Ernst Röhm
Ernst Julius Röhm, also known as Ernst Roehm in English (November 28, 1887 - july 2, 1934) was a German military officer, and the commander and co-founder of the Nazi Sturmabteilung, or storm troopers — the SA.
History
Early years
Röhm was one of three children of Julius Röhm and his wife Emilie (née Baltheiser). A native of Munich, Röhm served as a career officer with the Bavarian Army during World War I. He held the rank of Oberleutnant with the Bavarian 13th Infantry Regiment, and was severely wounded in the face in September of 1914, in Lorraine, France. He was later promoted to Hauptmann.
Following the end of the war in 1918, he joined the Freikorps, one of the many private militias that had formed in Munich to combat Communist insurrection. In 1920, he became a member of the National Socialist German Worker's Party—the Nazis— and helped to organize the Sturmabteilung—the SA. In 1923, after the failed Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, Röhm spent fifteen months in prison, during which time he became a close personal friend of Adolf Hitler.
After Röhm was released from prison in 1924, he worked with Hitler to rebuild the Nazis, but several intense differences developed between the two. In April of 1924 he helped create the Frontbann as a legal alternative to the temporarily defunct and outlawed SA. He then served in the Reichstag as part of the renamed National Socialist Freedom Party before resigning in 1925. He went to Bolivia to serve as a military advisor.
During this time, Röhm was maintained on the rolls of the German Reichswehr, where he was eventually promoted to the rank of Oberst.
Röhm's return to Germany
In 1930, Hitler personally assumed command of the storm troopers as the new Oberster SA-Führer. Hitler sent a personal request to Röhm to return to Germany, offering him the position of Stabschef (or "chief of staff") of the entire Sturmabteilung. Röhm accepted the offer in 1931, introducing radical new ideas to the SA and staffing the senior leadership with his close friends and personal associates. Rumors abounded that the SA leadership participated in homosexual activities, and Röhm's conduct as SA Stabschef was soon under heavy criticism, particularly by the conservative German military hierarchy.
The main function of the SA during the formative years of the Nazi Party had been that of a political army - namely, to supply the force to protect the party leadership and to attack and terrorize political opponents such as the Communist Red Front. Through violence and intimidation, the SA helped the Nazis become more powerful than the other political parties first in Munich and later throughout Germany.
Downfall
Following the Nazis' ascent to power in 1933, the socialist faction of the Nazi Party — led by Röhm — continued to believe in the socialism inherent to the party's name. This faction of the party insisted on nationalization of large firms, profit sharing for employees, and cuts in the interest rates; all of these measures were anathema to the business community that had supported Hitler's rise to power. Röhm himself spoke of a "second revolution," and vowed to act against what he termed reactionaries, much as the Nazis had acted against the Communists during the consolidation of power earlier that year.
Hitler moved swiftly to reassure the German business community. In so doing, a breach was opened between Hitler and the SA. The storm troopers, whose ranks were largely composed of dispossessed members of the working class, were anticapitalist in tendency, and they hoped to gain from the "revolution" they had helped win via their fighting in the streets. Hitler was of the opinion that the storm troopers were a political force who, once the Nazis had gained power, were no longer needed. Röhm, on the other hand, believed the SA was destined to be the germ of a "revolutionary" army for Hitler. While Röhm showed contempt for the Prussian military leadership, Hitler was well aware that he could not have come to power without the support of the Army, nor could he remain in leadership were the Army to withdraw its backing. Furthermore, Hitler realized he needed the Army's support to succeed the 86-year-old Paul von Hindenburg as President and Commander-in-Chief when von Hindenburg died.
In 1934, as it became clear that the President was weakening and approaching death, many factions in Germany devised schemes to position their own favorite candidates as von Hindenburg's successor. Shirer writes that a group of conservatives — including many within the armed forces — sought the return of Crown Prince Wilhelm, the son of Kaiser Wilhelm II, to Germany either as President or as head of a re-established German monarchy.
Germany's military leadership was incensed by Röhm's proposal in February of 1934 that Germany's armed forces (the Reichswehr) be absorbed into a single organization wherein the SA would have a clear numerical superiority and, thereby, become dominant. The Army viewed the SA as a brawling mob of undisciplined street fighters, and the tales of homosexuality and "corrupt morals" were well known within the Army; the officer corps unanimously rejected Röhm's proposal, citing the destruction of German military honor and discipline were Röhm's brawling storm troopers to gain control of the armed forces.
Hitler was presented with the opportunity to meet with the leaders of Germany's armed services on April 11 on board the pocket battleship Deutschland while reviewing the military's spring maneuvers in East Prussia. In the company of Defense Minister Werner von Blomberg, Hitler met with the army commander-in-chief - General Werner von Fritsch — and the head of the navy — Admiral Erich Raeder. Hitler advised the commanders of the deterioration of Hindenburg's health and proposed that the Reichswehr support Hitler's succession to the presidency. In exchange, Hitler offered to reduce the size of the SA, suppress Röhm's ambitions, and guaranteed that the Reichswehr would become Germany's sole bearer-of-arms. Shirer's account states that it was quite likely that Hitler also seduced the military leaders with a promise to expand both the army and the navy in exchange for their support.
The tension within the Nazis worsened after further calls from Röhm for the "second revolution," (this time against the conservative power structure) and after a showdown between Röhm and Hitler in early June.
Similarly, the conservative industrialists that had supported Hitler's rise to the chancellorship in 1933 continued to voice unease over the socialist leanings Röhm shared with the Strasser brothers, in particular their calls for the "second revolution." Through their close relationship with President von Hindenburg, both conservative groups — the officer corps and the industrialists — made their displeasure known to him.
In early June of 1934, von Hindenburg, though ailing, conveyed an ultimatum to Hitler that, unless the tension in Germany was put to an end, he was considering a declaration of martial law. Knowing that such a step would take power out of his hands — possibly forever — Hitler decided he could no longer forestall honoring his pact with the Reichswehr to suppress the SA and end its plans for the "second revolution."
Death
In spite of the pressure applied on him, Hitler postponed the decision to do away with his long-time comrade to the very end. He appealed to Röhm not to press for the "second revolution." Only when the differences appeared irreconcilable did Hitler finally make up his mind that Röhm had to go. Hesitating to the last, but spurred on by Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler with what were more than likely highly colored accounts of "treason" by Röhm and the SA, Hitler was finally convinced to order Göring and Himmler to put down Röhm's alleged "plot." Both Göring and Himmler had their own scores to settle, and they consolidated their own power by putting down the SA and its leader.
Röhm was executed without trial during the purge of the SA — the so-called "Night of the Long Knives" in June 1934. Following his arrest by Hitler himself at the resort of Bad Wiessee on June 30, Röhm was held briefly at Stadelheim Prison in Munich. There, on July 2, he was visited by SS-Brigadeführer Theodor Eicke (then the Kommandant of Dachau) and SS-Sturmbannführer Michel Lippert. Lippert shot Röhm at point-blank range after he refused to commit suicide with a pistol given to him. Röhm may not have realized who had ordered his execution; it has been unverifiably reported that his last words were reported as being "mein Führer, mein Führer". Eicke's response to the dying Röhm was said to have been, "You should have thought of that before. It is too late now." The measures taken by Hitler's followers during that weekend were made legal after the fact by a decree in the Law Regarding Measures of State Self-Defense on July 3. Ernst Röhm was buried in Westfriedhof (German for "west cemetery") in Munich.
Röhm's sexual orientation
Ernst Röhm was one of the most prominent of a number of early Nazi party members who was a suspected homosexual, and his homosexuality was ultimately the pretext used for his removal during the purge of the SA. Having been outed in 1925, however, Röhm made little attempt to hide his sexuality. Despite Hitler's pretense of shock upon discovering his deputy's sexual orientation, he had in fact long known that Röhm was homosexual.
During Röhm's tenure at the head of the SA, it has been suggested that a number of homosexual men (notably Karl Ernst, a former bouncer at a gay nightclub, and Edmund Heines) were appointed to and promoted within the SA as a result of high-level liaisons with powerful SA figures. This was despite the openly anti-gay policies of the Nazis, exemplified by their strengthening of Paragraph 175 (criminalising homosexual acts) of the German Criminal Code of 1871.
Popular culture
- How to be a real homosexual starring Nicholas Cook.(movie)
- Röhm is portrayed in the 2003 film Hitler: The Rise of Evil by Peter Stormare.
- Röhm is cited in the song "The Last Day of June 1934" by Al Stewart, from the album Past, Present and Future, (1973).
- Röhm is a major character in Michael Moorcock's novel, The Vengeance of Rome.
See also
References
- The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich - William L. Shirer (1960) Simon & Schuster, Inc. ISBN 0671728695 (1990 30th Anniversary edition)
- The Hidden Hitler - Lothar Machtan (2002) ISBN 0465043089