1939 Germany's Invasion of Poland
Response To Great Britain's Ultimatum
(1)Proclamation by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the
Reich, to the German Army, September 1,1939.
(2) Address by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the Reich,
before the Reichstag, September 1, 1939.
(3) Communication from the German Government to the
British Government, Handed to Joachim von Ribbentrop,
Minister for Foreign Affairs, to the British Ambassador
(Sir Neville Henderson) at 11:20 A.M., September 3, 1939
(4) Proclamation by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the
Reich, to the German People, September 3, 1939.
(1) Proclamation by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the
Reich, to the German Army, September 1,1939.
The Polish State has refused the peaceful settlement
of relations which I desired, and has appealed to arms.
Germans in Poland are persecuted with bloody terror and
driven from their houses. A series of violations of the
frontier, intolerable to a great Power, prove that
Poland is no longer willing to respect the frontier of
the Reich.
In order to put an end to this lunacy, I have no
other choice than to meet force with force from now on.
The German Army will fight the battle for the honour and
the vital rights of reborn Germany with hard
determination. I expect that every soldier, mindful of
the great traditions of eternal German soldiery, will
ever remain conscious that he is a representative of the
National-Socialist Greater Germany. Long live our people
and our Reich!
(2) Address by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the Reich,
before the Reichstag, September 1, 1939.
For months we have been suffering under the torture
of a problem which the Versailles Diktat created - a
problem which has deteriorated until it becomes
intolerable for us. Danzig was and is a German city. The
Corridor was and is German. Both these territories owe
their cultural development exclusively to the German
people. Danzig was separated from us, the Corridor was
annexed by Poland. As in other German territories of the
East, all German minorities living there have been
ill-treated in the most distressing manner. More than
1,000,000 people of German blood had in the years
1919-1920 to leave their homeland.
As always, I attempted to bring about, by the
peaceful method of making proposals for revision, an
alteration of this intolerable position. It is a lie
when the outside world says that we only tried to carry
through our revisions by pressure. Fifteen years before
the National Socialist Party came to power there was the
opportunity of carrying out these revisions by peaceful
settlements and understanding. On my own initiative I
have, not once but several times, made proposals for the
revision of intolerable conditions. All these proposals,
as you know, have been rejected - proposals for
limitation of armaments and even, if necessary,
disarmament, proposals for limitation of warmaking,
proposals for the elimination of certain methods of
modern warfare. You know the proposals that I have made
to fulfill the necessity of restoring German sovereignty
over German territories. You know the endless attempts I
made for a peaceful clarification and understanding of
the problem of Austria, and later of the problem of the
Sudetenland, Bohemia, and Moravia. It was all in vain.
It is impossible to demand that an impossible
position should be cleared up by peaceful revision and
at the same time constantly reject peaceful revision. It
is also impossible to say that he who undertakes to
carry out these revisions for himself transgresses a
law, since the Versailles Diktat is not law to us. A
signature was forced out of us with pistols at our head
and with the threat of hunger for millions of people.
And then this document, with our signature, obtained by
force, was proclaimed as a solemn law.
In the same way, I have also tried to solve the
problem of Danzig, the Corridor, etc., by proposing a
peaceful discussion. That the problems had to be solved
was clear. It is quite understandable to us that the
time when the problem was to be solved had little
interest for the Western Powers. But that time is not a
matter of indifference to us. Moreover, it was not and
could not be a matter of indifference to those who
suffer most.
In my talks with Polish statesmen I discussed the
ideas which you recognize from my last speech to the
Reichstag. No one could say that this was in any way an
inadmissible procedure on undue pressure. I then
naturally formulated at last the German proposals, and I
must once more repeat that there is nothing more modest
or loyal than these proposals. I should like to say this
to the world. I alone was in the position to make such
proposal, for I know very well that in doing so I
brought myself into opposition to millions of Germans.
These proposals have been refused. Not only were they
answered first with mobilization, but with increased
terror and pressure against our German compatriots and
with a slow strangling of the Free City of Danzig -
economically, politically, and in recent weeks by
military and transport means.
Poland has directed its attacks against the Free City
of Danzig. Moreover, Poland was not prepared to settle
the Corridor question in a reasonable way which would be
equitable to both parties, and she did not think of
keeping her obligations to minorities.
I must here state something definitely; German has
kept these obligations; the minorities who live in
Germany are not persecuted. No Frenchman can stand up
and say that any Frenchman living in the Saar territory
is oppressed, tortured, or deprived of his rights.
Nobody can say this.
For four months I have calmly watched developments,
although I never ceased to give warnings. In the last
few days I have increased these warnings. I informed the
Polish Ambassador three weeks ago that if Poland
continued to send to Danzig notes in the form of
ultimata, and if on the Polish side an end was not put
to Customs measures destined to ruin Danzig's trade,
then the Reich could not remain inactive. I left no
doubt that people who wanted to compare the Germany of
to-day with the former Germany would be deceiving
themselves.
An attempt was made to justify the oppression of the
Germans by claiming that they had committed acts of
provocation. I do not know in what these provocations on
the part of women and children consist, if they
themselves are maltreated, in some cases killed. One
thing I do know - that no great Power can with honour
long stand by passively and watch such events.
I made one more final effort to accept a proposal for
mediation on the part of the British Government. They
proposed, not that they themselves should carry on the
negotiations, but rather that Poland and Germany should
come into direct contact and once more pursue
negotiations.
I must declare that I accepted this proposal, and I
worked out a basis for these negotiations which are
known to you. For two whole days I sat in my Government
and waited to see whether it was convenient for the
Polish Government to send a plenipotentiary or not. Last
night they did not send us a plenipotentiary, but
instead informed us through their Ambassador that they
were still considering whether and to what extent they
were in a position to go into the British proposals. The
Polish Government also said that they would inform
Britain of their decision.
Deputies, if the German Government and its Leader
patiently endured such treatment Germany would deserve
only to disappear from the political stage. But I am
wrongly judged if my love of peace and my patience are
mistaken for weakness or even cowardice. I, therefore,
decided last night and informed the British Government
that in these circumstances I can no longer find any
willingness on the part of the Polish Government to
conduct serious negotiations with us.
These proposals for mediation have failed because in
the meanwhile there, first of all, came as an answer the
sudden Polish general mobilization, followed by more
Polish atrocities. These were again repeated last night.
Recently in one night there were as many as twenty-one
frontier incidents: last night there were fourteen, of
which three were quite serious. I have, therefore,
resolved to speak to Poland in the same language that
Poland for months past has used toward us. This attitude
on the part of the Reich will not change.
The other European States understand in part our
attitude. I should like here above all to thank Italy,
which throughout has supported us, but you will
understand that for the carrying on of this struggle we
do not intend to appeal to foreign help. We will carry
out this task ourselves. The neutral States have assured
us of their neutrality, just as we had already
guaranteed it to them.
When statesmen in the West declare that this affects
their interests, I can only regret such a declaration.
It cannot for a moment make me hesitate to fulfill my
duty. What more is wanted? I have solemnly assured them,
and I repeat it, that we ask nothing of those Western
States and never will ask anything. I have declared that
the frontier between France and Germany is a final one.
I have repeatedly offered friendship and, if necessary,
the closest co-operation to Britain, but this cannot be
offered from one side only. It must find response on the
other side. Germany has no interests in the West, and
our western wall is for all time the frontier of the
Reich on the west. Moreover, we have no aims of any kind
there for the future. With this assurance we are in
solemn earnest, and as long as others do not violate
their neutrality we will likewise take every care to
respect it.
I am happy particularly to be able to tell you of one
event. You know that Russia and Germany are governed by
two different doctrines. There was only one question
that had to be cleared up. Germany has no intention of
exporting its doctrine. Given the fact that Soviet
Russia has no intention of exporting its doctrine to
Germany. I no longer see any reason why we should still
oppose one another. On both sides we are clear on that.
Any struggle between our people would only be of
advantage to others. We have, therefore, resolved to
conclude a pact which rules out for ever any use of
violence between us. It imposes the obligation on us to
consult together in certain European questions. It makes
possible for us economic co-operation, and above all it
assures that the powers of both these powerful States
are not wasted against one another. Every attempt of the
West to bring about any change in this will fail.
At the same time I should like here to declare that
this political decision means a tremendous departure for
the future, and that it is a final one. Russia and
Germany fought against one another in the World War.
That shall and will not happen a second time. In Moscow,
too, this pact was greeted exactly as you greet it. I
can only endorse word for word the speech of Russian
Foreign Commissar, Molotov.
I am determined to solve (1) the Danzig question; (2)
the question of the Corridor; and (3) to see to it that
a change is made in the relationship between Germany and
Poland that shall ensure a peaceful co-existence. In
this I am resolved to continue to fight until either the
present Polish government is willing to continue to
bring about this change or until another Polish
Government is ready to do so. I am resolved t remove
from the German frontiers the element of uncertainty,
the everlasting atmosphere of conditions resembling
civil war. I will see to it that in the East there is,
on the frontier, a peace precisely similar to that on
our other frontiers.
In this I will take the necessary measures to se that
they do not contradict the proposals I have already made
known in the Reichstag itself to the rest of the world,
that is to say, I will not war against women and
children. I have ordered my air force to restrict itself
to attacks on military objectives. If, however, the
enemy thinks he can form that draw carte blanche on his
side to fight by the other methods he will receive an
answer that will deprive him of hearing and sight.
This night for the first time Polish regular soldiers
fired on our territory. Since 5.45 A.M. we have been
returning the fire, and from now on bombs will be met by
bombs. Whoever fight with poison gas will be fought with
poison gas. Whoever departs from the rules of humane
warfare can only expect that we shall do the same. I
will continue this struggle, no matter against whom,
until the safety of the Reich and its rights are
secured.
For six years now I have been working on the building
up of the German defenses. Over 90 millions have in that
time been spent on the building up of these defense
forces. They are now the best equipped and are above all
comparison with what they were in 1914. My trust in them
is unshakable. When I called up these forces and when I
now ask sacrifices of the German people and if necessary
every sacrifice, then I have a right to do so, for I
also am to-day absolutely ready, just as we were
formerly, to make every possible sacrifice.
I am asking of no German man more than I myself was
ready throughout four years at any time to do. There
will be no hardships for Germans to which I myself will
not submit. My whole life henceforth belongs more than
ever to my people. I am from now on just first soldier
of the German Reich. I have once more put on that coat
that was the most sacred and dear to me. I will not take
it off again until victory is secured, or I will not
survive the outcome.
Should anything happen to me in the struggle then my
first successor is Party Comrade Goring; should anything
happen to Party Comrade Goring my next successor is
Party Comrade Hess. You would then be under obligation
to give to them as Fuhrer the same blind loyalty and
obedience as to myself. Should anything happen to Party
Comrade Hess, then by law the Senate will be called, and
will choose from its midst the most worthy - that is to
say the bravest - successor.
As a National Socialist and as German soldier I enter
upon this struggle with a stout heart. My whole life has
been nothing but one long struggle for my people, for
its restoration, and for Germany. There was only one
watchword for that struggle: faith in this people. One
word I have never learned: that is, surrender.
If, however, anyone thinks that we are facing a hard
time, I should ask him to remember that once a Prussian
King, with a ridiculously small State, opposed a
stronger coalition, and in three wars finally came out
successful because that State had that stout heart that
we need in these times. I would, therefore, like to
assure all the world that a November 1918 will never be
repeated in German history. Just as I myself am ready at
any time to stake my life - anyone can take it for my
people and for Germany - so I ask the same of all
others.
Whoever, however, thinks he can oppose this national
command, whether directly of indirectly, shall fall. We
have nothing to do with traitors. We are all faithful to
our old principle. It is quite unimportant whether we
ourselves live, but it is essential that our people
shall live, that Germany shall live. The sacrifice that
is demanded of us is not greater than the sacrifice that
many generations have made. If we form a community
closely bound together by vows, ready for anything,
resolved never to surrender, then our will will master
every hardship and difficulty. And I would like to close
with the declaration that I once made when I began the
struggle for power in the Reich. I then said: "If our
will is so strong that no hardship and suffering can
subdue it, then our will and our German might shall
prevail."
(3) Communication from the German Government to the
British Government, Handed to Joachim von Ribbentrop,
Minister for Foreign Affairs, to the British Ambassador
(Sir Neville Henderson) at 11:20 A.M., September 3, 1939
The German Government have received the British
Government's ultimatum of the 3rd September, 1939. They
have the honour to reply as follows: -
1. The German Government and the German people refuse
to receive, accept, let alone to fulfill, demands in the
nature of ultimata made by the British Government.
2. On our eastern frontier there has for many months
already reigned a condition of war. Since the time when
the Versailles Treaty first tore Germany to pieces, all
and every peaceful settlement was refused to all German
Governments. The National Socialist Government also has
since the year 1933 tried again and again to remove by
peaceful negotiations the worst rapes and breaches of
justice of this treaty. The British Government have been
among those who, by their intransigent attitude, took
the chief part in frustrating every practical revision.
Without the intervention of the British Government - of
this the German Government and German people are fully
conscious - a reasonable solution doing justice to both
sides would certainly have been found between Germany
and Poland. For Germany did not have the intention nor
had she raised the demands of annihilating Poland. The
Reich demanded only the revision of those articles of
the Versailles Treaty which already at the time of the
formulation of that Dictate had been described by
understanding statesmen of all nations as being in the
long run unbearable, and therefore impossible for a
great nation and also for the entire political and
economic interests of Eastern Europe. British statesmen,
too, declared the solution in the East which was then
forced upon Germany as containing the germ of future
wars. To remove this danger was the desire of all German
Governments and especially the intention of the new
National Socialist People's Government. The blame for
having prevented this peaceful revision lies with the
British Cabinet policy.
3. The British Government have - an occurence unique
in history - given the Polish State full powers for all
actions against Germany which that State might
conceivabley intend to undertake. The British Government
assured the Polish Government of their military support
in all circumstances, should Germany defend herself
against any provocation or attack. Thereupon the Polish
terror against the Germans living in the territories
which had been torn from Germany immediately assumed
unbearable proportions. The Free City of Danzig was, in
violation of all legal provisions, first threatened with
destruction economically and by measures of customs
policy, and was finally subjected to a military blockade
and its communications strangled. All these violations
of the Danzig Statute, which were well known to the
British Government, were approved and covered by the
blank cheque given to Poland. The German Government,
though moved by the sufferings of the German population
which was being tortured and treated in an inhuman
manner, nevertheless remained a patient onlooker for
five months, withour undertaking even on one single
occasion any similar aggressive action against Poland.
They only warned Poland that these happenings would in
the long run be unbearable, and that they were
determined, in the event of no other kind of assistance
being given to this population, to help them themselves.
All these happenings were known in every detail to the
British Government. It would have been easy for them to
use their great influence in Warsaw in order to exhort
those in power there to exercise justice and humaneness
and to keep to the existing obligations. The British
Government did not do this. On the contrary, in
emphasising their obligation to assist Poland under all
circumstances, they actually encouraged the Polish
Government to continue in their criminal attitude which
was threatening the peace of Europe. In this spirit, the
British Government rejected the proposal of Signor
Mussolini, which might still have been able to save the
peace of Europe, in spite of the fact that the German
Government had declared their willingness to agree to
it. The British Government, therefore, bear the
responsbility for all the unhappiness and misery which
have now overtaken and are about to overtake many
peoples.
4. After all efforts at finding and concluding a
peaceful solution had been rendered impossible by the
intransigence of the Polish Government covered as they
were by England, after the conditions resembling civil
war, which had existed already for months at the eastern
frontier of the Reich, had gradually developed into open
attacks on German territory, without the British
Government raising any objections, the German Government
determined to put an end to this continual threat,
unbearable for a great Power, to the external and
finally also to the internal peace of the German people,
and to end it by those means which, since the Democratic
Governments had in effect sabotaged all other
possibilities of revision, alone remained at their
disposal for the defence of the peace, security and
honour of the Germans. The last attack of the Poles
threatening Reich territory they answered with similar
measures. The German Government do not intend, on
account of any sort of British intentions or obligations
in the East, to tolerate conditions which are identical
with those conditions which we observe in Palestine,
which is under British protection. The German people,
however, above all do not intend to allow themselves to
be ill-treated by Poles.
5. The German Government, therefore, reject the
attempts to force Germany, by means of a demand having
the character of an ultimatum, to recall its forces
which are lined up for the defence of the Reich, and
thereby to accept the old unrest and the old injustice.
The threat that, failing this, they will fight Germany
in the war, corresponds to the intention proclaimed for
years past by numerous British politicians. The German
Government and the German people have assured the
English people countless times how much they desire an
understanding, indeed close friendship, with them. If
the British Government hitherto always refused these
offers and now answer with an open threat of war, it is
not the fault of the German people and their Government,
but exclusively the fault of the British Cabinet or of
those men who for years have been preaching the
destruction and extermination of the German people. The
German people and their Government do not, like Great
Britain, intend to dominate the world, but they are
determined to defend their own liberty, their
independence and above all their life. The intention,
communicated to us by order of the British Government by
Mr. King-Hall, of carrying the destruction of the German
people even further than was done through the Versailles
Treaty is taken note of by us, and we shall therefore
answer any aggressive action on the part of England with
the same weapons and in the same form.
(4) Proclamation by Adolf Hitler, Chancellor of the
Reich, to the German People, September 3, 1939.
Great Britain has for centuries pursued the aim of
rendering the peoples of Europe defenseless against the
British policy of world conquest by proclaiming a
balance of power, in which Great Britain claimed the
right to attack on threadbare pretexts and destroy that
European State which at the moment seemed most
dangerous. Thus, at one time, she fought the world power
of Spain, later the Dutch, then the French, and, since
1871, the German.
We ourselves have been witnesses of the policy of
encirclement which has been carried on by Great Britain
against Germany since before the war. Just as the German
nation had begun, under its National Socialist
leadership, to recover from the frightful consequences
of the Diktat of Versailles, and threatened to survive
the crisis, the British encirclement immediately began
once more.
The British war inciters spread the lie before the
War that the battle was only against the House of
Hohenzollern or German militarism; that they had no
designs on German colonies; that they had no intention
of taking the German mercantile fleet. They then
oppressed the German people under the Versailles Diktat
the faithful fulfillment of which would have sooner or
later exterminated 20 million Germans.
I undertook to mobilize the resistance of the German
nation against this, and to assure work and bread for
them. But as the peaceful revision of the Versailles
Diktat of force seemed to be succeeding, and the German
people again began to live, the new British encirclement
policy was resumed. The same lying inciters appeared as
in 1914. I have many times offered Great Britain and the
British people the understanding and friendship of the
German people. My whole policy was based on the idea of
this understanding. I have always been repelled. I had
for years been aware that the aim of these war inciters
had for long been to take Germany by surprise at a
favourable opportunity.
I am more firmly determined than ever to beat back
this attack. Germany shall not again capitulate. There
is no sense in sacrificing one life after another and
submitting to an even worse Versailles Diktat. We have
never been a nation of slaves and will not be one in the
future. Whatever Germans in the past had to sacrifice
for the existence of our realm, they shall not be
greater than those which we are to-day prepared to make.
This resolve is an inexorable one. It necessitates
the most thorough measures, and imposes on us one law
above all others: If the soldier is fighting at the
front, no one shall profit by the war. If the soldier
falls at the front no one at home shall evade his duty.
As long as the German people was united it has never
been conquered. It was the lack of unity in 1918 that
led to collapse. Whoever offends against this unity need
expect nothing else than annihilation as an enemy of the
nation. If our people fulfills its highest duty in this
sense, that God will help us who has always bestowed His
mercy on him who was determined to help himself.