Albert Speer: Difference between revisions

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  | author = [[Airey Neave]]
  | author = [[Airey Neave]]
  | publisher = Little, Brown | year = 1978
  | publisher = Little, Brown | year = 1978
}}, pp. 143-144</ref>
}}, pp. 143-144</ref></blockquote>


While he had a special relationship with Hitler,  he opposed his scorched-earth policies and plotted assassination. At the [[Nuremberg Trials]], he was sentenced to 20 years. Eloquent in accepting responsibility, his frank statements probably saved his live, in contrast to that of his labor deputy, [[Fritz Sauckel]]. While in prison, he wrote a sometimes controversial but informative autobiography, ''Inside the Third Reich''.
While he had a special relationship with Hitler,  he opposed his scorched-earth policies and plotted assassination. At the [[Nuremberg Trials]], he was sentenced to 20 years. Eloquent in accepting responsibility, his frank statements probably saved his live, in contrast to that of his labor deputy, [[Fritz Sauckel]]. While in prison, he wrote a sometimes controversial but informative autobiography, ''Inside the Third Reich''.

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Albert Speer (1905-1981) was an architect who joined the Nazi Party as a young man, and soon became Adolf Hitler's protege and even friend. During World War II, he was the extremely effective Nazi Minister of Armament and Munitions (1942-1945). Airey Neave, a Nuremberg prosecutor, said

He was the only man in Hitler's entourage who sacrificed neither his will nor his reason. He also was a man of great talent who did most to enable the Nazi dream to become a reality.[1]

While he had a special relationship with Hitler, he opposed his scorched-earth policies and plotted assassination. At the Nuremberg Trials, he was sentenced to 20 years. Eloquent in accepting responsibility, his frank statements probably saved his live, in contrast to that of his labor deputy, Fritz Sauckel. While in prison, he wrote a sometimes controversial but informative autobiography, Inside the Third Reich.

Hitler's young architect

Minister of Armament and Munitions

At Nuremberg

References

  1. Airey Neave (1978), On Trial at Nuremberg, Little, Brown, pp. 143-144