19. DRZW, ii.133. Jörg K. Hoensch, Geschichte Polens, Stuttgart, 1983, S.280, has 66,300 dead, and 134,000 wounded. See also Christian Jansen/Arno Weckbecker, ‘Eine Miliz im “Weltanschauungskrieg”: der “Volksdeutsche Selbstschutz” in Polen 1939/40’, in Michalka, Der Zweite Weltkrieg, 482–500, here 484. The figures do not include those murdered by the SS Einsatzkom-mandos or the Selbstschutz, etc. Madajczyk, 4, gives 66,000 dead and 133,000 wounded.

20. DRZW, ii.133. Madajczyk, Okkupationspolitik, 4 (no source), gives figures of 16,000 German dead and 28,000 wounded. On 6 October 1939, Hitler announced 10,572 dead, 30,322 wounded, and 3,409 men missing as of 30 September. (Domarus, 1381. Groscurth, 211 (29 September 1939) gave an interim figure, between 1 and 24 September, of 5,450 dead and 22,000 wounded.)

21. Groscurth, 265–6; Janßen/Tobias, 248–9. The evidence demonstrates that his death was not, as often surmised (and immediately hinted at by Heydrich), in effect suicide. See also Groscurth, 210–11; Keitel, 219.

22. Cit. Janßen/Tobias, 247.

23. Domarus, 1367; Below, 207.

24. Groscurth, 209–10 (25 September 1939); Janßen/Tobias, 250.

25. Janßen/Tobias, 251.

26. RSA, IIA, ‘Außenpolitische Standortbestimmung nach der Reichstagswahl Juni-Juli 1928’ (first published as Gerhard Weinberg (ed.), Hitlers Zweites Buch. Ein Dokument aus dem Jahr 1928, Stuttgart, 1961), 37.

27. See Martin Broszat, Nationalsozialistische Polenpolitik, (1961), Fischer paperback edn, Frankfurt am Main, 1965, 11–15.

28. Halder KTB, i.65 (7 September 1939).

29. Groscurth, 357; Halder KTB, i.72 (12 September 1939).

30. Groscurth, 357; Broszat, Polenpolitik, 16.

31. Domarus, 1362 (speech, 1354–66); Broszat, Polenpolitik, 16.

32. Broszat, Polenpolitik, 16–17.

33. Seraphim, Rosenberg-T agebuch, 99 (19 September 1939); Weisungen, 34 (Weisung Nr.5, 30 September 1939).

34. Domarus, 1391 (text of the speech, 1377–93).

35. Broszat, Polenpolitik, 29–35.

36. Broszat, Polenpolitik, 36–41.

37. Mason, Arbeiterklasse, 1074–83, for the War Economy Decree; Max Seydewitz, Civil Life in Wartime Germany. The Story of the Home Front, New York, 1945, 58–9; Steinert, 97.

38. Shirer, 157.

39. Shirer, 159.

40. Shirer, 164.

41. Shirer, 165.

42. Shirer, 173.

43. DBS, vi.965ff.

44. DBS, vi.1032.

45. Ortwin Buchbender and Reinhold Sterz (eds.), Das andere Gesicht des Krieges. Deutsche Feldpostbriefe 1939–1945, Munich, 1982, 41.

46. See Shirer, 173.

47. MadR, ii.331.

48. See Kershaw, ‘Hitler Myth’, 143–6.

49. See Broszat, Polenpolitik, 41ff.; Madajczyk, Okkupationspolitik, 14–18, 186ff.

50. In his discussion with Army Commander-in-Chief Brauchitsch on 22 September, Heydrich agreed to withdraw the order — which had come, it was claimed, directly from Hitler’s train — to shoot insurgents without trial (Groscurth, 360–61).

51. Heydrich demanded, in his discussion with Brauchitsch on 22 September, that they be immediately arrested and deposited in concentration camps (Groscurth, 361–2).

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