{"id":541,"date":"2022-06-28T14:44:05","date_gmt":"2022-06-28T12:44:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/?p=541"},"modified":"2022-06-28T14:44:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-28T12:44:06","slug":"frank-neumann-behemoth-introduction","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/2022\/06\/28\/frank-neumann-behemoth-introduction\/","title":{"rendered":"Frank Neumann, Behemoth, Introduction"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>by Peter Hayes, quoted from the 1942 edition<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I wonder whether this sounds familiar these days&#8230;.., Franc<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>INTRODUCTION<br>by Peter Hayes<br>F r a n z N e u m a n n \u2019s Behemoth is one of the classics of modem political<br>analysis. Recognized upon publication during World War II as the first<br>thoroughly researched unmasking of what the subtitle promised\u2014the<br>structure and practice of Nazism\u2014the book has remained a stimulus to<br>inquiry and debate to this day. T h e provocative and controversial central<br>argument, telegraphed by the choice of title, is that the Third Reich<br>neither expressed a consistent ideology nor possessed a coherent structure.<br>Like the Behemoth in Jewish mythology and the writings of<br>Thomas Hobbes, Hitler\u2019s regime was a chaotic, lawless, and amorphous<br>monster. Its policies expressed the sometimes overlapping and sometimes<br>contending drives of the four symbiotic but separate power centers<br>(the Nazi party, the German state bureaucracy, the armed forces,<br>and big business) that composed it. Both the enormous might and the<br>inherent vulnerability of Nazi Germany stemmed, according to Neumann,<br>from its very nature as a conspiracy among these four selfinterested<br>groups, each of which sought to expand German power and<br>territory without ceding authority or status to any of the other parties.<br>This thesis, backed by the author\u2019s at the time unrivaled command<br>of evidence culled from German newspapers, periodicals, and official<br>publications, quickly made Behemoth into a book that had consequences.<br>In 1943-1945, while Neumann was serving in Washington, D.C., in the<br>Office of Strategic Services, the forerunner of the Central Intelligence<br>Agency, his work strongly influenced the formulation of America\u2019s<br>goals for postwar Germany as the \u201c four Ds,\u201d each directed at one of the<br>colluding groups he had highlighted: denazification, democratization<br>(including the recruitment and training of civil servants), demilitarization,<br>and decartelization. Immediately after the war, when Neumann<br>was a member of the prosecution staff preparing the Nuremberg Trials<br>of major war criminals, Behemoth stamped both the conception of the<br>American case and the organization of its supporting documents.<br>\u201cConspiracy\u201d to commit crimes against peace and humanity was the<br>centerpiece of the American charges against not only the 22 principal<br>vii<br>Vlll INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES<br>war criminals brought before the International Military Tribunal in<br>1945-1946 but also against the 185 lesser figures from the Nazi party,<br>the state bureaucracy, the armed forces, and industry and banking who<br>were arraigned before American judges in the twelve Nuremberg Military<br>Tribunals of 1947-1949. Although this approach had multiple origins,<br>not least in the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the prosecution of<br>mobsters in the United States, the conspiracy charge also reflected the<br>impact of N eumann\u2019s depiction of Hitler\u2019s regime. So did the way the<br>United States categorized captured German records for use as evidence<br>in both sets of proceedings. Before being assigned numbers, relevant<br>papers were sorted among four groups, each with a distinct prefix that<br>referred to one of Neumann\u2019s quadrumvirate of power structures (NO<br>= Nazi organization, that is, the party; NG = Nazi government;<br>N O KW = Nazi Military High Command; and NI = Nazi industry).<br>Significant as these responses to Behemoth were, they proved fleeting.<br>As the Cold War froze on a line through Germany, the United States<br>steadily backed away from the \u201c four Ds,\u201d turning denazification over<br>to the Germans, abandoning attempts at civil service reform, urging<br>the creation of a new West German army, and accepting the reconsolidation<br>of the country\u2019s largest banks and industrial enterprises. By<br>19 5 5 , when the Federal Republic o f Germany recovered full sovereignty<br>from the Western occupying powers, the United States had<br>completed a \u201c retreat to victory\u201d that forsook the specific objectives for<br>which Behemoth had pleaded in order to obtain German cooperation in<br>the larger purpose of building a nonaggressive and nonauthoritarian<br>government and society. Along the way, the legal notion of \u201cconspiracy,\u201d<br>along with the interpretation of Nazi rule that it summarized, had<br>won little acceptance as a tool of international law. Indeed, the charge<br>was the least successful of the counts against the defendants at both<br>sets of N uremberg trials: the International Tribunal found only eight<br>defendants guilty of conspiracy to commit crimes against peace or humanity,<br>all of them high-ranking people closely associated with Hitler<br>in making national policy; upon final review o f all cases, the Nuremberg<br>Tribunals did not convict a single individual so charged.<br>I f the rulings at Nuremberg offered an early and shrewd indication<br>of where and how Behemoth came to seem unpersuasive, a nearly simultaneous<br>and far less dramatic development elsewhere provided an ironic<br>harbinger of the book\u2019s lasting value. In 1948, Franz Neumann joined<br>the faculty at Columbia University in New York and encountered a<br>INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES ix<br>young graduate student named Raul Hilberg, who had been impressed<br>by Behemoth&#8217;s focus on the machinery of Nazi rule and the ways in<br>which preexisting structures had put their talent and experience to the<br>service o f criminality. After he completed a master\u2019s thesis under N eu mann\u2019s<br>direction on the role of the German bureaucracy in the murder<br>of the European Jews, Hilberg approached Neumann about supervising<br>a doctoral dissertation that would extend the story to cover the involvement<br>of the Nazi party, business, and the military as well. T he professor<br>assented, but added the warning that tackling this topic would amount<br>to committing professional suicide since few people were interested.<br>Neumann died in an automobile accident in 1954, a year before Hilberg<br>completed the dissertation, and thus never knew that Behemoth<br>had inspired what became The Destruction o f the European Jews, the monumental<br>work, first published in 1961, that ultimately emerged as the<br>foundational text for the study of the Holocaust. Neither did Neumann<br>live to see the other enduring intellectual spin-offs of his work, such as<br>Tim Mason\u2019s demonstration of \u201cthe primacy of politics\u201d in Nazism (a<br>phrase that Neumann was among the first to highlight), William Sheridan<br>Allen\u2019s deployment of Neumann\u2019s concept of \u201catomization\u201d to explain<br>the Nazification of German society, Martin Broszat\u2019s elaboration<br>of the incoherence of Nazi ideology, Hans Mommsen\u2019s development<br>of the \u201cfunctionalist\u201d explanation of Nazi policymaking, Peter Huettenberger\u2019s<br>emphasis on the \u201cpolycratic\u201d nature of Nazi governance,<br>and countless other examples.<br>Both the fertility of Behemoth, its capacity to generate new exploration<br>and perception, and the book\u2019s inclination to ideological overreach,<br>which the Nuremberg trial judgments highlighted, had their<br>origins in Franz Neumann\u2019s intellectual biography. Bom in 1900 to a<br>lower-middle-class Jewish family in Kattowitz, near Germany\u2019s eastern<br>border, Neumann became an active Social Democrat as a teenager,<br>earned a doctorate in law in 1923, and embarked on a career as a labor<br>attorney, primarily representing unions, first in Frankfurt and then in<br>Berlin. As a supporter of the Weimar Republic and a Marxist, he was a<br>target of persecution almost from the moment Hitler came to power in<br>January 1933. A month\u2019s imprisonment was enough to persuade him to<br>flee to England, where he took up graduate studies in political science<br>at the London School of Economics. There he completed a second<br>doctorate in 1936 under the direction of Professor Harold Laski, a celebrated<br>figure on the British intellectual left, with a dissertation on the<br>X INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES<br>rise and fall of the rule of law. Laski thereupon recommended Neumann<br>to the Institute for Social Research, a collection of heterodox<br>Marxist thinkers that Max Horkheimer presciently had moved from<br>Frankfurt to New York on the eve of the Nazi takeover in Germany.<br>This was Neumann\u2019s intellectual home until 1942, during the period in<br>which he wrote the first edition o f Behemoth.<br>In short, Neumann was shaped by his German upbringing, his training<br>as a lawyer and political scientist, not a historian, and his virtually<br>uninterrupted immersion in the political imagination of European socialism.<br>From these sprang the distinguishing formal characteristics of<br>Behemoth, for both good and ill\u2014its nearly exclusive reliance on contemporary<br>G erman source material; its preoccupation with legal philosophy<br>and with regulations, institutions, and lines of authority; its<br>inclination to fit empirical data into the framework of Marxist theory;<br>and its sometimes dauntingly dry and discursive prose style\u2014as well as<br>the principal interpretive assertions, both sound and otherwise, in each<br>of the three parts into which Neumann organized the book: Nazi politics,<br>economics, and society.<br>The greatest of Neumann\u2019s insights into the political side of Nazi<br>rule concerned how policy was effected and popular compliance obtained,<br>and his take on these issues was unmistakably that of a German<br>lawyer and leftist. His legal training was indispensable to his capacity<br>to see through the Nazi facade of dictatorial unity and to perceive that<br>\u201c the legal and administrative forms tell us very little\u201d about the real<br>distribution of power in Nazi Germany (p. 227). Neumann recognized<br>that the Nazi regime, unlike most modem governing systems, became<br>from its outset ever less vertically and hierarchically organized, with<br>competencies apportioned among agencies and degrees of control over<br>policy indicated by rank. Instead the Th ird Reich developed into a<br>\u201ctask state,\u201d in which specific goals were entrusted to prized individuals<br>outfitted with special authority in a fashion that cut across bureaucratic<br>domains and the lines of organization charts and gave rise to constant<br>turf battles, usually won by the officeholder with the strongest will and<br>web of allies, not necessarily the highest title. A sort of institutional<br>Darwinism was created on purpose, both because Hitler and his chief<br>lieutenants relished the rhetoric o f \u201cleadership\u201d over that of \u201cadministration\u201d<br>and because in the Nazi drive for expansion, time always was<br>of the essence, shortcuts always in demand. Thus plenipotentiaries proliferated<br>and became more important than cabinet members, special<br>INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES xi<br>offices multiplied and overrode ministries. And, thought Neumann, this<br>constant improvisation and infighting worked, at least in the short run,<br>because the energies unleashed more than offset the confusion caused<br>(p. 524). Only someone with a taste for institutional study and the patience<br>to parse the regime\u2019s countless decrees and formal regulations<br>could perceive, from afar and before the postwar testimony and memoirs<br>of numerous Nazi insiders along with tons of captured documents<br>confirmed the point, the essentially haphazard and impulsive nature of<br>much o f Nazi government.<br>Similarly, Neumann\u2019s leftism fostered his attentiveness to the range<br>o f techniques by which the Nazi regime maintained the loyalty of the<br>German populace. His attachment to the German working class and to<br>the positive aspects of German culture, backed by his awareness that<br>Hitler never received a majority of the vote in Germany before the<br>abolition of all other political parties, barred Neumann from seeing<br>Nazism as a manifestation of Germans\u2019 deepest longings. Hitler came<br>to power, Neumann believed, because of the machinations of elites and<br>the feckless leadership of the Nazi F\u00fchrer&#8217;s chief political rivals (pp.<br>31-34). Germans did his bidding thereafter for a combination of reasons<br>other than straightforward enthusiasm for his ideas. Some of these<br>reasons fall under the heading of seduction, for example, Nazism\u2019s skill<br>at \u201c surrounding every perfidy with the halo of idealism\u201d (p. 379) and<br>adroit use of \u201cmagical ceremonies\u201d (p. 439). Above all, Hitler\u2019s party<br>was diabolically adept at stealing the ideological clothes of Marxism (p.<br>193), especially as Nazi propaganda draped German expansionism in<br>the language of class warfare by depicting the Allies as plutocrats determined<br>to suppress the proletarian Axis powers (p. 187). Other forces<br>inducing subordination o f the people included corruption and terror.<br>On the one hand, the acceptance of property and jobs despoiled from<br>Jews and the involvement in their persecution, along with that of occupied<br>nations, created a sense of complicity that produced obedience.<br>On the other hand, the destruction of social groupings not permeated<br>by Nazism (atomization) and the omnipresent fear o f provoking a political<br>system characterized \u201cby the absence of any institutional limitations<br>upon . . . arbitrary power\u201d generated conformism (p. 524; see also<br>pp. 365, 400, and 552). Nowadays, when a \u201cvoluntarist turn\u201d in the<br>historiography of Nazi Germany is in vogue, underlining Germans\u2019<br>widespread and \u201cwilling\u201d participation in Nazi tyranny, Neumann\u2019s deXll<br>INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES<br>piction of the role of violence in the relationship between regime and<br>populace remains a useful corrective.<br>Behemoth&#8217;s analysis of the Nazi economy also benefited in key respects<br>from his legal and leftist cast of mind. Marxist interpretations of<br>fascism and Nazism treated them, above all, as \u201c imperialist\u201d movements,<br>seeing their expansionism as an expression of large-scale capitalism\u2019s<br>needs for markets and resources. If, as discussed below, the latter<br>part of this formula led Neumann astray, the former assuredly did not.<br>It concentrated his attention on war, conquest, and the demand for the<br>wherewithal to make them possible as not only the driving but also the<br>organizing principle of economic life in the Third Reich (p. 228). This<br>single-mindedness is what underlay the regime\u2019s pursuit of autarky, that<br>is, maximum feasible economic self-sufficiency, which Neumann<br>rightly recognized (without having access to Hitle r \u2019s secret remarks to<br>this effect) as a \u201c transitory\u201d measure (pp. 329-331). And that pursuit is<br>what set off the unplanned but inexorable interventionist spiral that was<br>the hallmark of Nazi economic policy and that increasingly \u201c regimented\u201d<br>private enterprises (p. 261), impelling them to seek greater<br>influence in Berlin, not least by satisfying its demands (pp. 314-315).<br>Conversely, the regime\u2019s endless appetite for output made the Reich<br>increasingly dependent on the largest, usually most efficient manufacturers,<br>which led to increasing concentration o f production in their<br>hands as contracts flowed their way and dispensable competitors were<br>shut down (pp. 267, 633). In this fashion, Neumann made clear, a process<br>of mutual cooptation characterized relations between big business<br>and the state in Nazi Germany, as each adapted to the other wherever<br>a common interest in maximizing output was present. In perceiving all<br>of this, Neumann anticipated two generations o f research and debate<br>about the economy o f Nazi Germany and laid bare many o f the reasons<br>why it has proved so resistant to clear-cut categorization as either capitalist<br>or state controlled.<br>Neumann\u2019s treatment of German society under Nazism carefully examines<br>assorted strata, institutions, and practices, but the level of descriptive<br>detail should not obscure the unconventional central<br>contentions on which his discussion rests, contentions that also reflect<br>his intellectual heritage. As a German Marxist, he simply would not and<br>could not believe that Nazism had cultural, rather than structural,<br>causes and impact. Unlike most British and French, and some American,<br>observers in the 1940s, he saw the Third Reich as imposed on<br>INTRODUCTION BY PETER HAYES xiii<br>Germans by powerful social structures (his conspiratorial quadrumvi<br>rate), not as a manifestation of deeper historical or cultural patterns. In<br>consequence he thought the elaborate apparatus of Nazi social policy<br>had not penetrated German society very deeply; certainly it had not<br>overcome class distinctions. Thus, as he confidently stated in the preface<br>to the first edition o f Behemoth, \u201ca complete military defeat will<br>uproot National Socialism from the mind of the German people\u201d (p.<br>xiii). So quick a change would occur, Neumann insisted, because \u201cthere<br>is no specific German trait responsible for aggression and imperialism<br>but that imperialism is inherent in the structure of the German monopolist<br>economy, the one-party system, the army, and the bureaucracy\u201d<br>(pp. 475-476). It followed logically that the reform of these retrograde<br>institutions through decartelization, denazification, demilitarization,<br>and democratization would transform Europe\u2019s most restless nationstate<br>into a normal and progressive one. Arguably, Neumann\u2019s prognosis<br>was remarkably astute, even though the degree of structural change<br>required turned out to be less than he thought necessary.<br>&#8230;.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by Peter Hayes, quoted from the 1942 edition I wonder whether this sounds familiar these days&#8230;.., Franc INTRODUCTIONby Peter HayesF r a n z N e u m a n n \u2019s Behemoth is one of the classics of modem politicalanalysis. Recognized upon publication during World War II as the firstthoroughly researched unmasking of what the subtitle promised\u2014thestructure and practice of Nazism\u2014the book has remained a stimulus toinquiry and debate to this day. T h e provocative and controversial centralargument, telegraphed by the choice of title, is that the Third Reichneither expressed a consistent ideology nor possessed a coherent structure.Like <a href=\"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/2022\/06\/28\/frank-neumann-behemoth-introduction\/\" class=\"more-link\">Read More<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":12,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[34,48],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-541","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-human-rights-civil-disobedience-courage-honesty","category-politics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/541","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/12"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=541"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/541\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":542,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/541\/revisions\/542"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=541"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=541"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/spblinux.de\/Staying-the-Course\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=541"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}