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The John Batchelor Show

S8 Ep113: Rommel developed a love-hate relationship with Adolf Hitler, often venerating him but glossing over his political and anti-Semitic excesses. Rommel's falling out with Hitler was usually due to distrust or Hitler letting the army down, not politics. Rommel

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Society & Culture, Arts, News, Books

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 23 November 2025

⏱️ 6 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rommel developed a love-hate relationship with Adolf Hitler, often venerating him but glossing over his political and anti-Semitic excesses. Rommel's falling out with Hitler was usually due to distrust or Hitler letting the army down, not politics. Rommel, a Suabian outsider, connected with Hitler partly because both were fighting the "pernicious influence" of the Prussian military aristocracy. Though he disliked the SS, he endured them as part of the system. His book, Infantry Attacks (1937), made him a national personality.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is CBSI on the world.

0:06.6

I'm John Batchel with Professor Lloyd Clark.

0:10.0

His new book is The Commanders,

0:11.4

the leadership journey of George Patton, Bernard Montgomery, and Erwin Rommel.

0:14.6

These are professional soldiers.

0:16.0

They devote themselves to understanding warfare.

0:19.3

And yet, politics.

0:28.4

The course for Owen Rommel is deeply compromised by the rise of the national socialist, the Nazis.

0:30.8

And it is surprising to learn that right away Rommel establishes what you'd have to say

0:37.1

is a manipulative relationship with the

0:39.9

furor, with Adolf Hitler.

0:42.2

And he goes through periods of admiring him and not admiring him, being punished by him

0:46.1

and not being punished by him.

0:48.8

Professor, this is the strangest part because once you associate Rommel with Hitler, he's not the same

0:56.8

inspirational figure he was before. It's troubling only because it's impossible to remove the

1:04.4

fact that he would have known of the remarks that Hitler said, repeated again and again treating human beings as worthy of being

1:13.7

destroyed, particularly the Jews, but many more people than that. Did Rahmell reflect on that

1:18.7

in his letters to Lucy, the anti-Semitism? Did he talk about it? No, I think he tended to gloss over

1:25.6

what we might describe as the most extreme excesses of Hitler's politics and personality.

1:33.7

And as you say, he had this love-hate relationship with Hitler.

1:39.5

There were very few people, if any, that Romel venerated more in his career.

1:45.5

Most of the admiration that Romel shows for anyone in a superior position to his own is directed wholly towards Hitler.

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