Extensive Definition
The Anschluss ( German:
connection), also known as the Anschluss Österreichs, was the 1938
annexation of
Austria
into Greater
Germany by the Nazi
regime.
The events of March 12,
1938, marked
the culmination of historical cross-national pressures to unify the
German populations of Austria and Germany under one nation.
However, the 1938 Anschluss, regardless of its popularity, was
enacted by Germany. Earlier, Nazi Germany had provided support for
the
Austrian National Socialist Party (Austrian Nazi Party) in its
bid to seize power from Austria's Austrofascist
leadership. Fully devoted to remaining independent but amidst
growing pressures, the chancellor of Austria, Kurt
Schuschnigg, tried to hold a plebiscite.
Although he expected Austria to vote in favour of
maintaining autonomy, a well-planned internal
overthrow by the
Austrian Nazi Party of Austria's state institutions in Vienna took place on
March
11, prior to the vote. With power quickly transferred over to
Germany, Wehrmacht troops
entered Austria to enforce the Anschluss. The Nazis held a plebiscite within the
following month, where they received 99.73% of the vote. No
fighting ever took place and the strongest voices against the
annexation, particularly
Fascist Italy, France
and the United
Kingdom (the "Stresa
Front"), were powerless or, in the case of Italy, appeased. The
Allies
were, on paper, committed to upholding the terms of the Treaty
of Versailles, which specifically prohibited the union of
Austria and Germany.
Nevertheless, the Anschluss was among the first
major steps in Adolf
Hitler's long-desired creation of an empire including
German-speaking lands and territories Germany had lost after
World
War I. Already prior to the 1938 annexation, the Rhineland was
retaken and the Saar
region was returned to Germany after fifteen years of occupation.
After the Anschluss, the predominantly German Sudetenland of
Czechoslovakia was taken, with the rest of the country becoming a
protectorate to
Germany in 1939. That same year, Memelland was
returned from Lithuania, the final peaceful territorial
aggrandizement before the start of World War
II.
Austria ceased to exist as a fully independent
nation until late 1945. A Provisional Austrian Government was set
up on April
27, 1945
and was legally recognized by the Allies
in the following months, but it was not until 1955 that Austria
regained full sovereignty.
Situation before the Anschluss
- Main articles: German Empire and Austrofascism
The idea of grouping all Germans into one state
had been the subject of inconclusive debate since the end of the
Holy
Roman Empire in 1806. Before 1866, it was generally thought
that the unification of the Germans could only succeed under
Austrian leadership, but the rise of Prussia was largely
unpredicted. This created a rivalry between the two that made
unification through a Großdeutschland
solution impossible. Also, due to the multi-ethnic composition of
the Austro-Hungarian
Empire centralized in Vienna, many rejected this notion and it
was unthinkable that Austria would give up her "non-German"
territories, let alone submit to Prussia. Nevertheless, a series of
wars, including the Austro-Prussian
War, led to the expulsion of Austria from German affairs,
allowed for the creation of the North
German Confederation and consolidated the German states through
Prussia, enabling the creation of a German
Empire in 1871. Otto von
Bismarck played a fundamental role in this process, with the
end result representing a Kleindeutsche
solution that did not include the German-speaking parts of Austria-Hungary.
The Emperor
in Vienna
did not want to become a member of Bismarck's Second
Reich, because he would have been forced to be an Emperor of
"second class" compared with the Emperor in Berlin. When
Austria-Hungary broke up in 1918, many German-speaking Austrians
hoped to join with Germany in the realignment of Europe, but the
Treaty
of Versailles (1919) and the Treaty
of Saint-Germain of 1919 explicitly vetoed the inclusion of
Austria within a German state, because France and the
UK
feared the power of a larger Germany, and had already begun to
disempower the current one. Also Austrian particularism, especially
among the nobility, played a huge role, as Austria was Roman
Catholic, while Germany was dominated, especially in
government, more by Protestants.
Both constitutions, that of Weimar
Republic and that of the First
Austrian Republic, included the political aim of unification
and this aim was widely supported also by democratic parties. In
the early 1930s, popular support for union with Germany remained
overwhelming, and the Austrian government looked to a possible
customs
union with Germany in 1931.
The Anschluss of 1938
Hitler's first moves
In early 1938, Hitler had consolidated his power in Germany and was ready to reach out to fulfill his long-planned expansion. After a lengthy period of pressure by Germany, Hitler met Kurt Schuschnigg, the Chancellor of Austria on 12 February 1938 in Berchtesgaden (Bavaria) and instructed him to lift the ban on political parties, reinstate full party freedoms, release all imprisoned members of the Nazi party and let them participate in the government. Otherwise, he would take military action. Schuschnigg complied with Hitler's demands and appointed Arthur Seyss-Inquart, a pro-Nazi lawyer, as Interior Minister and another Nazi, Edmund Glaise-Horstenau, as a Minister without Portfolio.Before the February meeting, Schuschnigg was
already under considerable pressure from Germany. This may be seen
in the demand to remove the chief of staff of the Austrian
Army, Alfred
Jansa, from his position in January 1938. Jansa and his staff
had developed a scenario for Austria's defense against a German
attack, a situation Hitler wanted to avoid at all costs.
Schuschnigg subsequently complied with the demand.
During the following weeks, Schuschnigg realized
that his newly appointed ministers were working to take over his
authority. Schuschnigg tried to gather support throughout Austria
and inflame patriotism among the people.
For the first time since 12 February
1934 (the time
of the Austrian
Civil War), socialists and communists could legally appear in
public again. The communists announced their
unconditional support for the Austrian government, understandable
in light of Nazi pressure on Austria. The socialists demanded further
concessions from Schuschnigg before they were willing to side with
him.
Schuschnigg announces a referendum
On 9 March, as a last resort to preserve Austria's independence, Schuschnigg scheduled a plebiscite on the independence of Austria for 13 March. To secure a large majority in the referendum, Schuschnigg set the minimum voting age at 24 in order to exclude younger voters who largely sympathized with Nazi ideology. Holding a referendum was a highly risky gamble for Schuschnigg, and, on the next day, it became apparent that Hitler would not simply stand by while Austria declared its independence by public vote. Hitler declared that the plebiscite would be subject to major fraud and that Germany would not accept it. In addition, the German Ministry of Propaganda issued press reports that riots had broken out in Austria and that large parts of the Austrian population were calling for German troops to restore order. Schuschnigg immediately responded publicly that reports of riots were false.Hitler sent an ultimatum to Schuschnigg on
11
March, demanding that he hand over all power to the
Austrian National Socialists or face an invasion. The ultimatum
was set to expire at noon, but was extended by two hours. However,
without waiting for an answer, Hitler had already signed the order
to send troops into Austria at one o'clock, issuing it to Hermann
Göring only hours later.
Schuschnigg desperately sought support for
Austrian independence in the hours following the ultimatum, but,
realizing that neither France nor the
United
Kingdom was willing to take steps, he resigned as Chancellor
that evening. In the radio broadcast in which he announced his
resignation, he argued that he accepted the changes and allowed the
Nazis to take over the government in order to avoid bloodshed.
Meanwhile, Austrian President Wilhelm
Miklas refused to appoint Seyss-Inquart
Chancellor and asked other Austrian politicians such as Michael
Skubl and Sigismund Schilhawsky to assume the office. However, the
Nazis were well organised. Within hours they managed to take
control of many parts of Vienna, including the Ministry of Internal
Affairs (controlling the Police). As Miklas continued to refuse to
appoint a Nazi government and Seyss-Inquart still could not send a
telegram in the name of the Austrian government demanding German
troops to restore order, Hitler became furious. At about 10 PM,
well after Hitler had signed and issued the order for the invasion,
Göring and Hitler gave up on waiting and published a forged
telegram containing a request by the Austrian Government for German
troops to enter Austria. Around midnight, after nearly all critical
offices and buildings had fallen into Nazi hands in Vienna and the
main political party members of the old government had been
arrested, Miklas finally conceded to appoint Seyss-Inquart
Chancellor. Hitler later commented: "Certain foreign newspapers
have said that we fell on Austria with brutal methods. I can only
say: even in death they cannot stop lying. I have in the course of
my political struggle won much love from my people, but when I
crossed the former frontier (into Austria) there met me such a
stream of love as I have never experienced. Not as tyrants have we
come, but as liberators."
The Anschluss was given immediate effect by
legislative act on 13 March,
subject to ratification by a plebiscite. Austria became the
province of Ostmark, and
Seyss-Inquart was appointed Governor. The plebiscite was held on
10 April
and officially recorded a support of 99.73% of the voters. Hitler's
brutal methods to emasculate any opposition were immediately
implemented in the weeks preceding the referendum. Even before the
first German soldier crossed the border, Heinrich
Himmler and a few SS officers landed in
Vienna to arrest prominent representatives of the First Republic
such as Richard
Schmitz, Leopold
Figl, Friedrich
Hillegeist and Franz Olah.
During the few short weeks between the Anschluss and the
plebiscite, Social Democrats, Communists, and other potential
political dissenters, as well as Jews, were rounded up and either
imprisoned or sent to concentration camps. Within only a few days
of 12
March, 70,000 people had been arrested. The referendum itself
was subject to large-scale propaganda and to the abrogation of the
voting rights of around 400,000 people (nearly 10% of the eligible
voting population), mainly former members of left-wing parties and
Jews.
The moderate reaction to the Anschluss was the
first major consequence of the strictly followed appeasement British foreign
policy strategy. The international reaction to the events of
March
12, 1938
led Hitler to conclude that he could use even more aggressive
tactics in his roadmap to expand the Third Reich,
as he would later in annexing the Sudetenland.
The relatively bloodless Anschluss helped pave the way for the
Treaty of
Munich in September 1938 and the annexation of Czechoslovakia
in 1939, because it reinforced appeasement as the right way for
Britain to deal with Hitler's Germany.
Legacy of the 1938 Anschluss
The Anschluss: annexation or union?
The word "Anschluss" outside the context of March 1938 is properly translated as "joinder", "connection", "unification" or "political union". In contrast the German word "Annektierung" that would mean military annexation unambiguously was and is not commonly used in this context. The usage of the term "Anschluss" has been widespread before and in 1938 describing an incorporation of Austria into Germany. Calling the incorporation of Austria into Nazi Germany an "Anschluss", that is a unification or joinder, was however also part of the propaganda used in 1938 by Hitler and the Nazis to create the impression the events of March 1938 were not backed and enforced by military pressure. Hitler himself stressed the meaning of the events numerous times following the "Anschluss" and described the incorporation of Austria as the return of it to its original home (Heimkehr). The word Anschluss endured the years of the Second World War and the years thereafter, letting the term, despite its non-correlating to the actual events and propaganda usage in 1938 stand for the events that took place.Some historical sources, for instance, Encyclopædia
Britannica, describe the Anschluss as an "annexation" rather
than a union. From a factual view of the events that were mainly
driven by the German military power and political pressure within
Austria and from the outside the term annexation is the closer
description than the term "Anschluss". It however omits to present
the differences between the "Anschluss" and other annexations of
Nazi Germany backed by force, i.e. large parts of the Austrian
population either supported or were indifferent to the
incorporation of Austria into the Third
Reich.
The appeal of Nazism to Austrians
The Anschluss can be misunderstood as merely a military annexation. This invites confusion with other German military occupations of European countries. Adolf Hitler himself was an Austrian. Despite the subversion by Hitler's sympathisers, Austrian acceptance of direct government by Hitler's Germany was a different phenomenon from the administration of other collaborationist countries.The Second Republic
The Moscow Declaration
The Moscow Declaration of 1943, signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and the United Kingdom included a "Declaration on Austria," which stated the following:The governments of the United Kingdom, the Soviet
Union and the United States of America are agreed that Austria, the
first free country to fall a victim to Hitlerite aggression, shall
be liberated from German domination.
They regard the annexation imposed on Austria by
Germany on 15 March
1938, as null
and void. They consider themselves as in no way bound by any
charges effected in Austria since that date. They declare that they
wish to see re-established a free and independent Austria and
thereby to open the way for the Austrian people themselves, as well
as those neighbouring States which will be faced with similar
problems, to find that political and economic security which is the
only basis for lasting peace.
Austria is reminded, however, that she has a
responsibility, which she cannot evade, for participation in the
war at the side of Hitlerite Germany, and that in the final
settlement account will inevitably be taken of her own contribution
to her liberation.
To judge from the last paragraph and subsequent
determinations at the Nuremberg
Trial, the Declaration was intended to serve as propaganda aimed at stirring
Austrian resistance (although there are Austrians counted as
Righteous Among the Nations, there never was an effective
Austrian armed resistance of the sort found in other countries
under German occupation) more than anything else, although the
exact text of the declaration is said to have a somewhat complex
drafting history. At Nuremberg Arthur
Seyss-Inquart and Franz von
Papen, in particular, were both indicted under count one
(conspiracy to commit crimes against peace) specifically for their
activities in support of the Austrian Nazi Party and the Anschluss,
but neither was convicted of this count. In acquitting von Papen,
the court noted that his actions were in its view political
immoralities but not crimes under its charter. Seyss-Inquart was
convicted of other serious war crimes, most of which took place in
Poland and
the Netherlands,
was sentenced to death and executed.
Austrian identity and the "victim theory"
After World War II, many Austrians sought comfort in the idea of Austria as "the Nazis' first victim". Although the Nazi party was promptly banned, Austria did not have the same thorough process of de-Nazification at the top of government which was imposed on Germany for a time. Lacking outside pressure for political reform, factions of Austrian society tried for a long time to advance the view that the Anschluss was only an annexation at the point of a bayonet.This view of the events of 1938 has deep roots in
the ten years of Allied occupation and the struggle to regain
Austrian sovereignty: The victim theory played an essential role in
the negotiations on the Austrian
State Treaty with the Soviets, and by pointing to the Moscow
Declaration, Austrian politicians heavily relied on it to
achieve a solution for Austria different from the Germany's
division into East and West. The State
Treaty, alongside with the subsequent Austrian declaration of
permanent neutrality,
marked important milestones for the solidification of Austria's
independent national identity during the course of following
decades.
As Austrian politicians of the Left and Right
attempted to reconcile their differences in order to avoid the
violent conflict that had dominated the First Republic, discussions
of both Austrian-Nazism and Austria's
role during the Nazi-era were largely avoided. Still, the Austrian
People's Party (ÖVP) had advanced, and still advances, the
argument that the establishment of the Dollfuss
dictatorship was necessary in order to maintain Austrian
independence; while the
Austrian Social Democratic Party, (SPÖ), argues that the
Dollfuss
dictatorship stripped the country of the democratic resources
necessary to repel Hitler; yet it ignores that Hitler himself was
indigenous to Austria.
Political events
For decades, the victim theory established in the Austrian mind remained largely undisputed. The Austrian public was only rarely forced to confront the legacy of the Third Reich (most notably during the events of 1965 concerning Taras Borodajkewycz, a professor of economic history notorious for anti-Semitic remarks, when Ernst Kirchweger, a concentration camp survivor, was killed by a right-wing protester during riots). It was not until the 1980s that Austrians were finally massively confronted with their past. The main catalyst for the start of a Vergangenheitsbewältigung was the so-called Waldheim affair. The Austrian reply to allegations during the 1986 Presidential election campaign that successful candidate and former UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim had been a member of the Nazi party and of the infamous SA (he was later absolved of direct involvement in war crimes) was that scrutiny was an unwelcome intervention in the country's internal affairs. Despite the politicians' reactions to international criticism of Waldheim, the Waldheim affair started the first serious major discussion on Austria's past and the Anschluss.Another main factor for Austria and its coming to
terms with the past emerged in the 1980s: Jörg
Haider and the rise of the Freedom
Party of Austria (FPÖ). The party had combined elements of the
pan-German right
with free-market liberalism since its foundation in 1955, but after
Haider had ascended to the party chairmanship in 1986, the liberal
elements became increasingly marginalized while Haider began to
openly use nationalist and anti-immigrant rhetoric. He was often
criticised for tactics such as the völkisch (ethnic) definition of
national interest ("Austria for Austrians") and his apologism for
Austria's past, notably calling members of the Waffen-SS "men of
honour". Following an enormous electoral rise in the 1990s peaking
in the
1999 elections, the FPÖ, now purged of its liberal elements,
entered a coalition with the Austrian
People's Party (ÖVP) led by Wolfgang
Schüssel that met international condemnation in 2000. This
coalition triggered the regular Donnerstagsdemonstrationen
(Thursday demonstrations) in protest against the government, which
took place on the Heldenplatz,
where Hitler had greeted the masses during the Anschluss. Haider's
tactics and rhetoric, which were often criticised as sympathetic to
Nazism, again forced Austrians to reconsider their relationship to
the past.
But Haider is not alone in making controversial
remarks about Austria's past: Haider's coalition partner, former
Chancellor Wolfgang
Schüssel, in a 2000 interview with the Jerusalem
Post stated that Austria was the first victim of
Hitler-Germany.
Literature
Tearing into the simplism of the victim theory and the time of the Austrofascism, Thomas Bernhard's last play, Heldenplatz, was highly controversial even before it appeared on stage in 1988, fifty years after Hitler's visit. Bernhard's achievement was to make the elimination of references to Hitler's reception in Vienna emblematic of Austrian attempts to claim their history and culture under questionable criteria. Many politicians from all political factions called Bernhard a Nestbeschmutzer (so. damaging the reputation of his country) and openly demanded that the play should not be staged in Vienna's Burgtheater. Kurt Waldheim, who was at that time still Austrian president called the play a crude insult to the Austrian people.The Historical Commission and outstanding legal issues
In the context of the postwar Federal Republic of Germany, one encounters a Vergangenheitsbewältigung ("struggle to come to terms with the past") that has been partially institutionalised, variably in literary, cultural, political, and educational contexts (its development and difficulties have not been trivial; see, for example, the Historikerstreit). Austria formed a Historikerkommission ("Historian's Commission" or "Historical Commission") in 1998 with a mandate to review Austria's role in the Nazi expropriation of Jewish property from a scholarly rather than legal perspective, partly in response to continuing criticism of its handling of property claims. Its membership was based on recommendations from various quarters, including Simon Wiesenthal and Yad Vashem. The Commission delivered its report in 2003. Noted Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg refused to participate in the Commission and in an interview stated his strenuous objections in terms both personal and in reference to larger questions about Austrian culpability and liability, comparing what he to be relative inattention to the settlement governing the Swiss bank holdings of those who died or were displaced by the Holocaust:I personally would like to know why the WJC
World
Jewish Congress has hardly put any pressure on Austria, even as
leading Nazis and SS leaders were Austrians, Hitler included...
Immediately after the war, the US wanted to make the Russians
withdraw from Austria, and the Russians wanted to keep Austria
neutral, therefore there was a common interest to grant Austria
victim status. And later Austria could cry poor - though its per
capita income is as high as Germany's. And, most importantly, the
Austrian PR machinery works better. Austria has the opera ball, the
imperial castle, Mozartkugeln [a chocolate]. Americans like that.
And Austrians invest and export relatively little to the US,
therefore they are less vulnerable to blackmail. In the meantime,
they set up a commission in Austria to clarify what happened to
Jewish property. Victor Klima, the former chancellor, has asked me
to join. My father fought for Austria in the First World War and in
1939 he was kicked out of Austria. After the war they offered him
ten dollars per month as compensation. For this reason I told
Klima, no thank you, this makes me sick.
The Simon
Wiesenthal Center continues to criticise Austria (as recently
as June 2005) for its alleged historical and ongoing unwillingness
aggressively to pursue investigations and trials against Nazis for
war crimes and crimes against humanity from the 1970s onwards. Its
2001 report offered the following characterization:
Given the extensive participation of numerous
Austrians, including at the highest levels, in the implementation
of the Final Solution and other Nazi crimes, Austria should have
been a leader in the prosecution of Holocaust perpetrators over the
course of the past four decades, as has been the case in Germany.
Unfortunately relatively little has been achieved by the Austrian
authorities in this regard and in fact, with the exception of the
case of Dr. Heinrich
Gross which was suspended this year under highly suspicious
circumstances (he claimed to be medically unfit, but outside the
court proved to be healthy) not a single Nazi war crimes
prosecution has been conducted in Austria since the
mid-1970s.
In 2003, the Center launched a worldwide effort
named "Operation: Last Chance" in order to collect further
information about those Nazis still alive that are potentially
subject to prosecution. Although reports issued shortly thereafter
credited Austria for initiating large-scale investigations, there
has been one case where criticism of Austrian authorities arose
recently: The Center has put 92-year old Croatian Milivoj
Asner on its 2005 top ten list. Asner fled to Austria in 2004
after Croatia announced it would start investigations in the case
of war crimes he may have been involved in. In response to
objections about Asner's continued freedom, Austria's federal
government has deferred to either extradition requests from Croatia
or prosecutorial actions from Klagenfurt,
neither of which appears forthcoming (as of June 2005). Extradition
is not an option since Asner also holds Austrian citizenship, having lived in
the country from 1946 to 1991.
Austrian political and military leaders in Nazi Germany
See also
- The Sound of Music (an account of the Anschluss, dramatized but based on actual events)
- The Great Dictator (a fictitious account of the invasion of "Osterlich" by "Tomania", modeled on the Anschluss)
- King Ottokar's Sceptre (a fictitious account of the failed Bordurian coup d'état and invasion of their democratic neighbour Syldavia, modeled on the Anschluss)
- Pan-Germanism
- Kurt Schuschnigg
References
Additional reading
Books
- Bukey, Evan Burr (1986). Hitler's Hometown: Linz, Austria, 1908–1945. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-32833-0.
- Parkinson, F. (ed.) (1989). Conquering the Past: Austrian Nazism Yesterday and Today. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-2054-6.
- Pauley, Bruce F. (1981). Hitler and the Forgotten Nazis: A History of Austrian National Socialism University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-1456-3 .
- Scheuch, Manfred (2005). Der Weg zum Heldenplatz: eine Geschichte der österreichischen Diktatur. 1933–1938. ISBN 3-8258-7712-4.
- Schuschnigg, Kurt (1971). The brutal takeover: The Austrian ex-Chancellor's account of the Anschluss of Austria by Hitler. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-00321-6.
- Stuckel, Eva-Maria (2001). Österreich, Monarchie, Operette, und Anschluss: Antisemtismus, Faschismus, und Nationalsozialismus im Fadenkreuz von Ingeborg Bachman und Elias Canetti.
Electronic articles and journals
- Österreichs Weg zum Anschluss im März 1938," Wiener Zeitung, 25 May 1998 (detailed article the on the events of the Anschluss, in German).
- Die propagandistische Vorbereitung der Volksabstimmung," Austrian Resistance Archive, Vienna, 1988 (accessed 10 June 2005).
- 1938: Austria, MSN Encarta. (accessed 10 June 2005).
- The Crisis Year of 1934 Buchner, A. From the Destruction of the Socialist Lager to National Socialist Coup Attempt (accessed 10 June 2005).
External links
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - Library Bibliography: Anschluss
- Austrian Historical Commission
- BBC article by Robert Knight, who served on the Historikercommission
- Exchange in the New York Review of Books between Gerald Stourzh and Gordon Craig over the latter's review, "Waldheim's Austria"
- Full text of the Moscow Declaration
- Simon Wiesenthal Center
- Time magazine coverage of the events of the Anschluss
- Pictures of Adolf Hitler in Vienna
- Anschluss - a soundbite history of the German invasion into Austria
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