“Admire” may not be quite the right word. But there’s no doubt that Stalin was fascinated by Hitler.
Immediately following the fall of Berlin and the end of WW2, Hitler’s butler Heinz Linge and his SS adjutant Otto Guensche, were brought to Moscow as captives by the NKVD. After two years of exhaustive interrogation, their recollections about Hitler were compiled into a secret book. Just one copy was printed, solely for Stalin’s use. Stalin wanted this book because he wanted to understand Hitler’s psychology.
Again, it may not add up to “admiration” for Hitler, but between the signing of the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact of 1939 and the Barbarossa invasion of 1941, Stalin gushed with enthusiasm for his new friends, the Nazis. Instances: -
• To please the anti-Semitic Nazis, the replacement of Litvinov (a Jew) by Molotov, in charge of Soviet Foreign Affairs.
• Stalin’s toast to honor Hitler at the formal dinner following the Pact’s signing: “I know how much the German nation loves its Führer. I should therefore like to drink to his health.”
• The secret NKVD order to Gulag concentration camp guards to stop calling their prisoners “fascists”.
• Handing over to the Gestapo German anti-Nazis who had sought asylum in Russia.
• Stalin’s congratulatory note to Hitler following the fall of Paris in 1940.
• Stalin’s insistence that war supplies from Russia to Germany be maximized: they increased by a factor of 8 times in the period 1938-40. Trotsky described Stalin as “Hitler’s Quartermaster”.
• Stalin’s refusal to believe copious intelligence reports, from many different sources, that Hitler was preparing to invade Russia in 1941.
Having acted so slavishly as Hitler’s accomplice, Stalin really could not believe that Hitler would be so crazy as to turn and attack him.
The relationship between Stalin and Hitler can be likened to the fable of the Frog who is persuaded to carry a Scorpion across a river. In midstream, the Scorpion breaks his promise, and stings the Frog. The Frog is amazed, because it means death for both of them. But the Frog should not have been amazed: it was just the nature of the Scorpion to sting.
2007-10-15 07:05:27
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answer #1
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answered by Gromm's Ghost 6
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There may have been some mutual admiration there, evidently Hitler admired Stalin for his firm hand. Maybe the fact that Stalin was a nom d'voyage that translates roughly as Steel, and Hitler had visions of Otto Von Bismark's "Blood and Iron".
Stalin had to depend on the groundwork laid by Lenin, and Hitler had to pretty much start from scratch to get to where he was by the time of the non-aggression pact in 1939, so he could have admired his technique.
It could have been like in the Sting, where Ray Walston is giving a report on the mark's vulnerability, and he tells them that he plays poker and "He cheats" "pretty good at it too" with a grin all across his face, a kind of admiration among thieves.
2007-10-14 22:13:41
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answer #2
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answered by william_byrnes2000 6
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Are you that stupid? Or you are you just a troll? Hitler and Stalin hate eachother. Read a history book.
2014-04-29 14:20:04
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-12-17 02:28:14
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-12-16 02:22:29
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I would doubt it.
While their regimes were similar in appearance they were on different sides of the fence.
The Nazis were an extremist right wing government and Stalin was part of an extremist left wing government. They did both hate the Jews though, and thought Poland was insignificant.
2007-10-14 20:12:49
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answer #6
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answered by nwyvre 3
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Boy...Elizabeth hit the nail on the head with that answer.
Stalin never trusted Hitler and vice versa. This was a war just waiting to happen.
2007-10-15 05:01:03
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answer #7
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answered by Quasimodo 7
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I don't think Josef Stalin admired anyone but himself.
2007-10-14 18:01:49
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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