KITTEL: ‘We can’t do anything about it; it’s nothing to do with us.’ It’s a matter of organisation. In the POLAND that remains there is the Generalgouverneur Dr FRANK,[296] who is personally a right-thinking man, and he said to me quite clearly–although I’m actually of the opposite school of thought: ‘If what I want to do here is carried out, there will be no bands in POLAND. My powers have a certain limit which you yourself know.’ It is like this: the Generalgouverneur at the present moment has Obergruppenführer KOPPE, with the rank of a GOC, in the position of a Secretary of State, with unlimited police authority at the same time.[297] So I said to myself that KOPPE has creative power in the whole of POLAND under FRANK. Some stupid question about competence cropped up. I went to KOPPE and said: ‘I have a case which comes under your jurisdiction and that of the Generalgouverneur.’ So he said: ‘The Generalgouverneur is not the competent authority for that, but Herr HIMMLER in BERLIN. I only come under the Generalgouverneur to the extent that he has the
BRUHN: Then HIMMLER must be the man responsible.
KITTEL: He
BRUHN: And the Waffen-SS–
KITTEL: Well, the position in the Waffen-SS may be a little different.
FELBERT: Only HIMMLER’s organisations have any say.
KITTEL: Yes. One can name umpteen cases. Someone may be acquitted by the court, and on leaving the court is arrested for being a public danger, and then doesn’t get out.
BRUHN: Yes, one simply doesn’t know about all that.
KITTEL: But you must know it. I once wrote a letter to the Minister of Justice, GÜRTNER, who once commanded a ‘Bataillon’ of mine, about a case like that in which someone was acquitted by the court and–
FELBERT: Then arrested again in spite of that.
KITTEL: The prison sentence which the prosecution had demanded was then simply carried out by the six months’ imprisonment which had been demanded being–
BRUHN: Turned into six months’ protective custody!
KITTEL: Six months’ protective custody.
BRUHN: But that is no longer the rule of law.
KITTEL: Oh, you must surely have realised that.
SCHAEFFER: We
? BRUHN: Yes, but then, suppose we win the war tomorrow, there would be a catastrophe!
KITTEL: It wouldn’t be a catastrophe, but–
? BRUHN: Because we represent a different standard of honesty, we shall be disposed of sooner or later anyhow. Things will reach such a pitch that when they no longer have any Jews left to shoot, they will probably shoot the relations of the officers.
SCHAEFFER: That’s why it will be a catastrophe if we win.
BRUHN: For–whoever has once started that bloodshed, it becomes as much of a necessity to him as our lunch to us; he won’t be able to stop it–or he will go crazy.
KITTEL: Oberst BIERKAMP(?) the head of the Security Service at CRACOW told me that when he sees that a man enjoys shooting others, he gets rid of him.
BRUHN: Does he shoot him himself?
KITTEL: No, he doesn’t do that–he transfers him to another job.
BRUHN: In other words–one can see it from dozens of examples–it’s their orders which turn the men into sadists.
KITTEL: Of course. Tell me, will it never be possible to get such things in GERMANY right again?
BRUHN: You mean a return to decency? That can only come about by our losing the war, i.e., only by scrapping this whole system of government.
FELBERT: We should never get things right again after a victorious war.
SCHAEFFER: You are amazed that we don’t know all that. Do you think HITLER knows it? And he is our supreme commander.
KITTEL: No. Those things are not passed on to HITLER.
SCHAEFFER: But HIMMLER knows it, doesn’t he?
KITTEL: HIMMLER knows all right.
Document 120
CSDIC (UK), SR Report, SRGG 1093 (C) [TNA, WO 208/4169]
Generalleutnant SCHAEFER (Commander, 244 Infantry Division)–Captured 28 Aug. 44 in Marseilles
Generalleutnant KITTEL (Commandant, Metz and Commander, 462 Volksgrenadier Division)–Captured 22 Nov. 44 in Metz.
Information received: 28 Dec. 44
SCHAEFER: After the stories you’ve told me one might think one was really no longer bound to the FÜHRER.
KITTEL: We can’t think that.
SCHAEFER: I mean in our hearts; when one goes over all the crimes that have been committed, it makes one’s hair stand on end.
KITTEL: 18,000 people were shot in ROSTOV, there are about 60,000 people in mass graves near LUBLIN.[299]