Erich Raeder  
Admiral of the Third Reich
Author(s): Keith Bird
Published by Casemate
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781612006642
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781612006642 Price: INR 675.99
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Erich Raeder led the German navy from 1928 to 1943, a period that included the last turbulent years of the Weimar Republic, the rise of Hitler, and World War II. Yet until now, no full-length biography has been written about this extraordinary naval figure. While most historians have viewed Raeder as a product of the Wilhelmian era and heir to Admiral von Tirpitz’s sea power ideology, this work clearly demonstrates Raeder’s affinity with Hitler’s fascism. Keith Bird refutes Admiral Raeder’s own argument that his navy was nonpolitical and independent; Bird shows him to be a political activist and the architect of German naval policy. Drawing on archival resources and the rich scholarship of German naval history over the past five decades, Bird examines the evolution of Raeder’s concept of naval strategy and his attempts to achieve the political and military means necessary to attain the navy’s global naval ambitions. He describes the admiral as ultimately being defeated by the contradictions in his own policies as well as Hitler’s and by the realities of Germany’s resources and military necessities.

Here for the first time, Raeder’s strict leadership of the navy after 1928 and his relationship to Hitler and the National Socialist state are placed in the context of Raeder’s formative years as an Imperial naval officer, his World War I combat experience, and his critical role in the survival and development of the postwar Reichsmarine. The impact of Hitler’s influence on both the pace and the nature of naval rearmament and the conduct of the Kriegsmarine in war are also examined here, as are Raeder’s furtive attempts to influence Germany’s strategic thinking in favor of a maritime strategy.
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Erich Raeder led the German navy from 1928 to 1943, a period that included the last turbulent years of the Weimar Republic, the rise of Hitler, and World War II. Yet until now, no full-length biography has been written about this extraordinary naval figure. While most historians have viewed Raeder as a product of the Wilhelmian era and heir to Admiral von Tirpitz’s sea power ideology, this work clearly demonstrates Raeder’s affinity with Hitler’s fascism. Keith Bird refutes Admiral Raeder’s own argument that his navy was nonpolitical and independent; Bird shows him to be a political activist and the architect of German naval policy. Drawing on archival resources and the rich scholarship of German naval history over the past five decades, Bird examines the evolution of Raeder’s concept of naval strategy and his attempts to achieve the political and military means necessary to attain the navy’s global naval ambitions. He describes the admiral as ultimately being defeated by the contradictions in his own policies as well as Hitler’s and by the realities of Germany’s resources and military necessities.

Here for the first time, Raeder’s strict leadership of the navy after 1928 and his relationship to Hitler and the National Socialist state are placed in the context of Raeder’s formative years as an Imperial naval officer, his World War I combat experience, and his critical role in the survival and development of the postwar Reichsmarine. The impact of Hitler’s influence on both the pace and the nature of naval rearmament and the conduct of the Kriegsmarine in war are also examined here, as are Raeder’s furtive attempts to influence Germany’s strategic thinking in favor of a maritime strategy.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • About the Author
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1. The Genesis of an Admiral
  • 2. Raeder and the Politics of the Naval Command, 1918–1920
  • 3. Rebuilding the Navy: Raeder and the Reichsmarine, 1920–1928
  • 4. Chief of the Republican Navy, 1928–1933
  • 5. Raeder, Hitler, and the Nazi Party, 1928–1939
  • 6. Between Raeder and Hitler: Fleet Building and Strategy in the Third Reich, 1933–1939
  • 7. Once Again, World War
  • 8. Dreaming in Continents, 1940–1942
  • 9. Raeder and German Surface Operations: Fall 1940–December 1942
  • 10. The End of the Raeder Era
  • 11. Defending the Navy, 1943–1960
  • Postscript
  • Notes
  • A Note on Bibliography and Sources
  • Plate section
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