WAS EDWARD
VIII REALLY A NAZI, AND HITLER'S WAR BUDDY? 'THE CROWN' SEASON 2 ADDRESSES
'VERGANGENHEIT'
BY EMILY
GAUDETTE ON 12/14/17 AT 5:22 PM
The Crown Season 2 finally tackles the dark
underbelly of Edward VIII's personality and political leanings after carefully
tip-toeing around the subject in Season 1. For those unfamiliar with Edward,
the Duke of Windsor (Alex Jennings), and his ties to Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party,
the disdain characters have toward him might seem a little harsh. However, when
learning the full extent of Edward's admiration and collusion with Hitler in
Episode 6, "Vergangenheit," viewers realize alongside Queen Elizabeth
(Claire Foy) that this joker needed to be booted from Britain.
The reveal
of Edward's alliance with Hitler plays out on The Crown as all the Netflix
drama's storylines do: the top secret information is doled out delicately, set
to the swell of violins, as a doe-eyed Foy shudders under its weight.
At first,
on The Crown, the Marburg Files are unearthed by the Allied forces, and though
Britain's government wants to stall on publishing them, the Americans push for
transparency. This leads to Queen Elizabeth being briefed on some of the
content regarding her uncle, the Duke of Windsor. She has a conversation with
him and decides, without the full story, that as the head of the church of
England, she has an ethical obligation to forgive him.
Of course,
things get messier when the Queen tells Tommy Lascelles (Pip Torrens) she's
willing to forgive Edward. He answers curtly through his mustache, "Before
you make your decision, ma'am, I believe you should be in full possession of
the facts." According to Lascelles, "The Duke of Windsor made his
loyalties clear as soon as he became King."
Lascelles
calls Edward's chosen court fellows known Nazis, and says the British
government stopped briefing Edward on matters of national security; they
believed he may have been involved in treasonous activities. When he abdicated
the throne, Edward took his wife to visit Hitler in Germany. Lascelles claims
the duke plotted to overthrow Elizabeth's father, reinstate himself as king and
give Hitler and the Nazis freedom to prowl Western Europe. Lascelles even
alludes to Edward having visited a concentration camp, though he adds, "Of
course, the full horrors were yet to come, but nonetheless, he visited."
Just when
it appears that Elizabeth cannot handle more bad news, Lascelles asks for
permission to continue. He alleges that Edward colluded further with the Nazis,
informing them that the Allied Forces had seized Hitler's military plans, which
"gave Germany time to change its plan" and eventually take control of
Paris. Finally, Lascelles adds, as the anxious-sounding score enters the frame,
Edward assured the Germans that Britain would fall to Nazi control as well, as
long as the bombing of his own citizens continued.
In response
to all this information about her uncle, Elizabeth denies him a job in British
government and exiles him and his wife from the country. The episode is
harrowing, of course, but does it align perfectly with the historical truth?
What we
know about Edward's trip to Germany, while it was under the rule of Adolf
Hitler and the Nazi Party, is that Hitler himself concluded that "the Duke
of Windsor was an advocate of the Nazi cause and could be of future use,"
according to The New York Times and Philip Ziegler's biography of Edward VIII.
According to Vanity Fair, the plan to reinstate Edward as a puppet king under
the Nazi regime was hatched three years after Edward and his wife visited
Hitler, as opposed to being concocted on that very trip (as it appears in The
Crown).
The
intercepted telegrams that suggested Edward was in on the plot surfaced in
1953, and Winston Churchill (with Dwight Eisenhower behind him) tried to cover
up the documents, alleging that they were "tendentious and
unreliable," according to The Guardian. We do see Churchill, in the
episode's cold open, tell the king and gathered dignitaries that the Marburg
Files (specifically the Windsor File incriminating Edward) cannot see the light
of day, but his reasoning for hiding them isn't explored at length.
Some
British historians, including Carolyn Harris, maintain Churchill's argument and
believe that Edward wasn't aware of the plot to make him King of England (under
Hitler). According to The BBC, Harris says Edward's motives in meeting Hitler
were "peaceful" and more about finding a place in government for
himself and his wife after abdicating the throne. The BBC also points out that Edward's
assistant, Sir Dudley Forwood, later said that the entire trip to Germany was
about making the Duchess of Windsor feel included in state affairs. According
to Forwood, Edward wanted his new, American bride to feel important, even if
she had to (figuratively) step over the bodies of Hitler's victims to do it.
Royal
biographer Andrew Morton, author of "17 Carnations: The Royals, the Nazis
and the Biggest Cover-Up in History," found a way to condemn Edward's
ignorance and suggest that he was indeed a Nazi sympathizer, though Britain
tried its best to keep that a secret. "[Edward] was certainly
sympathetic...even after the war he thought Hitler was a good fellow and that
he'd done a good job in Germany, and he was also anti-Semitic, before, during
and after the war," Morton wrote.
Though no
one can say for sure exactly why Edward brought his wife to meet Hitler, it's
safe to say he at least sympathized with some part of the Nazi regime, which
makes him, in the most literal sense of the term, a Nazi sympathizer.
Edward was
appointed governor of the Bahamas during the controversy surrounding his Nazi
ties, and after a stint there, he lived out the rest of his life in France. The
Crown does touch on Edward's time in the Bahamas, which Elizabeth informs him
was a tactic to keep him away from the war in the mainland, but it doesn't do
much with Edward's character beyond making Elizabeth confront him. If Edward
was involved with Hitler and the Nazis, which historical documents seem to
suggest, it feels especially hollow to remember that he simply lived out his
life of luxury in France, socially ostracized but not tried for treason.
The Crown
Season 2 is streaming on Netflix.
17 Carnations: The Royals, the Nazis, and the Biggest Cover-Up in History
by
Andrew Morton
“For fans of the
Netflix series The Crown, a meticulously researched historical tour
de force about the secret ties among Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston
Churchill, the Duke of Windsor, and Adolf Hitler before, during, and
after World War II--now in paperback.
Andrew Morton tells
the story of the feckless Edward VIII, later Duke of Windsor, his
American wife, Wallis Simpson, the bizarre wartime Nazi plot to make
him a puppet king after the invasion of Britain, and the attempted
cover-up by Churchill, General Eisenhower, and King George VI of the
duke's relations with Hitler. From the alleged affair between Simpson
and the German foreign minister to the discovery of top secret
correspondence about the man dubbed "the traitor king" and
the Nazi high command, this is a saga of intrigue, betrayal, and
deception suffused with a heady aroma of sex and suspicion.
For the first time,
Morton reveals the full story behind the cover-up of those damning
letters and diagrams: the daring heist ordered by King George VI, the
smooth duplicity of a Soviet spy as well as the bitter rows and
recriminations among the British and American diplomats, politicians,
and academics. Drawing on FBI documents, exclusive pictures, and
material from the German, Russian, and British royal archives, as
well as the personal correspondence of Churchill, Eisenhower, and the
Windsors themselves, 17 CARNATIONS is a dazzling historical drama,
full of adventure, intrigue, and startling revelations, written by a
master of the genre.”
Unmasked,
Edward the Nazi King of England: Princess Diana's biographer reveals
the Duke of Windsor's collusion with Hitler… and a plot to regain
his throne
Unique microfilm
revealed the innermost workings of the Nazi regime
Found
incriminating correspondence relating to former King of England
New book by Diana
biographer reveals the Duke of Windsor was willing to deal with
Hitler to win back his throne
Called Hitler a
'great man' and openly criticised Churchill the 'warmonger'
Was convinced
conflict could've been avoided if he stayed on the throne
The Nazi leader
would put the Duke back on the Throne as a puppet king
However, details
of the secret deal were ordered destroyed after the war
Winston
Churchill, Clement Attlee and American President Eisenhower among
those who attempted to cover up damning dossier
By Andrew Morton For
The Mail On Sunday
PUBLISHED: 22:07
GMT, 28 February 2015 | UPDATED: 19:50 GMT, 1 March 2015
It was the most
unlikely place to find a treasure trove: tucked inside a battered
metal canister covered in a tatty plastic raincoat and hidden in a
remote German estate, where it had been hastily buried in the dying
days of the Nazi regime.
The men who
discovered it in the weeks following the end of the war were dubbed
‘documents men’, Allied soldiers charged with finding the secrets
of Hitler’s Third Reich. Inside was unique microfilm that revealed
the innermost workings of the Nazi regime. Back in London, the haul
was triumphantly called pirates’ gold.
But within days,
they realised with horror that the thousands of files detailing every
part of the Nazi regime’s inner workings contained incriminating
correspondence relating to the former King of England, Edward VIII,
his wife – the divorced American Wallis Simpson, whom he married in
1937 – and their links to dictator Adolf Hitler.
Honoured guests:
Edward and Wallis depart Hitler’s mountain retreat in October 1937,
after meeting the Fuhrer
The book claims that
the Duke, center, was angered at being forced to abdicate the throne
in 1936 and was willing to work with Adolf Hitler, right, to regain
it
This was dynamite
that could explode beneath the Monarchy.
For the next 12
years, war leader Winston Churchill, post-war Prime Minister Clement
Attlee, American President Eisenhower and others in the political
elite attempted to destroy or cover up the damning Windsor dossier.
Even King George VI,
at loggerheads with his elder brother, the Duke of Windsor, since his
abdication in 1936, was ‘greatly agitated’.
Now my three years
of research have uncovered the extent of Edward’s Nazi sympathies
and the monumental efforts lasting more than a decade by the
Establishment on both sides to trace, conceal and destroy vital
documents that they feared could bring down the House of Windsor.
The jaw-dropping
contents of the file concerned the wartime activities of the Duke and
Duchess of Windsor, particularly their brief stay in Spain and
Portugal after the fall of France in 1940. The secret papers painted
an astonishing portrait of a man who was disaffected with his
position, disloyal to his family and unpatriotic towards his country.
The file revealed
that such was his disaffection that Churchill, his friend and
supporter, had threatened him with court martial unless he obeyed
military orders.
During this Iberian
sojourn, many of Edward’s unguarded utterances were secretly
recorded by German diplomats and pro-Fascist Spanish aristocrats who
sent the material in minute detail to Berlin, where Hitler and his
right-hand man, foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, pored over
the Royal runes.
The transcripts
reveal that Edward, who felt he had been ostracised and humiliated in
the wake of his abdication in 1936, was outspoken in his criticism of
Churchill and the war and was convinced that, if he had stayed on the
throne, conflict could have been avoided.
He was angered at
being forced to abdicate the throne in 1936 because he wanted to
marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson, left, and was willing to work
with Hitler, right
The Duke of Windsor
chats to Hitler’s propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels at a party in
Berlin in 1937
Only the continued
heavy bombing of British cities, he believed, would bring the United
Kingdom to the negotiating table. Taken at face value, the Duke was
speaking high treason, giving succour to the enemy when Britain faced
its darkest hour of the war. If the German files were to be believed,
here was a man who had no faith in his country’s leaders or his own
family. He was also a man who fully approved of Hitler and his
spurious plans for peace.
Worryingly, they
chimed with Washington’s intelligence. American ambassadors to
Spain and Portugal who met the couple at this time were so alarmed
that they sent messages to Washington reporting that the couple were
‘indiscreet and outspoken against the British government’.
Historian John Costello later described the Duke’s sentiments as
‘tantamount to treason’.
Such was the
dangerous importance of these unguarded private utterances that it
gave the Nazi high command complete faith in a sinister plot to
entice the Duke and Duchess to stay in Spain, where he would wait for
the Germans to invade and conquer his homeland. Then the man who
spent his honeymoon in Austria before the war and visited Germany in
October 1937 as Hitler’s honoured guest would return to Britain as
the Fuhrer’s puppet king.
The Nazis even had a
code name for the plot – Operation Willi – which was the
extraordinary climax to a bizarre entanglement between the Duke, the
Duchess and Hitler which began shortly after he was elected German
Chancellor in 1933.
Not only did Hitler
try to marry Edward, then Prince of Wales, to a young German
princess, but he then flooded London with a slew of Nazi supporting
aristocrats with orders to find out what their Royal cousins were
thinking. The stammering Duke of York, Edward’s brother and later
King George VI, was blunt about this blue-blooded Nazi courtship. ‘My
own family relations in Germany have been used to spy and get
particulars from other members of my family,’ he later observed.
Edward and Wallis welcomed them with open arms.
The couple,
pictured, married at a private ceremony on June 3, 1937 in France and
honeymooned in Germany
Edward, right,
celebrates his marriage to Wallis Simpson in France in June 1937 with
a cup of tea
The Duke of Windsor
marries Wallis Simpson in 1937
As serious doubts
began to be raised at home about Edward’s fitness to be King, he
was viewed inside the Third Reich as a friend and ally of the Nazi
regime.
Wallis Simpson came
under special scrutiny from both sides. Even Hitler was intrigued by
her relationship with the pompous but charming Von Ribbentrop, who
had singled her out for special attention when he was Nazi ambassador
in London in the 1930s.
It was said Von
Ribbentrop sent Wallis bouquets of flowers, ordered from society
florist Constance Spry, to her home. The Prince of Wales’s cousin,
the well-informed Duke of Württemberg stoked the rumour mill,
stating that the bouquets of 17 carnations (some say they were roses)
represented the number of occasions Wallis and Von Ribbentrop had
slept together.
Hitler is a great
man... Churchill's a warmonger
Such was the concern
about the proximity of Wallis and her then husband Ernest to the
future King that at the height of her clandestine affair with Edward
in 1935, Scotland Yard detectives were ordered to watch the couple
and delve into their private life.
It emerged that not
only was Ernest hoping for a high honour when the new King took the
throne, but his wife was two-timing him and Edward with a third man,
Ford car salesman Guy Trundle.
It was also
discovered that a neighbour in Wallis’s apartment block, Bryanston
Court in Central London, was Princess Stephanie von Hohenlohe – a
woman who had been monitored by the security services since 1928.
They considered her a political intriguer – possibly a Nazi spy,
but certainly a woman with direct access to Hitler himself. It was
not long before worried Establishment figures wondered if Princess
Stephanie and Wallis were working hand-in-glove, and Bryanston Court
was a nest of espionage and plotting.
Military leaders had
serious concerns about the Duke of Windsor, right, and his wife
Wallis Simpson, left
MRS Simpson had
already been described by Palace courtiers as a witch, a vampire and
a high-class blackmailer. Soon she was being spoken of as a Nazi spy.
Within weeks of Edward ascending the throne in January 1936, there
was considerable concern that the Government red boxes – which to
this day are ferried to the Palace containing intelligence reports,
policy briefings and important documents needing Royal approval or
signature – were being treated in a cavalier manner, their contents
accessible to prying eyes.
The pre-war Prime
Minister, Stanley Baldwin, learned that the French and Swiss
governments knew that the King was discussing everything with Mrs
Simpson. As she was believed to be ‘in the pocket of Ribbentrop’,
this was a matter of grave concern.
American ambassador
Robert Worth Bingham reported to President Roosevelt: ‘Many people
here suspect that Mrs Simpson is in German pay. I think this is
unlikely.’
All the while Hitler
was observing developments from afar, sitting in his private cinema
watching newsreels of the new young King, Edward VIII, and his
American mistress. At least it made a change from his usual diet of
Disney cartoons.
The King’s
possible reaction was on Hitler’s mind when he occupied the
Rhineland in March 1936 – effectively tearing up the Treaty of
Versailles. His calculation that Edward would give him tacit support
proved correct. That April the King sent Hitler a telegram wishing
him ‘happiness and welfare’ for his 47th birthday.
For all his scrutiny
of the youthful and glamorous new King, Hitler badly misjudged his
quarry. He felt Edward was a man of the world, a man of power and
ambition. And Von Ribbentrop had grossly overestimated Edward’s
influence over British politics, believing he was capable of
dictating foreign policy.
Despite concerns,
the Duke of Windsor made trips to the War Office, pictured, during
the conflict
So the Fuhrer was
astonished when, in December 1936, Edward gave up his empire for
Wallis, the twice-divorced American. Propaganda minister Joseph
Goebbels caustically observed: ‘He has made a complete fool of
himself… it was lacking in dignity and taste.’ Hitler believed
Edward had been ousted by Churchill, who had manoeuvred him into a
dubious marriage.
But even after the
abdication, the Nazis still kept faith, inviting him to visit the
Fatherland in October 1937.
During the 12-day
visit, Germany was bedecked with alternating Union Flags and
swastikas, and Wallis accepted curtsies from high and low-born alike.
She was even referred to as ‘Her Royal Highness’, a title King
George VI had pointedly denied her.
The Nazi leadership
was impressed, seeing in the Duke one of their own. Goebbels
described him as a ‘tender seedling of reason’. Nonetheless the
couple’s phones were tapped throughout their visit.
Controversially, the former King gave a Nazi salute when he met
Hitler and other leaders. He later confirmed he did salute Hitler
during their private 50-minute conversation at his mountain retreat
at Berchtesgaden, but insisted ‘it was a soldier’s salute’.
After taking tea, they bade each other a fond farewell, never to meet
again. As they drove away Hitler remarked to his interpreter: ‘The
Duchess would have made a good queen.’
This was
emphatically not the view of Queen Elizabeth, later the Queen Mother.
Once war was declared in September 1939 and Wallis and Edward paid a
short visit to London before being packed off to France, she could
barely contain her loathing. She wrote to Queen Mary – mother of
her husband George and Edward: ‘I trust she will soon return to
France and STAY THERE. I am sure she hates this dear country and
therefore she should not be here in wartime.’
Such was the routine
suspicion and hostility felt towards the couple that when Churchill,
as First Lord of the Admiralty, showed the Duke around the Secret
Room – where the exact position of the Royal Navy and Kriegsmarine
fleets were plotted – the Earl of Crawford, a government Minister,
warned: ‘He will blab and babble out state secrets without
realising the danger.’
Edward’s behaviour
did not inspire confidence. Though he schemed briefly to lead an
international peace movement – which many believed would only add
succour to the Nazi cause – he expended more effort playing golf
and agitating to have his French chef released from Army duty. And
there remains considerable circumstantial evidence that loose-lipped
table talk by the Duke while he was in Paris made its way back to
Berlin and influenced Hitler’s military strategy.
The Duke, pictured
here making his abdication speech, believed Britain could be bombed
to submission
Wallis’s friend,
playwright Clare Boothe Luce, recalled an evening in May 1940 when
the Windsors were playing cards in their Paris home. Luce was
listening to BBC radio news describing a Luftwaffe fighter attack on
coastal towns. When she remarked how sorry she felt for the
casualties, the Duchess looked up briefly from her cards and replied:
‘After what they did to me I can’t say I feel sorry for them –
a whole nation against one lone woman.’
The self-absorption
of Edward and Wallis meant it was entirely in character that, when
the Germans advanced south through France in 1940, he demanded that a
Royal Navy ship pick them up from Nice.
The former King was
bluntly told to drive to Spain, ostensibly a neutral country, and
take his chances.
Their four-car
convoy included a hired van just for the Royal luggage. They were
however motoring into a trap, one partially of their own making.
Within days of their arrival in Madrid, German diplomats were working
with their Spanish allies to ensure the former King remained in
Spain. The couple were offered a small fortune and a palace in Ronda
in southern Spain to sit out the war.
Edward was so
tempted by the offer that he telegraphed Churchill and asked if there
was any need for a prompt return to London. Churchill ordered that he
be moved to neighbouring Portugal.
According to German
diplomats, the Duke was seen as ‘the only Englishman with whom
Hitler would negotiate any peace terms, the logical director of
England’s destiny after the war’. Like Vidkun Quisling, the Nazi
appointee to rule Norway, and Marshal Petain in occupied France, the
Duke of Windsor was the perfect puppet.
Operation Willi was
treated with deadly seriousness by Hitler and Von Ribbentrop, the
Fuhrer ordering his top spymaster Walter Schellenberg to travel to
Lisbon to entice or if necessary kidnap the Windsors. Their every
move, gesture and sentiment was pored over, with German diplomats
looking for signs of encouragement.
The Duke twice
secretly contacted the Nazis via a Spanish diplomat, asking first if
they would protect his two rented houses in Paris and Cannes and
their contents. The captured microfilm revealed the potentially
explosive negotiations – the Germans agreed to his request. Even
the ambassador brother of Spanish dictator Franco was shocked by
Edward’s behaviour. ‘A prince does not ask favours of his
country’s enemies. To request the handing over of things he could
replace or dispense with is not correct.’
Moreover, the
couple’s defeatist attitude in private conversations greatly
concerned the British ambassador. ‘The Duke believed that Great
Britain faced a catastrophic military defeat which could only be
avoided through a peace settlement with Germany,’ observed
historian Michael Bloch.
The Duke even
stunned the American journalist Fulton Oestler by saying in an
interview during the war, when he had been appointed Governor of the
Bahamas: ‘It would be a tragic thing for the world if Hitler was
overthrown, Hitler is the right and logical leader of the German
people. Hitler is a very great man.’
Little wonder that a
draft letter written on Churchill’s behalf in 1940 informing the
prime ministers of the Dominions about the decision to appoint the
Duke Governor of the Bahamas focused on his ‘pro-Nazi inclinations’
and the fact that he may become a centre of intrigue.
Edward’s
disloyalty knew no boundaries. The Duke considered his younger
brother George ‘utterly stupid’, the Queen an intriguer and
Churchill a warmonger. At least that was how the Germans described
it. Such was the collapse in relations between Edward and the British
Government when he was in Portugal that the Duke believed he would be
arrested if he went to the British Embassy in Lisbon. Little wonder
that the Windsor File was so potentially incendiary.
When he was shown
the dossier after the war, Churchill immediately insisted that it be
destroyed lest it damage the standing of the Monarchy. So did the
King, the Prime Minister and Allied Supreme Commander Dwight
Eisenhower.
However several
copies had been made, some lodged with the Americans. American
academics, drafted in to the wartime State Department, warned that
they would be breaking the law if they destroyed the Windsor file.
Their views
prevailed. But it took another 12 years, after years of British
delaying tactics, for the file to be published.
The Duke of Windsor,
who was worried about the publication, largely escaped scot-free, the
media briefed to see him as an unwitting and innocent victim of
misguided Nazi intrigues.
Today, with the help
of new documents and letters never previously seen, we can see this
dark corner of British history in a more honest light – how
seriously the Windsors’ Nazi sympathies were taken at the time and
the deep alarm the postwar discovery of the Nazi files caused at the
highest levels.
The wrangling
between the British and their American allies about the Windsor File
was not without cost. It created a sour climate of suspicion and
distrust that endured, with the Americans perplexed that the British
would expend so much diplomatic and political capital on a man
without public position who was effectively exiled from his homeland.
It was seen in
Westminster as a small price to be paid to maintain the illusion of
Monarchy as the national crucible of honour, duty and loyalty.
17 Carnations by
Andrew Morton is published by Michael O’Mara, priced £20.00.
It seems to me that there were quite a few aristocratic Nazi sympathizers in the UK at the time . As the war progressed they learned to either be quiet or changed their mind .I think more than anything Edward was stupid ,vain and had an incredible sense of entitlement . He was a fool who fell for Hitlers manipulation . He didn't have the brains to make a good king and we are all lucky that this showed itself relatively early on .I think his great nephew Andrew is probably similarly short of grey matter and the humility to know .
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