British Saved Hitler from German Army Coup

wilhelm20canaris.jpgHenry Makow

In May 1938, when Hitler announced his intention to invade Czechoslovakia, the German General Staff were alarmed. They were afraid world war  would destroy Germany. They decided to place Hitler in a mental asylum.

All they needed was confirmation from England that it would assist Czechoslovakia. The British dithered. Instead of taking a stand, they sabotaged  Germany’s resistance to the Nazi plague.

Ludwig Beck, the Chief of the German General Staff observed: “Through yielding to Hitler, the British government will lose its two main allies here, the General Staff and the German people.”

The simplest and best opportunity to avoid calamity was lost. The Illuminati wanted world war to increase their power and wealth, and to advance of their satanist One World Government. The Illuminati were not going to allow their creation, Adolf Hitler, to be overthrown.

spychiefcover.jpgTHE COUP

Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, Chief of the Abwehr (Military Intelligence) was part of the conspiracy to overthrow Hitler which is described in Richard Bassett’s Hitler’s Spy Chief: The Wilhelm Canaris Betrayal (2012). pp.150-160.

Canaris and General Beck sent Ewald Von Kleist to London August 21 where he met Sir Robert Vansittart, the chief diplomatic adviser to the cabinet. Kleist told him that Germany planned to invade Czechoslovakia Sept. 30, 1938.  If England drew a line in the sand, the generals had plans to make an end of the Nazi regime. These plans were well advanced. But all Kleist could secure was a general statement from Winston Churchill, who was not yet in the cabinet.

Nevertheless, the plan proceeded. Richard Bassett writes: “Several generals commanding troops were prepared to enter the conspiracy. By 14 Sept. General Von Witzleben, commander of the Berlin area, had made arrangements with Gen. Franz Halder (New Chief of Staff) and others to arrest Hitler as he returned from from Berchtesgaden to the capital. Count Helldorf, the Berlin Police Chief, would arrest the other party leaders while General Hoeppner, in command of the Third Panzer Division, would march on Berlin at the signal from Witzleben.  Count Brockdorff-Ahlefeld, in command of the Potsdam garrison, would support Witzleben while Count Fritz von der Schulenburg, son of the German Crown Prince’s former chief of staff, would secure the government sector of Berlin….” (156)

adolf_hitler630_pxlw.jpg(Left, Chamberlain endorses Nazi aggression.)

However, the entire conspiracy was predicated on England stating it would intervene in the event of a German attack on Czechoslovakia. But instead of taking a stand, Chamberlain announced Sept. 14 he would fly to Berchtesgarden to treat with Hitler. The optics suggested capitulation. In those days, statesmen did not fly to meet each other. Chamberlain had never flown before.

Bassett: “Both Chamberain’s message to Hitler, noting ‘I shall be ready to travel as of tomorrow morning’ and Hitler’s immediate acceptance, imply a mutual understanding that the stakes on a personal plane were high.”

When Canaris heard the news at dinner, he lost his appetite. “What! He…visit that man?” Canaris exclaimed. Many prominent Germans were horrified. The coup was postponed indefinitely. How could they overthrow Hitler when he was effortlessly getting his way?

Chamberlain’s decision to visit Hitler spared Hitler and his gang from immediate arrest. Publisher David Astor wrote that the failure to act on the Kleist mission was “the saddest missed opportunity of the whole hellish experience leading up to World War Two.” (Balliol Record, 1982)

CANARIS (AND HUMANITY) BETRAYED

tmb_person_henderson2.jpgRichard Bassett writes: “Canaris … had opened his hand to the British and they had … betrayed… his entire stratagem. …It is not improbable that in arranging Chamberlain’s visit so rapidly and secretly [British ambassador to Berlin Neville Henderson, left] had obliquely impressed on the Fuhrer his knowledge of Hitler’s vulnerability and the need to act swiftly…Did forces in Britain in subtle way want a war with Germany?  Did they fear a restoration of the monarchy and the generals who would prove no less menacing to the balance of power?” (162)

Canaris is often described as a “wily old fox” but he didn’t have the big picture. The Illuminati Jewish banking power based in London wanted a world conflagration. Hitler was their arm’s-length agent.

Regardless of what the British did, why didn’t Canaris and the generals act independently?  Why didn’t they simply overthrow Hitler? That would have defused world tensions and saved 60 million lives. Canaris and the generals may have been tied to the Illuminati themselves. They may have been Freemasons and looked to London for leadership. Apparently, there was a branch of German Freemasonry that was not shut down by Hitler. These people may have been betrayed by their fellow Masons in England.

Canaris had ties with Illuminati bankers and arms merchants like Basil Zaharoff. On one level, the Abwehr served the Nazi cause admirably. But on another level, Canaris worked hard to ensure an Allied victory.  He supplied advanced warnings of every Nazi attack. He censored intelligence reports both of Allied weaknesses, and strengths like ULTRA and Double Cross System. He schooled Franco’s Spain on how to remain neutral.

Hitler was undoubtedly aware that Canaris was a traitor but Hitler was a traitor himself. When SD Chief Reinhard Heydrich was about to arrest       Canaris, the British arranged to assassinate him. Heydrich was the only high-level Nazi official assassinated. Czech agents injured him, and according to Heydrich’s wife, Hitler’s doctors finished him off.

Freemasonry may control the world’s intelligence intelligence services. But these services, and Freemasonry in general, function on a need-to-know basis. Their members don’t know the true agenda (or they couldn’t be used.) Thus, Willhelm Canaris, who the Gestapo hung on a meat hook in 1945, and other well-meaning Germans were sacrificed toLuciferian world control by the Cabalist bankers.

Mankind is in their baneful grasp. The Second World War, usually depicted as a struggle to save “civilization” from Nazi barbarism, in fact advanced an eventual tyranny much more subtle, but not so different. – See more at: http://henrymakow.com/2014/11/British-saved-hitler-from-German-army-coup.html#sthash.NCIORVYS.dpuf

http://henrymakow.com/2014/11/British-saved-hitler-from-German-army-coup.html

One thought on “British Saved Hitler from German Army Coup

  1. “They were afraid world war would destroy Germany. They decided to place Hitler in a mental asylum.”

    Should have done that with the banksters that offered them the war chest.

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