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			4 - A “Nazi” in the Academy
			
 The “Little Hitler” in the Academy In February 1937 the scientific 
			class nominated the mathematician Theodor Vahlen and the race 
			hygienist Eugen Fischer for election to the academy.319
 
			  
			Bieberbach and Planck were among the 
			sponsors of both proposals.320  
			  
			Although Fischer’s science, 
			anthropology, and eugenics, were more relevant to National Socialist 
			science policy, Vahlen had extremely impressive political 
			credentials for the Third Reich, even better than Philipp Lenard or 
			Johannes Stark. Vahlen was born in 1869, was a decorated veteran of 
			World War I, and had been a member of the NSDAP from the very 
			beginning. He served as regional leader for Pomerania and member of 
			parliament during the twenties, joined the Storm troopers in 1933, 
			and switched over to the SS in 1936. 
			Vahlen became full professor of mathematics at the University of 
			Greifswald before World War I and university rector in 1924. 
			Moreover, Vahlen was one of the few professors in the Weimar 
			Republic to embrace early and openly Hitler’s movement.
 
			  
			In 1924 Vahlen incited a crowd at a 
			rally against the republic and took down the Prussian and Reich 
			flags from the University flagpoles. The republican government 
			Immediately placed Vahlen on leave and eventually fired him without 
			a pension for political abuse of his function.  
			  
			Vahlen was offered a 
			professorship outside of Germany, at the Technical University in his 
			birthplace, Vienna.321 
			 
			Theodor Vahten, 1934. 
			(Courtesy of the 
			UHstein Bilderdienst.) 
			  
			Vahlen was also a respected, although not first-class, 
			mathematician. His main interests lay in the areas of ballistics and 
			nautical navigation. During World War I he had led an artillery 
			battery.  
			  
			Devastating criticism in 1905 from a 
			Jewish colleague not only pushed Vahlen into applied mathematics, 
			what he characterized as the natural, concrete way of thinking of 
			the “Aryan” race, but may have made him more anti-Semitic. As early 
			as 1923 Vahlen characterized mathematics as a mirror of the races.322 
			In 1934 Vahlen began his close collaboration with Ludwig Bieberbach 
			to propagate Deutsche Mathematik through a journal of the same name. 
			But Vahlen also tried to use more rational arguments in the service 
			of National Socialist science policy. For example, Vahlen was more 
			circumspect than the adherents of Deutsche Physik on the subject of 
			the theory of relativity and took care to use scientific arguments 
			when attacking Einstein’s work. In 1933 he responded to a proposal 
			that this theory and its supporters be forcibly eradicated by 
			insisting that to use the Education Ministry’s power in this matter 
			would mean regressing back to medieval methods. The National 
			Socialists would be more successful in the purification and 
			clarification of their spiritual life by placing the best men in the 
			best positions.323
 
			  
			Eventually Vahlen adopted the common 
			tactic of ascribing the theory of relativity to other “Aryan” 
			physicists, thereby accusing Einstein of plagiarism, but also making 
			the theory palatable to the National Socialist state.324 
			Vahlen gained power and influence over science policy in the Third 
			Reich mainly because he was a fascist, not because of his 
			mathematical prowess. In March 1933 Vahlen was appointed to the 
			University Division in REM. A little more than a year later he was 
			in charge. He was especially active in implementing the Law for the 
			Restoration of the Career Civil Service and decisively molded the 
			Ministry’s science policy towards the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, the 
			PAW, and the Research Foundation. On 1 January 1937 Vahlen was 
			relieved of his duties in the Ministry.325
 
			  
			As his subsequent conduct would show, 
			Vahlen was most probably eased out because he was no longer able to 
			fulfill his function. 
			In the spring of 1936 Vahlen tried to take over the Kaiser Wilhelm 
			Society through the back door. The mathematician sent an emissary to 
			Philipp Lenard and asked him to accept the presidency of the Society 
			as a figurehead. Vahlen would do all the work.326 Lenard 
			replied that Vahlen should take the job himself.327
 
 
			If he could have, he probably would 
			have, but the Society had influential allies within the National 
			Socialist state, Lenard could arguably have been pushed through in 
			the face of opposition, but not Vahlen. One of Vahlen’s successors 
			at REM hinted to Johannes Stark that Vahlen had been forced to give 
			up his position in the ministry.328 In any case, Stark 
			believed that Vahlen, who in his opinion had little understanding or 
			character, wanted to become president, not to further a National 
			Socialist revolution in science, but instead out of desire for 
			money.329 
			It was no coincidence that Vahlen was nominated for the PAW after 
			his efforts to manipulate the presidency of the Kaiser Wilhelm 
			Society had been thwarted. Vahlen’s entry into the academy was 
			coerced by his National Socialist allies. As usual, two competent 
			experts assessed his scientific career and justified his admission, 
			but made clear in subsequent publications that they in fact thought 
			little of the very work they had previously praised.330
 
			However, Vahlen’s election was complicated by the traditional method 
			of voting in the PAW. New members had to be nominated within a 
			class, elected by that class, and finally elected by the academy at 
			large. All these votes were taken by a special form of secret 
			ballot: each member would place either a black or white sphere in a 
			container.
 
			  
			If the candidate received a large enough 
			majority of white spheres, then he was elected. The spheres posed 
			problems for scientists who were intent on transforming the PAW into 
			a National Socialist institution, but at the same time wanted to 
			keep the appearance that the long-standing traditions of the academy 
			were still being respected. 
			When the vote on Fischer’s and Vahlen’s candidacy was held on 15 
			April, it ended with a shocking result. Although Fischer was elected 
			by a wide margin, Vahlen did not achieve the necessary majority.331 
			Such a defeat was almost unheard of at the PAW, and revealed how 
			problematic the black and white spheres could be: there was no way 
			to stop a member from professing support in public but casting the 
			black sphere in secret. For example, although Planck had been one of 
			the sponsors of Vahlen’s appointment, he could nevertheless have 
			secretly voted against him.
 
			However, Vahlen and his supporters were not finished and the 
			victory* of Vahlen’s opponents proved short-lived, if not 
			counterproductive. Bieberbach immediately called for the following 
			changes in how the PAW elected members: only the members of the 
			relevant class would vote; each member would be asked for his 
			opinion publicly, i.e., no more secret ballots; and the secretary 
			alone would then decide whether or not this name should be proposed 
			to the ministry.332
 
			  
			Less than a month after he made this 
			threat, Bieberbach simply started the process all over again. Vahlen 
			was proposed by several members of the scientific class,333 
			nominated by a wide margin,334 and on 24 June was finally 
			elected by a sufficient majority.335 
			It was also no coincidence that Vahlen retired from REM a few months 
			later, when he received the unusual honor of a personal letter of 
			congratulations from Hitler.336 Vahlen was still an 
			honorable long-standing National Socialist activist, but he had 
			gotten older and had noticeably slowed down. When the SS accepted 
			him in 1936, the SS Security Service pointedly requested that he not 
			be assigned to them.337
 
			  
			As far as the SS and REM were concerned, 
			the academy was a suitable rest home for an aging old fighter. In 
			contrast to the more powerful and independent Kaiser Wilhelm 
			Society, the PAW could not resist a takeover. 
			In October 1938 Minister Rust informed PAW that the statutes of the 
			academy would be changed corresponding to the fundamental ideology 
			of National Socialism. The leadership principle had to be 
			introduced, thereby installing a strict hierarchy and eliminating 
			any remaining democratic elements. The structure of the academy 
			leadership would be altered to include a president, vice president, 
			and two secretaries, one for each class. One of the two secretaries 
			would also handle the business of the entire academy and have the 
			title of General Secretary.
 
			The number of full members would be expanded, which was an effective 
			way to create a majority of National Socialist members while 
			retaining a sense of continuity with the old academy. REM not only 
			had to approve the election of all members, but the PAW had to 
			report Its nominees to REM before any public announcement was made.
 
			  
			Election to the academy was also no 
			longer permanent. REM could withdraw its approval of a given member 
			at any time.Full members could be only Reich citizens, i.e., “Aryans,” who lived 
			in Prussia,338 The Reich Citizenship Law had previously 
			redefined the Jews as “subjects” without the full rights of German 
			citizens.339
 
			  
			This subtle measure provided a very 
			effective mechanism for persecuting “non-Aryans.” Henceforth laws 
			and decrees needed merely to assign certain rights exclusively to 
			citizens in order to take them away from the Jewish subjects. 
			Finally, and as expected, the remaining “non-Aryan” full members had 
			to leave the academy. Furthermore, the PAW was supposed to persuade 
			these few Jewish members to resign quietly. The contrast between 
			these final purges and the earlier Einstein affair is stark.
 
			  
			Whereas in 1933 REM wanted to generate 
			publicity for getting rid of Einstein, the ministry now did not want 
			to draw attention to the fact that it had tolerated Jews in the PAW 
			for so long. However, the National Socialist leadership did make a 
			concession for the moment with regard to the foreign members: REM 
			would not require that external and corresponding members satisfy 
			the same requirements. Finally, REM gave PAW less than a month to 
			report back to Rust.340 
			The academy membership and leadership capitulated immediately. The 
			“non-Aryan” members were informed of Rust’s decree by unofficial and 
			confidential letters. The three scholars, Adolf Goldschmidt, Eduard 
			Norden, and Issai Schnur, responded by resigning from the PAW. When 
			the chairman reported this to the general meeting of the academy, he 
			requested and received permission on behalf of the academy to 
			express thanks to their former colleagues for their many years of 
			valuable work. The PAW immediately began altering the statutes as 
			ordered.341
 
			  
			On 14 October 1938 the academy reported 
			to REM that its Jewish members had left the PAW.342
			 
			  
			Thus the academy had purged itself of 
			its last Jewish members before the infamous pogrom dubbed the “Night 
			of Broken Glass” and the radical escalation of anti-Semitic terror 
			and anti-Jewish legislation that followed. 
			For the Jews in Germany, 1936 and 1937 were relatively calm years in 
			large part because the Third Reich wanted to present a good image 
			for the 1936 Olympic games.
 
			  
			But that changed dramatically in 1938. 
			In the night of 9 November 1938 a murderous pogrom was unleashed by 
			Minister of Propaganda Josef Goebbels, ostensibly in response to the 
			assassination of a German diplomat in Paris by a Polish Jew. 
			Throughout Germany, SS and SA (not in uniform) burned synagogues, 
			destroyed seven thousand businesses, killed 100 Jews, and 
			sadistically tortured thousands more. There were 20,000 Jewish men 
			arrested and sent to concentration camps. Most Germans were shocked 
			by the pogrom.  
			  
			Many people privately complained about 
			the vandalism, lawlessness, and destruction of property. However, 
			there was little or no opposition to the legal measures that 
			followed. The National Socialists used the “Night of Broken Glass” 
			as a cynical excuse for far-reaching decrees against the Jews, 
			thereby excluding them from the economy and removing most, if not 
			all, of their remaining freedom.343
 
			The academy also felt the change in 
			official policy towards Jews. Without warning in late November, REM 
			specified additional changes in the new statutes. Members who were 
			half-Jews, who had some Jewish ancestry, or who had Jewish wives had 
			to leave the academy as well. Indeed, they were to be handled 
			exactly as PAW had treated their full Jewish members. Rust 
			considered exceptions inappropriate. Thus the National Socialists 
			used an obvious yet effective tactic: no mention was made of the 
			intention to get rid of the “half-Jews” until the full Jews were 
			gone. Although the PAW was confronted with a series of escalating 
			demands, each was presented as if it was the last and final 
			concession and gave no hint of further measures to come. 
			Since only Reich citizens could become full members, in the future 
			no Jews would be elected. Furthermore, the same standards would of 
			course be used for the election of new corresponding or honorary 
			members. In particular, REM would reject the election of a foreign 
			member if he was a Jew in the sense of the Reich Citizenship Law.
 
			  
			Existing corresponding and honorary 
			Jewish members living In Germany would be asked to resign. If they 
			refused, thenRust would take advantage of the power given him by the new statutes 
			and dismiss them. Finally, REM would postpone further action on 
			Jewish foreign corresponding members until it had discussed the 
			matter with the German Foreign Office.
 
			Henceforth Rust would appoint the academy president, vice-president, 
			and two secretaries, although the PAW was free to make suggestions. 
			In order to rejuvenate the academy, full members over the age of 
			seventy could be relieved of their duties, making possible the 
			election of a younger full member.
 
			  
			This apparent reform was a transparent 
			method of silencing several recalcitrant older members and replacing 
			them with younger scholars more congenial to National Socialism. 
			Finally, REM asked the PAW to consider changing its name to “Berlin 
			Academy of Sciences.” As usual, the PAW had only a month to submit 
			the new statutes to Rust.344 
			The external pressure on the PAW to transform itself was 
			complemented by agitation by the National Socialist fifth column 
			within the academy. On 1 December Vahlen, Bieberbach, and three 
			other NSDAP members confronted the PAW leadership. These party 
			comrades told their colleagues in the PAW that they had heaved a 
			sigh of relief when REM demanded new statutes for the academy. 
			Indeed, Vahlen, Bieberbach, and the others had felt ashamed that the 
			academy had remained silent and not already voluntarily done what 
			was needed.
 
			  
			In other words, the academy should have 
			voluntarily transformed itself into a completely “Aryan,” National 
			Socialist institution rather than waiting for the Ministry to force 
			them to do so. 
			However, the five party comrades noted that a new epoch in the 
			history of the PAW was beginning. They disagreed fundamentally with 
			the argument made by many academy members that the PAW had to save 
			what could be saved. Bieberbach and Vahlen reminded their colleagues 
			that they all had been living since 1933 in a National Socialist 
			state, where everything was to be arranged according to fascist 
			principles, including science. It was not a matter of saving 
			something, they argued, rather of building something new and 
			National Socialist.
 
			Since party comrades were best suited for such work, Vahlen, 
			Bieberbach, and the others demanded that they be included in the 
			committee charged with changing the statutes,345 After a short 
			discussion and one substitution, the academy agreed.346
 
			  
			At the same meeting the PAW also 
			capitulated to the demand that all members with some Jewish ancestry 
			leave the academy. Acting chairman Planck read the REM decree 
			requiring the removal of the members who were “part-Jewish or had 
			part-Jewish wives” to the meeting. He then requested and received 
			the permission to thank these members on behalf of the academy for 
			their valuable contribution to the scientific work of the academy. 
			Implementation of the decree was entrusted to the statutes 
			commission, now dominated by Bieberbach and Vahlen.347
 
			  
			The academy did risk one pathetic 
			request: that REM not apply this policy as strictly as had been done 
			in the universities. Apparently some academy members still clung to 
			the delusion that the National Socialist state would grant 
			exceptions for Jewish members. Shortly before Christmas, the academy 
			learned that the PAW members who were part Jewish or had part-Jewish 
			wives, Max Sering, Otto Hintze, and corresponding members Felix 
			Jacoby and Hans Horst Meyer, had resigned.348 
			On 22 December, PAW officially submitted its new statutes, which 
			corresponded completely with the REM decree. However, the academy 
			cautiously declined the suggestion of renaming the academy because 
			the title “Prussian Academy of Sciences” was so well-known 
			internationally.349
 
			  
			The new statutes created the position of 
			academy president, and the Ministry of Education immediately named 
			Vahlen acting president.350 A few weeks later Bieberbach 
			was appointed acting secretary of the scientific class. When an 
			academy member complained that the four academy secretaries had 
			resigned their offices and cleared the way for Vahlen and Bieberbach 
			without informing the academy and thereby forestalling any 
			discussion, he was told that there had not been enough time.351
			 
			  
			This was either an excuse or the result 
			of the tactics skillfully employed by REM to seize control of the 
			PAW. 
			Thus the leadership principle was finally introduced to the academy 
			in 1938 on the eve of World War II, a few months after the brutal 
			pogrom of Germany’s Jews and in the same year when Hitler purged the 
			leadership of the armed forces. Conservative generals who had been 
			critical of Hitler’s foreign policy were forced to resign and 
			replaced by more pliable men. The traditional German elites lost 
			what little remaining autonomy they had within the National 
			Socialist state. Now nothing stood in the way of Hitler’s war.352
 
			When the scientific class met on 19 January 1939, acting secretary 
			Bieberbach announced that they had five free positions as 
			replacements for older members. First, Bieberbach pointedly noted 
			that he did not want to elect other relatively old scientists, 
			rather the academy should bring in suitable younger colleagues. Here 
			“suitable” had a specific meaning. Racial acceptability was now 
			taken for granted. These new appointments had to meet an especially 
			high standard with respect to political desirability, i.e., not 
			merely being politically harmless, rather having special political 
			qualifications or backing.
 
			  
			However, Bieberbach artfully passed the 
			buck. Neither he nor acting president Vahlen would make such a 
			decision; that would be up to the responsible political offices.
 
			The secretary went on in the January 
			meeting to develop what must have been a deceptively seductive 
			argument: of course, political qualifications would not replace 
			scientific performance. Bieberbach assured his colleagues both 
			personally and in the name of Vahlen that no one would be prepared 
			to support the election of a member who did not completely and 
			entirely fulfill the usual scientific requirements. In short, 
			Bieberbach and Vahlen wanted only to require especially high 
			political qualifications while maintaining the usual scientific 
			standards. 
			In fact, there was no shortage of qualified scientists who also met 
			these special political qualifications. Many of Germany’s best 
			scientists actively or passively supported National Socialist 
			policies.
 
			  
			Moreover, Bieberbach had been met with 
			understanding from the political officials when he had argued to 
			them that high scientific qualifications were an absolute 
			prerequisite of any election. Bieberbach had taken the liberty of 
			preparing a list of suitable names for new academy members, but 
			assured his colleagues that he was prepared to discard any name for 
			whom the representatives of the discipline had objections with 
			regard to the scientific qualifications. In contrast, the 
			mathematician did not offer to include any additional names in the 
			list. 
			Next Bieberbach brought up the case of the physical chemist Max 
			Volmer, yet he was not named specifically.353 Although 
			the academy had previously nominated him, representatives of the 
			National Socialist state had found his political conduct 
			unacceptable.354
 
			  
			Thus Bieberbach drove home the point 
			that he and Vahlen had not invented the high political standards for 
			new academy members. That had been done by National Socialist 
			officials in REM. What had happened with Volmer had been very 
			unpleasant, and the academy had to avoid such situations in the 
			future. Here Bieberbach and Vahlen also began another effective 
			tactic; telling their colleagues - whether true or not - that the 
			two of them had barely managed with great effort to keep the 
			political authorities from punishing the academy for some matter or, 
			even worse, from restricting the freedom of the PAW even further. 
			However, Bieberbach probably revealed his hypocrisy when he moved on 
			to the next order of business; electing the future National 
			Socialist Armaments Minister, Fritz Todt, as an honorary member of 
			the academy.
 
			  
			After arguing (rather implausibly) that 
			Todt’s scientific achievement matched that of the other honorary 
			members and his political and economic significance for the German 
			people far outweighed them, Bieberbach not only called upon his 
			colleagues to elect him, he broadly hinted that any black spheres 
			might cause problems for the academy. Todt was nominated with only a 
			few votes against him.355  
			  
			A week later the full academy nominated 
			Todt by a similar margin.356 
			However, the National Socialist leadership of the PAW had not yet 
			won over their colleagues. Vahlen closed an academy meeting in late 
			January with a personal and serious appeal to the members. They had 
			to put aside their personal resentments, jealousies, friendships or 
			antagonisms, he urged, in order to place the good of the whole above 
			that of the individual. The time had come for camaraderie and 
			support ci the acting leaders. Otherwise, Vahlen noted menacingly, 
			the academy might suffer heavy damage.357
 
			A few months later Vahlen turned his attention to the traditional 
			secret ballot.
 
			  
			The academy president noted that black 
			spheres had repeatedly been deposited without any member having 
			openly expressed his objections. This result is hardly surprising. 
			It had always been common for a candidate to receive a few black 
			spheres, and few members wanted to oppose openly a candidate backed 
			by the PAW leadership. The implication of Vahlen’s remarks was 
			clear. The academy members could continue to enjoy their traditional 
			secret ballots only if they always voted yes. The academy responded 
			by electing twenty-four members en masse.358 
			Vahlen’s increasingly dictatorial handling of the academy led to a 
			modest revolt. Three senior academy members, Planck, Hein-rich 
			Luders, and Hans Stille, criticized Vahlen’s actions in writing and 
			sent copies of their letter to all academy members. The acting 
			president reacted by accusing his critics of unfairly mistrusting 
			and trying to pressure him. Since Planck and his colleagues were 
			hardly in a position to threaten Vahlen, the mathematician’s 
			response suggests that he was either concerned about his scientific 
			reputation, or senility was causing him to lose his grip on reality.
 
			Vahlen brought up the matter of confidence before the entire PAW and 
			challenged anyone to discuss the supposed uneasiness among the 
			members which had led to mistrust of the acting president. Planck 
			now backed down and argued that the letter should not be seen as a 
			statement of mistrust, rather they had merely expressed their 
			concern for the future of the academy.
 
			  
			The physicist went on to say that, in 
			his opinion, the academy should have full confidence in Vahlen and 
			be thankful for his efforts on its behalf. Vahlen was pleased to 
			note that no one had expressed mistrust in him or the other academy 
			officers, and thanked them for their support.359 
			Vahlen’s acting presidency was due to run out on 15 June. When the 
			academy met that day, the members were informed that Rust had 
			accepted the new statutes with a few minor changes and that the PAW 
			now had to nominate a new president, vice-president, and two class 
			secretaries. Not surprisingly, Vahlen suggested that the academy 
			vote on the four offices as a bloc, that is, they should vote to 
			make the acting officials permanent. No doubt Vahlen hoped to avoid 
			a referendum on his personal popularity.
 
			But Planck stirred himself to raise a dissenting voice. In his 
			opinion the academy president should be someone with very good 
			connections to scientists in foreign countries and therefore could 
			well represent the academy outside of Germany. Planck nominated Hans 
			Stille as president. Another member supported Planck by noting that, 
			even according to the new statutes, the PAW had to vote on its 
			nominations for the four academy offices. Yet a third disagreed, and 
			a long discussion with many participants followed.
 
			Vahlen saw that an election was unavoidable, and called for a 
			two-stage secret ballot for PAW president using slips of paper. The 
			first round of voting determined the candidates and produced 
			twenty-three votes for Vahlen, twenty-five for Stille, one each for 
			Heymann and Planck, and five empty pieces of paper. The second 
			round, now between Vahlen and Stille, ended in a tie.360
 
			  
			The other three acting officers ran 
			unopposed and were elected. Vahlen laconically noted that he would 
			report these results to REM.361 Two weeks later Minister 
			Rust appointed the acting officers, including Vahlen, to their 
			permanent positions.362 The historian John L. Heilbron 
			has characterized Planck’s final challenge of Vahlen as a “moral 
			victory” because Planck and the academy did not go down without a 
			fight.363  
			  
			If so, it was one of the last such 
			victories in the history of the PAW under Hitler. 
			
 
 
			  
			International Relations
 
			The PAW and other academies of science 
			played an important role in the international commerce of science, 
			often organizing or sponsoring conferences, corresponding with 
			foreign institutions, and providing a forum where science policy on 
			an international scale could be debated and created.  
			  
			Before World War I, German science 
			dominated the international scientific community, German was the 
			main language of science, and the PAW played a decisive role in the 
			international politics of science. 
			When Germany lost World War I, the victorious allies imposed the 
			Treaty of Versailles, a peace settlement which forced Germany to 
			give up large amounts territory, to restrict its military, and to 
			pay large reparations to some of the victors. Many Germans 
			considered the treaty unfair and punitive, especially because of the 
			war guilt clause which forced Germany to accept all blame for the 
			war. Germany was now ostracized, and so was German science. In 1919 
			two new international scientific organizations, the International 
			Research Council and the International Academic Union for the 
			Humanities, were created in order to exclude Germany and Austria.
 
			Many Allied scientists argued that time would have to pass and 
			passions cool before they could reaccept their former enemies into 
			the international community of science. The Germans simply 
			considered it a boycott. This ostracism was fairly effective during 
			the first postwar years. Congresses were not held in Germany, the 
			German dominance of scientific journals was broken, and German was 
			even replaced slowly by English. But the boycott had never been 
			complete, and by 1925 it was beginning to crumble.
 
			  
			By the late twenties many scientists in 
			the United States and Europe wanted to reopen the channels of 
			scientific cooperation. However, when the former allies became 
			willing to accept the Germans, the latter began playing hard to get. 
			For the German scientists, the boycott was a moral issue. Their 
			pride had been wounded.
 
			  
			They tried to put up a united front and 
			condemned the few deserters like Einstein, scientists who accepted 
			personal invitations to attend conferences when Germans officially 
			were banned or at least unwelcome. When German foreign policy 
			changed in the course of the Weimar Republic from confrontation to 
			cooperation with the League of Nations and the German Foreign Office 
			turned to German scientists for assistance in reestablishing 
			international ties, the German scientific community refused to 
			cooperate.  
			  
			When Germany was invited to join the 
			International Research Council in 1926, the cartel of German 
			academies and Union of German Universities refused. It quickly 
			became obvious that they simply did not want to join this 
			organization, in large part because of the bitterness caused by the 
			boycott.364 
			Although the PAW refused to participate in international scientific 
			activities coordinated by the Council, it did take an active part in 
			National Socialist cultural policy. In late June 1937 REM asked the 
			academy if it was able and willing to name foreigners or Germans 
			living outside of Germany who were actively working for German 
			interests as honorary or corresponding members for the sake of 
			cultural and political considerations. The academy was willing, with 
			two conditions: the individual must fulfill the academy’s usual 
			scientific requirements and the relevant experts must be willing to 
			propose him.365
 
			  
			This was the same bargain that 
			Bieberbach had offered with respect to full membership. The PAW was 
			willing to bestow scientific honors for political reasons, so long 
			as they went to good scientists. 
			The National Socialist government closely monitored and controlled 
			the international activities of academy scientists. For example, in 
			the summer of 1938 REM informed PAW that all invitations to an 
			international medical congress in Strasbourg were to be turned down, 
			perhaps because Germany had been forced to return Alsace to France 
			as part of the peace settlement.366
 
			  
			In late October PAW received an 
			invitation to attend a congress on cancer research in Paris. Since 
			REM considered German participation undesirable, PAW turned down the 
			invitation with thanks.367 However, scientists were 
			welcome to get involved in politics, so long as it suited National 
			Socialist interests. Shortly after Germany had absorbed Austria and 
			took one of the first major steps towards World War II, Walther 
			Nernst suggested that the Berlin academy send a telegram of 
			greetings to the Vienna academy and welcome them home to the Reich. 
			His colleagues agreed.368 
			The successful German Lightning War (Blitzkrieg) radically changed 
			the quality of the PAW’s international relations. It was no longer a 
			matter of whether German academies would cooperate with 
			international organizations in Belgium and France, rather what the 
			conquering Germans would do with them and the rest of occupied 
			Europe. War also brought with it additional financial restrictions. 
			Vahlen announced that the academy finances were being reevaluated 
			and that until further notice the academy would not publish the work 
			of non-Germans.369
 
			  
			But exceptions were made. In April 
			Bieberbach successfully argued that the work of a Bulgarian 
			mathematician should be published because the work was of high 
			quality and it would be good for Germany’s cultural relations with 
			Bulgaria.370 
			The 1939 German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact on the eve of World War 
			II surprised and dismayed Germany’s neighbors. The two totalitarian 
			states set aside their deep ideological differences, agreed not to 
			attack each other, and in a secret clause of the treaty divided 
			Poland and the Baltic states between them. Hitler wanted the treaty 
			so that his back would be free when he attacked western Europe, even 
			though he intended to attack the Soviet Union eventually. Stalin 
			wanted more time to prepare for the confrontation with Germany, 
			because he in turn considered German aggression inevitable.
 
			This pact also caused a radical about-face in official cultural 
			policy. Cooperation between the PAW and Soviet institutions had 
			previously been tightly controlled. In December 1936 the Reich 
			Exchange Office in the Prussian State Library, which controlled and 
			coordinated all exchanges of publications with foreign institutions, 
			had ordered the PAW to provide them with a detailed list of every 
			exchange with the Soviet Union, and informed the academy that any 
			new exchanges would have to be approved in advance.371
 
			Three years later, cooperation with Soviet institutions was 
			positively encouraged. REM decreed on 30 November that scientific 
			relations with the Soviet Union would be renewed.372 By 
			the new year the PAW was able to report that the previous exchanges 
			of publications between the PAW and the Soviet scientific institutes 
			had been reinstated, along with many new requests for German 
			publications. The academy tried as best it could to fulfill the many 
			requests.373
 
			  
			The situation changed abruptly once 
			again in the summer of 1941, when Germany tore up its pact and 
			invaded the Soviet Union. 
			War had an immediate effect on the academy’s international 
			communication. Almost no exchanges remained with hostile countries. 
			Allies were another matter. In November 1940 two more requests for 
			publication exchanges from friendly countries were approved: a 
			geophysical institute in Italy and a mathematical institute in 
			Japan.374
 
			  
			Countries that had been conquered by 
			Germany offered special opportunities for international scientific 
			cooperation. REM instructed Bieberbach to support an “Analytical 
			Bulletin” being published by the “National Center for Scientific 
			Research and Documentation” in Paris. This bulletin provided brief 
			summaries of the contents of articles from scientific and technical 
			journals from around the world, and was designed to facilitate the 
			absorption of French industry by its German counterpart by 
			encouraging the French to collaborate with the Germans.375 
			The academy also took part directly in the plunder of European 
			science. In the summer of 1940 the Prussian State Library informed 
			the PAW that manuscripts and library material of German origin were 
			being returned, i.e., removed, from French and Belgian libraries. 
			Furthermore, the academy was encouraged to place orders for such 
			material.376
 
			  
			In fact the PAW did order materials from 
			libraries in occupied countries and thereby participated directly in 
			the German rape of Europe and fundamentally perverted the purpose of 
			an academy of sciences. This ruthless collaboration with National 
			Socialism was an ironic twist on the academy’s traditional fostering 
			of international cooperation in science through an exchange of 
			publications. 
			Perhaps the most consequential role played by the PAW in the 
			cultural exploitation of countries under German occupation came in 
			occupied Poland.377 In late August 1940 the PAW informed 
			the director of the university library in Berlin that there were 
			nineteen publications of the Krakow academy which the PAW did not 
			have. The PAW asked this official to arrange that these publications 
			be sent to the Berlin academy from the former Krakow academy, which 
			had been closed by German officials.378
 
			In November the PAW was contacted by the newly established State and 
			University Library in Posen, also in occupied Polish territory. The 
			librarian was trying to build up a German-language library, and 
			hoped to receive PAW publications.
 
			  
			Although the new Reich University of 
			Posen had only just been established and the librarian did not have 
			much German literature to offer in exchange, he did have large 
			collections of Polish literature which he would be willing to send 
			to Berlin. The PAW responded immediately that it would be pleased to 
			begin a publication exchange. It would send its usual publications 
			to Posen together with a list of one German and eleven Polish 
			publications which it would like in return.379 
			Sometimes this process was pushed by higher officials as part of the 
			German policy of assimilation. When Education Minister Rust visited 
			Posen, he pointedly noted that its library only had PAW publications 
			through World War I. REM instructed the academy to send the missing 
			publications to Posen.380 Shortly after the new year the 
			Posen library sent eighteen volumes to the PAW.381
 
			  
			A few weeks later, the German occupation 
			government in Poland sent PAW volumes from the archives of the 
			former Polish Academy of Sciences.382 The PAW also elected the 
			rector of the University in Posen a corresponding member of the 
			academy in 1941.383 
			The Polish scientists and scholars had little opportunity to protest 
			the plunder of their country, but the special National Socialist 
			brand of international scientific cooperation was not always passed 
			over in silence.
 
			  
			Early in December 1943 the PAW and the 
			other German academies received a polite yet accusatory letter from 
			the Swedish Academy of Sciences. Sweden was one of the few neutral 
			countries during World War II. The German authorities in Norway had 
			responded to student protests by closing the University of Oslo, 
			arresting the male Norwegian students along with many teachers, and 
			announcing that they would be deported to Germany for forced labor.
			 
			  
			How, the Swedes asked, did the PAW 
			justify this?384 The PAW’s first reaction was to do 
			nothing before first checking with the Foreign Office.385 
			REM forbade both official and personal responses by any academy 
			member.386  
			  
			One scholar nevertheless disobeyed the 
			ministry and answered his Swedish colleagues in the spring of 1944 
			by reciting a list of destruction done to German culture by Allied 
			bombs.387
 
			  
 
			  
			Vahlen’s Presidency
 
			Vahlen and Bieberbach stuck to their 
			promise and only elected competent scientists as full members, some 
			of whom were National Socialists, some who were politically useful, 
			and others who were politically harmless. In June 1939 Otto Hahn and 
			two colleagues proposed Adolf Thiessen for full membership in the 
			academy.388  
			  
			Thiessen was a capable scientist and 
			long-standing National Socialist who had taken over the old 
			institute of the Jewish physical-chemist Fritz Haber, after the 
			institute had been purged of its “non-Aryan” scientists and Haber 
			had been driven into exile.389 
			In 1943, Werner Heisenberg and Otmar Freiherr von Ver-schuer were 
			elected unanimously to the academy.390 Verschuer 
			certainly fit the image of a “Nazi” scientist. He was the mentor of 
			Josef Mengele and carried out research with the remains of 
			concentration camp victims which his former student sent him from 
			Auschwitz.
 
			  
			However, Heisenberg’s election 
			demonstrates that another type of scientist was also acceptable to 
			the academy: an apolitical scientist who was nevertheless considered 
			valuable by the National Socialist state. In a modest act of 
			defiance the scientific class voted in early March 1941 to nominate 
			Volmer once again as a member.391 
			  
			However, the academy leadership simply 
			ignored them. 
			By 1939 the PAW was completely integrated into the National 
			Socialist state. In late February the PAW finally eliminated voting 
			by spheres in favor of what was cynically described as free and open 
			voting.392
 
			  
			REM and the PAW also continued their 
			relentless expulsion of “non-Aryan” members. In the summer of 1939 
			Ernst Heymann informed the academy that the Jewish scientist Richard 
			Willstatter had been expelled as a corresponding member of the PAW. 
			Willstatter had merely been informed that, according to the new 
			statutes he was no longer a corresponding member because he did not 
			fulfill the requirements for the Reich citizenship. No member of the 
			academy raised any objections.393 
			In November 1941 REM informed the academy that the Italian 
			corresponding member Tullio Levi-Civita was a full Jew. Vahlen noted 
			that he must now be removed from the list of corresponding members, 
			and the academy moved to do so. The physicist and corresponding 
			member James Franck was supposed to be a full Jew, but since he was 
			in the United States, REM decreed that a decision in his case would 
			have to wait until after the war.394
 
			  
			However, once Germany was at war with 
			the United States the situation changed. In November 1942 both 
			Franck and Max Bom as “non-Aryans” were removed from the list of 
			corresponding members.395 
			Although in a sense Vahlen had now reached the zenith of his power 
			within the PAW, the start of World War II revealed that his mental 
			facilities were deteriorating rapidly. In October he requested that 
			REM transfer him to a position where he could actively contribute to 
			the war effort. In November 1939, the septuagenarian mathematician 
			informed the personnel office of the SS that he was available if the 
			personal protection of the Fuhrer needed strengthening. A few months 
			later he asked the same office for permission to wear a field gray 
			uniform and for assignment to the front. But Vahlen’s superiors 
			kindly turned down his offers.396
 
			In early 1943 Vahlen, who was clearly steadily losing his grip on 
			reality, submitted his resignation to Rust in order to go to war. 
			The matter was passed onto the SS, where Vahlen’s colleagues tried 
			to say no gently.397
 
			  
			The Ahnenerbe, the SS scientific 
			research branch, thought that Vahlen’s offer was a nice gesture, 
			knowing full well that Vahlen’s faculties were not what they used to 
			be. Of course, no one wanted to hurt Vahlen’s feelings. Perhaps SS 
			leader Heinrich Himmler could himself tactfully decline the offer.398 
			In fact, on 25 March, Himmler told Vahlen that an old fighter like 
			himself had nothing to prove. Instead, he should devote himself to 
			his scientific research.399 
			Vahlen’s memory began failing him so often that the academy business 
			suffered, creating difficulties and embarrassing situations. The 
			mathematician was finally relieved of his duties as academy 
			president in the summer of 1943. But Himmler did promote Vahlen 
			within the SS 400 and early in 1944 the SS finally gave 
			Vahlen permission to wear a field gray uniform.401 Vahlen 
			tried one last time in February 1944 to join the Waffen-SS, the 
			military arm of the SS. Once again, Vahlen was gently advised to 
			devote himself to science.402
 
			The war finally came home to the academy in the summer of 1941. The 
			president began one meeting by honoring two former scientific 
			employees of the PAW who had fallen on the eastern front.403
 
			  
			In 1943 Allied bombing raids became 
			common over Germany, causing death and destruction and revealing the 
			impotence of Goring’s air force. However, the raids did not have the 
			hoped-for effect on morale. The more the Germans suffered, the more 
			they stuck together and fought their enemies. Goebbels’ propaganda 
			now emphasized the “total war” and the atrocities which the Soviets 
			would commit if they made it to Germany.In late November several academy members lost everything they owned 
			to Allied bombs. 404
 
			  
			By mid-December, the bombing had made 
			further printing of the academy publications impossible for the 
			duration of the war.405 The first meeting of the academy 
			in 1944 was held in the air raid shelter because the usual meeting 
			room had been damaged.406 The air raids and small number 
			of members present ended the meeting on 9 March after just ten 
			minutes. Vahlen lost his apartment to an Allied air raid and moved 
			to Vienna, where he was immediately given a honorary professorship 
			by the Vienna Technical University.408 In July 1944 Rust 
			told the PAW that no new president would be named until after the 
			war.409  
			  
			The last minutes of an academy meeting 
			in the Third Reich noted merely that the meeting had to be 
			postponed.410
 
			  
 
			  
			  
			Postwar
			 
			After the fall of the Third Reich, what 
			was left of the PAW scrambled to accommodate itself to the new 
			political realities. The academy began meeting again In June 1945, 
			even though many members were no longer in Berlin and the city was 
			occupied by Allied and in particular Soviet forces.  
			  
			The acting secretary, Hermann Grapow, 
			told his colleagues that the local mayor was very interested in 
			cultural matters and had offered to help find a permanent meeting 
			place for them - they were now meeting in the local city hall. 
			However, a different academy member, Eduard Spranger, objected to 
			the apologetic tone of the draft report which was to be submitted to 
			the authorities. In his opinion, there was no reason for the academy 
			to begin apologizing for its former conduct.411  
			  
			He was soon proved wrong. 
			In mid-June PAW member Johannes Stroux met with the local magistrate 
			about the financing of the academy, new statues, and office space. 
			The magistrate asserted its veto power over the election of full 
			members. When the academy subsequently discussed how the elections 
			should take place, one member proposed voting by acclamation, a 
			suggestion perhaps unconsciously reminiscent of the Third Reich, The 
			rest of the members agreed that a secret vote using slips of paper 
			was preferable.412
 
			The PAW now took great care to ingratiate itself with the new 
			rulers. When a local politician suggested that the academy start 
			public lectures as a way to attract attention, the PAW responded by 
			proposing a lecture on the connections between the writer Jacob 
			Grimm and Russian scholars.413 The academy also sent a 
			congratulatory letter care of the Soviet occupation government to 
			the Leningrad Academy on their 220th anniversary.414
 
			  
			The Germans’ concern about the future of 
			their academy was justified. In a subsequent meeting with German 
			officials employed by the Soviet occupation government, the academy 
			representative was told that the government was not certain that the 
			PAW still existed, rather it might have to be refounded. In other 
			words, all of the existing members would in effect be dismissed and 
			the academy rebuilt from scratch. This barely veiled threat was 
			followed by the pointed remark that the PAW still employed former 
			members of both the NSDAP and SA.415 
			At the next meeting, in July 1945, the academy discussed what to do 
			about their colleagues who had been members of the NSDAP, forcing 
			five former party members to leave the room. Many more employees of 
			the academy had been in the party, and the remaining PAW members 
			decided to dismiss four employees and try to keep two others.
 
			  
			Since the city government refused to 
			allow the academy to impose one policy on its employees but another 
			on its members, the PAW could not delay dealing with its politically 
			tainted members. The officials responsible for the PAW gave its 
			acting president two lists, one of eight members who had to go, and 
			another with the names of eighteen individuals who had to be 
			examined more closely. The members present accepted the two lists 
			and the proposed measures unanimously.416  
			  
			The list of eight included Vahlen, 
			Bieberbach, Konrad Meyer, Peter Adolf Thiessen, Franz Koch, Carl 
			August Emge, Friedrich Stieve, and Theodor Mayer.417 
			The PAW had to face criticism for its past under National Socialism 
			and pressure to conform to the wishes of the Soviet Occupation 
			Government. In August the shadow of the Einstein affair reemerged. 
			The magistrate ordered the PAW to use its records to prepare a 
			report on the entire matter.418 The PAW was also informed 
			that its library, like all libraries, would be purged of undesirable 
			political writings.419
 
			  
			In December the PAW began to transform 
			itself once again, this time according to the model of the Soviet 
			Academy of Sciences by incorporating scientific institutes. One of 
			the first to be considered was a new institute for Slavic languages, 
			but the PAW also began to swallow up various scientific state and 
			KWG institutes in and around Berlin that had been orphaned by the 
			division of Germany.420  
			  
			Thus the introduction of the Soviet 
			model had both ideological and pragmatic justification. 
			Members also protested in vain against the dismissal of former NSDAP 
			members and the grave dangers this policy had for the academy, the 
			university, and indeed for the cultural life of Berlin in general. 
			The result would be the emigration and persecution of respected 
			scholars on one hand, and the obstruction and alienation of new 
			forces on the other.421
 
			  
			It is worth noting that even though this 
			protest was futile, it went far beyond any criticism made by the 
			academy of National Socialist policy in the early thirties. 
			Shortly after Christmas 1945 the PAW as such ceased to exist. After 
			a sometimes bitter discussion the academy bowed to pressure to 
			change its name - something not even the National Socialists had 
			insisted upon - and remove the name Prussian. It was now the “Berlin 
			Academy of Sciences.”422
 
			  
			By 1947 it had been renamed the “German 
			Academy of Sciences” and included over nineteen institutes and other 
			scientific institutions.423 This academy in turn became 
			the “Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic” in 1972 
			and lasted in this form until German reunification in 1990, when the 
			institutes were either disbanded or reconnected to some other 
			scientific institution. What remained has returned to the original 
			model for an academy of sciences, now renamed the 
			“Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences.” 
			On 5 October 1946, something else happened that was ironically 
			reminiscent of the Third Reich. By order of the Soviet occupation 
			government, all institutions under its control, including the 
			academy, gathered together at a rally celebrating the judgment 
			reached at the Nuremberg Trials. With few exceptions, the surviving 
			National Socialist leadership was sentenced to death for crimes 
			against humanity. The academy was ordered to ensure that all members 
			and employees attended, and that they arrived in a group.424
 
			  
			There were certainly grave differences 
			between the Third Reich, now condemned for the crime of genocide, 
			and the Stalinist society the Soviets imposed on eastern Germany. 
			But the coerced public ceremony recognizing the judgment from 
			Nuremberg is nevertheless reminiscent of the mandatory collective 
			listening to Hitler’s speeches during the Third Reich and 
			illustrates the special tragedy of scientists and other Germans in 
			the Soviet occupation zone and the subsequent German Democratic 
			Republic. They traded a murderous racist dictatorship for a milder, 
			socialist one. 
			The National Socialist scientist and PAW dictator Theodor Vahlen 
			barely outlived the Third Reich. According to his widow, the 
			seventy-six-year-old Vahlen died on 16 November 1945 in a Prague 
			prison.425
 
			  
			Ludwig Bieberbach, perhaps the other 
			most prominent National Socialist in the academy, was one of the 
			very few professors who never regained a teaching position in 
			Germany. However, the postwar stigma attached to Bieberbach was 
			mainly caused by his infamous Deutsche Mathematik, not because of 
			his role in the subversion of the PAW. 
			The concessions Max Planck made during the Einstein affair were not 
			forgotten, but have usually been softened by the emphasis placed 
			both on the statement Planck made before the academy honoring 
			Einstein’s scientific achievement, and on the great personal 
			suffering Planck had to endure under Hitler. The final and 
			ultimately futile fight Planck put up for the independence of the 
			academy demonstrates that he saw clearly what National Socialism was 
			doing to the academy, to science, and to Germany.
 
			Perhaps the strongest image associated with the PAW under Hitler is 
			Max von Laue’s barring the door to the “Nazi” physicist Johannes 
			Stark. Von Laue himself published an account of the affair in 1947 
			as a response to a self-serving article from Stark. Indeed von Laue 
			is regularly portrayed as one of the few German scientists who 
			refused any and all compromise with the National Socialists, and the 
			Stark affair is presented as proof.
 
			  
			The history of the academy under Hitler 
			demonstrates that his conduct in fact was more ambiguous and 
			ambivalent, but nevertheless still laudable. 
			The PAW was important enough to be brought into line with the rest 
			of German society during the Third Reich, but the slow pace of the 
			transformation of the academy and the subsequent imposition of 
			Vahlen as PAW president also reveal that the academy was really not 
			that important to the National Socialist state. Otherwise its Jewish 
			members would have been thrown out immediately, and it would hardly 
			have been used as a rest home for senile party comrades.
 
			  
			The PAW could delay its purge of 
			“non-Aryan” members because it was relatively unimportant for 
			National Socialist science policy, not because of the personal or 
			professional courage of its members. 
			The academy certainly did not actively oppose or resist the new 
			regime, but that does not necessarily earn it the “Nazi” label.
 
			  
			On one hand, the academy began 
			immediately to make concessions to Germany’s new National Socialist 
			rulers. On the other hand, with few exceptions the PAW continued 
			throughout the Third Reich to have outstanding scientists and 
			scholars as its members who produced high-quality science and 
			scholarship. The members of the PAW willingly and knowingly 
			cooperated with National Socialist policies while simultaneously 
			trying to maximize their shrinking professional and personal 
			independence. 
			Bieberbach’s and Vahlen’s argument, that only good scientists would 
			be chosen for membership, even if they also had to fulfill political 
			criteria as well, was no doubt both seductive and effective. Any 
			member who wished to believe that the academy was apolitical and 
			that scientific qualifications were all that mattered could accept 
			this perverse type of affirmative action for professionally 
			competent National Socialist scientists and their fellow travelers.
 
			What such a scientist could not do, however, was to dwell for too 
			long on those scientists who had been driven out of the academy or 
			who were denied admission. As the political scientist Joseph Haberer 
			recognized, compliance and cooperation did not protect the Academy, 
			rather helped transform it into a willing tool of National 
			Socialism. Furthermore, in the long run, the unwillingness to 
			protect colleagues and the concessions made to the regime were the 
			most grave legacy of this period.426
 
			The history of the academy shows that its members were cajoled, 
			coerced, threatened, and seduced step by step into transforming 
			themselves into a willing tool of the National Socialist state.
 
			  
			This transformation culminated in the 
			ruthless purge of “non-Aryan” members and participation in the 
			scientific rape of occupied Europe. But Vahlen did not conquer and 
			subsequently pervert the academy, rather he took over after its 
			members had already collectively sealed a Faustian pact with the 
			Third Reich.  
			  
			Bieberbach did not undermine the academy 
			by himself, rather he was able to persuade the majority of his 
			colleagues to either help or at least not oppose him. Planck not 
			only regretted the shameful handling of Einstein, he also was forced 
			to preside over the forced resignation of the rest of his Jewish 
			colleagues.  
			  
			Finally, von Laue did bar the door to 
			Johannes Stark, but he and Planck also had little choice but to step 
			aside when others held the door open to scientists like Fischer, 
			Thiessen, von Verschuer, and Vahlen.
 Back to 
			Contents
 
 
 
			  
			  
			  
			
			5 - Physics and Propaganda
 The majority of German scientists neither embraced National 
			Socialism nor emigrated from it.
 
			  
			They stayed and worked, either 
			withdrawing as much as possible from the disturbing reality of the 
			Third Reich - often called “inner emigration” - or actively 
			participating in the National Socialist system. The latter 
			individuals inevitably acted in an ambiguous and ambivalent manner. 
			Enthusiastic National Socialists, opponents, opportunists, and the 
			vast silent majority all worked within the system despite having 
			very different motives.  
			  
			Thus different observers have often 
			described the same activity by the same scientist either as 
			collaboration or resistance. Both labels are problematic because 
			they mirror the black-and-white juxtaposition of “Nazi” and 
			“anti-Nazi.” For most scientists, the day-to-day reality lay in 
			between. 
			Werner Heisenberg’s guest lectures in foreign countries and 
			resulting participation in cultural propaganda during the Third 
			Reich provide an excellent example of how ambiguous and ambivalent 
			cooperation with the National Socialist state could be. One lecture 
			in particular deserves close inspection. In September 1941, when 
			German armies were pushing deep into Soviet territory, Heisenberg 
			and Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker traveled from Germany to 
			Copenhagen, where they gave talks and visited their Danish physicist 
			colleagues.
 
			  
			This visit remains one of the most 
			controversial events in the recent history of German science 
			precisely because it has been used as evidence for diametrically 
			opposed interpretations of Heisenberg’s and von Weizsacker’s conduct 
			under Hitler:  
				
					
					
					they went to Copenhagen in order 
					to help their colleague Niels Bohr and to save the world 
					from nuclear weapons
					
					they went in order to help the 
					National Socialists exploit Bohr (who had a Jewish mother) 
					and win the race to the atom bomb 427 
			Heisenberg’s and von Weizsacker’s 1941 
			visit to Denmark belongs in the context of National Socialist 
			cultural propaganda in countries occupied by or obedient to Germany 
			during the war. The physicists did not simply go to Copenhagen to 
			help Bohr, They traveled to a Denmark occupied by German troops. 
			While in Copenhagen, they participated in official propaganda by 
			lecturing at a German cultural institute. 
			Heisenberg’s many guest lectures also facilitate an analysis of two 
			important aspects of science during the Third Reich. First, the 
			National Socialist regime transformed foreign lectures and 
			international conferences into effective tools for cultural 
			propaganda. Second, there was a functional relationship between the 
			changing official attitude towards Heisenberg, the rehabilitation of 
			modem physics under Hitler, and the usefulness to the National 
			Socialists of Heisenberg as a goodwill ambassador.
 
			Perhaps most important, Heisenberg’s and von Weizsacker’s September 
			1941 trip to Copenhagen must be placed in the context of World War 
			II. For this reason the story of their foreign lectures will be 
			divided up into two chapters.
 
			  
			Chapter 6, “Physics and Propaganda” 
			covers the prewar period and the Lightning War, when it appeared 
			that the war would soon end with a National Socialist victory. In 
			contrast, Chapter 7, “Goodwill Ambassadors” covers the period when 
			the war turned sour for Germany and the persecution of the Jews was 
			transformed into the Holocaust.
 
			  
 
			  
			The “Coordination” of Foreign Lectures
 
			The National Socialists took care to 
			regulate quickly and strictly any cultural exchange with other 
			countries as part of a thorough “coordination” of the civil service.
			 
			  
			Officials at REM informed the rectors of 
			the German universities that they welcomed foreign lectures by 
			German scientists, so long as the scholar was worthy of representing 
			Germany in the National Socialist sense. Only REM could approve a 
			foreign trip by a civil servant or employee under its jurisdiction, 
			which included all university instructors.428 
			  
			By early 1934 the ministry noted in a 
			threatening tone that individuals with unsuitable personalities and 
			ideologies were being proposed as representatives of the new 
			Germany. 
			All foreign travel requests for speaking engagements were to be 
			submitted through official channels and had to include and quote 
			verbatim the opinion of the regional leader of the NSDAP.429 
			The Foreign Office of the new Germany now demanded that it be 
			informed ahead of time of any foreign lectures, and that the speaker 
			contact and work closely with the German Embassy in the country to 
			be visited.430
 
			  
			Moreover, this strict policy was 
			introduced at a time when the Foreign Office was still relatively 
			independent of National Socialist influence. 
			By early 1935, REM had extended its control to lectures by foreign 
			scholars inside of Germany. Any invitation had to be approved by the 
			ministry in advance, and any such request had to be submitted early 
			enough so that the ministry could check with both the Foreign Office 
			and the German Embassy in the country concerned. The Education 
			Ministry also extended its right of refusal. As of June 1935 no 
			invitation either for a lecture abroad or for participation in an 
			international congress could be accepted without its permission.431
 
			  
			By 1937 the Ministry of Education 
			required that universities and scholars provide complete information 
			on all conferences being planned, both inside and outside of the 
			Reich.432 The Ministry of Propaganda also gained some 
			control over international cultural commerce. Its German Congress 
			Center controlled the technical aspects of such trips by providing 
			the scholars with foreign currency and through the organization of 
			congresses held inside Germany.433 
			Differences in the treatment of nationalities under these guidelines 
			illustrate how sensitive cultural policy was to political events. In 
			1935 Germans living abroad could be invited to purely scientific 
			conferences in Germany without consulting REM, but any visits to or 
			from Poland or Alsace-Lorraine had to be approved well ahead of 
			time. In the spring of 1936, the Education Ministry forbade German 
			scholars to have anything to do with any organization or event 
			connected with the League of Nations. By that October, all official 
			visits to Spain by civil servants were to be cleared beforehand. A 
			month later this decree was extended to cover all employees.434
 
			In 1927 the twenty-six-year-old Heisenberg was called to a full 
			professorship in theoretical physics at the University of Leipzig. 
			Heisenberg, one of the creators of quantum mechanics, quickly 
			received honors, recognition, and invitations from abroad. In 1929, 
			Heisenberg was invited to hold a series of guest lectures at the 
			University of Chicago during the summer semester.435
 
			  
			Three years later Heisenberg was granted 
			leave again to lecture at a summer school for physics at the 
			University of Michigan. Heisenberg’s guest lectures continued after 
			the National Socialists took power, but the context in which these 
			goodwill trips took place became very different.436 
			The year 1933, which included such radical change in Germany, also 
			brought good news to Heisenberg in the form of the 1932 Nobel Prize 
			for physics. The University of Leipzig was very proud of Heisenberg, 
			but concerned that he might now be tempted to go elsewhere. 
			Heisenberg responded with thanks for the appreciation, noted that 
			the philosophical faculty had made his stay in Leipzig as pleasant 
			as possible, and that he hoped to be able to stay at the university 
			for a long time to come.437
 
			  
			In the spring of 1934 Heisenberg 
			received a call to a position at Harvard University with very 
			generous fringe benefits. When Heisenberg informed the dean of this 
			American offer, the administrator in turn assured Heisenberg that he 
			would spare no effort to try and retain the physicist for the 
			University of Leipzig and Germany, The Nobel laureate decided to 
			stay at Leipzig, at least for the time being.438 
			In February 1936 Heisenberg requested another leave of absence to 
			lecture at the University of Michigan in July and August, and to 
			attend the tercentennial anniversary celebrations of Harvard 
			University. The ministry approved Heisenberg’s trips, granted him 
			leave from July through September, and informed the Foreign Office 
			and the Congress Center of his plans.439
 
			  
			In May he submitted an application to 
			attend a physics conference at Niels Bohr’s Institute for 
			Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen, which was approved as well.440 
			In his subsequent report on the conference for the ministry, 
			Heisenberg restricted his comments to scientific matters and avoided 
			politics. In contrast, Pascal Jordan, another of the creators of 
			quantum mechanics but an enthusiastic follower of Hitler,441 
			submitted a report couched in National Socialist rhetoric. 
			In the spring of 1937, Heisenberg requested permission to attend a 
			congress on statistics to be held that October in Geneva. He had 
			been invited to deliver one of the featured papers, a lecture on 
			“Statements of probability in the quantum theory of wave fields.”442 
			The rector approved the trip, but the local head of the University 
			Teachers League was ambivalent.443
 
			  
			Although Heisenberg had never been a 
			radical leftist, had always been nationalistic, and had volunteered 
			for military training the previous autumn, the Party official had 
			some misgivings about approving the trip to Switzerland. Heisenberg 
			had close connections with Jewish physicists in foreign countries 
			and, apparently worst of all, rejected anti-Semitism.  
			  
			One could not expect that Heisenberg 
			would represent National Socialist doctrine while outside of 
			Germany. 
			But despite these misgivings, the University Teachers League 
			approved the trip because of Heisenberg’s international reputation. 
			He was so well known, inside and outside of Germany, that the 
			prestige of the National Socialist government would be hurt more by 
			denying him the chance to travel to Switzerland than by
 giving him permission for the trip.444
 
			 
			Niels Bohr (right) 
			and Werner Heisenberg in the Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, 1936.
			 
			(Photo by P. 
			Ehrenfest, Jr., Courtesy of the AIP Emilia Segrt Visual Archives.) 
			  
			One probable reason for this ambivalence 
			was the fact that public political attacks on Heisenberg had begun, 
			for example in the main newspaper of the NSDAP, the Volkischer 
			Beobachter.445 It is not clear whether Heisenberg went to 
			Geneva or not. When Heisenberg requested permission in the summer of 
			1937 to go to the annual small conference at Niels Bohr’s institute 
			in Copenhagen, no objections were raised.446  
			  
			Perhaps Switzerland was considered 
			politically more sensitive than Denmark, or the fact that Heisenberg 
			went to Copenhagen so often made the trip seem less dangerous. 
			Events surrounding a nuclear physics conference held in Zurich in 
			the summer of 1936, which Heisenberg could not attend since he was 
			in the United States, are instructive of the development of National 
			Socialist cultural policy. Eight physicists asked for permission to 
			attend the meeting, and six applications were approved. For Ludwig 
			Bewilogua, Robert Dopel, Hans Geiger, Gerhard Hoffmann, and Fritz 
			Kirchner, the ministry approved easily, if not swiftly.447
 
			  
			Hans Geiger submitted his request on 23 
			May, and on 17 June had to write his rector again to accelerate the 
			process. Geiger was scheduled to give the featured lecture in his 
			own special field of research. It was in the interest of German 
			science, Geiger argued, that he be allowed to attend, otherwise a 
			Dutchman or a Frenchman would take his place.448 
			Rausch von Traubenberg, a professor at the University of Kiel with a 
			Jewish spouse, ran into political trouble. The rector, the dean, and 
			the representative of the University Teachers League, the Party 
			organization in charge of university instructors, all approved the 
			trip. The rector said that he could not imagine any serious danger 
			in sending Traubenberg to the conference, which was to be limited to 
			scientific matters. But Traubenberg had failed in the past to get 
			permission to travel. The regional Party leadership of the state 
			Schleswig-Holstein had killed all previous applications, and refused 
			yet again.449
 
			  
			The Reich Ministry of Education told the 
			rector at Kiel to inform Traubenberg that he could not go to Zurich 
			because of the shortage of foreign currency. 
			Fritz Sauter, who taught physics at the University of Gdttin-gen, 
			and in 1939 joined the NSDAP, submitted his request to attend the 
			Zurich meeting, and as far as he knew, it went through without any 
			problem.450
 
			  
			In fact, REM approved the trip, only to 
			learn that Sauter was being watched by the Gestapo, the domestic 
			secret police branch of the SS. The ministry did not want to take 
			responsibility for sending Sauter under these circumstances to 
			Switzerland. Officials from the ministry then reached a compromise 
			with the secret police.451 Sauter could go to Zurich, but 
			he would have to submit a report to REM on the attitude of Swiss 
			physicists toward the new Germany.452 
			The request of Erich Regener, a physicist at the Technical 
			University in Stuttgart, was forwarded on to the ministry with an 
			unofficial letter that implied that Regener and his wife were not 
			“Aryan.”453
 
			  
			REM responded by asking the Wurttemberg 
			Ministry of Culture whether Regener had submitted the questionnaire 
			required of all civil servants, and in particular, whether Regener 
			had ever belonged to a Freemason Lodge and whether evidence had been 
			presented that Regener and his wife were “Aryan.”  
			  
			The Reich official made clear that, if 
			at all possible, this information should be gathered without 
			Regener’s knowledge.454 The Wurttemberg Ministry 
			responded that Regener had never belonged to a Lodge and was of 
			“Aryan” blood. His wife was Jewish.455  
			  
			A few weeks later, REM directed the 
			Minister of Culture in Stuttgart to inform Regener that his trip 
			could not be approved because of the shortage of foreign currency.456
 
			  
 
			  
			  
			The “White Jew” and “Ossietzky of Physics”
			 
			The National Socialist regime went to 
			considerable lengths in 1935 and 1936 to present its best face, for 
			example during the 1936 Olympic games. But during the last few years 
			before the war, the more radical and disturbing aspects of the new 
			Germany emerged, including the pogrom known as the “Night of Broken 
			Glass” and the aggressive German military expansion.457
			 
			  
			These years were also very hard on 
			Heisenberg. He suffered political attacks that were not only 
			dangerous in themselves, but injurious to his personal and 
			professional pride. 
			On 15 July 1937 he was attacked as a “white Jew” and “Jewish in 
			spirit” by his colleague, fellow Nobel laureate, and president of 
			the Imperial Physical-Technical Institute, Johannes Stark, in an 
			article published in the SS weekly Das Schwarze Korps.458
 
			  
			Heisenberg called upon his superiors to 
			protect him against Stark’s attacks, A fundamental decision was 
			necessary. If the ministry considered Stark’s viewpoint in Das 
			Schwarze Korps correct, then Heisenberg would resign; if the 
			ministry did not support such attacks, then Heisenberg demanded the 
			sort of protection which the armed forces would grant to its 
			youngest lieutenant. Heisenberg suggested that perhaps the Leipzig 
			University Student Organization could do something, since it was 
			affiliated with the NSDAP, He apparently thought that he had 
			National Socialist allies in Leipzig.459 
			The bureaucracy did not welcome Stark’s attack. Very many 
			individuals lost their positions or were denied promotions on 
			political grounds during the Third Reich. But the Ministry of 
			Interior insisted that such decisions as well as any complaints 
			about the political reliability of civil servants go through 
			official channels.460
 
			  
			Both the Ministry of Propaganda and the 
			Party Chancellery had decreed in 1936 that attacks on civil servants 
			in the press should be avoided.461  
			  
			The rector of the University of Leipzig 
			- who brought the matter to the attention of the Reich regional 
			representative in Saxony - observed that Stark had implicitly 
			criticized those parts of the National Socialist government 
			responsible for personnel policy and requested that the government 
			enforce its policy towards such attacks in the press.462 
			Heisenberg continued his aggressive tone with his superiors. Almost 
			seven months after he had insisted on either resignation or 
			protection, he demanded to know whether the ministry believed that 
			his performance deserved insults like “white Jew” and the “Ossietzky 
			of physics”?
 
			  
			Stark’s attack and the inaction of his 
			superiors had crippled Heisenberg’s work. A student had turned down 
			both a place and a stipend at Heisenberg’s institute after Stark’s 
			attack out of fear that association with Heisenberg could harm him 
			politically. This case showed that unless a clear decision was made 
			concerning the attack in Das Schwarze Korps, work in Heisenberg’s 
			institute would be made almost impossible.463  
			  
			(The socialist and pacifist Carl von 
			Ossietzky was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize while imprisoned in a 
			German concentration camp, thereby embarrassing the National 
			Socialist government and prompting Adolf Hitler to forbid German 
			citizens thereafter to accept the Nobel Prize. Ossietzky died In the 
			camp.) 
			Heisenberg also contacted the SS directly, but a low-ranking 
			official informed him that they could do nothing for him. It 
			appeared that SS Leader Heinrich Himmler and Minister of Education 
			Bernhard Rust had decided not to answer Heisenberg’s requests for 
			the Munich professorship and for public recognition of his service 
			and loyalty to the fatherland. Heisenberg saw no alternative but to 
			submit his resignation at Leipzig and to leave Germany. He did not 
			want to emigrate, he told his mentor Arnold Sommerfeld, but he also 
			had no desire to live in Germany as a second-class citizen.464
 
			Meanwhile, Johannes Stark had not prospered. He had refused as 
			president of the German Research Foundation to fund some scientific 
			research desired by the SS, and was subsequently sacked by the REM 
			and replaced by SS man Rudolf Mentzel.
 
			  
			In the spring of 1936 Adolf Wagner, one 
			of the most powerful and rath-less regional party leaders in 
			Germany, instituted legal proceedings to throw Stark out of the 
			Party for having meddled in the politics of Wagner’s region in 
			southern Bavaria. Stark fought back and remained in the NSDAP, but 
			his trial dragged on until 1938. After 1936, he was viewed with 
			increasing disapproval within the SS and influential Party circles.465 
			Influential colleagues also intervened on Heisenberg’s behalf. 
			During the summer of 1938 the aeronautical engineer Ludwig Prandtl 
			convinced Himmler that Germany could not afford to lose Heisenberg, 
			who was still relatively young and could train a generation of 
			scientists.466 Prandtl was in a position to influence the 
			SS.
 
			  
			In 1937 the Party official in charge of 
			Gottingen described him as a typical scientist in an ivory tower. 
			Prandtl was an honorable, conscientious scholar from an older 
			generation concerned with his integrity and respectability. However, 
			given Prandtl’s exceptionally valuable scientific contributions 
			toward the expansion of the Air Force, he was also someone the 
			National Socialists neither could do without, nor wanted to 
			alienate.467 
			The leader of the SS forbade further political attacks on 
			Heisenberg, invited the physicist to meet with Mm, and made it clear 
			that he expected Heisenberg to stick to physics, not politics.468 
			Heisenberg responded immediately, agreed to avoid politics, but 
			insisted on a public rehabilitation.469
 
			  
			In November a messenger from Himmler 
			arrived and asked Heisenberg for more detailed information on the 
			“physics war” between Deutsche Physik and the established physics 
			community, which Heisenberg considered to be a good sign.470 
			At the same time a Party official told Prandtl that the struggle 
			against the theory of relativity had been stopped by someone in a 
			high position.471 
			Despite its power, the SS could not end Heisenberg’s troubles. In 
			December 1938 an official from the Saxon Ministry of Culture paid an 
			unofficial visit to his Berlin colleague in the Education Ministry 
			and asked about the Heisenberg case. Minister Rust had not made up 
			his mind, in part because the Heisenberg affair was only one part of 
			the controversy between theoretical and experimental physics.
 
			  
			The two bureaucrats agreed that Stark 
			had gone too far. But they also agreed that Heisenberg had brought 
			much of his troubles upon himself. In the summer of 1934, for 
			example, Stark had arranged a public declaration of support for 
			Adolf Hitler that Heisenberg had refused to sign. The excuses he 
			gave for his past conduct were no defense.  
			  
			Nevertheless, the official from the 
			Saxon ministry assured the rector in Leipzig that Heisenberg would 
			not be disciplined for this previous politically unacceptable 
			conduct. Heisenberg would just have to have a little more patience 
			and wait for Reich Ministry of Education to act.472 
			
 
 
			  
			  
			Probation
			 
			The last foreign lecture tour Heisenberg 
			undertook before the coming war cast its shadow over international 
			scientific relations was a trip to Holland in January 1939. The 
			physical colloquium of the University of Leyden invited Heisenberg 
			to give a talk on “the penetrating components of cosmic rays.”473
			 
			  
			The trip was approved without any 
			objection. As usual, Heisenberg was required to submit a report upon 
			his return.474 Heisenberg arrived in Leyden on 25 January 
			1939, and stayed with his colleague and friend Hendrik Antony 
			Kramers, professor at the University of Leyden. Heisenberg gave his 
			talk that afternoon before an audience that included physicists from 
			the University of Amsterdam and the Philips Factory in Eindhoven.
			 
			  
			A long discussion followed in which 
			Kramers, Hendrik Casimir, and other Dutch scientists took part. The 
			colloquium continued the following day with presentations from 
			Kramers’ students and colleagues on pressing problems of modern 
			physics. 
			Heisenberg also gave a lecture on nuclear forces at the Philips 
			Company, which included a hundred researchers from Philips’ 
			scientific staff. After the talk, Heisenberg toured the impressive 
			experimental apparatus in the company laboratory.
 
			  
			On 28 January, Heisenberg went with 
			Kramers to the Hague, and there, in cooperation with the German 
			embassy in Holland, the two physicists visited Prince Bernhard zu 
			Lippe. In the afternoon, Heisenberg heard a talk in Amsterdam on the 
			magnetic properties of solid state materials. He then visited his 
			colleague Jacob Clay to discuss cosmic radiation and returned to 
			Germany that evening.475 
			In April 1939 Heisenberg proposed another trip. He wanted to 
			participate in three prestigious and very visible international 
			physics meetings: a June conference at the University of Chicago on 
			cosmic radiation, a September meeting on nuclear physics at the 
			Technical University of Zurich, and the October Solvay Conference in 
			Brussels on the properties of elementary particles.
 
			  
			His travel costs would be paid for by 
			the organizers of the conferences, and Heisenberg wanted to stay in 
			America for six weeks in order to visit several institutes 476 
			The rector passed on the request together with the approval of the 
			head of the Leipzig University Teachers League.477  
			  
			REM approved the trips without special 
			comment.478 However, neither of the last two conferences 
			took place.
 
			  
 
			  
			  
			The SS Report on Heisenberg
			 
			A day before Heisenberg’s trips were 
			approved, bureaucrats from another part of the National Socialist 
			state completed a document that would silence Deutsche Physik 
			479 rehabilitate modern theoretical physics, and change 
			Heisenberg’s life. The SS had finally finished with Its thorough 
			examination of Heisenberg and his work.  
			  
			The SS sent the report to the Party 
			Chancellery. When the SS forwarded a copy to REM, it told the 
			ministry that Heisenberg should be given another appointment, where 
			this new professorship should be, and why this post was suitable. 
			The SS report, which apparently forestalled a parallel investigation 
			in the Party Chancellery, was definitive.480 
			Heisenberg could not be called to Munich, for that would be seen as 
			a victory over the Party officials there. Members of Himmler’s staff 
			independently informed Heisenberg why he could not receive the 
			Munich professorship. It was the vacant professorship for 
			theoretical physics at the University of Vienna that the SS wanted 
			to be Heisenberg’s new home.
 
			  
			Most of the physics professors in 
			Vienna had joined the NSDAP when it was still illegal in Austria, 
			and were politically and ideologically reliable. The SS was 
			cautiously optimistic that this circle of physicists would awaken 
			Heisenberg’s interest in political events and eventually attract him 
			to National Socialism.481 
			According to the SS, Heisenberg was a man of surpassing scientific 
			reputation. His strength lay in the school of physicists he had 
			trained, which included Siegfried Flugge and Carl Friedrich von 
			Weizsacker. As for the controversy raging over the foundations of 
			physics, Heisenberg argued that no conflict was possible between 
			experimental and theoretical physics, because every theoretical 
			physicist regarded experimental physics as an absolute necessity for 
			his own work.
 
			  
			Moreover, the converse was also true. 
			Heisenberg preferred to make a sharp distinction between “good” and 
			“bad” scientists and was willing to agree that physicists who were 
			“divorced from true experience” (a vague classification used by 
			advocates of Deutsche Physik) were poor.
 
			  
			The SS argued that Heisenberg’s concept 
			of bad physicist could be regarded as equivalent to the concept of 
			“non-Aryan” (artfremde) thinker in physics. In particular, 
			Heisenberg had agreed that some of the Jewish physicists and “Aryan” 
			physicists from Jewish schools of physics, for their “Jewish” 
			physics, who had been attacked by Lenard and Stark, were bad 
			physicists. 
			The SS admitted that Heisenberg had been trained in a school of 
			“Jewish physics.” Consequently, his first great successes like 
			quantum mechanics were influenced by “non-Aryan” physics. However, 
			according to the SS, Heisenberg’s work had recently become more and 
			more “Aryan” (artgemasse). For Heisenberg, the theory was merely the 
			working hypothesis with which the experimenter investigates nature 
			by means of suitable experiments.
 
			  
			Theory confirmed by experiment was 
			therefore the clear description of observations made in nature aided 
			by the exact tools of mathematics. 
			 
			Werner Heisenberg 
			(middle) in military training, ca. 1937 
			(Courtesy of the 
			Library and Archives of the Max Planck Society.) 
			  
			The SS also gave Heisenberg good marks for character.  
			  
			He was a 
			typical apolitical scholar but nevertheless ready at any time 
			unconditionally to serve Germany, because, as he told the SS, 
			“someone is either born as a good German or not.” Furthermore, 
			Heisenberg had a strong military record. As a teenager in Munich he 
			had fought with the Lutzow paramilitary force (Freikorps) against 
			leftists during the revolution and short-lived Bavarian Soviet 
			Republic following World War I.482  
			  
			After Germany repudiated the Treaty of 
			Versailles in 1935 and announced that it would rearm, Heisenberg had 
			volunteered for the Army reserve.  
			  
			Finally, during the crisis of 
			September 1938, when war with Czechoslovakia was forestalled only by 
			the infamous Munich conference, where France and Britain forced 
			Czechoslovakia to give up the Sudetenland to Germany, Heisenberg had 
			volunteered to fight and was one of the many German soldiers 
			standing on the front waiting to attack. 
			 
			Werner Heisenberg 
			(far right) in military training, ca. 1937 
			(Courtesy of the 
			Library and Archives of the Max Planck Society.) 
			  
			The SS added that unfortunately Heisenberg’s political attitude had 
			not been as clear as would have been desirable. He had declined to 
			take part in an election rally in 1933 (one of the many elections 
			manipulated by the National Socialists) because his foreign 
			colleagues, with whom he had very good relations, might have 
			misunderstood.  
			  
			When invited to sign Stark’s declaration 
			for Hitler, Heisenberg had declined. But the SS argued that in the 
			mean time Heisenberg had become more and more convinced by the 
			successes of National Socialism and was now positively inclined 
			toward it. However, he still believed that, aside from the 
			occasional participation in an instructional (i.e., indoctrination) 
			camp or the like, an active political role for a university 
			professor was inappropriate. 
			Finally, the SS hoped thai Heisenberg could be brought to accept 
			anti-Semitism. The report claimed that even Heisenberg now rejected 
			the “excessive alienation by Jews of German living space.”483
 
			  
			A few weeks later Himmler informed Heisenberg personally that he 
			would be called to Vienna and, exactly as Prandtl had requested, be 
			allowed to publish his views in the Zeitschrifl fur die gesamte 
			Naturwissenschaft, the house journal of Deutsche Physik.484 
			But the Ministry of Education could not send Heisenberg anywhere 
			without the explicit permission of the Party Chancellery, which had 
			veto power over all important appointments in Germany, including 
			university professorships. The SS could merely provide an assessment 
			of Heisenberg’s character and suitability and make a suggestion. 
			When shortly before Christmas the SS proposed sending Heisenberg to 
			Vienna,485 the Chancellery rejected it. Party officials 
			responded that Heisenberg’s political conduct, especially after the 
			National Socialist seizure of power, made this call unacceptable.486
 
			This conflict over the fate of Heisenberg was typical of the 
			polycratic institutional rivalry under National Socialism. Different 
			agencies jealously guarded their own authority and sought to usurp 
			that of others. No one power bloc, not even a force as powerful as 
			the SS, could consistently dominate the others and get its way.
 
			  
			In June 1939 the Party Chancellery 
			learned that Heisenberg’s three foreign trips had been sanctioned - 
			which suggests that some REM officials opposed such permission - and 
			pointedly reminded the Education Ministry that the Party had already 
			opposed two proposed appointments for Heisenberg because of his 
			political conduct. Conceding that it was too late to do anything 
			about the trip to the U.S.A., the Party officials wanted the 
			opportunity to express an opinion with respect to the Zurich and 
			Brussels conferences, that is, to reverse the decision made by the 
			ministry.487 
			But the Ministry of Education, now supported by the SS report on 
			Heisenberg, stood its ground. Abraham Esau, a Party member since the 
			spring of 1933 488 and a physicist with considerable 
			political and professional influence, was to lead the massive German 
			delegation to Zurich.489
 
			  
			He intervened on Heisenberg’s behalf. 
			Esau had often had the opportunity to observe Heisenberg at 
			international meetings, where, he said, Heisenberg had always 
			conducted himself in a completely unobjectionable manner. Moreover, 
			with respect to the prestige of German science, Esau emphasized that 
			Heisenberg’s presence in Zurich was very desirable.490
			 
			  
			REM pointed out to the Party Chancellery 
			that the local leader of the University Teachers League, the 
			responsible Party official, had no political objection, and that 
			Heisenberg was going to be one of the major speakers at the Zurich 
			and Brussels meetings. Although in the past the Party had 
			successfully put pressure on the Ministry of Education, this time 
			Minister Rust politely told his colleagues in the Party Chancellery 
			that they would have to live with his decision.491  
			  
			Heisenberg was too hot to be rewarded 
			with a prestigious professorship, but he could be used as a 
			propaganda tool.
 
			  
 
			  
			Lightning War and New Opportunities For 
			Cultural Propaganda
 
			The German invasion of Poland in 
			September 1939 represented a turning point for Heisenberg the 
			Itinerant lecturer.  
			  
			Whereas he had previously represented 
			German science at international conferences, now he became a 
			goodwill ambassador for the German war effort and, whether he liked 
			it or not, for National Socialism. A reserve officer, Heisenberg was 
			called up in September 1939,492 conscripted by Army 
			Ordnance for military research on nuclear fission, and allowed to 
			return to his teaching in Leipzig a week later 493 
			Heisenberg hoped that the conflict would not cost too many lives - 
			unfortunately, he was wrong.494  
			  
			Most Germans were unenthusiastic about 
			the war when it began.495 Heisenberg was no exception, yet he was 
			also determined to help his fatherland win the war. 
			The successful Lightning War provided new opportunities for National 
			Socialist cultural policy outside of the Reich. Germany attacked, 
			defeated, and occupied most of Europe in quick succession; Poland, 
			Denmark and Norway, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, and finally 
			France, Henceforth the great majority of Heisenberg’s guest lectures 
			would take place in countries either occupied by or obedient to 
			Germany.
 
			  
			Each trip required extensive approvals 
			and notifications: the cultural-political section of the Foreign 
			Office, the foreign branch of the NSDAP, the German Congress Center, 
			and the German Academic Exchange Service all had a say. Most 
			important, in the country to be visited the “German Cultural 
			Institute” (GCI), which was under jurisdiction of the Foreign 
			Office, or the local branch of the Exchange Service was to be 
			informed. 
			The traveler had to acquire the necessary exit visa, foreign 
			currency, leave from military service, and tickets. Foreign currency 
			could be requested from the Congress Center only after REM had 
			approved the trip. The Congress Center was to be informed of the 
			exact duration, travel schedule, and any intermediate stops for the 
			trip, as well as the exact topic of the lecture. Once the scholar 
			had entered the foreign country, he had to Immediately contact the 
			official German delegation and either the GCI or Exchange Service.
 
			GCIs, branches of the Exchange Service, or comparable institutions 
			existed in Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, France, Greece, 
			Italy, Holland, Hungary, Norway, Portugal, Rumania, Serbia, 
			Slovakia, Spain, and Sweden. In France and Belgium the traveler was 
			to visit the military occupation authorities, in Norway the Reich 
			Commissioner for the Occupied Norwegian Territories.
 
			  
			If at all possible, the scholar was 
			ordered to drop in on the foreign branch of the NSDAP. Once in the 
			foreign country, if a scientist was asked to give an additional 
			talk, then he had to ask permission from the German embassy.  
			  
			He also had to submit a report to REM 
			upon his return, including discussions of his general impressions 
			and experiences, his contacts with foreign colleagues, and the local 
			attitude toward Germany and German policy.496 
			Special rules applied to different countries. Scholars in the 
			protectorates of Bohemia and Moravia, parte of what had been 
			Czechoslovakia, could attend conferences only in foreign countries 
			as part of the German delegation, and if they wanted to speak a 
			language other than Czechoslovakia^ it had to be German.497
 
			  
			Czech scientists could not lecture in 
			Germany; indeed the German occupying authorities made few exceptions 
			to their policy of not allowing any foreign scholars to travel to 
			Germany.498 Lecturers visiting Hungary and Rumania, both 
			allies of Germany, were forbidden to discuss the relations between 
			the two countries, especially their border dispute.499 
			Trips by German scholars to the General Government, part of what had 
			been Poland, were placed under especially stringent restrictions. 
			Any and all contact between German scientists and Polish colleagues 
			was forbidden.500 The General Government was in a sense a 
			laboratory for the most extreme National Socialist policies, 
			including German colonialism, slave labor, and from 1941 onward, 
			genocide.501
 
			The German Foreign Office and Ministry of Education together worked 
			out guidelines for German scholars suitable to represent Germany in 
			neutral (and presumably occupied or puppet) countries during the 
			war. The scholar not only had to be a good scientist, he had to be 
			well-known outside of Germany and able to contact his foreign 
			colleagues immediately. Furthermore, the scientist had to show 
			complete understanding of National Socialist domestic and foreign 
			policy. Being apolitical did not suffice. Finally, the scientist had 
			to possess social graces and, where necessary, knowledge of foreign 
			languages.502
 
			  
			The German authorities continued to use 
			Heisenberg as a guest speaker, but since he stubbornly maintained 
			his apolitical nature, the responsible officials became more and 
			more ambivalent about his value for cultural propaganda. 
			As the program grew, officials became concerned about the uneven 
			quality of the lectures by its touring scholars. Several reports of 
			poor performances provoked threats and new guidelines from the 
			Education Ministry. The speaker had to make a clear decision whether 
			he intended his talk for a general audience or for a group of 
			specialists. Every lecture was to be seen as a scientific 
			performance and as a contribution to the cultural and political 
			status of Germany. A lecture before academics which merely repeated 
			known results and offered nothing new harmed the prestige of Germany 
			as well as the personal reputation of the scholar.
 
			Scientists who spoke to general audiences should also speak to a 
			closed circle, seminar, or institute in order to make contacts with 
			the foreign experts in their field. Finally, lecture topics should 
			be chosen so as to offer something new to scholars outside of 
			Germany. The Ministry gave the deans and rectors responsibility to 
			judge the quality of the scientist when approving their applications 
			to speak abroad. If valid criticism was made of a speaker, then REM 
			would not allow him to travel abroad again.503
 
			Since the speaker usually knew little about the political situation 
			in the country he visited, the ministry suggested that he discuss 
			the text of the lecture beforehand either with the GCI or the 
			cultural department of the German mission.
 
			  
			In September 1942 the SS informed the 
			ministry that severe restrictions were being placed on any and all 
			written materials taken across German borders. Any document, 
			including the text of a lecture, had to be submitted beforehand for 
			inspection and approval by the university intelligence officer.504 
			In principle, the German scholar was instructed to avoid politically 
			controversial topics while abroad. The scientist lectured in order 
			to impress the natives with German culture, taking pains not to 
			cause problems for the German political authorities or 
			representatives.505 
			In November 1940, Heisenberg received an invitation through the 
			German Foreign Office to speak at the Paris “German Institute” on 
			“The current goals of physical research.” Around the same time, 
			Heisenberg was asked by the Hungarian “Union for Cultural 
			Cooperation” to come to Budapest in early 1941 to deliver a paper on 
			“Newton’s and Goethe’s theory of colors in the light of modern 
			physics.”
 
			  
			Since Heisenberg was technically 
			considered a soldier, he assumed that only the Army had to approve 
			his talks, and that he did not have to consult REM.506 
			The University told him that he was mistaken.507 
			Heisenberg dutifully wrote the ministry, noting that he had a letter 
			from his superior in the Army granting him permission to give the 
			talks.508 The Leipzig representative of the 
			University-Teachers League supported the request, noting that 
			Heisenberg was suitable in every respect to represent German science 
			in foreign countries.509 Both the dean and the rector 
			agreed that Heisenberg was an appropriate candidate as well.510 
			REM responded by rejecting the Paris trip511 and 
			approving the lecture in Budapest.512
 
			  
			Apparently the distinction between a 
			conquered enemy and an ally was important. 
			In May 1941, Heisenberg received an invitation to speak at the 
			“German Institute for Eastern Work,” located in the General 
			Government.513 The Germans had set up the institute at 
			the site of the former University of Krakow. With very few 
			exceptions, the Polish faculty of this university had been arrested 
			by the German occupation forces and had been sent to the 
			concentration camp in Sachsenhausen.
 
			  
			Hans Frank, the governor of what In 
			effect was a German colony on the eastern border of the Reich, was 
			also the founder and promoter of this institute. The Institute’s 
			goal was to prepare for German expansion into this region by 
			providing preliminary scientific research for German colonization of 
			eastern Europe. 
			The Institute’s work anticipated future “eastern research” of the 
			sort that the National Socialists needed for their policy of 
			acquiring “living space” for Germans at the expense of other 
			peoples. For example, the Institute’s section for astronomy and 
			mathematics employed the forced labor of Russian prisoners of war 
			and concentration camp inmates for mathematical research.514 
			Wilhelm Coblitz, institute director, stated in 1941 that the Eastern 
			Jewish question required scientific investigation as preparation for 
			the final postwar solution of the European Jewish question.515
 
			The invitation to speak in Krakow had originated with the governor 
			himself.516 Frank had been a schoolmate of Heisenberg’s 
			and may well have wished to show off one of the scientific 
			institutes under his control. Heisenberg was willing to go.517 
			The rector in Leipzig thought that he was perfectly suited for a 
			foreign trip, both in the scientific and social senses.518
 
			  
			A month later the officials in Leipzig 
			sent on an additional letter from the Army, granting Heisenberg 
			permission to travel to the General Government.519 But in 
			1941 when Coblitz asked REM for permission for Heisenberg to hold a 
			lecture at the German Institute for Eastern Work, the request was 
			denied.520 
			The German Institute for Eastern Work did not give up easily. 
			Coblitz pointed out it was the personal wish of Governor Frank that 
			Heisenberg be invited to Krakow. The ministry did not give 
			permission, but provided an explanation. Heisenberg was a 
			politically controversial figure. Because his connections to Jewish 
			physicists and their followers in foreign countries were so 
			extensive, the Party Chancellery had rejected two attempts to call 
			this talented scholar to universities in Munich and Vienna.
 
			Moreover, the Education Ministry understood the concerns of the 
			Party. The Ministry of Propaganda had monitored Heisenberg’s talk in 
			Budapest and judged it unacceptable from the standpoint of National 
			Socialism.
 
			  
			All of his foreign talks were apolitical 
			popular or specialized scientific lectures. The main problem in 
			Hungary was his audience. The local “Jewish-influenced” physics 
			community attended and enthusiastically applauded Heisenberg’s 
			lecture - no doubt embarrassing the National Socialist officials who 
			were also present.  
			  
			Heisenberg could not go to Krakow, but 
			REM assured Frank that it was more than willing to assist his 
			cultural policy in any way it could. Frank had only to ask.521
 
			  
 
			  
			The German Astrophysics Conference at 
			the Copenhagen German Cultural Institute
 
			In March 1941 Heisenberg’s friend, 
			colleague, and former student Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker held 
			several lectures in occupied Copenhagen and thereby set into motion 
			a series of policy decisions that led to Heisenberg’s most 
			controversial foreign lecture.  
			  
			Von Weizsacker spoke before the Danish 
			Physical and Astronomical Society on “Is the world infinite in time 
			and space?” The lecture, given in Danish, was both well attended and 
			successful. He repeated the performance at the collaborationist 
			Danish-German Society. 
			The German occupation authorities reported that von Weizsacker knew 
			how to make a difficult topic stimulating. The lay audience, 
			including the commander of the German troops in Denmark, could 
			follow it without difficulty. Finally von Weizsacker took up an 
			invitation from Niels Bohr’s Institute of Theoretical Physics, and 
			before a purely scientific audience, spoke on “The relationship 
			between quantum mechanics and Kantian philosophy.”
 
			  
			A lively discussion followed. Although 
			von Weizsacker’s conclusions were controversial, he managed to 
			convince many of his Danish colleagues. Clearly the occupation 
			authorities were also well informed about what went on in Bohr’s 
			institute. 
			The official report on von Weizsacker’s talks in Denmark judged that 
			he had an exceptionally good influence on both lay audiences and 
			purely scientific Danish circles. The German authorities in Denmark 
			wanted to invite von Weizsacker back to Copenhagen in the fall, this 
			time together with Heisenberg, as part of a week-long conference on 
			mathematics, astronomy, and theoretical physics at the newly-founded 
			German Cultural Institute (GCI).522 The German Foreign 
			Office forwarded the request to REM with its approval.523
 
			The initiative for Heisenberg’s invitation came from von Weiszacker, 
			who has recently recalled that their concern about their Danish 
			mentor Niels Bohr was one of the main reasons for their desire to 
			visit Copenhagen.524
 
			  
			Since Bohr’s mother was Jewish, the 
			German occupation officials considered him a “non-Aryan.” However, 
			Bohr and the other scientists at his institute had been able to 
			continue work because during the first few years of the war Germany 
			treated both Denmark and the Danish Jews relatively gently as part 
			of the fiction that the Danish government had invited the German 
			forces and was cooperating with the Third Reich. 
			A month later REM agreed that von Weiszacker should return to 
			Copenhagen, but ignored Heisenberg. The Kaiser Wilhelm Society, von 
			Weiszacker’s employer, told the Minister that von Weiszacker would 
			be happy to take part in the Copenhagen conference.525 
			The Ministry of Education, in turn, informed the Foreign Office in 
			early June that von Weiszacker would come.526 But the 
			German Cultural Institute wanted Heisenberg too.527
 
			On 14 July von Weiszacker met with an official from the German 
			Academic Exchange Service In order to plan the Copenhagen 
			conference. A week later he submitted a written proposal. Three 
			German astronomers, Hans Kienle, Albrecht Unsold, and Ludwig 
			Biermann, should be invited along with von Weiszacker and 
			Heisenberg.
 
			  
			The common theme of the conference could 
			be the composition of the atmospheres of stars, a subject for which 
			Kienle represented the best German empirical work, Unsold and 
			Biermann the best theoretical. In addition - and probably the main 
			reason for the choice - the subject was also the main field of 
			research for the Danish director of the Copenhagen observatory, 
			Bengt Stremgren. Heisenberg would present his own work on cosmic 
			radiation, while von Weiszacker would discuss the transformation of 
			elements in stars. 
			In his letter, von Weiszacker recommended Heisenberg, as the leading 
			theoretical physicist in Germany and someone who could not be 
			surpassed for cultural propaganda. Since Heisenberg had spent years 
			in Denmark and spoke fluent Danish, his participation in a 
			conference in Copenhagen would be especially effective.528
 
			  
			The Foreign Office informed REM in early 
			August that both Heisenberg and von Weiszacker had been consulted, 
			and asked whether the authorities in Copenhagen could count on the 
			participation of Kienle, Biermann, and Unsold as well529 
			Von Weiszacker wrote to Bohr, informed him that he and Heisenberg 
			were going to speak at the astrophysics conference at the GCI, and 
			invited all of the Danish scientists to attend.530 
			But REM, which had just turned down Frank, resisted the idea of 
			sending Heisenberg to Copenhagen. They argued that a conference in 
			astronomy had already been planned for Wurzburg for October 1941, 
			that many foreigners and especially Danes had been invited, and that 
			the special event desired by von Weiszacker overlapped with, and 
			would detract from, the Wurzburg meeting.
 
			  
			Additionally, the ministerial official 
			criticized the choice of scientists proposed for the Copenhagen 
			meeting. Heinrich Vogt, Heinrich Siedentopf, Bruno Thiiring, and 
			Paul ten Bruggencate - all politically acceptable to the National 
			Socialist state - were supposedly the leading German scientists in 
			the field of the atmospheres of stars.531  
			  
			The ministry wanted to use the Wiirzburg 
			meeting to abort the Copenhagen conference. A decree to this effect 
			was drafted, but never sent.532 The Foreign Office 
			intervened again and requested a meeting with REM.533
 
			An official from the Foreign Office, the 
			director of the Copenhagen GCI, and a representative of the ministry 
			got together on 2 September. The director pointed out that the 
			conference had already been announced. A cancellation now, when the 
			GCI was just beginning its work in Copenhagen, would be very 
			damaging. The objections voiced by REM were irrelevant.  
			  
			The GCI did not particularly care what 
			the theme of the* conference was, or - with an obvious exception - 
			which Germans took part. The meeting in Copenhagen would be a 
			scientific colloquium and have no official character. The Wiirzburg 
			conference would not be harmed, especially since the two Shwtgrens - 
			father and son - were going to Wiirzburg as well. Moreover, 
			Heisenberg would only be in Copenhagen for two or three days.534 
			After some discussion, a proposal was cleared with Rudolf Mentzel, 
			the head of the science section in the ministry,535 to 
			pass the buck. The Education Ministry would approve the conference 
			if the Party Chancellery approved Heisenberg’s participation. The 
			head of the Cultural Political Section of the Foreign Office 
			considered the matter very important. If the Copenhagen conference 
			was rejected, then State Secretary Ernst von Weiszacker, the father 
			of Carl Friedrich, would intervene.
 
			  
			Thus for tactical reasons it was 
			desirable that von Weiszacker’s proposal be approved.536 
			The Education Ministry accordingly wrote to the Party Chancellery 
			that von Weiszacker, in close cooperation with the GCI in Copenhagen 
			and after successful lectures in Denmark, wished to hold the 
			proposed conference in Copenhagen, at which Danish and German 
			scientists, including Heisenberg, were to take part. The workshop 
			would take place in the GCI without being advertised to the greater 
			public. Did the Party object to Heisenberg’s attendance? Given the 
			need for haste, the ministry telephoned the Party Chancellery in 
			order to hear the decision as soon as possible.537
 
			The Party Chancellery responded that there was no objection to 
			Heisenberg’s going to Copenhagen, provided that he kept a low 
			profile and stayed only a few days.538 This decision went 
			out the day before the rejection of Heisenberg’s trip to Krakow.539 
			The Foreign Office was more powerful than Frank, and Denmark a less 
			sensitive area than the General Government. The Party did take care 
			to emphasize once again that a high profile visit from Heisenberg 
			was undesirable.540
 
			Heisenberg, von Weiszacker, the German occupation authorities, and 
			later, the Danish scientists, all wrote reports of this visit. 
			Heisenberg evaluated opportunities for Danish-German cultural 
			relations poorly.
 
			  
			Because he had to return to Germany 
			before the conference was over for personal reasons, Heisenberg 
			received permission from the Foreign Office to go to Copenhagen a 
			few days early. He was welcomed by an official from the GO on 15 
			September, met with Stromgren at the Copenhagen Observatory the 
			following day, when he agreed on the schedule for the workshop, and 
			contacted his colleagues at Bohr’s institute.The meeting began on 19 September.
 
			  
			The only Danes who attended were the two 
			Stremgrens and the staff of the observatory. The physicists from 
			Bohr’s institute boycotted the conference. Several members of the 
			German colony in Copenhagen appeared just in time for Heisenberg’s 
			talk on cosmic radiation. Afterward, Heisenberg met with the NSDAP 
			representative in Denmark and the following afternoon the German 
			scientists were the guests of the German ambassador in Copenhagen, 
			on 21 September Heisenberg left Denmark. 
			German relations with scientific circles in Scandinavia had become 
			very difficult, he wrote in his report. Everywhere he went, he 
			encountered a very reserved, if not dismissive attitude. Very few 
			Danish colleagues were prepared to engage in scientific cooperation 
			within an official institution like the GCI, Heisenberg concluded 
			with a nonsequitur.
 
			  
			The Danes took this position even though 
			almost all of his Danish colleagues told him that they did not have 
			the slightest criticism of the conduct of German troops in Denmark. 
			Where Heisenberg’s Danish colleagues saw “Nazi” invaders, he saw 
			German soldiers.541 
			Von Weiszacker tried to present a positive picture. Instead of 
			mentioning that most Danish scientists boycotted the meeting, he 
			emphasized that five did attend, and that the meeting was 
			exceptionally fruitful. Instead of referring to members of the 
			German Colony in the audience, von Weiszacker noted that 
			representatives of the German occupation government and the NSDAP 
			attended, as well as at least one other Dane, the rector of the 
			University of Copenhagen.
 
			  
			Von Weiszacker argued that the 
			conference was living proof that scientific research continued in 
			Germany despite the war, and ended rather weakly by suggesting that 
			the opportunity in personal conversations to set right several false 
			judgments about Germany was “not without significance.”542 
			At the end of the war, Danish scientists explained that they 
			perceived the policy of the GCI as an attempt to coerce Bohr and his 
			colleagues into cultural collaboration. Although pressed to attend 
			the lectures - von Weiszacker told the Danes that if they did not 
			come to the GCI, then the SS would open their own cultural institute 
			- the Danes refused.
 
			  
			During the conference, von Weiszacker 
			brought the director of the GCI into the Institute of Theoretical 
			Physics and pushed him without an appointment past Bohr’s secretary.
			 
			  
			Von Weiszacker thereby forced Bohr into 
			a confrontation he had taken pains to avoid, in part because he 
			feared that the Danish resistance would believe that he was 
			collaborating with the Germans. The Danish scientists also recalled 
			that Heisenberg had callously offended them by remarking that war 
			was a “biological necessity” and behaving as an intense nationalist, 
			with the characteristic German deference to authority, here to the 
			German state.543 
			In 1961, Bohr told a Soviet colleague a similar story. Heisenberg 
			came to Bohr in the autumn of 1941, when Hitler had already defeated 
			France and was advancing quickly into Russia. Heisenberg had wanted 
			to convince his mentor that Hitler’s victory was inevitable and that 
			it would be unwise to doubt it. The National Socialists did not 
			honor science, which was why they treated scientists so badly. Bohr 
			had to join forces with Heisenberg and help Hitler. When the 
			National Socialists were victorious, then their attitude towards 
			scientists would change. In particular, Heisenberg told Bohr that he 
			had to cooperate with the GCI.544
 
			Moreover, Heisenberg made similar statements after the war. In their 
			obituary for Heisenberg, Neville Mott and Rudolf Peierls gently 
			criticized him for his obtuseness. When Heisenberg visited a German 
			refugee physicist in Great Britain late in 1947, Heisenberg argued 
			that if the National Socialists had been left in power for another 
			fifty years, then they would have become quite decent. As Mott and 
			Peierls note, that was a strange remark to make to a colleague who 
			had first lost his job and then relatives and friends in 
			extermination camps.545
 
			Perhaps most interesting, the report of the 1941 visit from the 
			German authorities in Copenhagen was very positive. According to an 
			official from the German occupation forces, the workshop had been 
			run by the Danish scientist Stromgren and the significant Danish 
			astronomers as well as some theoretical physicists had attended.
 
			  
			This German official was also the only 
			reporter who mentioned that the German physicists Walther Bothe and 
			Kurt Diebner, both of whom were involved with the Army research into 
			the military applications of nuclear fission, participated in the 
			conference as well. In the opinion of the German officials in 
			Copenhagen, both the workshop and the popular lectures at the GCI 
			were great successes, for they drew new Danish researchers into the 
			GCI.546  
			  
			That had been the purpose all along. 
			The Foreign Office did not stop there. In November 1941, it informed 
			the Ministry of Education that the Party Chancellery intended to 
			make a definitive decision: should Heisenberg be used for foreign 
			lectures in the future?
 
			  
			The Foreign Office had no doubt that 
			with regard to cultural political considerations, Heisenberg was 
			extremely valuable. The reports on his lectures in foreign countries 
			- and here the report on Budapest seems conveniently to have been 
			forgotten - had all been very positive. Moreover, several 
			independent suggestions had been made for using Heisenberg more 
			often as a guest lecturer.  
			  
			The Foreign Office wanted to know: was 
			Heisenberg an acceptable goodwill ambassador for German culture or 
			not?547 
			There is one important aspect of Heisenberg’s and von Weiszacker’s 
			1941 visit with Niels Bohr which Heisenberg and von Weiszacker 
			rarely mentioned in their many postwar descriptions of the event. 
			When they traveled to Copenhagen, the German Lightning War was 
			driving deep into the Soviet Union. Most Germans, and most probably 
			Heisenberg and von Weiszacker, believed that Hitler’s victory was 
			imminent. It is unlikely that the two German physicists would have 
			been concerned about the prospect of developing nuclear weapons for 
			this war.
 
			The historian Philippe Burrin has convincingly argued that the 
			decision to launch the Holocaust, the physical extermination of all 
			Jews under German control, was made on 18 September 1941, one day 
			before the conference began at the Copenhagen German Cultural 
			Institute.548 Of course it took some time before the 
			National Socialist leadership’s policy change, from forcing the Jews 
			to emigrate or planning to concentrate them on a “reservation” to 
			murdering them, would become known to Germans like Heisenberg or 
			conquered nationals like Bohr.
 
			  
			But in retrospect, the German 
			astrophysics conference in September 1941 was a watershed in many 
			respects. Up until this point, Heisenberg had consciously or 
			unconsciously been a goodwill ambassador for National Socialism and 
			German military aggression.  
			  
			Henceforth he would consciously or 
			unconsciously be an ambassador for genocide.
 Back to 
			Contents
 
 
			  
			  
			  
			
			6 - Goodwill Ambassadors 
			Rehabilitation Ludwig Prandtl made a second, more vigorous assault 
			on National Socialist policy towards physics in the spring of 1941, 
			this time seeking allies in German industry, including Carl Ramsauer, 
			a leading physicist at German General Electric.549
 
			  
			Germany’s misfortune in war also played 
			into the hands of Prandtl, Ramsauer, and company. Shortly after the 
			Soviet defense had frozen the Lightning War in its tracks during the 
			winter of 1941, it was clear that the entire German war economy had 
			to be reorganized and made more efficient. Although victory still 
			appeared possible, the war now appeared much more difficult to win. 
			Ramsauer now succeeded in convincing Major General Friedrich Fromm, 
			the commander of the German Reserve Army and chief of armaments 
			production, that German physics, and with it Germany’s ability to 
			wage war, was in grave danger.550 By early December 1941, 
			Prandtl had received a favorable response from Field Marshall Erhard 
			Milch, Hermann Goring’s deputy in the Air Force Ministry.551
 
			  
			The Air Force appreciated the connection 
			between academic physics and the industrial production of modern 
			weapons.552  
			  
			After assembling such powerful political 
			backing, Ramsauer submitted a twenty-eight page memorandum with six 
			appendices on the sorry state of German physics to REM.553 
			Ramsauer did not expect Rust to react to this challenge, nor did he, 
			but the Ministry of Education was not the main target.554 
			Ramsauer’s memorandum circulated widely. The highest agencies of the 
			government, including the military, developed a great interest in 
			theoretical physics.555 
			Perhaps the best example of such interest was the popular nuclear 
			fission lecture series held on 26 February 1942 in Berlin-Dahlem 
			before a restricted audience of representatives of the National 
			Socialist Party, the German state, and German industry.556 
			Minister of Education Bernhard Rust, Albert Vogler, the President of 
			both the Kaiser Wilhelm Society and Germany’s largest steel concern, 
			and the Reich Research Council were in attendance.557
 
			  
			Along with popular talks on the latest 
			research results given by the responsible project scientists, the 
			Army representative Erich Schumann discussed the military 
			applications of nuclear fission, the Reich Research Council 
			representative Abraham Esau stressed the significance of nuclear 
			power for the state and industry, and Hans Geiger, a politically and 
			professionally very conservative experimental physicist, made the 
			connection between research and application.558 
			These lectures gave the members of the nuclear power project the 
			opportunity to sell their research for financial, material, and 
			institutional support. The vivid and suggestive contributions by 
			Otto Hahn,559 Paul Harteck,560 and Heisenberg561 
			were exemplary in this respect. Hahn did not mention his former 
			Jewish collaborator Lise Meitner in his historical account of the 
			discovery of nuclear fission; instead he described enthusiastically 
			the potential of nuclear-fission chain reactions.562 
			Harteck was even more colorful in his justification of heavy water 
			research. Heavy water could be used to ignite a nuclear fission 
			chain reaction. Once lighted, no one knew how long or how powerfully 
			this flame could bum.563
 
			Heisenberg used a diagram of the various possible nuclear reactions 
			in uranium and moderator to provide his listeners with a layman’s 
			description of how uranium machines and nuclear explosives should 
			work (see diagram below).564
 
			 
			Chain reaction in 
			uranium machines (left) and in nuclear explosives (right). 
			 
			The solid black 
			circles represent uranium 238,  
			the ruled circles 
			uranium 235, and the small circles moderator 
			(Prom Walker, p. 56.) 
			  
			The left-hand portion of the diagram 
			represented a schematic uranium machine and the various nuclear 
			processes that a fission neutron could experience in uranium.  
			  
			A fast neutron can fission a uranium 238 
			nucleus, but, as Heisenberg realized, with very low probability. 
			After a few collisions, the slowed neutron might be absorbed by a 
			uranium 238 nucleus, and disappear from the scene. If, instead, the 
			slow neutron collided with a uranium 235 nucleus, it might cause 
			fission. But that was very unlikely. Therefore the desired chain 
			reaction could not proceed in ordinary uranium; new techniques were 
			needed in order to force the chain reaction.565 
			Heisenberg then made an analogy both in the spirit of the times and 
			tailored to the level of comprehension of his audience.566
 
			  
			The behavior of neutrons in uranium 
			could be thought of as a human population, where the fission process 
			represented an analogy to a child-bearing marriage and the neutron 
			capture process corresponded to death. In ordinary uranium, the 
			death count overwhelms the birth rate, so that a population must die 
			out after a short period of time. For survival, the number of births 
			per marriage or the number of marriages must be increased, or the 
			probability of death reduced. 
			Heisenberg told his audience that nature prohibited an increase in 
			neutron births. An increase in the number of fissions/ marriages 
			could be achieved by enriching the uranium 235 in the uranium 
			sample.
 
			  
			If pure uranium 235 could be produced, 
			Heisenberg noted, then the processes represented in the right-hand 
			side of the diagram could take place. Unless a fission neutron 
			escapes through the outer surface of the uranium, every neutron 
			would cause a further fission after one or two collisions. In this 
			case, the probability of death was vanishingly small compared to the 
			likelihood of neutron increase. 
			If a large enough amount of uranium 235 could be accumulated, then 
			the number of neutrons in the uranium would increase tremendously in 
			a very short period of time. The isotope uranium 235 might make an 
			explosive of “utterly unimaginable effect.” Heisenberg hastened to 
			inform his audience of prospective patrons that the explosive 
			uranium 235 was very difficult to obtain.
 
			  
			As for reducing the probability of 
			neutron death, Heisenberg noted that a uranium machine composed of 
			uranium and a neutron moderator could facilitate fission in uranium 
			235 without great danger of neutron absorption by the heavier 
			isotope uranium 238. 
			  
			Heisenberg observed that, like uranium 
			235, large amounts of the moderator heavy water were not easy to 
			obtain. 
			Heisenberg recommended uranium machines as heat engines which could 
			produce energy and power vehicles or ships. These machines would be 
			particularly suitable for submarines, since a nuclear reactor does 
			not consume oxygen. But these uranium machines had an even more 
			important application.
 
			  
			The transformation of uranium in the 
			machine created a new substance, element 94 (plutonium), which most 
			probably would be as explosive as uranium 235, and much easier to 
			manufacture since it could be separated chemically from its parent. 
			Uranium enrichment made nuclear energy and explosives possible.
			 
			  
			A uranium machine could function as a 
			heat engine and produce another unimaginably powerful explosive. To 
			achieve all this, Heisenberg recommended strong financial and 
			institutional support for the nuclear power project. In short, 
			Heisenberg went out of his way to illustrate clearly and vividly the 
			warlike aspects of nuclear power.567 
			As Hahn noted in his diary, the lectures before the Reich Research 
			Council made a good impression.568 They were subsequently publicized 
			in a newspaper account under the title, “Physics and National 
			Defense.” Although the words atomic, nuclear, energy, or power did 
			not appear, a reader would have learned that the meeting dealt with 
			problems of modern physics decisive for national defense and the 
			entire German economy.569
 
			  
			The physicist and Party official 
			Wolfgang Finkelnburg could soon tell Heisenberg that his lecture 
			before the Reich Research Council and the subsequent press accounts 
			had had a good effect. Finkelnburg had received several inquiries 
			from Party positions concerning the military importance of 
			theoretical physics and especially of Heisenberg’s work.570 
			The military potential of nuclear power penetrated into the highest 
			circles of the National Socialist state.
 
			  
			On 21 March, less than a month after 
			Heisenberg’s lecture, Reich Minister of Propaganda Josef Goebbels 
			noted in his diary that he had received a report on the latest 
			developments in German science. Goebbels learned that research on 
			atomic weapons had progressed so far that it might be used in the 
			ongoing war.  
			  
			His reports claimed that tremendous 
			destruction could be wrought with a minimum of effort, with 
			terrifying prospects for war. Modern technology placed means of 
			destruction in the hands of human beings, the Reich Minister of 
			Propaganda noted, that were incredible. It was essential that 
			Germany be ahead of everybody, he recognized, for whoever could 
			introduce such a revolutionary innovation into the war had the 
			greater chance of winning it.571 
			By this time, no one involved with the research or administration of 
			the nuclear power project believed that nuclear fission could 
			influence the outcome of the war. But by dangling seductively the 
			prospect of unimaginably powerful weapons sometime in the future, 
			scientists from the German nuclear power project could, and did, 
			enjoy exceptional political and financial support from several 
			diverse sections of the National Socialist German state.
 
			For example, in the spring of 1943 Hahn and Heisenberg lectured at 
			the Reich Postal Ministry before a small circle of around fifteen 
			people, including Postal Minister Ohnesorge, Minister of Armaments 
			Speer, and General Keitel, head of the supreme command of the Armed 
			Forces. Hans Meckel, a former staff member of the Navy commander 
			Admiral Donitz, attended this meeting and remembered one statement 
			from Heisenberg very clearly: even though there were a few still 
			unsolved problems, within one to two years the scientists hoped to 
			be able to offer the National Socialist leadership a bomb with 
			“hitherto unknown explosive and destructive power.”572
 
			The rehabilitation of modern physics and the great interest in 
			nuclear power improved Heisenberg’s position in the National 
			Socialist state. In June 1942, he became director of the Kaiser 
			Wilhelm Institute for Physics in Berlin-Dahlem. A professorship at 
			the University of Berlin usually went with the directorship. The 
			planned appointment caused another round of political reports on 
			Heisenberg from various branches of the NSDAP.
 
			  
			These investigations573 
			cleared the way for Heisenberg’s call to Berlin. The unlikely 
			combination of the SS’s positive report and the newly found support 
			for modern physics in German industry had fully rehabilitated him. 
			The Ministry of Education stressed the importance of Heisenberg’s 
			appointment for the national defense. Both Albert Speer’s Ministry 
			of Armaments and the Armed Forces had great interest in Heisenberg’s 
			research.574
 
			  
			Indeed Heisenberg subsequently told a 
			colleague that Speer took a great personal interest in nuclear 
			physics research.575 Alfred Rosenberg’s office echoed 
			Ramsauer’s memorandum and argued that the Party could not intervene 
			in the “difference of opinion” between Lenard’s and Heisenberg’s 
			schools of physics.576 The Reich University Teachers 
			League merely repeated some of the positive statements made about 
			Heisenberg in the SS report and added pointedly that Himmler had 
			personally called a halt to political attacks on Heisenberg.577
			 
			  
			The contrast with the previous attempts 
			to bring him to Munich and Vienna is stark.
 
			  
 
			  
			Lectures in Switzerland and Budapest
 
			In the spring of 1942, Heisenberg 
			received an invitation to speak before the Swiss League of Students. 
			Switzerland was one of the few countries in Europe to remain neutral 
			during the war.  
			  
			The Swiss physicist Paul Scherrer, who 
			had recommended his German colleague for the lecture, asked 
			Heisenberg to give a talk before the physicists at the Zurich 
			Technical University as well,578 Heisenberg became 
			inundated with offers for speaking engagements. In the end, he 
			agreed to lecture before the Science Faculty of the University of 
			Geneva, the Swiss Physical Society, and the student organizations of 
			Bern and Basle as well.579  
			  
			The rector at the University of Leipzig 
			noted as usual that the dean considered Heisenberg suitable for the 
			trip and that the University Teachers League representative had no 
			objections. He asked REM for its approval,580 which was granted in 
			late October.581  
			  
			The Party reminded him of his obligation 
			to call upon its foreign branch while in Switzerland.582 
			On 17 November 1942, Heisenberg arrived in Zurich and was met by the 
			head of the Swiss Students League. The next day, he spoke at the 
			university colloquium on the observable variables in the theory of 
			elementary particles. Afterward he visited his old colleague 
			Scherrer at the Technical University. Heisenberg’s next lecture came 
			before the Swiss Physical Society on 19 November, which included 
			dinner afterward as the guest of the president of this society. The 
			next day he went to Basle, paid a courtesy call on the physicists 
			there, and in the evening spoke before the local student 
			organization on the current goals of physical research.
 
			Two days later, he gave an evening lecture before the Zurich student 
			organization on changes in the foundation of the exact sciences.
 
			  
			On 24 November, he visited the German 
			ambassador to Switzerland and the representative of the Party in 
			Bern and lectured to the Bern student organization. Heisenberg 
			reported that he was treated throughout in a very friendly fashion 
			in Switzerland, and not just by old colleagues. He encountered 
			frequent political condemnation of the German “re-ordering” of 
			Europe, but this ill will did not carry over to personal 
			relationships. His lectures had attracted great interest.583 
			In October 1942, the German ambassador to Hungary, a German ally, 
			complained to the Foreign Office about REM’s unwillingness to allow 
			Heisenberg to return to Budapest. With his Nobel Prize and his call 
			to the Kaiser Wilhelm Society, Heisenberg was so well known that a 
			lecture from him guaranteed a cultural and political success.
 
			  
			Hans Freyer, who had been professor for 
			philosophy and sociology at Kiel and Leipzig during the Weimar 
			Republic, and who was now the president of the Budapest GCI, wanted 
			to invite Heisenberg for a talk in his institute. However, Freyer 
			did agreed that, because of the controversy Heisenberg’s previous 
			trip to Hungary had caused, other lectures in Budapest would not be 
			a good idea.584 
			The Budapest GCI managed to get around the recalcitrant ministry by 
			joining forces with the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. In early November 
			the Society informed the ministry that a joint scientific meeting 
			had been planned with the Budapest GCI, including talks not only by 
			Heisenberg, but also from Max Planck and Carl Fried-rich von 
			Weizsacker.585 The Education Ministry reacted angrily.
 
			  
			Another talk by Heisenberg in Budapest 
			would undoubtedly attract foreign scholars of Jewish origin or 
			liberal political views who had been connected with German physics 
			before the National Socialists took power. For example, Heisenberg 
			had former students and colleagues in Hungary. The ministry was 
			afraid that some members of the audience would see the affair as a 
			political demonstration for Jewish scientists. 
			However, the request by the Budapest GCI was very much strengthened 
			by the Kaiser Wilhelm Society’s participation.586 The 
			joint series which would present Heisenberg along with Planck and 
			von Weizsacker to the Hungarian public would not be easy to cancel.
 
			  
			REM informed the Foreign Office that 
			they considered German initiatives for sending Heisenberg abroad 
			inappropriate because his visits always ended up being so 
			controversial. But since Ernst Telschow, General Secretary of the 
			Kaiser Wilhelm Society, had gone so far ahead with preparations for 
			the lectures without consulting either the ministry or the Foreign 
			Office, REM agreed to go along - this time.587 
			Heisenberg, von Weizsacker, Planck, and the German ambassador to 
			Hungary submitted reports on the lectures. Heisenberg’s was the most 
			sober. On 30 November 1942 he arrived in Budapest and joined Planck 
			and von Weizsacker as the guests of the Budapest institute. Planck 
			and von Weizsacker spoke on the first two days of December, 
			respectively. Heisenberg had lunch with the director of the GCI on 2 
			December, tea with the German ambassador to Hungary, and lectured 
			that evening on “the current goals of physical research.”
 
			  
			An informal party at the institute 
			brought the activities of the day to a congenial close. 
			The three German physicists met the physics professor at the 
			University of Budapest for lunch on the following day and Heisenberg 
			joined his counterpart at the local technical university for dinner. 
			He returned to Germany on 4 December. When Heisenberg reported his 
			impressions of the political climate in Budapest, he judged that the 
			GCI had succeeded in keeping alive the Hungarian interest in German 
			cultural goods in a most auspicious manner.588
 
			Von Weizsacker reported that he spoke on “atomic theory and 
			philosophy” before invited guests, including officials and the 
			representatives of physics and the neighboring disciplines at the 
			local universities. After the talks, he had a pleasant opportunity 
			to meet with Hungarian colleagues. Von Weizsacker’s remarks about 
			the Budapest trip stand in sharp contrast to his 1941 report on the 
			Copenhagen conference. The apparent interest in cultural politics he 
			showed at that time disappeared shortly after the tense meeting in 
			Denmark, never to return.589
 
			Planck’s report enthusiastically praised the export of German 
			culture. He gave his standard talk on “The senses and boundaries of 
			the exact sciences.”
 
			  
			The president of the GCI, who as Planck 
			noted approvingly had set himself the task of cultivating the 
			cultural relations between Germany and Hungary, met Planck and his 
			wife at the train station and looked after them throughout their 
			stay. Planck’s talk was held on 1 December in the cozy atmosphere of 
			the GCI. Guests included representatives of the German delegation to 
			Hungary of the NSDAP, and many Hungarian dignitaries, including 
			Archduke Joseph, the president of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 
			and the Archduchess Anna. 
			Following Planck’s talk, an official reception was accompanied by 
			pleasant personal conversation. Planck was impressed both by the 
			good will towards Germans expressed by the Hungarians and especially 
			by Freyer’s exceptional skill. He understood how to awaken and 
			maintain interest in German culture among the educated circles in 
			Hungary. Planck reckoned that the entire event completely fulfilled 
			its goal, to support the intellectual connections between Germany 
			and Hungary.590
 
			The account by the German foreign service stressed the collaboration 
			of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society. The Budapest GCI previously had 
			sponsored only lectures in the humanities; they decided to try 
			physics in order to attract Hungarians interested in science. The 
			Kaiser Wilhelm Society was happy to send a few scientists.
 
			  
			At first its president, Albert Vdgler, 
			planned to attend as well and provide a brief survey of the society. 
			General Secretary Ernst Telschow went instead. As Freyer noted 
			approvingly, Tel-schow’s talk provoked great interest among the 
			Hungarian scientists and the representatives of the Ministry of 
			Culture. The Hungarians had lost the research funds they previously 
			had received from America; Freyer believed that Germany could fill 
			the gap. 
			As far as the scientific talks were concerned, Freyer noted with 
			approval that the aged Planck spoke with astonishing freshness, 
			inner dignity, and intellectual elegance. Heisenberg, in his 
			presentation of the current problems in physics and promising 
			research areas, lectured with a clarity and maturity which only a 
			researcher working on the furthest boundaries of science could 
			provide.
 
			  
			Von Weizsacker, who spoke without notes, 
			impressed Freyer with his ability to combine physics with philosophy 
			so productively. The discussion provoked by von Weizsacker’s talk 
			lasted until midnight. The lectures by Heisenberg and von Weizsacker 
			were followed by a concert of Bach and Mozart. 
			From the perspective of the president of the Budapest GCI, the 
			lectures were a complete success. The audience had been hand-picked, 
			and almost no invitations were declined. Along with the Archduke and 
			Archduchess, the guests included the ambassadors or representatives 
			of Italy, Finland, Croatia, and Slovakia, the Hungarian Minister of 
			Culture, all the relevant professors from the University of 
			Budapest, and representatives of other Hungarian universities.
 
			  
			Best of all, great interest had already 
			been expressed from the Hungarian side for more such cultural 
			events, which was what Freyer wanted to hear.591
 
			  
 
			  
			  
			The Goodwill Ambassador
			 
			Heisenberg’s trip to Budapest was the 
			last time he experienced difficulty in traveling abroad. Henceforth, 
			if he declined an invitation to speak, then it was his decision.
			 
			  
			The delayed effect of his dual 
			appointment in Berlin and the ever-worsening state of the war 
			inspired the change in policy.592 Heisenberg’s secret 
			research had been classified important for the war. As the German 
			position in the conflict deteriorated, his standing inside the 
			National Socialist state climbed slowly but steadily, as 
			demonstrated by his election to the Prussian Academy of Sciences in 
			early 1943.593 
			Heisenberg received two invitations to France in 1943. The German 
			Embassy in Paris was sponsoring a lecture series at the College de 
			France, and wanted Heisenberg to deliver a strictly scientific talk 
			in French.594 The dean at the University of Berlin forwarded the 
			invitation to Heisenberg with the remark that he, the rector, and 
			the representative of the University Teachers League naturally would 
			support the trip.595
 
			  
			The German Institute in France also 
			wanted a lecture from Heisenberg.596 He turned down both 
			offers because his French was not good enough for lecturing.597
			 
			  
			In contrast, Cart Friedrich von 
			Weizsacker did give a lecture in Paris, but both his talk and the 
			lunch in his honor were boycotted by his French colleagues. When the 
			French physicist Frederic Joliot-Curie criticized his German 
			colleague for the “bad taste” he had showed by accepting an 
			invitation from the German occupation authorities, von Weizsacker 
			replied that he had been forced to accept.598 
			In February 1943, the Slovakian University in Pressburg (Bratislava) 
			sent an invitation by way of REM for Heisenberg to lecture in the 
			Slovakian Protectorate. In a striking about-face a ministry official 
			now told Heisenberg that they wanted him to accept the 
			invitation.599 Heisenberg agreed to go.600
 
			  
			On 28 March Heisenberg met the president 
			of the local technical university, the dean of the Slovakian 
			University, and a representative of the German Academic Exchange 
			Service. That afternoon Heisenberg was the guest of the president, 
			who took him to the opera in the evening. The next day, Heisenberg 
			had an audience with the German ambassador, lunch with the dean and 
			the president, an evening lecture on the state of atomic physics, 
			and a late dinner with some Pressburg scientists.  
			  
			The following day brought more of the 
			same: a walk through the old town hall with the mayor of Pressburg, 
			lunch with the dean, the president, the local head of the German 
			Academic Exchange Service, and the German ambassador, an evening 
			lecture on cosmic radiation to a small group of scientists and 
			students, and dinner with Pressburg scientists and a visiting 
			Italian mathematician.  
			  
			The Pressburg scientists were very 
			friendly. Heisenberg reported that the relations between Germans and 
			their Slovakian colleagues were very good.601 
			A second popular lecture series on nuclear power was held before the 
			Air Force Academy in May 1943.602
 
			  
			By demonstrating the usefulness of 
			modern physics, these lectures became part of the continuing battle 
			against Deutsche Physik. Indeed Heisenberg’s foreign lecture tours 
			in general also contributed to the continuing campaign against the 
			forces of Lenard and Stark - the advocates of Deutsche Physik were 
			of no use when it came to foreign cultural propaganda. A month 
			earlier, Carl Ramsauer had repeated his arguments about the 
			dangerous decline of German physics before this same sympathetic 
			audience. Since Ramsauer had kindled the interest of Academy members 
			in nuclear physics, Heisenberg was asked to arrange a lecture series 
			to keep it alive.603 
			Abraham Esau, the administrator in charge of nuclear physics 
			research, opened the series with a status report on the nuclear 
			power project and followed it with a talk on the production of 
			luminous paints without the use of radium, a pressing topic for the 
			manufacture of aircraft dials.604
 
			  
			Otto Hahn spoke on the artificial 
			transmutation of elements - and this time, before a less political 
			audience, mentioned Lise Meitner by name as contributing to the work 
			that led up to the discovery of nuclear fission.605 Klaus 
			Clusius discussed isotope separation,606 and Walther 
			Bothe lectured on the research tools of nuclear physics.607
			 
			  
			All of these speakers stressed the 
			utility of physics as well as the need for increased governmental 
			support. 
			Heisenberg’s contribution paralleled his 1942 lecture before the 
			Reich Research Council. But two differences are significant. In 
			contrast to the winter of 1941-1942, the uranium research now 
			enjoyed secure political and financial support; in contrast to 
			Heisenberg’s February 1942 talk, he now represented nuclear fission 
			as irrelevant to the war effort. A chain reaction in uranium 235 
			would produce large amounts of energy explosively, Heisenberg noted, 
			but that was as close as he came to mentioning nuclear explosives.
 
			  
			He told his audience that the first step 
			toward a very important technical development had been taken. 
			Nuclear power could be liberated for large-scale applications. 
			However, he closed on a more somber note. The practical execution of 
			this process was greatly hindered by the strained economy and the 
			great external difficulties presented by the war.608 
			Shortly before the lecture series before the Academy, Heisenberg 
			received an invitation from the SS.
 
			  
			In 1942 the first “SS-House” outside of 
			the Reich had been established in Leyden. Himmler entrusted it with 
			two tasks: providing Dutch students with a Germanic education and 
			establishing contact with intellectuals in Holland. The Dutch were 
			to become acquainted with German “ideological goods.” In a year’s 
			time, the director of the SS-House believed that he and his 
			colleagues had made a good start towards their cultural and 
			political goals, but they recognized that the German military 
			setbacks of the previous winter as well as political developments 
			inside Holland had created difficulties.  
			  
			For this reason the SS decided to invite 
			leading German scholars to Leyden in order to demonstrate the 
			prowess of German intellectuals to Dutch academics. Heisenberg was 
			asked to visit Leyden in the spring of 1943.609 He 
			declined because he was too busy, but encouraged another invitation 
			in the fall. The SS apparently did not contact him again.610 
			In June 1943, the collaborationist Dutch Ministry of Education sent 
			Heisenberg another invitation to visit Holland. The Reich 
			Commissioner for the Occupied Dutch Territories, the highest German 
			official in Holland, encouraged Heisenberg’s acceptance.611
 
			  
			REM welcomed the proposal, especially 
			since the invitation had come from the Dutch Ministry.612 Heisenberg 
			told the ministry in Berlin that he was willing to visit Holland in 
			principle, but only under certain conditions. He already had asked 
			the Dutch officials to tell him which of his Dutch colleagues wanted 
			to see him and what the exact details of his itinerary would be. He 
			wanted to know what his Dutch colleagues - including friends and 
			former students - thought of the idea before he committed himself.613 
			A Dutch official in the Dutch ministry collaborating with the German 
			authorities called in Kramers and showed him Heisenberg’s letter. 
			Kramers wrote directly to Heisenberg to describe the poor working 
			conditions of Dutch academics. An official of the Dutch Ministry of 
			Education had intimated that this situation might be improved by 
			reestablishing personal scientific contacts between Dutch and 
			international - in other words, German - colleagues.
 
			The Dutch and German authorities wanted Heisenberg to spend a week 
			in Holland. He would visit all the physics institutes, meet with his 
			Dutch colleagues, and give talks drawn from his own research before 
			small groups of Dutch physicists. Thus Heisenberg’s itinerary would 
			fulfill the new governmental guidelines for foreign lectures.
 
			  
			Kramers added that he had discussed this 
			matter with Casimir and other Dutch scientists. All would welcome a 
			visit by Heisenberg - which was exactly what Heisenberg wanted to 
			hear.614 
			The adverse working conditions which Kramers mentioned may be 
			illustrated by the state of the physical laboratory at the 
			University of Leyden, where Kramers was professor of theoretical 
			physics. German authorities had seized and closed the laboratory. 
			The scientific equipment was to be shipped to Germany as war booty. 
			Dutch scientists were prohibited from entering the laboratory.615
 
			As soon as he received the letter from Kramers, Heisenberg told REM 
			that he would visit Holland and implied that the personal invitation 
			he had received from his Dutch colleague had been a crucial factor 
			in his decision.616 Heisenberg simultaneously wrote to 
			Kramers and expressed his pleasure in the upcoming visit.617 
			Kramers replied in kind.618 The German officials were 
			pleased that Heisenberg was coming, but also displeased that Kramers, 
			who was not cooperating with the occupation authorities, had become 
			involved.619
 
			  
			They informed Heisenberg that although 
			he was free to see Kramers informally, Kramers would not be an 
			official participant in the program for Heisenberg’s visit. 
			Furthermore, Heisenberg was ordered to visit the German occupation 
			authorities at the very beginning of his visit in order to be 
			briefed on the political state of the Dutch universities.620 
			Heisenberg traveled to Holland in October 1943, following a summer 
			of protests by students and professors at Dutch universities over 
			German occupation policies, including the persecution of Dutch Jews, 
			The Germans responded with harsh repression and deportations of 
			Dutch Jews to the death camps.621 As soon as Heisenberg 
			arrived in the Netherlands, he met with collaborating officials from 
			the Dutch Ministry of Education and with representatives of the 
			German occupation authorities.
 
			  
			The following day he paid a courtesy 
			call on the physics institute in Utrecht, and dined with the 
			theoretical physicist Leon Rosenfeld. In the morning Heisenberg 
			journeyed to Leyden, visited the famous Kammer-lingh-Onnes 
			Laboratory, and met Kramers. On 21 October, Heisenberg gave the 
			first talk of his trip, a lecture on the theory of elementary 
			particles, at a small colloquium at the Leyden physics institute. 
			Heisenberg spent the next few days in Delft, where he visited his 
			colleague Kronig as well as the nearby technical university. On 24 
			October, Heisenberg and the physicists from the Philips Company and 
			from the University of Leyden attended an informal colloquium 
			presented by Kramers at Rosenfeld’s house. The next day Heisenberg 
			traveled to Amsterdam, where the physicist participated in some 
			experiments on cosmic radiation.
 
			  
			On 26 October, Heisenberg discussed his 
			visit with Dr. Seyss-Inquart, the German Commissioner in Holland. 
			According to Heisenberg’s subsequent report, everywhere he went he 
			met a most cordial reception. He avoided politics wherever possible; 
			when it did come up, Heisenberg reported, his Dutch colleagues 
			harshly rejected the German point of view. However, he nevertheless 
			assured his official readers that cooperation with the Dutch on a 
			purely scientific basis was definitely possible.622 
			Shortly after the end of the war, Hendrik Casimir was questioned by 
			the astronomer Gerard Kuiper, a former countryman and now a member 
			of the American Armed Forces. Kuiper wrote a report that vividly 
			captured the impression of callous nationalism that Heisenberg had 
			made on his Dutch colleagues. According to Casimir, when Heisenberg 
			visited Holland in 1943, he said that history legitimized Germany’s 
			rule over Europe and the world. Casimir reported that Heisenberg had 
			been aware of the German concentration camps and the looting of 
			other countries, but he nevertheless wanted his country to control 
			Europe.
 
			Heisenberg justified his position to Casimir by arguing that only a 
			nation that ruled ruthlessly could maintain itself. Democracy was 
			too weak to rule Europe. Therefore, in Heisenberg’s opinion, it was 
			a contest between Germany and Russia. Heisenberg, a pronounced 
			anti-Communist, betrayed his great insensitivity to the plight of 
			his colleagues in occupied Europe by making harsh statements. He 
			coldly drew the logical conclusion from his own arguments, that “a 
			Europe under German leadership might well be the lesser evil.”623
 
			  
			Heisenberg’s Dutch colleagues did not 
			appreciate the obtuse message that he gave them, that Germany had to 
			win the war; nor could he understand how or why he had alienated 
			them. He believed that his visit to Holland had gone well, despite 
			all the politics.624
 
			Heisenberg had been asked by his Dutch 
			colleagues to visit their country in order to improve their working 
			conditions. This is exactly what he did.  
			  
			On Heisenberg’s intervention, Rosenfeld 
			received permission to visit his mother in Belgium.625 
			After Heisenberg’s visit, the German occupation authorities suddenly 
			announced that the Dutch scientists might be allowed to retain some 
			scientific instruments vital to their research. Kramers and his 
			colleagues immediately submitted a modest list of apparatus they 
			wished to keep. A German official visited Kramers, mentioned that he 
			had spoken with Heisenberg in Berlin, and expressed surprise that 
			the Leyden Laboratory was still closed. This official ostentatiously 
			lifted the ban on research and promised that the Dutch physicists 
			would be told as soon as possible what equipment would not be 
			removed. Heisenberg’s Dutch colleagues were sincerely grateful to 
			him.626 
			The German occupation authorities had asked Heisenberg how his visit 
			might be extended and the cultural cooperation between Dutch and 
			German scientists increased. For a long time, he felt unable to 
			answer, but at last gave an apolitical response. Given the state of 
			the war, which was steadily deteriorating for Germany, further 
			visits did not appear to him to be a good idea.
 
			  
			He counseled the occupation authorities 
			to wait patiently. But Heisenberg also noted that he considered his 
			trip to have been a success, since it had reopened channels of 
			scientific communication between Dutch physicists and him. His 
			recent correspondence with Kramers had been very valuable. 
			Heisenberg told his countrymen in Holland that he was convinced that 
			scientific relations between the Germans and the Dutch would resume 
			very quickly once the war had come to a happy end.627 
			A little more than a month after returning to Germany from Holland, 
			Heisenberg went east to speak at the German Institute for Eastern 
			Work.628
 
			  
			Coblitz submitted a second petition in 
			the spring of 1943, and this time it was approved. The ministry made 
			so prompt a decision, and informed Heisenberg so quickly,629 
			that he could tell Coblitz of his willingness to speak in the 
			General Government630 even before the director of the 
			German Institute for Eastern Work had sent him an official 
			invitation.631 
			Around the same time, Heisenberg received recognition from the east 
			of his enhanced professional prestige in another form, the 
			“Copernicus Prize” for excellence in physics. This prize, originally 
			awarded by the University of Konigsberg, was now awarded jointly by 
			the university and Frank’s institute.632 Both Heisenberg 
			and Gustav Borger, a Party official from the University Teachers 
			League, saw this honor as yet another blow against the forces of 
			Lenard and Stark.
 
			  
			Borger sent Heisenberg his hearty 
			congratulations, since this award represented yet another gratifying 
			official recognition of Heisenberg’s work and thereby of theoretical 
			physics.633 Heisenberg replied that this prize especially 
			pleased him, because it could be interpreted as an official 
			rehabilitation of theoretical physics.634  
			  
			As Germany’s position in the war grew 
			worse, Heisenberg’s prestige as a scientist in Germany rose higher 
			and higher. 
			Coblitz took care to remind the “in-house physicist” at the German 
			Institute for Eastern Work to attend Heisenberg’s lecture, 
			especially since Frank, who was a “close friend” of Heisenberg, had 
			personally invited him.635 Heisenberg’s visit to Krakow was delayed 
			until the end of the year. Frank was either busy or on vacation.636 
			Heisenberg had to wait until the dates of his trip to Holland were 
			set in October.637
 
			  
			A month later, he fell ill.638 
			He finally delivered his lecture in the second week of December, 
			only a few months after the German authorities had begun to 
			annihilate the Jewish ghettos in Krakow, Warsaw, and Lodz.639 
			There is no record of how or whether Heisenberg reacted to the 
			razing of the ghettos, but he probably knew that it was happening. 
			Similarly, Heisenberg knew that throughout Europe Germans were 
			pillaging occupied countries and deporting their Jews to 
			concentration camps. But Heisenberg was hardly alone. Every German 
			with eyes to see and ears to hear knew about the concentration camps 
			and that the Jews had vanished from Germany.
 
			  
			After the war, many people inside and 
			outside of Germany assumed that Germans like Heisenberg knew about 
			the Holocaust, but nevertheless either did nothing, or even worse, 
			continued to work for the National Socialists. Is this criticism 
			fair? 
			Philippe Burrin’s analysis640 of the decision to launch 
			the Holocaust helps put Heisenberg’s activities into context. 
			According to Burrin, Hitler was torn by two conflicting, if both 
			malevolent, intentions towards the Jews. On one hand, Hitler wanted 
			to purge them from Germany.
 
			  
			This goal did not necessarily require 
			genocide, for Hitler and the National Socialist leadership spent a 
			great deal of time and effort on plans to deport Jews to a 
			“reservation” like Madagascar or a region deep in Asiatic Russia. On 
			the other hand, Hitler also wanted to use some Jews as hostages 
			against the international Jewish conspiracy he saw threatening him, 
			his movement, and the German people. 
			Obviously Hitler could not both eliminate the Jews from the German 
			sphere of influence and simultaneously hold them as hostages. Thus 
			his policy toward Jews vacillated during the first nine years of the 
			Third Reich. His decision to forego both options in order to murder 
			the Jews was the result of a third theme in his irrational 
			worldview. The National Socialist leader blamed the Jews, both 
			inside and outside of Germany, for the German defeat in World War I.
 
			  
			As Burrin demonstrates, Hitler 
			consistently threatened the Jews with physical extermination if 
			there was a repeat of World War I, in other words, if “the Jews” 
			once again threatened to betray and defeat Germany. 
			In the late summer of 1941, it became clear to the German military 
			leadership that the conflict with the Soviet Union would be a long 
			difficult affair, and that ultimately the United States would enter 
			the war on the side of Great Britain. World War II was thereby 
			transformed from the quick painless lightning war to a world-wide 
			war of attrition similar to the conflict Germany lost in 1918. 
			Hitler now ordered a sudden and definitive change in his policy 
			towards the Jews. Emigration, which had been encouraged, was now 
			stopped. Plans for a Jewish reservation were dropped. The 
			uncoordinated murder of Jews by special SS forces in the occupied 
			regions of the Soviet Union was transformed into a systematic, 
			efficient, bureaucratic genocide.
 
			Five or six million Jews were murdered, many killed in gas chambers 
			after being shipped to death camps in overcrowded cattle cars. The 
			Jews were not the only victims of the National Socialists. Another 
			nine or ten million people were starved, shot, or overworked. The 
			National Socialists treated Gypsies like the Jews and murdered forty 
			percent of the one million Gypsies in Europe. Around four million 
			Slavs lost their lives as slave laborers in Germany. Finally, the 
			Germans deliberately allowed two or three million Soviet prisoners 
			of war to die in captivity.641
 
			It hardly seems fair to accuse Heisenberg or anyone else of 
			responsibility for the Holocaust before the National Socialist 
			leadership itself decided to commit genocide. Thus Heisenberg’s 
			appeal to the SS for a political rehabilitation, his willingness to 
			travel abroad as a goodwill ambassador for National Socialist 
			Germany, and his participation in the wartime German “uranium 
			project”642  - in other words, his decision to 
			remain in Germany and work within the system - all happened or began 
			before the Holocaust became inevitable. However, Heisenberg knew he 
			was working for a ruthless, racist, and murderous state.
 
			Moreover, Heisenberg did not stop working on nuclear fission, 
			traveling abroad, or enjoying the political backing of patrons in 
			the Third Reich once he learned of the rape of Europe, the 
			deportation of Jews, the razing of the ghettos, or of the death 
			camps. That would have meant taking a clear, courageous, and 
			potentially dangerous stand against National Socialism, something 
			Heisenberg did not do.
 
			  
			However, it hardly seems fair to blame 
			Heisenberg for the Holocaust. His conduct was consistent over the 
			course of the Third Reich. It was Hitler who changed his mind.
 
			  
 
			  
			Copenhagen in 1944
 
			During the winter of 1943-1944 the war 
			entered its last, and for the majority of Germans, most hopeless 
			phase.  
			  
			The steady deterioration of German 
			society, including the destruction of cities from the air, 
			interruptions in the transportation system, and increasing shortages 
			of basic necessities, hampered, but did not stop Heisenberg’s guest 
			lectures. He did not go to the GCI in Bucharest643 or to 
			the “German Academy” in Klagen-furt.644  
			  
			Instead he stayed in Berlin for the 1944 
			summer semester to lecture at the university.645 But he 
			did go to Copenhagen.646 Heisenberg learned in January 
			that the German occupation authorities had occupied the Bohr 
			Institute. Jurgen Beggild, the Danish physicist who had been left in 
			charge after Bohr and the Jewish or partly Jewish members had been 
			forced to flee Denmark for Sweden, had been arrested and accused of 
			working with Germany’s enemies. 
			Once the remaining physicists at the Bohr institute realized that 
			their German colleagues had not been responsible for the German 
			takeover, they decided to alert Heisenberg to the occupation and 
			asked the physical chemist Hans Suess - who was passing through 
			Copenhagen on his way south from Norway - to pass on the message. 
			Heisenberg learned of the occupation from Suess on 5 January 1944 
			and arranged to be part of the German commission that would 
			investigate whether the research at the Bohr Institute had been 
			contributing to the Allied war effort.647
 
			Von Weizsacker found out to his dismay that the German officials in 
			Copenhagen were considering making him the new director of Bohr’s 
			old institute. He did not want to confront his Danish colleagues as 
			a conqueror and asked Heisenberg to use his influence to kill the 
			plan.648 In the company of the Army physicist
 Kurt Diebner and others, Heisenberg traveled to Denmark on 24 
			January and met with the plenipotentiary of the German Reich in 
			Copenhagen.649
 
			  
			The German authorities were debating 
			whether to staff the Bohr institute with German physicists, to force 
			the Danish scientists at this institute to contribute to the German 
			war effort, or to strip the institute of all equipment needed in 
			Germany.650 
			Heisenberg obviously wanted to arrange as beneficial a settlement as 
			possible for the Danes. He toured the high-voltage equipment and the 
			cyclotron at the institution with some occupation officials, 
			emphasizing how complicated the equipment was and how difficult to 
			move. The next day, the German authorities informed the Danish 
			Foreign Office that the Bohr institute would be reopened without 
			conditions and released Beggild.651 Heisenberg 
			subsequently told Johannes Jensen, a colleague who had many friends 
			and acquaintances at the Bohr institute, that the Danes were very 
			happy about this outcome. 652
 
 
			A month after his visit to Denmark, 
			Heisenberg received an invitation by way of the Foreign Office and 
			the German occupation officials to speak again at the Copenhagen 
			GCI.653 Heisenberg accordingly spent four days in 
			Denmark, April 18 to 22, as guest of Otto Hofler, the new director 
			of the GCI.  
			  
			On the evening of 19 April, Heisenberg 
			gave his talk, “The smallest building blocks of matter,” before an 
			audience made up almost completely of Germans. Heisenberg’s Danish 
			colleagues refused to attend, including the scientists who had 
			attended the 1941 astrophysics conference and who, until the 
			resignation of the Danish government, had participated in the 
			programs of the GCI.  
			  
			The following day Heisenberg had lunch 
			with the plenipotentiary of the Reich, Dr. Best, and spent the 
			evening as Hofler’s guest with several representatives of cultural 
			politics in Scandinavia. 
			On 19 April, Heisenberg also paid a visit to Bohr’s old institute, 
			whereupon Heisenberg’s Danish colleagues invited him to give them a 
			talk on his own work. Heisenberg subsequently met with several 
			Danish colleagues and their wives as the guest of Professor Mailer. 
			On 21 April Heisenberg lectured on “the theory of elementary 
			particles” in Danish, followed by a brief institute tea.
 
			Heisenberg asked the Danes why they had not come to his talk at the 
			GCI. They replied that, because of the tense political relationship 
			that had existed between Germany and Denmark since the Danish 
			government resigned in 1943, they wanted nothing to do with the 
			political GCI.
 
			  
			After discussing all this information in 
			his report, Heisenberg went on to support energetically what the 
			director of the Copenhagen GCI had told him: Hofler would never be 
			able to win over the Danes and gain their cooperation unless, for 
			the time being, he restricted himself to purely scientific and 
			scholarly work.  
			  
			The side of his work that had more to do 
			with propaganda, such as guest lectures and the like, should be 
			postponed to a later, more opportune time. Heisenberg closed his 
			report with the same conviction he had expressed after his last trip 
			to Holland: once the war had come to a happy end, scientific 
			cooperation with the Danes would not be difficult.654
			 
			  
			Indeed, after the war Heisenberg had a 
			great deal of difficulty understanding why he had alienated his 
			foreign colleagues. 
			The director of the Copenhagen institute during the last years of 
			the Third Reich may have been typical of the scholars sent as 
			cultural emissaries to foreign countries by the National Socialist 
			state. Hofler’s specialty was Germanic philology. He had spent many 
			years in Scandinavia and had taught at the University of Uppsala. 
			The Copenhagen GCI did not limit its activities to Denmark, but 
			attempted to influence cultural policy in Sweden and Norway as well. 
			He had connections with Scandinavian colleagues, knew the countries, 
			and spoke the languages.655
 
			Shortly after Hofler joined the NSDAP in the spring of 1937 656 
			he was appointed to the Research Council of the “Ahnenerbe,” a 
			branch of the SS.657
 
			  
			The Ahnenerbe supported a wide range of 
			research. Some topics would now be considered unscientific or even 
			pseudo-science, such the “World Ice Theory” developed in the early 
			twentieth century by Hanns Horbiger. Both Himmler and Hitler were 
			very interested in Horbiger’s work, which argued that the universe 
			was composed of ice.658 The Ahnenerbe also sponsored 
			respectable science, such as entomology and plant genetics. Finally, 
			the Ahnenerbe was the branch of theSS which planned, financed, and carried out inhuman experiments with 
			prisoners of war and concentration camp inmates.659
 
			In 1938, the SS helped Hofler trade his professorship at Kiel for a 
			more prestigious one at Munich, and in return he placed his 
			expertise in Germanic philology and close connections in Scandinavia 
			at the service of the Ahnenerbe’s efforts to use the field of 
			Germanic prehistory in order to justify the dominance of the “Aryan” 
			race.660
 
			  
			In 1942, before moving from the 
			University of Munich to the Copenhagen GCI, Hofler visited Denmark 
			with SS papers to do research the SS characterized as intelligence 
			work.661 
			After the second world war Hofler applied for a teaching position at 
			the University of Munich. A university official asked Heisenberg in 
			1949 whether Hofler had strictly limited himself to scholarship 
			while in Copenhagen, or had engaged in cultural propaganda.662 
			Heisenberg’s evasive answer663 provides insight into his 
			perception and continued support of the GCIs. First, he claimed that 
			he had never met Hofler personally. Perhaps he had forgotten about 
			his 1944 meeting with Hofler,664 of which Hofler reminded 
			him in 1947.665
 
			Next Heisenberg asserted that the Copenhagen GCI had not had an 
			entirely bad reputation and that it had not been a source of 
			explicit National Socialist propaganda. If the Danes had stopped 
			frequenting the GCI, that was not Holler’s fault. They had merely 
			concluded that the Germans would lose the war. Heisenberg said that 
			he had never heard criticism of Hofler by the Danes, although he did 
			admit that the Danish scientists would hardly have expressed such 
			complaints to him.
 
			  
			Heisenberg closed his report on Hofler 
			by noting that even if the latter had not been as successful as 
			Freyer, the president of the Budapest GCI, Hofler had not left a 
			negative impression behind in Denmark.666 
			As late as 1949, Heisenberg had few misgivings either about his past 
			associations with, or the goals of, these institutes. Heisenberg may 
			have been unaware of Hofler’s connections to the SS, but that would 
			hardly explain the physicist’s participation in National Socialist 
			cultural propaganda. From Heisenberg’s perspective, the GCIs 
			afforded him the opportunity of retaining contact with colleagues 
			all over Europe, A boycott of them would have done him no good, nor 
			would it have benefited German physicists or scholars in other 
			countries.
 
			After the war Heisenberg wrestled with this dilemma in a memo 
			entitled “The active and passive opposition in the Third Reich.” 
			This essay - apparently never published or circulated -  offers 
			a unique opportunity to get inside Heisenberg’s mind and arguably 
			demonstrates his postwar denial of the true nature of both the Third 
			Reich and the role he played in it.
 
			If the vast majority of Germans had refused any collaboration with 
			National Socialism in 1933, Heisenberg noted, then much misfortune 
			would have been avoided. But that did not happen. Rather, the 
			National Socialist system had understood how to win the support of 
			the masses. Once the National Socialists had gained control of the 
			government, the relatively thin layer of people whose certain 
			instinct told them that the new system was bad from the ground up, 
			now only had the opportunity of “passive” or “active” opposition.
 
			Heisenberg noted that, on one hand, these people could have 
			condemned the National Socialist system as basically bad and a 
			threat to Germany and Europe, but concluded, nonetheless, that there 
			was nothing that could be done. Whoever reasoned that way could 
			either emigrate or deny responsibility, and wait until the system 
			was overcome from the outside.
 
			  
			Heisenberg designated this behavior as 
			“passive” opposition. Another group, he went on, judged the 
			situation as follows. A war, even if it served to overthrow National 
			Socialism, was such a horrible catastrophe, and would cost so many 
			millions of people their lives, that everything had to be done to 
			avoid it or to reduce its horror. Many people who thought so, but 
			did not comprehend the stability of a modern dictatorship, tried the 
			path of open, immediate resistance during the first years and ended 
			up in concentration camps. 
			For others, Heisenberg added, individuals who recognized the 
			hopelessness of a direct attack on the dictatorship, the only path 
			remaining was the acquisition or preservation of a certain amount of 
			influence. Such people risked being branded collaborators. 
			Heisenberg now argued that this course was the only way to bring 
			about change in National Socialism and described it as “active” 
			opposition. This position was much more difficult and ambiguous than 
			passive opposition, since the activist had to make concessions at 
			unimportant places in order to be able to influence important 
			matters.667
 
			Heisenberg’s retrospective portrayal of “active” and “passive” 
			opposition during the Third Reich makes clear what he chose to 
			believe after the war. By staying and working within the National 
			Socialist system, accepting responsibility and thereby being in a 
			position to wield influence, Heisenberg had “actively” opposed 
			Hitler.
 Heisenberg’s last foreign lectures took place in Geneva and Zurich 
			in the autumn of 1944.668
 
			  
			When he met with his Swiss colleagues, 
			Heisenberg repeated what he had told their Dutch counterparts a year 
			before: only Germany stood between Russia and European civilization.669 
			Furthermore, when Heisenberg was asked about the prospects for a 
			German victory in Europe, he said that it would have been nice if 
			Germany had won.670 
			This answer did not please either the Swiss or the Germans. The 
			former would assume that Heisenberg wanted National Socialism to 
			dominate Europe, if not the world. The latter would consider 
			Heisenberg’s comment defeatism, something which became a serious 
			offense during the last, terrible months of the war. Finally, 
			Heisenberg’s remark need not have been a conscious endorsement of 
			National Socialism.
 
			  
			Once the war began, many Germans 
			separated in their own minds their support of Germany from that of 
			Hitler’s movement. This self-deluding distinction was important, for 
			it allowed the National Socialist state to harness the energies of 
			the many Germans who did not support Hitler, but also wanted Germany 
			to win the war. 
			Significantly, Heisenberg never got around to sending in a report on 
			his 1944 trip to Switzerland. In late March 1945 REM reminded him of 
			his omission,671 but by this time Heisenberg was more 
			concerned about the advancing American forces than about the 
			bureaucrats in Berlin.
 
			Foreign scientists have shown a great deal of ambivalence toward 
			Heisenberg and von Weizsacker since the end of World War II.672 
			This ambivalence derives largely from the talks the two German 
			physicists gave in foreign countries during the war as well as the 
			postwar apologia they have used to justify their conduct in the 
			Third Reich, But Heisenberg and von Weizsacker did not merely 
			participate in National Socialist cultural propaganda. They were 
			also exploited by Hitler and his followers, as were many Germans.
 
			Heisenberg never spread vulgar National Socialist propaganda. Even 
			his comments to Casimir were couched in terms of Germany, not 
			Hitler’s movement. Every one of Heisenberg’s official visits was 
			restricted to scientific talks.
 
			  
			But that was precisely what the National 
			Socialist officials responsible for cultural propaganda wanted him 
			to do as part of an effective division of labor. Heisenberg 
			represented the “better side” of National Socialist Germany as a 
			“good German,” an apolitical Nobel laureate willing to serve as a 
			goodwill ambassador for German culture while other Germans were 
			invading, occupying, exploiting, and sometimes murderously ravaging 
			the very same countries. 
			The German Cultural Institutes and comparable institutions such as 
			the German Institute for Eastern Work provide vivid examples for the 
			distortion and abuse of science and culture. In the eyes of many 
			native scientists, these institutes were centers of scientific and 
			cultural collaboration with National Socialism as well as symbols of 
			the German occupation and exploitation of their homeland.
 
			  
			As long as he could lecture in German, 
			Heisenberg accepted all offers of speaking engagements at such 
			institutes and thereby alienated and deeply disappointed many of his 
			foreign colleagues. 
			Heisenberg was either unable to understand or unwilling to confront 
			the cause and effect of this alienation. By delivering lectures 
			there, he supported and thereby legitimated the National Socialist 
			policy of cultural propaganda. When he could, he aided foreign 
			colleagues in trouble, including Jewish scientists. He did this at 
			considerable risk to himself, and his colleagues were grateful. But 
			this gratitude could not make up for the alienation caused by his 
			participation in cultural propaganda and his personal identification 
			with the German war effort and German armed forces.
 
			The National Socialist state reexamined its policy toward modern 
			physics during the course of the Third Reich and especially during 
			the war, with the result that the irrational and barren Deutsche 
			Physik was eventually discarded in favor of modern physics, with its 
			recognized economic and military utility. But it was first and 
			foremost Heisenberg, and not modern physics, that came under 
			dangerous political and ideological attack in the Volkischer 
			Beobachter and Das Schwarze Korps, and it was first and foremost 
			Heisenberg, not the theory of relativity or quantum physics, who 
			emerged victorious with a political rehabilitation and enhanced 
			prestige.
 
			The SS report on Heisenberg suggests that scientific arguments alone 
			did not win this battle. Industrial scientists and researchers with 
			close ties to the armed forces played a crucial role. The SS and the 
			Party accepted the judgment of Ludwig Prandtl and Carl Ramsauer, 
			that modern physics was useful and needed support, and found a 
			politically and ideologically acceptable justification for its 
			rehabilitation.
 
			  
			Heisenberg’s appeal as a “good German” 
			and especially his long-standing association with the armed forces 
			made it easier for the National Socialist state to accept his 
			physics. Once the ideological taint had been removed from modern 
			physics, Heisenberg could be also used as a cultural propaganda 
			tool. 
			The political rehabilitation of Heisenberg was necessary before the 
			National Socialist state could take full advantage of his propaganda 
			value. For Heisenberg to be useful in a cultural propaganda sense - 
			or for that matter, to be useful in the training of physicists or 
			for research - he had to be used; for him to be used, he had, to 
			some degree, to be trusted; for him to be trusted, the National 
			Socialist state had to make some concessions with respect to the 
			ideological purity of physics.
 
			  
			The very utilitarian and international 
			character of modern physics was used to facilitate cultural 
			cooperation and ultimately collaboration between scientists in 
			foreign countries and National Socialism. 
			Finally, Heisenberg’s foreign lectures illuminate the problematic 
			black-and-white dichotomy of resistance versus collaboration. 
			Heisenberg’s 1941 visit to Copenhagen has been portrayed as proof 
			that either:
 
				
					
					
					the physicist willingly 
					collaborated with the “Nazis” to exploit Bohr
					
					or he resisted Hitler by warning 
					the Allies of the German atom bomb 673 
					 
			When this visit is seen in context, it 
			is clear that the truth lies somewhere in the middle. 
			Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker has insisted that intent, not action, 
			is most important. He and Heisenberg traveled to Copenhagen in order 
			to help their Danish colleague Niels Bohr.
 
			  
			But what kind of help did 
			Heisenberg and von Weizsacker offer Bohr in the fall of 1941, when 
			German victory appeared certain?  
			  
			They urged him to cooperate with the 
			German authorities and especially the German Cultural Institute in 
			Copenhagen. Today it is clear that this was bad advice; at that time 
			it may not have been so clear. It is hardly surprising that 
			Heisenberg and von Weizsacker offered Bohr precisely this advice.
			 
			  
			They merely advised Bohr to do what they 
			were doing.
 
			
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