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Hans Bernd Gisevius

    July 14, 1904 – February 23, 1974

    Hans Bernd Gisevius was a German diplomat and intelligence officer who served covertly as a staunch opponent of the Nazi regime. During World War II, he acted as a crucial liaison in Zurich, connecting American intelligence with German Resistance forces. His clandestine work facilitated vital communication channels between internal opposition groups and foreign agencies. Gisevius thus embodies a figure whose quiet efforts significantly impacted the hidden struggle against totalitarianism.

    Hans Bernd Gisevius
    Bis zum bittern Ende. II. Band, vom Münchner Abkommen zum 20. Juli 1944
    Bis zum Bittern Ende. Vom Reichstagsgrand zur Fritsch-Krise. Erster Band
    Eine Biographie Adolf Hitler. Versuch einer Deutung
    Bis zum bittern Ende
    Der Anfang vom Ende
    To the bitter end
    • 1947

      When on July 20, 1944, a bomb—boldly placed inside the Wolf's Lair (Hitler's headquarters in East Prussia) by the German Anti-Nazi Resistance—exploded without killing the Führer, the subsequent coup d'état against the Third Reich collapsed. Most of the conspirators were summarily shot or condemned in show trials and sadistically hanged. The conspiracy involved a wide circle of former politicians, diplomats, and government officials as well as senior military men. The Resistance had started as early as 1933 and involved several planned putsches and assassination attempts. Hans B. Gisevius knew or met the major figures—including Beck, Canaris, Oster, Goerdeler, and von Stauffenberg—and barely escaped after the coup's failure. One of the few survivors of the German Anti-Nazi Resistance, Gisevius traces its history, from the 1933 Reichstag fire to Germany's defeat in 1945, in a book as riveting as it is exceptional.

      To the bitter end