63. Goebbels continued: “Should have been made six months ago.” (In fact, seven months ago Molotov had been in Berlin.) Goebbels added: “I read a comprehensive report on Russian-Bolshevik radio propaganda. It will give us some real problems, because it is not so stupid as the English material. Probably written by Jews.” Fröhlich,
64. Dekanozov appeared at 6:00 p.m. on June 18, but despite an audience of fifty minutes, managed only to complain about German delays in issuing exit visas for a Soviet consular official in Königsberg, ships at Baltic ports, and the costs of building a bomb shelter. Naumov,
65. Hill,
66. The protest listed 260 flight violations between March 27 and June 19. On June 20, the NKVD border guard had reported that just since June 10, there had been 86 more unauthorized reconnaissance flights from Greater Germany, Finland, Hungary, and Romania. Solov’ev and Chugunova,
67. The play was a production of the Franko Ukrainian Academic Theater on tour in Moscow.
68. Vishlev,
69. Simonov, “Zametki,” 53. According to Zhukov, Stalin was aware of and to a degree accepted the argument of German propaganda that Wehrmacht forces were stationed on the border partly because Soviet forces were there and Germany had no ultimate guarantee that Stalin would not attack preemptively.
70. Zhukov later wrote that Stalin said: “Germany is up to its neck in war in the West, I believe Hitler would never risk creating a second front for himself by attacking the Soviet Union. Hitler is not such a fool that he fails to understand the Soviet Union is not Poland, not France and that it is not even England and all these taken together.” Timoshenko supposedly asked, “What if it does happen?” and requested bringing the frontier troops to a war footing and sending more westward, but Stalin refused, designating their proposal tantamount to “launching a war.” Zhukov,
71. Sontag and Beddie,
72. Schulenburg was said to have observed of the Pact: “I gave my all in order to work toward good relations between Germany and the Soviet Union, and in some ways I have achieved my aim. But you know yourself that in reality I have achieved nothing. This treaty will lead us into the second world war and bring ruin upon Germany . . . This war will last for a long, long time, just as did the First World War.” Wegner-Korfes, “Ambassador Count Schulenburg,” 187–204; Fleischhauer,