Index
- Abetz, Otto, 243, 251
- America First Committee, 311, 345, 346, 361-362, 367
- American Expeditionary Force, 278, 293, 314, 333, 371
- Anabaptists, 56
- Angell, Sir Norman, 193-194
- Anti-Semitism, in Germany, 13-14, 64-65,82, 360
- in Lindbergh’s philosophy, 361-362
- Assassinations, political, 60-79, 239
- Atlantic Charter, 184, 185-187, 200-202,227, 333-334
- Atrocity stories, 79-83
- Australian armed forces, 155
- Austria, Dollfuss Putsch, 8-10
- independence guaranteed, 7-8
- seizure of, 27
- Baltic states, fate of, 193, 227-228
- Baruch, Bernard, 170
- Bayes, William D., 43
- Berliner Illustrierte, 42
- Bernstein, Henri, 148-149
- Bezbozhnik Society, 99
- Birdsall, Paul, 286
- Black Guards, 15, 39, 56, 62-63, 83
- Blood Purge (June 30, 1934), 12, 32, 34, 39-40, 64, 78
- Blum, Leon, 267, 279
- Brest-Litovsk treaty, 58, 107
- British Expeditionary Force, 21-22
- British Intelligence Service, 66-68
- British Navy, and American safety, 276
- Churchill’s tribute to, 168-169
- as a fighting force, 152-156
- Bucharest treaty, 58
- Cagoulard movement, 243, 251-259
- Canada, and the war effort, 152, 154, 155, 204
- China, 320, 366
- war economy, 109
- Churchill, Randolph, 26, 166, 172, 176, 177-178
- Churchill, Winston, 139-183
- address to French people, 284
- Atlantic meeting with Roosevelt, 184-185
- aversions, 176-177
- as a bricklayer, 178-179
- characteristics, 144, 148-151
- on effect of air bombardment, 372-375
- gift of prophecy, 148
- military judgment, 156-161, 182-183
- opinion of Roosevelt and the New Deal, 145-148
- opinion of United States, 144-145
- as a painter, 179
- place in history, 139
- popularity in England, 139-142
- principal interests, 166-183
- realist and idealist, 142-144
- secret of success, 163-166
- as a speaker, 171-174
- speeches on defense of Britain, 151-153, 160, 164-166
- as a writer, 163-164, 169, 170, 179
- Ciano, Count, 7
- Clapper, Raymond, 350
- Cole, G. D. H., 141-142
- Communism, compared with England’s wartime socialism, 231-233
- compared with Nazism, 84-87
- economic failure in Russia, 116-134
- in France, 241, 249-250
- in Germany, 13-14, 214-215
- in Spain, 98
- threat of revolution in Europe, 101-103
- in the United States, 273-274
- Compiègne armistice, 283
- Conant, James B., 323
- Conscientious objectors, 321-324
- Cooper, Hugh, 107
- Corrigan, Douglas, 353-355
- Crete, battle of, 153, 158, 303
- Croix de Feu, 250
- Curie, Eve, 281, 318
- Czechoslovakia, 51-52
- occupied by Germany, 27-28
- Darlan, Admiral, 266-268, 272
- Darre, Walther, 54, 309
- Das Kapital, 85
- Deloncle, Colonel Eugene, 243
- Deuxième Bureau, 243, 251-256
- Dneiper dam, 107-108
- Dollfuss Putsch, 8-10
- Dunkirk, evacuation of, 21, 22, 151, 152, 303, 316
- Duranty, Walter, 90
- Dusseigneur, General, 243, 251
- Einstein, Albert, 323
- England, at war, 139-183
- defense against Hitler, 300-306
- and wartime socialism, 231-233
- Fayard, Arthème, 252-253
- Faymonville, Colonel, 135
- Fifth Columnists, 339-376
- Finland, 100, 105, 175, 364-366
- Fish, Hamilton, 344-345
- Foreign trade, effect of Nazi slave labor on, 192-197, 208-212
- and Nazi economy, 53-54
- France, compared with America, 273-280
- declining birth rate, 234, 263, 277-278
- future under Nazis, 283-284, 290-291
- hope for, 281-282
- indemnity and reparations to Germans, 285-292
- Maginot line complex, 234, 240, 274-275, 296, 375
- reasons for fall of, 30, 234-273
- venality of press, 234, 280-281
- French Army, equipment of, 234-235
- morale of, 235-238
- treason in, 238-262
- Franco, General, 264
- Fuller, Colonel Horace M., 20
- de Gaulle, General, 266, 315
- recognition of government, 292
- Garvin, J. L., 174
- Gaxotte, Pierre, 252-253, 256
- George, General, 243
- Georgiev, Vlada, 63, 77
- German Air Force, strength of, 299, 333, 359, 372-374
- German Army, 16, 297
- Hitler’s ascendancy over, 8-9, 17-34
- German people, attitude toward America, 329-331
- character of, 55-58, 217-218, 226-227, 282
- Hitler’s relation to, 36-38
- Germany, 1-87
- Communism in, 15-16, 214-215
- deindustrialization vs. military occupation, 219-226
- postwar reconstruction, 56-58
- Gestapo, 15, 62, 67-68, 228, 243
- in Holland, 67
- murder monopoly of, 79, 83-84
- and Nazi economy, 53-54
- political position of, 74-76
- in Spain, 25, 356
- Goebbels, Joseph, 8, 15, 33, 163
- and propaganda, 80, 243, 330-331
- as a public speaker, 37
- Goering, Hermann, 14-16, 24, 32, 163, 359
- Glass, Senator Carter, 51
- G. P. U., 70-71, 83-85, 119-120, 133, 228
- political position of, 74-77
- Greece, 158-159
- Hackett, Francis, 43-44
- Haushofer, Karl, 17
- Hayes, Carlton J., 357
- Hemingway, Ernest, 97
- Hess’s flight to England, 15, 161-163
- Hillenkoetter, Lieutenant-Commander, 20
- Himmler, Heinrich, 15, 64, 67, 163, 243
- Hitler, Adolf, 1-69
- assassination attempts analyzed, 60-69
- attack on Russia, 23, 30, 110-111, 160-161
- compared with Hohenzollerns, 263-264, 328
- and homosexuality, 34-35
- impressions of, 1-3, 10-12, 43-51
- military mistakes, 19-30
- and Mussolini, 4-10
- and Napoleon, 17, 30, 113-114
- occupation of Czechoslovakia, 27-28
- personal bravery, 30-33
- physical appearance, 1-3, 43-44
- plans for invasion of Britain, 300-305
- principal interests, 167
- as a public speaker, 37-41
- relation to German people, 35-36, 60
- reoccupation of Rhineland, 24-26, 148, 226
- responsibility for war, 12-14
- successors to, 14-17
- seizure of Austria, 8-10, 27
- treatment if beaten, 58-60
- and the United States, 306-309
- as war lord, 17-19
- and women, 36-37
- and world conquest, 37, 190-199, 202-209, 213-214, 323-325
- Homosexuality, 33-35
- Hoover, Herbert, 344-345
- Huntziger, General Charles, 235-238
- Hutchins’ Four Freedoms, 309-313
- Imro, 77-78
- Irish neutrality, 144, 305-306
- Jankowsky, Frau Marie, 81-83
- Japan, 112, 316
- publishes Axis peace terms, 199, 202-207
- Je Suis Partout, 243, 251-258
- Jews, persecution of, 64-65, 82, 360, 362-364
- John of Leyden, 56
- Jung, Dr. Carl G., analysis of Hitler and Nazism, 45-51, 54-55
- Keynes, John Maynard, 286-287
- Kirov, Sergei, assassination of, 69-71
- Korff, resigns from Ullstein Verlag, 41-42
- Labor party in England, 141-142
- La Guardia, F. H., 345
- Laval, Pierre, 239, 269-273
- League of Nations, 143, 287, 334, 336-337
- proposed, 223, 230
- Lenin, Nikolai, 69, 98-99, 123
- on morality, 103
- Lewis, Sinclair, 353
- Lindbergh, Anne Morrow, 81-83, 350, 355-356
- Lindbergh, Charles A., 339-361, 364-376
- admiration for Nazi Germany, 358-360
- anti-Semitism, 361-362
- character and personality, 347, 348, 351-353
- classed as Copperhead, 339-341
- and free speech, 343-344
- ingratitude to France and England, 349-351
- isolationist arguments answered, 368-376
- kidnaping and murder of child, 356-357
- “Letter to America,” 367-368
- and newspaper publicity, 352-354
- as one-time national hero, 346-348
- political philosophy, 273-274, 350-351, 359, 361
- praised by President Coolidge, 346-347
- propagandist for Hitler, 198-200, 214
- supporters of, 341, 343, 346, 367
- visit to Soviet Union, 358-359
- von Lossow, General, 11-12, 39
- Ludendorff, General, 11, 32, 67, 327
- Maginot line complex, 234, 240, 274-275, 296, 375
- Mandel, Georges, 253-255
- Masaryk, Thomas G., 51-52
- Master race doctrine, 37, 191-192
- Mein Kampf, 1, 31, 37, 41-42, 85, 283-284
- Hackett’s index to, 44-45
- Miller, Douglas, 111, 213
- Morrow, Mrs. Dwight, 353
- Mowrer, Edgar, 20, 60
- Mosley, Oswald, 361
- Munich Beer Hall, bombing attempt, 67-69
- Munich Beer Hall Putsch, 1, 32
- Munich pact, 28, 61, 360-361
- Mussolini, Benito, 4-5, 49, 173
- and Dollfuss Putsch, 8-10
- first meeting with Hitler, 3-7
- and political assassinations, 72-74
- and yes-staff, 18
- Napoleon, and Hitler, 17, 30
- and Mussolini, 4-5
- National Socialist German Workers Party, 13-14
- Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg, 9-10, 61-63
- Nazi propaganda, 79-83, 239, 243, 248-262, 275-276
- Nazism, 51-53, 83, 360
- compared with Communism, 84-87
- Nelson, Donald M., 294
- Newspapers, American and French, 279-281
- Nicolson, Harold, 174, 357
- NKVD defined, 119-120
- Norris, Kathleen, 345
- Norway, invasion of, 30, 157-160
- Nye, Senator Gerald P., 149, 214, 344-345
- Okhrana, 75-76
- von der Osten, Major, 25-26
- Out of the Night, 68, 83-84, 163
- Pax Anglo-Americana, 146, 229-230
- Peace conference, 191-192, 214-231
- Atlantic Charter, 200-202, 221, 334
- Axis terms, 198-199, 202-208
- Pétain, Marshal, character of, 262-265, 272
- dupe of German propaganda, 239, 255-262
- as head of Vichy government, 265-266, 292, 315
- Hitler’s promise to, 284-285
- request for armistice, 243-245
- Petit Journal, 250-251
- Poison gas, 302
- Poland, attack on planned, 18
- conquest by Nazis, 29-30, 191-193, 195, 322, 365
- fate of, 184-185
- and Russia, 100, 174-175
- Prioux, General, 241-242
- Raleigh, John McCutcheon, 45
- Rauschning, Hermann, 160, 309
- Reichstag fire, 68
- Rhineland, reoccupation of, 24-26, 148, 226
- von Ribbentrop, Joachim, 15, 29, 243, 251
- Roehm, Ernst, 32-34, 39
- Roosevelt, Franklin D., 145-147, 296
- meeting with Churchill, 184-185
- re-election and German morale, 330
- verdict on Lindbergh, 339-341, 344
- Rosenberg, Alfred, 15, 163
- Royal Air Force, 22-23, 301, 303, 304, 332, 374
- Churchill’s tribute to, 166
- Russell, Bertrand, 323
- Russia, 88-139
- approval of Atlantic Charter, 227-228
- and defeat of Germany, 101-103
- development of Red Army, 92-94, 134-137
- failure of Planned National Economy, 116, 121-123, 130-131
- Five-Year Plans, 107-108, 116, 122
- freedom of worship, 99-100
- monetary system, 129-130
- morale of people, 95-99
- political assassinations in, 67-79
- reasons for resistance to Nazi attack, 90-99
- as refuge for Jews, 363-364
- standard of living, 92, 118-123, 129
- Terror under political police, 115-120, 125-128, 131-134
- U. S. help for, 88-90, 100-104, 137-138
- weaknesses of Soviet system, 115-134
- Russo-German pact, 29, 100, 112
- Schieffer, Colonel, 242, 277-278, 326
- Schuman, Frederick L., defines dictatorship, 146
- Selassie, Haile, 76
- Shipbuilding capacities, 155-156
- Siegfried line, 26, 28
- Socialism, in wartime England, 231-233
- South America, and the Nazis, 49, 191, 205, 208, 370-371
- Soviet Union, see Russia
- Spanish Civil War, 25-26, 52-53, 97-98, 356
- Stalin, Joseph, 88-115, 133-138
- agreement with Churchill, 103-104
- and compromise peace with Germany, 106-112
- and political assassinations, 69-72, 76, 78
- quarrel with Trotzky, 133-134
- system of army espionage, 105-106
- Stoddard, Lothrop, 44
- Storm Troopers, 10, 32-34, 39, 54-55, 83
- Swing, Raymond, 157, 299
- Third Reich, symbolism of, 54-55
- Thompson, Dorothy, 43-44
- Tolischus, Otto, 43
- Trotzky, Leon, 42-43, 123, 133-134, 176, 180
- United States, 292-337
- army morale, 318-326
- Atlantic Ocean complex, 274-277, 375
- battleground for war against Nazis, 331-333
- choice of war or surrender, 369-373
- and Communists, 273
- comparison with France, 273-280
- conditions after German defeat, 337-338
- dangers to, 197-198, 293-294, 306-309
- effect of declaration of war against Nazis, 313-321, 330-331
- and the first World War, 326-328, 335-336, 338
- and the League of Nations, 334, 336-337
- lease-lend appropriations, 190, 292, 294, 317
- military preparedness, 296-300
- national morale, 295-296
- Neutrality Acts, 317, 330
- postwar economic condition, 189-190
- representation in Peace Conference, 332-334
- and Russia, 88-90, 100-104, 137-138
- Vallandigham, Clement L., 339-341, 344, 376
- Valtin, Jan, 68, 83-84, 163
- Versailles treaty, 220, 224, 334, 336
- denounced, 24, 25, 40, 290
- leniency of, 58, 286-287
- War Aims, 184-233
- Wave of the Future, 83, 87, 349, 360
- Weimar Republic, 12-13, 336
- Weygand, General, 151, 242
- What Mein Kampf Means to America, 43
- Wheeler, Senator Burton K., 198, 200, 214, 273-274, 343-345
- Wilson’s Fourteen Points, 186-187
- Woollcott, Alexander, on Churchill, 164
- on Lindbergh, 342-343, 376
- World War, first, cost and reparations, 57-58, 193, 286-287, 335-336
- You Can’t Do Business with Hitler, 213