Norman Ohler: Hitler, Nazis, Drugs, WW2, Blitzkrieg, LSD, MKUltra & CIA | Lex Fridman Podcast #481
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- Hitler invited three young tank generals to his
office, and they had a plan, which was the plan to go through the Ardennes
Mountains. That was the victorious idea. So it's not the
drugs, actually, that idea to go through the Ardennes Mountains. If you, if you think
monocausal, you would say that's the reason. That idea was
genius, and Hitler immediately understood it, because before, the
plan was to attack in the north of Belgium, which is the same as World War
I. It becomes a stalemate, and they fight for months, and no one
really moves, and it's bloody, and nothing's happening. It's
bad. But that was the only plan that they had. That's why the high
command said, "No, we're not going to do it. It's stupid." But these three tank generals,
they said, "Look, if we go with the whole army through the Ardennes
Mountains," and like Hitler, "Eh, this is not possible. This is like a mountain range.
How can the whole German army fit through this
eye of a needle," basically. And they said, "No, we can do it because
everyone misunderstands what tanks can do. Tanks are not
slow machines in the back that wait for the
action to happen, and then support this somehow. We're going to use tanks in
the front as race cars, basically. We're going to
overpower the enemy. We're going to be in France
before they know it. We are already behind them, but it would only
work if you would reach Sedan, the border city of France, within three
days and three nights, and that was only possible if you don't stop."
Suddenly, Ranke realized that his moment had come because
he had the recipe how people could stay awake for three days and three nights.
Before that, he was kind of an outsider, like the freak with the drug idea. Suddenly, he became
...like- ..."Okay, tell us, how does it work?" And he gave lectures in front of
the officers, and he wrote a stimulant decree where a whole
army is prescribed a drug, in this case methamphetamine, how much should
be taken, and at what intervals. This became a very big thing.
And then Temmler had to deliver 35 million dosages
to the front lines. And then on May 10th, they took their
methamphetamine and they started the surprise attack through the Ardennes Mountains.
- The following is a conversation with Norman Ohler, author of
Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich. A book
that investigates what role psychoactive drugs, particularly
stimulants such as methamphetamine, played in the military
history of World War II. It is a book that two legendary
historians, Ian Kershaw and Antony Beevor, give very high
praise to. Ian Kershaw describes it as, "Very well
researched, serious piece of scholarship." And Antony Beevor
describes it as, "Remarkable work of research."
And it is indeed a remarkable work of research. Norman went
deep into the archives using primary sources to uncover
a perspective on Hitler and the Third Reich that has before this been
mostly ignored by historians. He also wrote
Tripped: Nazi Germany, the CIA, and the Dawn of the Psychedelic
Age. And he's now working on a new book with the
possible title of Stoned Sapiens, great
title, looking at the history of human civilization
through the lens of drugs. This is the Lex
Fridman Podcast. To support it, please check out our sponsors in the
description and consider subscribing to this
channel. And now, dear friends, here's Norman Ohler.
Tell me the origin story of meth,
methamphetamine, and Pervitin, its brand name drug version, in
the context of Nazi Germany in the late 1930s. Let's start there.
- I think you're right to ask about the context because without the
context, it's not really understandable. So what was the
situation? In the 20s, the Nazi movement basically started, and it started in
Bavarian beer halls. So alcohol was the drug of
choice of the early Nazi movement. The only guy that didn't
drink was Hitler. He was a teetotaler, I guess you
say. So that was happening in Munich. So alcohol and
National Socialism are very closely connected. At the same
time, in the 20s, in Berlin, there was a completely different thing going
on. People were taking all kinds of drugs. This had
to do, actually, with the defeat of Germany in the First World War. I mean, the context
is a big context. The Versailles Treaty had the effect that the German economy
was not really able to recover after the end of World
War I. The Versailles Treaty was written basically by the Western
victorious powers. Germany had no say in the negotiations. And I'm
certainly not a German nationalist, not even a German
patriot, but even I would say that the Versailles Treaty
treated Germany somewhat unfairly. I mean, it laid all the blame on Germany. And,
I mean, a war is a very complex thing, and the First World War
to examine how it actually started is a very complex, you know,
story, and there's many factors to it. But the Versailles Treaty just said it was
Germany's fault, and then Germany had to do all these
payments to the allies. It couldn't create a new economy.
It couldn't have a new army. So it was — the economy really went down. Everything in Berlin
was cheap, and the people were also using
substances that were very cheap in huge quantities. So while in
Bavaria, they were drinking alcohol, and alcohol in the brain,
stimulates behavior, group behavior: us
against them. You can actually examine this. A neuroscientist
would know exactly how this works. While in Berlin, the drugs that were used
were morphine. There was cocaine, there was
mescaline, there was ether. So people were experimenting.
Everyone developed a different mindset. It was all... you know, you didn't
behave in a way
that some kind of authority would like you to behave in, because the authority had
just lost the First World War and there was no real authority
in Berlin. People were doing whatever they wanted to do, and they were intoxicating
themselves in the way they wanted to do it. So the population, in a way, if you
just look at Munich and Berlin, was growing apart. Like, there
were the alcohol people in Munich, the Nazis, and then there were these
weird, diverse, LGBTQ, whatever kind of scene in Berlin. Like,
actresses sniffing ether in the morning and then making crazy moves.
- Could you speak to the nature of the motivation of the drug use in Berlin at the
time? Was it rebellion? Was it a way to deal with the
difficult economic depression? Was it just the natural thing that young people do to
explore themselves, to understand the world, to develop their culture? Like, what do we
understand about drug use there?
- All of these factors come together. But it was the first time in modern history,
in Germany at least, that there was no emperor. Like, before
that, Kaiser Wilhelm, everything was very strict, you know? You
had to... you couldn't go crazy, you know, as a young person. You couldn't
be a young person. But now in the Weimar Republic in the '20s, you could.
No one stopped you, so people went crazy. That's what made
Berlin into the city that it still somehow is. And maybe
later we talk about contemporary Berlin. It kind of... it's
still has that vibe, you know? That's why people still come to Berlin. Drugs are
cheap, you can move however you want, there's no authority. So that created
a rift between the Nazis in Munich, and they always hated Berlin
and what was going on in Berlin. So, for example, Goebbels, the later
propaganda minister, he called the situation in Berlin the
hated asphalt reality of Berlin.
He hated that. And when the Nazis then were able to take power in
1933, one of the first things they did
was to really prosecute people who were taking drugs,
because they wanted to, you know, bring everyone back into the fold.
And I think that's... You asked what was the reason for people taking
so many drugs. They were accessible, they were
cheap, but I think the most important thing is that
they let you find yourself maybe, or lose
yourself, you know? Also possible, you know?
- Can we also talk about that here, because
you have a connection to this place, Berlin, and this
part of the world. Can you just briefly speak to that so
we can contextualize even deeper the personal aspect
of this? Because you understand the music of the people,
the land, its history. There's something you can only really
understand if you've been there and you have taken it
in. And we'll return to this topic in multiple contexts, but in this
particular way, as one human being who writes about this place,
what's your own story?
- I grew up in West Germany, and this was during the World War. And
Berlin, the walled-in city, was always like a big
fascination. There was a wall, there was actually a wall in the city
preventing people to move into another part. And I was from the
West, fortunate enough to be from the free West, so I could
travel to Berlin and I could leave. I could look at it, and I always loved Berlin. I thought it
was a very vibey place. And then when the wall came down, I was still
in school but I immediately got into the car of my parents and drove there.
I wanted to see how it came down. And then Berlin really, in the
'90s, became a place that was very attractive to me and I
moved there then in the '90s. I was first living in New York. I wrote my first
novel in New York, and I loved New York before Giuliani became
mayor. It was... He ruined the city. Before that,
it was not gentrified. Or let's say he introduced gentrification, and
gentrification is a big topic. I still lived in the
ungentrified New York City for like 300 bucks a month rent,
and everyone I knew was an artist.
- You loved the diversity of it?
- Yeah, I loved it. I wrote my first novel there. I took LSD for
the first time in Downtown Manhattan on a Saturday night.
- So you're kind of like a German Kerouac type character, but
moved a few decades forward.
- I wouldn't compare myself to another writer, but I think Kerouac is pretty cool.
But he's an amphetamine writer. "On the Road" was apparently
written in two weeks on amphetamines. And, but it's good. Amphetamines
are not bad per se. We can also talk about these so-called bad drugs,
you know, because basically they're neutral. But let's not lose the thread.
- Yes. Yes. New York, Berlin-
- Even though New York was-
- Yes.
- Oh, yeah. And then I was in New York. I was in a health food store, one of the first.
Like, there weren't health food stores back then a lot, but there was one on
First Avenue. And suddenly there was an announcement,
which was unusual in the health food store. I think it was called Prana, Prana
Foods. And the announcement was that Kurt Cobain had just shot himself.
It was like... and I had been actually, and still am, a
Nirvana fan. I've seen one of the last concerts of Nirvana in
New York City, and it was amazing. But he killed himself.
And the next day, I received a music cassette from a friend
of mine from Berlin with electronic music, and I realized that
there had been a paradigm shift, obviously. Rock music with the hero on
stage was dead. Now it was, you know, dance,
electronic music, which a lot of people today think it's kind of simplistic
music form, but it's actually a very highly intelligent music form. At least it was in
the '90s. People were really experimenting with that music. That was the new
music. That was actually the reason I moved to Berlin. I really decided I'd leave
New York City. I'm going to move to Berlin. And then in
Berlin, to answer your question,
I fell in love with something that probably reminded me
of the '20s, even though I wasn't there in the '20s.
That really... The city was very open. The wall had just... was still, you know...
I mean, it's a few years later, but still, the wall, it felt like it just came down.
There was... Germany was... Berlin was not yet the capital of Germany. That was still in
Bonn. So Berlin was a very
cheap, and cultural, and crazy city, probably a bit like in the '20s, actually.
And that's how I fell in love with it, and that's how I became interested in this electronic scene.
I mean, I visited many dance venues then, so-called clubs.
- Yeah, it's one of the hubs in the world of electronic music.
- They claim that techno was kind of invented in Berlin, but it also comes
from Detroit. So Detroit and Berlin are like the techno hubs, I would say.
- Yeah, electronic music is a soundtrack for some of the most interesting
experiences this earth has ever created, right? Just it gets people
together in some interesting ways. So it's not just the music itself,
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