memorandum of 9 October
1939, after the campaign in Poland. He said:
"The military application of our
people's strength has been carried through to such an extent that
within a short time at any rate it cannot be markedly improved upon by
any manner of effort ...
"The warlike equipment of the German people is at present larger
in quantity and better in quality for a greater number of German
divisions than in the year 1914. The weapons themselves, taking a
substantial cross-section, are more modern than is the case of any
other country in the world at this time. They have just proved their
supreme war worthiness in their victorious campaign ... There is no
evidence available to show that any country in the world disposes of a
better total ammunition stock than the Reich ... The A. A. artillery
is not equalled by any country in the world."
In this reorganization of the
economic life of Germany for military purposes, the Nazi Government
found the German armament industry quite willing to cooperate, and to
play its part in the rearmament program. In April 1933 Gustav Krupp von
Bohlen submitted to Hitler on behalf of the Reich Association of German
Industry a plan for the reorganization of German industry, which he
stated was characterized by the desire to coordinate economic measures
and political necessity. In the plan itself Krupp stated that "the
turn of political events is in line with the wishes which I myself and
the board of directors have cherished for a long time." What Krupp
meant by this statement is fully shown by the draft text of a speech
which he planned to deliver in the University of Berlin in January 1944,
though the speech was in fact never delivered. Referring to the years
1919 to 1933, Krupp wrote:
"It is the one great merit of the
entire German war economy that it did not remain idle during those bad
years, even
183 |