It was one of the most perplexing episodes of the
Second World War which, more than 70 years on, remains shrouded in mystery.
But
a new book claims to have solved the riddle of the flight to Britain in 1941 of
Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler’s deputy. Hess’s journey to Britain by fighter
aircraft to Scotland has traditionally been dismissed as the deranged solo
mission of a madman. But Peter Padfield, an historian, has uncovered evidence
he says shows that, Hess, the deputy Fuhrer, brought with him from Adolf
Hitler, a detailed peace treaty, under which the Reich would withdraw from
western Europe.
The
existence of such a document was revealed to him by an informant who claims
that he and other German speakers were called in by MI6 to translate the treaty
for Churchill.
The
figure, who is not named by Mr Padfield, was an academic who later worked at a
leading university. He has since died. Before his death, he passed on an
account of how the group were assembled at the BBC headquarters, in Portland
Place, London, to carry out the task.
The
academic said Hess had brought with him the proposed peace treaty, expressed in
numbered clauses and typed on paper from the German Chancellery. An English
translation was also included, but the British also wanted the original German
translated.
The
informant said the first two pages of the treaty detailed Hitler’s precise aims
in Soviet Union, followed by sections detailing how Britain could keep its
independence, Empire and armed services, and how the National Socialists would
withdraw from western Europe. The treaty proposed a state of “wohlwollende
Neutralitat” – rendered as “well wishing neutrality”, between Britain and
Germany, for the latter’s offensive against the Soviet. The informant even said
the date of the Hitler’s coming attack on the east was disclosed.
Mr
Padfield, who makes the claims in a new book, Hess, Hitler and Churchill, said:
“This was not a renegade plot. Hitler had sent Hess and he brought over a fully
developed peace treaty for Germany to evacuate all the occupied countries in
the West.”
Mr
Padfield, who has previously written a biography of Hess as well as ones of
Karl Dönitz and Heinrich Himmler, believes the treaty was suppressed at the
time, because it would have scuppered Churchill’s efforts to get the USA into
the war, destroyed his coalition of exiled European governments, and weakened
his position domestically, as it would have been seized on by what the author
believes was a sizeable “negotiated peace” faction in Britain at that time. At
the same time, since the mission had failed, it also suited Hitler to dismiss
Hess as a rogue agent.
There
is no mention of the treaty in any of the official archives which have since
been made public, but Mr Padfield believes this is because there has been an
ongoing cover-up to protect the reputations of powerful figures. The author
says that his informant broke off contact with him after approaching his former
masters in the security services.
Mr
Padfield has also assembled other evidence to support the existence of the
treaty and its contents – as well as the subsequent cover-up.
He
has established that two inventories were taken of items carried by Hess when
he was arrested after parachuting out of his aircraft, a Messerschmitt 110, on
the evening of May 10 1941, near Eaglesham, outside of Glasgow. Neither has
ever been released.
He
has found witness statements from a woman living near where Hess had landed,
which indicate that police were “ordered to search for a valuable document
which was missing”. The item, according to the witness, was found “over near
the wee burn in the park”.
Mr
Padfield also points out that Hess had used a specialist translator from the
German Foreign Ministry – even though he had the use of another, fluent English
speaker – when drawing up documents for his negotiations with the British,
before his flight. This suggests, Mr Padfield claims, that approved wording was
required for the documents.
Hess
was kept captive in Britain until the end of the war when he was returned to
Germany to stand trial at Nuremberg. He was sent to Spandau Prison where he
killed by British agents in 1987. The authorities said he had committed
suicide, although his son and some historians have claimed the British state
had him murdered to protect secrets.
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