with prostitutes and their conversations secretly recorded. Nothing sensa-
tional was ever exposed.100
The structure of the RSHA reflected Heydrich’s attempt to avoid the
duplication of responsibilities between individual departments that had
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167
led to various rivalries and conflicts in the past, most notably between the
Gestapo and the criminal police, but also between the Security Police and
the SD. While the Gestapo now primarily concentrated on matters of
political persecution (directed against both Germans and foreigners living
in the Reich), the criminal police gained responsibility for policy areas
such as economic crimes and the combating of abortions and homosexu-
ality. ‘Preventive’ measures against asocials and criminals were now also
among the responsibilities of the criminal police.101
The RSHA became the central organization of the Nazi terror during
the Second World War, but measured against Heydrich’s original ambi-
tions of merging the SD, the Gestapo and the criminal police into a
tightly integrated state protection corps it was a heterogeneous institu-
tion: legally trained police officials worked alongside SD leaders, but the
SD continued to be financed by the party treasury whereas the Security
Police were funded by the state. This RSHA was not the tightly knit and
uniformly organized apparatus for which Heydrich had hoped, but rather
an institutional roof for the various agencies of the Nazi persecution appa-
ratus, albeit one run by a single administration and under the unifying
command of Heydrich.102
With a total of 3,000 employees, including secretaries and lower offi-
cials, and a leadership corps of some 400 men (and one woman) as heads
of individual desks or departments, the RSHA was not a huge institution,
but it was one that differed fundamentally from the traditional adminis-
tration in terms of purpose, institutional ethos and staff composition:
77 per cent of its leadership corps were born after 1900, most were from
middle-class families, two-thirds had completed a university education
and one-third had a doctoral degree, mostly in law, but also in literature,
history, theology and philology. The RSHA was thus an institution
for social climbers, not social failures. However, despite Heydrich’s prefer-
ence for well-educated members of staff, he was also consciously anti-
intellectual. Scholarship had to be political. Ideas could be proven only
through deeds. What Heydrich wanted was the creation of an ideologi-
cally committed vanguard or ‘fighting administration’, an elite which
would not only devise new policies but also implement them. Deeds,
not words, were what mattered. Most of the members of the RSHA
leadership corps, for example, served both in senior administrative func-
tions in Berlin and as heads of the
Einsatzkommandos
in the course of
the war. In that sense, the RSHA was a flexible organization, constantly
modifying and reorganizing its departments, as well as a mobile institu-
tion, whose staff were frequently ordered to fulfil different tasks, from
administration jobs in Berlin to participation in fighting and mass killings
in the field.103
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The RSHA’s imperfect organizational structure in no way diminished
the radicalism of its employees. On the contrary, the loose administrative
structure created room for competition between individual desks and
departments, leading to increasingly radical initiatives. Heydrich publicly
prided himself on having created a police apparatus which was composed
of ‘ideologically committed Nazis’, ‘political soldiers’ of the ‘hidden front’,
an institution that united under one roof political problem analysis,
operational organization and implementation.104
Shortly after the establishment of the RSHA, Heydrich’s restructured
terror apparatus was confronted with its first major challenge. On the
evening of 8 November 1939, at 9.20, a bomb exploded in Munich’s
Bürgerbräukeller, the venue for Hitler’s annual commemoration speeches
on the anniversary of his failed 1923 putsch. The explosion, set off shortly
after the Führer had left the building, killed eight people and wounded
dozens. If Hitler, concerned about the bad weather, had not curtailed his
speech in order to take an earlier return flight to Berlin, he, too, would
have been killed in the explosion. The man responsible for the assassina-
tion attempt was caught that same night: Georg Elser, a thirty-eight-year-
old cabinet-maker, was arrested while trying to cross the German–Swiss
border. In view of the political sensitivity of the case, Heydrich and
Himmler personally took charge of the investigations.105
Although during the interrogations Elser insisted that he had planned and
carried out the assassination attempt without any assistance, Heydrich and
the Gestapo officers investigating the case at first doubted his claims. Instead,
they believed that it was a plot against Hitler orchestrated by the British
Secret Intel igence Service.106 Coincidental y, the fol owing day, an SD
commando under Walter Schel enberg abducted two British SIS agents,
Sigismund Payne Best and Richard Stevens, from the Dutch border town of
Venlo and brought them to Berlin for interrogation. Heydrich wrongly
assumed that the SD had penetrated a British secret operation with the aim
of eliminating Hitler – an assumption that reflected his penchant for spy
stories and conspiracy theories and that was not supported by any solid
evidence.107
Elser was taken to Sachsenhausen concentration camp where he was
murdered in early 1945, shortly before the Red Army liberated the camp.
His fate was shared by a growing number of people. Between August 1939
and the spring of 1942, the number of inmates in concentration camps
(excluding those in the death camps constructed further east from late
1941 onwards) rose from about 21,000 to just under 80,000, with most of
the new arrivals being non-Germans.108
In order to cope with this new influx, four new concentration camps –
Auschwitz, Neuengamme, Gross-Rosen and Natzweiler – were built
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between the outbreak of war and the spring of 1941, in addition to the six
camps that had already existed within the Greater German Reich before
September 1939: Sachsenhausen, Dachau, Mauthausen, Flossenbürg,
Buchenwald and the women’s camp at Ravensbrück. Living conditions in
these increasingly overcrowded camps deteriorated quickly: food rations
decreased substantially, maltreatment became more widespread and
mortality rates in the prisoners’ barracks rose steadily.109
Although he continued to be in charge ‘only’ of the internment and
release of prisoners, and not of camp life itself (which remained the
responsibility of Theodor Eicke), Heydrich was heavily involved in the
question of how enemies of the state should be treated once imprisoned.
In January 1941, he established three categories of concentration camps,
which were meant to reflect both ‘the personality of the prisoners and the
degree of danger they represent for the state’. The so-called ‘lesser
compromised’ prisoners whom Heydrich considered ‘capable of improve-
ment’ were sent to Dachau, Sachsenhausen and Auschwitz, of which the
latter initially served as a ‘category I’ concentration camp and became a
fully operational extermination camp only in early 1942. The more ‘seri-
ously compromised’ inmates whose re-education would take longer were
to be sent to ‘category II’ camps, namely Buchenwald, Flossenbürg and
Neuengamme. The only ‘category III’ camp, Mauthausen, was reserved for
‘seriously compromised’ prisoners who were unlikely to be capable of
reintegration into the people’s community. Mauthausen indeed proved to
be the camp within the German Reich with the harshest living conditions
for inmates and the highest mortality rates.110
Concentration camps were not the only penal institutions for those
arrested by Heydrich’s men or Kurt Daluege’s Order Police. Throughout
the history of the Third Reich, the number of inmates in normal prisons
remained substantially higher than those in concentration camps, rising
from over 108,000 inmates in the summer of 1939 to over 180,000 at the
time of Heydrich’s death in the summer of 1942. These figures included
ordinary criminals such as murderers, rapists and thieves, but after 1939
the definition of what constituted criminal behaviour was cast ever wider
to include people deemed work-shy or defeatist, all of whom were now
also considered enemies of the state.111
Harsh treatment was also issued to ‘deviant youths’, notably the famous
‘Swing Kids’ who formed an illegal counter-culture to the Hitler Youth by
secretly listening to jazz and organizing dance parties at which they played
‘degenerate’ English or American music. With strongholds in larger cities
such as Hamburg or Berlin, the largely apolitical Swing Kids’ crime
consisted of defying the military culture that permeated the Hitler Youth
and cultivating a musical taste that the Nazis considered inappropriate for
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German youth. Himmler urged Heydrich not to show any leniency
towards their rebellious behaviour and asked him to ‘radically eradicate’
the ‘whole evil’. The ‘ringleaders’, Himmler insisted, were to be sent to a
concentration camp where they ‘will have to be beaten before undergoing
rigorous exercising and engaging in hard labour’. Their internment was to
last no less than two years. Heydrich happily complied: after a first round
of arrests in August 1941, the Gestapo broadened its operations in early
1942 and sent several ringleaders to concentration camps throughout the
Reich.112
Others fared even worse. According to Heydrich’s guidelines of 3
September, his terror apparatus was authorized to execute people without
trial, even for minor crimes. This ‘special treatment’, as it was generally
termed, was carried out in concentration camps, ordinary prisons and
labour camps.113 In implementing this policy, secrecy was of the essence,
both in view of popular opinion and with respect to the Reich’s new diplo-
matic relations with the Soviet Union after the conclusion of the Hitler–
Stalin Pact in August 1939. As Heydrich pointed out in February 1940,
the pact had created a ‘completely new situation’ as far as foreign policy
was concerned, even though on the domestic front the Communists
remained the enemy above all others.114
Within the Third Reich, special treatment was particularly aimed at one
‘opposition group’, which would grow exponentially over the course of the
Nazi conquest of Europe: foreign labourers living in Germany. From late
1939 onwards, various state agencies dealt intensively with the issue of
how to segregate from the German population the vast number of Polish
prisoners of war and workers who had streamed into the Reich. In March
1940, the question was comprehensively regulated through Hermann
Göring’s so-called Polish decrees. Gestapo agencies were authorized to
punish ‘transgressions’ committed by Polish labourers – ‘chronic careless
working’, work stoppages or acts of sabotage – without reference to any
other institution, such as the courts of law. The measures that could be
adopted included internment in labour or concentration camps and, in
serious cases, execution. Sexual relations between Polish workers and
Germans were to be punished by shooting the Polish worker without trial
and the deportation of the German partner, whether male or female, to a
concentration camp.115
Apart from Polish slave labourers, one other ‘enemy group’ within
wartime Germany was targeted by Heydrich’s apparatus with particular
rigour: the Jews. Surveillance of Jews living in the Third Reich intensified
drastically after the start of the war. From September 1939 onwards,
the RSHA reinforced its control over the Reich Association of Jews,
which had been created in 1939 as an umbrella organization for all
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171
remaining Jewish organizations in Germany. In the first months after
the outbreak of war, Heydrich and his RSHA further perfected mecha-
nisms for excluding the Jews from German society. On 12 September
1939, for example, Heydrich banned Jews from shopping in all but a few
select food shops. Less than two weeks later, he ordered all radio sets in
the possession of Jews to be confiscated throughout the Reich.116
Polish slave labourers and German Jews were the chief victims of