Helmuth Wohlthat
Wohlthat in 1940
Chief,
German Economic Mission to the Far East
In office
3 April 1941  7 May 1945
Ministerial Director
Four Year Plan
In office
4 February 1938  7 May 1945
Ministerial Director
Reich Ministry of Economics
In office
22 December 1934  4 February 1938
Additional positions
1939–1945Member of the Prussian State Council
Personal details
Born4 October 1893
Wismar, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, German Empire
Died1982 (age 89)
West Germany
Resting placeFriedhof II der Jerusalems-und Neuen Kirche, Kreuzberg, Berlin
NationalityGerman
Political partyNazi Party
Alma materUniversity of Cologne
Columbia University
Professioncivil servant
Military service
Allegiance German Empire
Branch/serviceImperial German Army
Years of service1912–1918
RankOberleutnant
Unit23rd (2nd Rhenish) Field Artillery Regiment
Battles/warsWorld War I

Helmuth C. H. Wohlthat (4 October 1893 – 1982) was a German businessman and civil servant in Nazi Germany. From 1938, he was a chief aide to Hermann Göring in the Four Year Plan organization, and headed several high-level diplomatic and economic negotiations before and during the Second World War.

Early life and education

Wohlthat was born in 1893 at Wismar and attended the Realgymnasium in Düsseldorf and Berlin. In 1912, he enlisted in the 23rd (2nd Rhenish) Field Artillery Regiment in Koblenz as a Fahnenjunker (officer cadet). In the First World War, he served as an artillery officer and adjutant of the 16th Artillery Brigade, attaining the rank of Oberleutnant. After the end of the war and his discharge from military service, he worked as a commercial trainee and also studied at the University of Cologne. He emigrated to the United States in 1919 and continued his studies in political science at Columbia University. From 1919 to 1933 he worked in New York City as a businessman and trader.[1]

Return to Germany and civil service career

After his return to Germany in 1932, he entered the civil service and worked briefly in the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture in the Reich Office of Dairy Products, Oils and Fats. Hjalmar Schacht brought him into the Reich Ministry of Economics and the Prussian Ministry of Economics and Labor in 1934 as a Generalreferent (General Consultant). By December 1934, he had been promoted to Ministerial Director, and in 1935 he became the head of the Reich Office for Foreign Exchange Management. In 1937, he served as the German representative to the London conference that resulted in the 1937 International Agreement for the Regulation of Whaling. On 4 February 1938, when the Ministry of Economics was reorganized under Walther Funk, Wohlthat was named Ministerial Director for Special Projects in Hermann Göring's Four-Year Plan, reporting directly to Göring. At the same time, Göring appointed him to the Prussian State Council.[1][2]

In his new post, Wohlthat was primarily responsible for foreign trade and foreign exchange management. He also was involved directly in Göring's quest to expropriate Jewish businesses under the policy of Aryanization. Over several months in 1938 he investigated and ultimately exposed the Petschek mining conglomerate to be a Jewish-owned business, despite it being technically controlled by a foreign holding company, and it was ultimately confiscated by government trustees for disposal.[3]

Wohlthat's remit also involved oversight of the German whaling fleet, and he was tasked with planning and preparing for the Antarctic Expedition of 1938-1939. The expedition's main objective was economic, in particular the establishment of a whaling station and the acquisition of fishing grounds for a German whaling fleet to reduce Germany's dependence on imported industrial oils and dietary fats. Preparations took place under strict secrecy, as the enterprise was also tasked with making a feasibility assessment for a future occupation of Antarctic territory. It even resulted in a disputed German territorial claim named New Swabia. The Wohlthat Mountains in Antarctica are named after him.[4]

Diplomatic and trade missions

At this point in his career, Wohlthat embarked on a series of high-level foreign negotiations. In February 1939, he negotiated the Rublee-Wohlthat Plan with George Rublee, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt's representative to the Intergovernmental Committee on Refugees.[5] The agreement set out conditions and a funding mechanism (via a trust fund financed by Jewish assets) for the emigration of 150,000 working-age Jews from Germany over a period of 3 to 5 years, to be followed by 250,000 of their dependents. The agreement never actually was implemented due to the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939.[6]

Wohlthat's next assignment was as the lead negotiator for the economic treaty with the Kingdom of Romania that was signed on 23 March 1939. By its provisions, Romania agreed to sell 90% of its oil, timber, grains and mineral ores to Germany. This was intended to relieve the Reich's scarcity of food and raw materials. Also, Germany gained the rights to develop additional Romanian oil fields, and was granted lease-free ports on the Danube and Black Sea. All these actions were aimed at securing Romania as a dependent ally in a prelude to the launching of the war. An analysis by Time magazine concluded that the treaty:

… converted Rumania from an independent nation to a German dependency. In no instance of modern times has one State made such humiliating, far-reaching economic concessions to another as Rumania's King Carol II made in Bucharest last week to Dr. Helmuth Wohlthat, Führer Hitler's traveling salesman.[7]

Wohlthat's negotiations with Francisco Franco's government in Spain did not yield quite as favorable an outcome. After recently emerging victorious in the Spanish Civil War with the military help of Germany, Spain owed the Reich a great monetary debt totaling approximately $215 million. Germany was anxious to tie Spanish trade to Germany's future war needs by securing a near monopoly on Spanish trade as had been achieved with Romania. Germany intended for the Spanish debt to be repaid through yearly export surpluses. Wohlthat's first negotiating session from 12 June to 5 July yielded no results and when he returned in November, war had already been declared. Franco knew that he would likely face a boycott from the United Kingdom if he tied himself too closely to Germany and he sought to preserve his freedom of action, having already declared Spain's neutrality at the outbreak of hostilities. Negotiations resumed on 2 November and concluded with an agreement signed on 22 December. It continued the existing trade agreements between Spain and Germany but granted no special trade status and acknowledged Spain's freedom to trade with other nations; Spain subsequently concluded trade agreements with the U.K. and France.[8] Despite initially not attaining all his objectives, Wohlthat's trade agreement eventually bore fruit when, after Germany's successes in the Battle of France, Spain tilted in favor of the Axis powers. Spanish exports to Germany increased quite dramatically. From 1940 to 1941, their value increased ten-fold, with food exports increasing fifteen times. While food products flowed to Germany and Italy, the Spanish people "starved and endured great suffering".[9]

After the conquest and occupation of the Netherlands, Wohlthat became the Reichskommissar for the De Nederlandsche Bank in Amsterdam on 23 May 1940. In this position he controlled the Dutch foreign exchange flow and their entire foreign trade.[10] In early April 1941, he was made the head of the German Economic Mission to the Far East and was sent to Japan. He was charged with purchasing needed raw materials such as rubber, soy beans, tin and tungsten ore. Before the closure of the Trans-Siberian Railway to German commerce by the German attack on the Soviet Union in June 1941, Wohlthat was shipping 55,000 tons of cargo per month via that route. After that, he succeeded in shipping a total of about 240,000 tons of material to Germany via freighters and submarines between 1942 and 1945, though perhaps as much as half never reached its destination due to the Allied blockade. Wohlthat remained in Japan through the end of the war.[11]

In the post-war period, Wohlthat returned to Germany and held various supervisory board positions in the private sector. From 1947 to 1973, he was an industrial consultant in Düsseldorf at the Henkel chemical company.[12] He died in 1982.

References

  1. 1 2 "Document 17: Wohlthat, Helmuth, deutscher Beamter". Pressmap. Interpress (Hamburg) No. 13/1950. 24 January 1950. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  2. Lilla, Joachim (2005). Der Preußische Staatsrat 1921–1933: Ein biographisches Handbuch. Düsseldorf: Droste Verlag. p. 248. ISBN 978-3-770-05271-4.
  3. Irving, David (1989). Göring: A Biography. New York: William Morrow & Co. pp. 233–234. ISBN 978-0-688-06606-2.
  4. Cornelia Lüdecke; Colin Summerhayes (15 December 2012). The Third Reich in Antarctica: the German Antarctic Expedition, 1938–39. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1-720-91889-9.
  5. Schubert, Günter (2003). Der Fleck auf Uncle Sams weißer Weste. Amerika und die jüdischen Flüchtlinge 1938–1945. New York: Campus Verlag. p. 97. ISBN 978-3-593-37275-4.
  6. Wohlthat Glossary Entry in Chronologie des Holocaust Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  7. "Foreign News: Killing". Time Magazine. 3 April 1939. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
  8. "Economic Influence of the Great Powers in the Spanish Civil War: From the Popular Front to the Second World War". The International History Review. 5 (2): 249–253. May 1983.
  9. Marquina, Antonio (1998). "The Spanish Neutrality During The Second World War". American University International Law Review. 14 (1): 178.
  10. Kreutzmüller, Christoph (2005). Händler und Handlungsgehilfen. Der Finanzplatz Amsterdam und die deutschen Großbanken (1918–1945). Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 155. ISBN 978-3-515-08639-4.
  11. "Interrogation of Helmuth Wohlthat by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East". University of Virginia Law School. 12 July 1946. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  12. "Wohlthat, Helmuth". Bundesarchiv invenio. Retrieved 23 October 2023.
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