Hitler's Banker

Publié le par John Weitz

Hitler's BankerHjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht was a genius - but like his name, eccentric and highly enigmatic. Now, in the first-ever full-scale biography to appear in English, historian John Weitz brings this brilliant Nazi-era financier to life. Born to an impoverished family of the German upper middle class, Schacht gained worldwide fame as Germany's commissioner of currency and president of the Reichsbank in the 1920s.

Single-handedly, he halted Germany's runaway inflation and, as a tough negotiator, freed Germany from the crippling reparation debts imposed by the Versailles Treaty. Later, under the Nazis, he built the economic and financial juggernaut that underwrote Hitler's military machine. Yet before the war was over, Hitler had imprisoned him in Dachau; afterward, he was one of only three defendants at the Nuremberg trials to be acquitted.



ISBN-13: 9780316929165
Author : John Weitz
Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
Publication date: 09/18/1997

Editorial Reviews - Publishers Weekly

Schacht (1877-1970) bankrolled Hitler's Wehrmacht but was acquitted at Nuremberg of having conspired to wage war. He was, his lawyers contended, a German patriot who had worked as Reichsbank president to arrest the runaway inflation of the early 1920s and rebuild the nation's economy. Weitz (Hitler's Diplomat) defends the deeply conservative, anti-Semitic Schacht, who survived six postwar trials and lived to a prosperous 93, as a nonparty capitalist who cautiously distanced himself from the Nazis before the shooting started. U.S. Associate Justice Robert H. Jackson, who prosecuted Schacht unsuccessfully at Nuremberg, labeled him "a Brahmin among the untouchables [who]... never could... afford to separate from them politically." Weitz depicts the ambitious Schacht as a slippery, contradictory, vain, courageous figure.

Turning a nation with empty coffers into an industrial giant geared for war, he worked, so he claimed, not for personal gain but for the "welfare of the broad masses." The book's inconsistencies and irrelevancies (we learn, for no reason, the license number of Hitler's Mercedes) suggest some carelessness in preparation. However, this first biography of the banker in English is useful as a balance to Schacht's memoir, published when he was 76. Photos not seen by PW. (Oct.)


Publié dans Bibliothèque

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