Hitler's Plan to Kidnap the Pope
By Dan Kurzman (Catalyst, June, 2007) As soon as Italian dictator Benito Mussolini was ousted from power on
July 25, 1943, Adolf Hitler began hatching a plan to kidnap Pope Pius
XII and plunder the Vatican. Clearly, the Fuehrer thought, the
"Jew-loving" pope had encouraged King Victor Emanuel II and some rival
fascist leaders to overthrow his Italian puppet.
The
following day Hitler called for an urgent meeting of his military
leaders. They must liberate Mussolini and return him to power, he cried.
And "we must occupy Rome" and "destroy the Vatican's power, capture the
pope, and say that we are protecting him." The pope might even have to
be killed.
About six
weeks later, on September 13, SS General Karl Wolff, the SS commander in
Italy, received a phone call from his boss, SS Chief Heinrich Himmler,
orchestrator of the Holocaust. Himmler, Wolff told me, bellowed that the
Fuehrer wanted to see him urgently.
The
general, who had previously served as Himmler's chief of staff,
suspected why. Three days earlier, on September 10, German troops had
marched into Rome, and German intelligence soon snatched Mussolini from
captivity. The Duce was now to regain power in Nazi-occupied northern
Italy, and Wolff would be sent to the capital in Fasano, near Salo,
primarily to make sure that Mussolini followed the Nazi line. But
Himmler had revealed to Wolff that Hitler had an additional secret
mission in mind for him.
According
to notes that Wolff told me he had taken during and after the meeting,
Hitler barked: "I want you and your troops to occupy Vatican City as
soon as possible, secure its files and art treasures, and take the pope
and the curia to the north," probably Liechtenstein.
Referring
to the threat of an Allied invasion of Italy, he added: "I do not want
the pope to fall into the hands of the Allies or to be under their
political pressure and influence."
Wolff
promised to do his best but was conflicted, feeling that such an
operation could alienate Italy and the entire Catholic world. Besides,
he worshipped power, and the pope, like Hitler, was one of the world's
most powerful leaders. The two men, although holding diametrically
contrary views, were to the calculating general like earthly gods.
Still, he felt, his mission might be useful—if he could sabotage it and
obtain a blessing from Pius for saving his life and the Church itself.
Wolff could perhaps also save his own life if Germany lost the war and
he was tried for his war crimes.
But Wolff,
who revered the SS, may have been prompted as well by other more sordid
details of the kidnap plot that were later discovered in a letter that
one Italian fascist leader wrote to another. It was headed Massacre of
Pius XII with the Entire Vatican.
According
to this message, which repeated what a high SS official (perhaps Wolff)
told the fascist writer, the purpose of the plot was to avenge "the
papal protest in favor of the Jews"— apparently referring to an expected
papal outcry when the Roman Jews were rounded up.
The plan
called for soldiers of the SS Florian Geyer Cavalry, disguised in
Italian uniforms, to invade the Vatican shielded by night, kill all
members of the curia, and take the pope prisoner. Then troops of the
Hermann Goering Panzer Division would surge into the Vatican to "rescue"
the pontiff and kill the disguised SS men, assuming they were Italian
assassins rather than SS compatriots. Thus, no witnesses.
If the pope
tried to escape (or was perceived as trying to), he, too, would be shot.
The world, like the panzer soldiers, would be led to believe that the
"Italians" were guilty.
Meanwhile,
Wolff described Hitler's order to Rudolf Rahn, the German ambassador to
Italy, who was to be transferred from Rome to Fasano as the emissary to
Mussolini's new republic. Rahn then joined in a conspiracy with Wolff
and several other like-minded German officials against the plot and went
to see Hitler. If the people learned that their pope had been abducted,
Rahn told the Fuehrer and his chief lieutenants, they might rise up
against the Germans.
Most of
Hitler's men seemed cool to an attack, fearing such a reaction. Even
Himmler, who had been meeting secretly with the German Resistance, was
uncertain; he had to choose between striking the Church, which he hated,
and seeking to improve his image in Allied eyes in case Germany lost the
war.
The only
one present who strongly supported an attack was Martin Bormann,
Hitler's ruthless secretary, who wanted to replace Christianity with a
new religion headed by the Fuehrer. Bormann, Rahn told me, turned
beet-red with anger as he, the ambassador, made his plea. But Hitler
trusted his secretary most, and it appeared that his advice would be
taken.
Meanwhile,
General Wolff revealed to the Vatican that Pius was in danger. The pope
loathed Hitler. And Hitler loathed him, viewing him as an obstacle to
his —and Bormann's—grandiose plan to capture the minds and souls of much
of mankind after a victorious war.
In 1939,
realizing what was at stake, Pius had actually joined in a conspiracy by
some German generals to overthrow Hitler and, if necessary, a high
Vatican official told me, to kill him. The risks, he said, to both the
pope personally and the Church were incalculable. But in the end the
plot fell through.
In 1943, as
the tension between the two men grew, Monsignor Domenica Tardini, the
Vatican's assistant secretary of state, told the cardinals to "keep a
suitcase ready because we might be deported at any time." The pope
himself called a meeting of cardinals to choose a possible successor in
case he was kidnapped. And friends of the pope prepared a plan for him
to flee to Spain if necessary, though he vowed to remain in the Vatican
unless he was carried out.
Ernst von
Weizsaecker, the German ambassador to the Vatican, another anti-Hitler
conspirator, tried to convince Pius that he should remain silent when
the Nazis rounded up the Jews of Rome. The Pope, until then, had felt
that if he spoke out strongly against the Jewish genocide, Hitler would
not only attack the Vatican but would drag out the hundreds of thousands
of Jews from the Vatican institutions in which they were hiding
throughout occupied Europe, as well as their Christian protectors.
But the
German diplomats were afraid that he would nevertheless speak out
publicly if the Roman Jews, his neighbors, were deported. If he did,
they argued, there was virtually no chance that Hitler would cancel his
kidnap plan. And on October 16, the Gestapo in Rome began rounding up
the Jews.
That rainy
morning, Princess Enza Pignatelli Aragona, a friend of Pius, was
awakened by a phone call from a friend, who informed her of the arrests.
The princess told me she rushed to the Vatican and, interrupting a papal
mass, blurted the news to the pope, crying, "Only you can stop them!"
"But they
promised me that they would not touch the Jews in Rome!" Pius exclaimed.
He then ordered Cardinal Luigi Maglione, his secretary of state, to
summon Ambassador Weizsaecker urgently and protest the action. As the
princess departed, the pope promised, "I'll do all I can."
When
Weizsaecker arrived for a meeting with Maglione, he said he would "try
to do something for these poor Jews." But, he asked, "what would the
Holy See do if these things were to continue?"
"The Holy
See would not want to be faced with the need to express its
disapproval," the cardinal answered …"If the Holy See were forced to
[protest], it would trust the consequences to Divine Providence." In
other words, he would speak out publicly if the roundup of Jews
continued.
Shaken, the
ambassador responded, "I think of the consequences that a protest by the
Holy See might precipitate."
Clearly,
the word "kidnap" was on both their minds.
Meanwhile,
other German diplomats—and, the Vatican would say, the pope's
nephew—urged an eminent priest, whom Berlin trusted, to write an urgent
note to a cooperative German commander in Italy that was to be wired to
Berlin echoing Cardinal Maglione's warning.
At the same
time, in Germany, General Wolff managed to convince Hitler that he would
have a hard time suppressing an uprising in Italy if the pope felt
forced to speak out and had to be dethroned. So, finally, Himmler
ordered that the roundup stop after only about 1,000 of the 8,000 Roman
Jews were picked up. And the pope, who had apparently been prepared to
publicly condemn the roundup, felt there was no longer a need to do so
now.
Several
months later, in May 1944, Wolff secretly met with Pius, who, having
learned of the general’s role in helping to sabotage the kidnap plot,
felt that the man must have some good in him, whatever his background.
Both men
agreed that the war would best end in an Allied-German alliance, without
Hitler, to halt the Soviet advance on Europe. And Wolff assured the pope
that he would try to frustrate any new plot against him.
Wolff was
overwhelmed when the pope then blessed him. He now had the full
confidence of both the Vicar of Christ and the Antichrist, an incredible
interworld feat. The general rose, clicked his heels together—and raised
his arm in the Nazi salute! The pope smiled forbearingly. His visitor
had simply confused his gods. But he would eventually betray one of
them—surrendering the entire German army in Italy, on his own, to the
Americans.
The kidnap
plot had failed, but it had helped to shape the policies and attitudes
of the pope, Hitler, and their subordinates during a most important
segment of World War II history.
Award-winning author Dan Kurzman is the only journalist who ever
interviewed General Karl Wolff. His newly released book, A Special
Mission: Hitler's Secret Plot to Seize the Vatican and Kidnap Pope Pius
XII, is available from Da Capo Press.
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