This work is the result of a project commissioned by Stalin about Hitler at the end of the war. It is a very precious dossier on Nazi Germany. It unveils the intimacy of the dictator, his relationships, his inner circle of collaborators with the leaders of the Third Reich, his life, the rise to power, and then the war.
This dossier, written for Stalin based on the interrogation of two officers who were close to Hitler: aides-de-camp and butler, is a testimony to this period in Germany’s history, on a Hitler convinced of his charisma and destiny, his calculations against the USSR, and his chimera of an alliance with the Anglo-Saxons.
This book takes us back 60 years, to the end of the Second World War and Hitler’s suicide. It is Mathias Uhl, a German historian, who discovered this document in the Russian archives. This book is not just another historical work on the Third Reich; it is a testimony to the inner workings of a system that crushed Germany and Europe in a criminal venture.
We discover the allies of Nazi Germany, we are in the German headquarters, with the generals and marshals, with men like Goering or Goebbels. We uncover the rivalries between these Nazi leaders, rivalries maintained by Hitler. We learn that the leader of Germany was a sick man who needed to receive daily injections. This man who held the future of his people in his hands.
The Hitler dossier, commissioned by another dictator, Stalin, should be read to avoid reliving this troubled period when an entire nation was hypnotized by a criminal ideology.
Thierry Jan, writer