Fuehrer Conferences on Naval Affairs, 1939-1945 Jak Mallmann Showell
As the Allies made their inexorable last assault upon Germany in 1945, Adolf Hitler ordered that every official military document be destroyed. Admiral Karl Donitz, then supreme commander-in-chief of the navy, felt differently. The navy, he believed, had waged an honourable war, and posterity would prove the fairest judge. Accordingly, the records fell into Allied hands. Were it not for Donitzs singular decision, this remarkable book would not exist. Fuehrer Conferences on Naval Affairs is the faithful first-hand account of Hitlers meetings with his navy commanders-in-chief Grand Admiral Dr Erich Raeder until January 1943, then Admiral Donitz and a handful of other highranking officers. Such was the nature of these meetings that even secretaries were excluded, and both Raeder and Donitz personally checked the typescripts of the meeting notes before approving them. The conferences concerned either subjects upon which Hitler requested information or topics that the commanders-in-chief wanted to bring to the Fuehrers attention. This is, therefore, an authentic and intimate account of the views of Axis high command upon naval strategy and its execution throughout the Second World War, covering such key events as the invasion of Norway, plans to invade Britain, the sinking of the Bismarck and the Normandy landings.