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To this day, Hitler is categorized as having had a right-wing extremist worldview. Now,
decades after its original publication, a book that challenges the classification of
Hitler’s political ideology is attracting growing interest and is available in a new
edition. Rainer Zitelmann’s highly acclaimed study Hitler. Selbstverständnis eines
Revolutionärs (in English: Hitler’s National Socialism https://hitlers-national-
socialism.com/) reveals that Hitler did not identify as either right- or left-wing, but
rather as an anti-capitalist revolutionary who had nothing but contempt for bourgeois
and conservative interests. He placed great emphasis on social issues and equal
opportunities and, as he got older, even expressed admiration for the Soviet planned
economy.
The book is a “longseller,” having sold successfully over many years. When it was
first published by Berg-Verlag 37 years ago, it primarily appealed to historians. In
recent years, it has garnered significant interest from an ever-wider readership
outside the specialist world – both at home and abroad. The book is Hitler.
Selbstverständnis eines Revolutionärs (in English: Hitler’s National Socialism) by
Rainer Zitelmann, an in-depth exploration of Adolf Hitler’s inner thoughts and beliefs.
Through meticulous analysis of Hitler’s speeches and writings, Zitelmann’s first
doctoral thesis, which earned him a doctorate in history in 1986, has established itself
as a definitive study on the worldview of the Nazi leader.
To date, several German-language editions of the work have been published. Interest
in the work is also growing internationally: the study has already been published in
English and has recently been released in Russian and Czech. Translations into
Polish, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian are currently in progress and will follow
soon.
A nuanced study with unexpected findings
Zitelmann’s book sets itself apart from other historians’ works in several respects.
Firstly, it distinguishes very carefully between the Hitler of the 1920s, the 1930s, and
the 1940s. Other authors tend to take a broad-brush approach to Hitler’s worldview
from 1919 onward, as if the leader of the NSDAP had a single coherent worldview
from the very beginning. This is not true. Rainer Zitelmann identifies several shifts
and developments in Hitler’s way of thinking, right up to the last years of his life.
Secondly, Zitelmann’s assessment of Adolf Hitler is sober and objective, never
passing judgement. For understandable reasons, many scholars still struggle to
maintain such a neutral, non-judgmental stance when evaluating one of the greatest
criminals in human history. However, the clear separation of factual analysis from
personal opinion enhances the academic rigor of the book and avoids falling into the
same trap as other Hitler biographers, many of whom draw hasty conclusions based
on moral judgements. Furthermore, Zitelmann succeeds at all times in clearly
detaching his study from his own (then left-wing) political convictions. (Today,
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Zitelmann is a member of Germany’s Free Democrat Party (FDP) and a supporter of
classical liberalism.)
Thirdly, the findings of the study are quite surprising: they contest the traditional
categorization of Adolf Hitler within the right-wing political spectrum. According to
Zitelmann, Hitler was both a right-wing and left-wing extremist. As the leader of the
NSDAP, he aimed to transcend this dichotomy, “not in the ‘middle’, however, but by a
new extreme in which both were sublated.” Moreover, Hitler considered himself a
revolutionary and held social democrats and communists in higher regard than
conservatives, the bourgeoisie, and even his fascist allies such as Benito Mussolini
and Francisco Franco. Initially on the left-wing of the political spectrum, Hitler
retained many of his convictions to the end.
Socialists and communists – the real opposing force to National Socialism?
According to the conventional assessment of Hitler as an extreme right-wing
politician, the left would have been the true political opposition to National Socialism.
At first glance, this viewpoint seems plausible, especially considering the widespread
persecution of socialists and communists in the Third Reich. “In balance ... it is
incontestable that the Communists and the Social Democrats had to bear the greater
sacrifices,” Zitelmann states. “While they were being tortured and murdered in the
concentration camps, the right-wing bourgeois and the capitalist forces were still
making good money in the Third Reich.”
Adolf Hitler publicly attacked “Jewish Bolshevism” on several occasions, with some
scholars identifying this animosity as the primary catalyst for his anti-Semitic beliefs.
Furthermore, and this is undisputed, there is a fundamental contradiction – of which
Hitler himself was well aware – between Hitler’s nationalism and the internationalism
of socialism.
For left-wing intellectuals like Max Horkheimer, the leading philosopher of the
Frankfurt School, it was therefore clear: National Socialism was fascism, in line with
the definition of fascism supplied by Georgi Dimitrov, General Secretary of the
Communist International, who described it “as the open terrorist dictatorship of the
most reactionary, most chauvinistic and most imperialist elements of finance capital.”
This deeply ideological thesis persists to this day, despite the fact that it has long
been debunked by historical research. Nonetheless, the left’s reputation as the true
antithesis to Hitlerism has often granted credibility to their analyses of National
Socialism. However, Zitelmann, himself a Maoist in his youth, arrives at a completely
different conclusion in his study. He concludes that Hitler had far more in common
with the left than is generally assumed.
What did Hitler really think?
Rainer Zitelmann’s analysis primarily draws on two of Hitler’s books – Mein Kampf
(1925) and his Second Book (1928), which was never published during his lifetime –
along with countless speeches, newspaper articles, and recordings of his
monologues and conversations.
As Zitelmann points out, Adolf Hitler’s public speeches should be read with caution.
Taking his words at face value can lead to contradictory conclusions, as the NSDAP
leader said different things depending on the occasion, time, and audience. Hitler
was also a skilled populist, tailoring his messages to different target groups and their
respective interests. It made a big difference whether he was speaking to farmers,
workers, or industrialists. “In this he was a master of demagogy and often succeeded
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in deceiving both his supporters and opponents about his real views and intentions,”
emphasizes Zitelmann.
Since Hitler believed that the masses were stupid, his speeches followed a simple
“black/white” and “good/bad” pattern. Statements made in private, however, prove
that his thinking on certain issues was far more nuanced. In his early speeches and
articles, as well as in his two books, Hitler expressed his long-term domestic and
foreign policy goals with astonishing candor, Zitelmann notes.
In order to distinguish between Hitler’s tactically motivated statements and those that
should be taken seriously and at face value, Zitelmann subjects them to three
“consistency tests.” He compares Hitler's public statements with those that were not
intended for the public, those made behind closed doors, recorded in minutes and
diaries of close associates. This analysis reveals significant disparities. For instance,
Hitler frequently criticized Mussolini and later the Spanish dictator Franco in private
conversations – something he never did to the same extent in public. At the same
time, Hitler displayed admiration for socialists and communists within his inner circle,
while expressing nothing but contempt for the bourgeois and conservative parties.
The business party DVP (German Peoples Party), was disparaged by Hitler as a
mere “milling about of ants,” with its members deemed to be “harmless, unimportant,
politically without strength. It only vegetates.” Hitler’s verdict on the liberal Democratic
Party was even more scathing. He called it “a stinking sore within the nation.” In
contrast, he was far more positive toward the Social Democratic Party (SPD): “The
racially most impeccable and best German people live together in Social
Democracy.” He valued the SPD as a revolutionary party and hoped before the First
World War that the Social Democrats in Austria would bring about a “weakening of
the Habsburg regime I hated so much.” According to Hitler’s own notes, the fact that
he turned away from the Social Democrats was due to the influence of the Jews
within the party.
Moreover, Zitelmann distinguishes between the statements made by Hitler at specific
times or to particular audiences, and those made consistently throughout his political
career to all audiences. The former were often tactically motivated, while the latter
can be taken to more closely reflect Hitler’s true convictions. For instance, in the late
1920s, Adolf Hitler appealed to rural voters with romanticized visions of agrarian life,
but this strategy was short-lived and clearly motivated by tactical considerations.
Thirdly, Zitelmann consider the coherence of Hitler’s statements, specifically whether
certain statements contradict the beliefs he expressed elsewhere. It is important to
note that there were consistent themes in Hitler’s ideology, serving as foundational
principles from which his other opinions can be derived. The most important of these
fundamental axioms was Hitler’s concept of the “eternal fight” which for him was
founded in social Darwinism: “I regard fighting as being the fate of all creatures.”
A revolutionary who unites nationalism and socialism
Zitelmann reconstructs and charts the evolution of Hitler’s world view with a large
number of sometimes surprising quotes. According to his analysis, the leader of the
NSDAP viewed himself as a revolutionary whose mission was to transform society.
Hitler believed that this transformation could only be achieved with a fighting elite, a
group he felt could only be found on the fringes of the political spectrum – among
communists and nationalists, rather than among passive “hangers-on” from the
bourgeois center. Hitler admired Communism because, as opposed to the bourgeois
forces, it “fanatically” advocated a worldview. He wanted to carry out his revolution
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with supporters from the communist and nationalist camp. In 1941, he recalled: “My
party at the time consisted of ninety percent of people from the left. I could only use
people who had fought.” (The percentage is likely to be an exaggeration.)
For Hitler, “nationalism” and “socialism” were identical: “Any truly national idea is
social in the final analysis, that means whoever is prepared to commit himself to his
nation so completely that he truly does not have any higher ideal than only the well-
being of this, his nation, … is a socialist.” And elsewhere: “The more fanatically
national we are, the more we must take the welfare of the national community to
heart, that means the more fanatically socialist we become.”
At the same time, Hitler “sharply rejected bourgeois nationalism because it identified
egoistic class and profit interests with the interests of the nation” – and Hitler wanted
to transcend these too. In Hitler’s own words: “socialism becomes nationalism,
nationalism socialism … We do not recognize pride of estate, just as little as pride of
class. We know only one pride, namely to be the servants of a people.” Within this
nation, Hitler wanted to bring about the equality sought by socialism: “Socialism can
only exist within the framework of my nation” because “there can only be approximate
equals within a national body in larger racial communities, but not outside of them.”
Hitler was always anti-capitalist, but only sporadically anti-Bolshevik
Contrary to long-held assumptions, social issues played a significant role in Hitler’s
thinking. He was deeply concerned with promoting equality of opportunities and
eliminating class and social distinctions. At the same time, Hitler was a staunch anti-
capitalist, a belief that permeated his thinking consistently, rather than being a mere
tactical maneuver as some Marxists and Social Democrats, for whom Hitler’s anti-
capitalist rhetoric posed a problem, suggested in the 1920s. As Zitelmann
demonstrates, anti-capitalism was a defining feature of Hitler’s thinking throughout.
There is no contradiction here between Hitler in public and Hitler in private. Anti-
capitalism was a constant thread, from the beginning of Hitler’s political career to the
very end.
The same cannot be said of Hitler’s attitude toward “Jewish Bolshevism.” According
to Zitelmann, Hitler believed in this ideology at the beginning of the 1920s; by the end
of the 1920s his conviction had begun to waver; and in the 1940s he merely paid lip
service to the thesis of Jewish Bolshevism, advocating it publicly without taking it
seriously.
The historian Thomas Weber arrives at a similar conclusion in his 2016 book, Wie
Adolf Hitler zum Nazi wurde: Vom unpolitischen Soldaten zum Autor von Mein
Kampf. According to Weber, Hitler did not see Bolshevism as a distinct threat, but
rather as a tool of Jewish capitalism.
Hitler only saw the Communists as rivals, yet the most dangerous opposition
came from the right
Thus, anyone who interprets Hitler’s anti-Bolshevik statements as evidence of a
reactionary, chauvinistic fascism is mistaken. The fact that Hitler persecuted the left
more than the ranks of the bourgeois “has nothing to do with Hitler’s preference for
the right, however – quite the opposite. He regarded the right-wing and bourgeois
forces as being cowardly, weak, without energy and incapable of any resistance,
whereas he assumed the left to have the brave, courageous, determined and
therefore dangerous forces.” Hitler considered National Socialism to be a
revolutionary movement in competition with the Communists. He therefore regarded
the communists as his only serious adversaries.
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This was possibly a mistaken assumption. As Zitelmann points out: “The only
effective opposition to Hitler, in actual fact, represented by conservative and in part
also monarchistic forces such as Ludwig Beck, Franz Halder, Hans Oster, Erwin von
Witzleben, Carl Friedrich Goerdeler, Johannes Popitz, Count Peter Yorck von
Wartenburg and Ulrich von Hassell, stood to his right.” The renowned journalist
Sebastian Haffner expressed a similar view in 1979: “The only opposition which could
really have become dangerous for Hitler came from the right,” he said. “From its
vantage, Hitler was on the left. This makes us stop and think. Hitler can certainly not
be so readily sorted into the extreme right of the political spectrum as many people
are in the habit of doing.”
On 24 February 1945, as he faced up to the total and irreversible failure of the Third
Reich, Hitler stated: “We liquidated the left-wing class fighters, but unfortunately we
forgot in the meantime to also launch the blow against the right. That is our great sin
of omission.” He was trying to find an explanation for his looming defeat. In fact, as
Rainer Zitelmann emphasizes, it was Hitler’s adherence to ideological beliefs that
prompted him not to act against the right-wing opponents he so despised, and not
mere oversight.
Hitler’s state needed “living space in the East”
Hitler’s economic policies were heavily influenced by the renowned economist
Thomas Robert Malthus, who suggested that population growth would outpace
agricultural production, leading to potential famine, social unrest, and inflation. Hitler
extended this theory to industrial production, predicting that demand for natural
resources would surpass supply. In contrast to Malthus, Hitler believed that the
solution to this problem lay in territorial expansion. He argued that if a state lacked
sufficient resources within its borders, it should acquire them from sparsely populated
neighboring states with abundant fertile land. This ideology fueled Hitler’s fixation on
acquiring “living space in the east.”
With this in mind, on November 23, 1939, Hitler declared to his commanders-in-chief:
“The increasing number of our people requires a larger living space. My objective is
to establish a rational balance between population size and living space. This is
where the struggle must commence. No nation can evade this challenge or else it
must yield and gradually die out … I have chosen a different path: adjusting living
space to accommodate the population. One realization is important: the state makes
sense only if it serves to preserve the essence of its people. In our case, we are
talking about 82 million people ... The eternal challenge is to align the number of
Germans with the available land.”
Incidentally, Malthus’ assumption was wrong. Growing populations can also be fed
through increases in productivity and free trade. The fact that small states such as
Switzerland and Singapore are today among the richest countries in the world speaks
for itself. But Hitler had no interest in free trade and had a pessimistic outlook on the
future of global trade. This sentiment was shared by many politicians of his era who,
like Hitler, advocated self-sufficiency, but without prioritizing the expansion of their
own territories.
Hitler’s attitude to private ownership of productive assets is somewhat more
complicated. Although he dispensed with comprehensive nationalizations, his policies
eroded the rights of owners by imposing strict state control over production and
investment. Hitler believed that private property was permissible only when it served
the “common good” rather than the self-interest of the entrepreneur. Owners were
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required to align their actions with the state’s objectives. In this way, everything
remained subordinate to the state.
Adolf Hitler’s admiration for the Soviet economy grew, particularly in the final years of
his life. He received reports from the Eastern Front highlighting the substantial
progress achieved as a result of Stalin’s industrialization efforts. To his inner circle,
Hitler explicitly praised the Soviet system of state planning and hinted that this should
become a component of the post-war economy – entirely in line with his national
socialism.
For a deeper insight into Hitler’s political and economic perspectives, Zitelmann’s
book is highly recommended. In the intervening years, more and more research
findings have been published, supporting and validating Zitelmann’s original
conclusions.