Der Angriff (German for "The Attack") was the official newspaper of the Berlin Gau of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP), founded by Joseph Goebbels on 4 July 1927 as a weekly publication with the motto "For the oppressed against the exploiters."[1][2]Goebbels, appointed Gauleiter of Berlin in 1926, established the paper to counter the city's strong opposition to Nazism, which included a large communist presence and initial Nazi weakness, using it as a tool to propagate party ideology and mobilize supporters.[3]The newspaper's content focused heavily on anti-Semitic rhetoric, portraying Jews as exploiters and enemies of the German people, alongside attacks on communists, social democrats, and other perceived adversaries, often employing crude cartoons and sensationalist language to arouse public sentiment.[4][5] Frequently banned by Weimar authorities for its inflammatory material, Der Angriff was published irregularly until the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, after which it became a daily organ under Goebbels's direction, aligning with his role as Reich Minister of Propaganda.[1][2]Under Nazi rule, Der Angriff played a key role in campaigns such as the 1933 boycott of Jewish businesses and broader efforts to consolidate party control in Berlin, though its influence waned as centralized propaganda structures like the Völkischer Beobachter dominated nationally.[6] Publication continued until April 1945, ceasing amid the collapse of the regime.[2]
Origins and Founding
Establishment in 1927
Der Angriff was established in July 1927 by Joseph Goebbels, who served as the Gauleiter of the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP) in Berlin.[1]Goebbels had been appointed to this position in November 1926 by Adolf Hitler, tasked with revitalizing the party's presence in a city dominated by communist and social democratic influences.[7] The newspaper functioned as the official organ of the Berlin Gau (regional branch) of the NSDAP, aimed at disseminating party propaganda and mobilizing support amid the Weimar Republic's political fragmentation.[2]The first issue appeared as a weekly publication, reflecting the limited resources of the nascent Berlin Nazi organization, which had only around 1,000 members at the time of Goebbels' arrival.[1] Its motto, "Für die Unterdrückten, gegen die Ausbeuter" (For the oppressed, against the exploiters), encapsulated Goebbels' strategy of framing Nazi ideology as a defense against perceived Marxist and capitalist threats.[7] Initial circulation was modest, but the paper quickly adopted a combative style to challenge rival publications and street-level opponents, contributing to the NSDAP's gradual expansion in Berlin's working-class districts.[2] Goebbels personally oversaw editorial content, using it to assert his authority within the party and counter internal rivals.[3]
Goebbels' Strategic Motivations
Joseph Goebbels, appointed Gauleiter of Berlin by Adolf Hitler on November 12, 1926, inherited a Nazi Party branch with fewer than 1,000 members in a city dominated by communist and social democratic strongholds, where the NSDAP polled under 2% in the 1924 Reichstag elections.[1] To counter this marginal position and the pervasive influence of left-wing newspapers like the communist Die Rote Fahne, Goebbels sought a dedicated propaganda organ to aggressively promote National Socialist ideology and mobilize support among Berlin's working-class voters, whom he viewed as alienated by Weimar's economic instability and cultural fragmentation.[7]The strategic imperative was to transform Berlin from a "red fortress" into a Nazi power base, recognizing the capital's symbolic and practical importance for national dominance; Goebbels explicitly aimed to wage ideological "war" against perceived enemies, using the press to provoke confrontations that could generate publicity and recruit stormtroopers (SA) through narratives of victimhood and heroism.[1] Der Angriff, launched as a weekly on July 4, 1927, with the motto "For the oppressed against the oppressors," served this end by framing communists as foreign agents funded by Soviet Russia and Jews as economic exploiters, thereby appealing to nationalist and antisemitic sentiments while positioning the NSDAP as the defender of German interests.[7] This combative approach aligned with Goebbels' belief in propaganda as a tool for psychological mobilization rather than mere information, drawing from his academic background in literature to craft inflammatory rhetoric that bypassed rational debate in favor of emotional agitation.[3]Beyond recruitment, the newspaper functioned as a vehicle for Goebbels' personal authority within the party, allowing him to bypass central NSDAP constraints in Munich and tailor content to local battles, such as street clashes with the Red Front Fighters' League, which were sensationalized to build a cult of militancy and loyalty to Hitler.[1] By 1928, initial circulation reached around 15,000 copies, reflecting modest success in penetrating Berlin's media landscape, though financial strains from bans and low sales underscored the high-risk strategy of prioritizing provocation over profitability.[3] This focus on sustained "attack" journalism prefigured Goebbels' later role as Reich Propaganda Minister, emphasizing causal links between unrelenting opposition framing and the erosion of rivals' legitimacy in a polarized urban environment.[7]
Editorial Style and Propaganda Methods
Confrontational Tone and Techniques
Der Angriff's editorial tone was aggressively combative, characterized by inflammatory language designed to incite outrage and mobilize Nazi supporters against perceived enemies. Goebbels, as chief editor from its founding in July 1927, frequently authored articles laden with sarcasm, invective, and vulgarity, framing political opponents as existential threats to the German volk.[8][9] This approach contrasted with more restrained conservative papers, prioritizing provocation over measured debate to mirror the street battles of the Weimar era.[3]A core technique involved personalized vilification, exemplified by the recurring "Isidor" series launched in 1928, which targeted Berlin's deputy police chief Bernhard Weiss—a Jewish liberal—through derogatory caricatures and pseudonyms implying Jewish inferiority and corruption.[10] These attacks exaggerated Weiss's role in suppressing Nazi activities, portraying him as a symbol of Jewish overreach in state institutions, and prompted over 60 successful libel suits against Goebbels by 1933, though the paper's circulation benefited from the resulting notoriety.[11][12]The newspaper employed hyperbole and scapegoating to amplify threats from communists, Social Democrats, and Jews, often depicting them as conspiratorial exploiters in vivid, accusatory prose that blurred factual reporting with agitprop.[8] Slogans such as "For the oppressed against the exploiters," emblazoned on the masthead from 1927 onward, encapsulated this binary rhetoric, positioning Nazis as avengers while urging readers toward direct action.[7][12]Visual techniques complemented the verbal assault, with cartoons by pseudonymous artist Mjölnir—such as depictions of Nazi "knock-outs" against foes—employing brutal imagery to reinforce themes of inevitable victory through violence.[12] This integration of text and graphics aimed to evoke fear and hatred, fostering a siege mentality that aligned with Goebbels' strategy of turning Berlin's "red" strongholds into Nazi battlegrounds.[13]
Use of Visuals and Rhetoric
Der Angriff employed striking visual elements and aggressive rhetorical strategies to propagate Nazi ideology and incite reader engagement. The newspaper regularly published political caricatures by Hans Schweitzer, who used the pseudonym Mjölnir, focusing on antisemitic depictions, glorification of Sturmabteilung (SA) members as triumphant or martyred heroes, and portrayals of policemen as misused Aryans under Jewish-influenced leadership.[14] These cartoons, such as one showing a policeman trapped between figures representing Bernhard Weiss (derisively called "Isidor") and communist thugs, emphasized themes of economic exploitation, political violence, and racial conflict to reinforce Nazi narratives.[14]Typography and layout further amplified visual impact through bold, large headlines, pictures, boxes, and bars that altered traditional newspaper formats to prioritize sensationalism over factual reporting.[15] For instance, the April 23, 1928, issue featured a Schweitzer cartoon illustrating Adolf Hitler with a resolute expression amid raised arms of followers, symbolizing unwavering leadership and mass devotion.[9] Such visuals eschewed subtlety, employing slashing lines and exaggerated features to evoke emotional responses and align with the paper's "fighting press" ethos aimed at Berlin's working-class audience.[14]Rhetorically, Joseph Goebbels' editorials and articles adopted a confrontational, polemical tone, weaving antisemitism into every aspect of content while promoting macho depictions of SA violence and the myth of Hitler's redemptive return.[14] Techniques included relentless repetition of core motifs like Jewish conspiracies and Weimar system critiques, personal attacks on opponents, and emotional appeals over analytical depth to foster proletarian identification with Nazism.[9] This combination of crude propaganda visuals and incendiary language, evident from the paper's inaugural issue on July 4, 1927, distinguished Der Angriff as a tool for arousal rather than information, prioritizing violent imagery and simplified slogans to build party loyalty.[3]
Primary Targets and Campaigns
Antisemitic Content
Der Angriff routinely portrayed Jews as existential threats to the German volk, attributing economic woes, cultural decay, and political subversion to supposed Jewish conspiracies, with articles framing antisemitism as a defensive necessity.[8] The newspaper's content emphasized Jews' alleged control over Berlin's media, police, and commerce, using caricatures and inflammatory rhetoric to incite boycotts and hostility.[7]A central antisemitic campaign targeted Bernhard Weiss, the Jewish deputy police chief of Berlin, whom Goebbels pseudonymously dubbed "Isidor" to evoke derogatory stereotypes of Eastern European Jews and imply corruption.[10] This began prominently with an August 15, 1927, essay titled "Isidor" in Der Angriff, accusing Weiss of abusing his position to shield Jewish interests and suppress Nazi activities.[10] The attacks persisted across nearly every issue in 1927 and 1928, linking Weiss to broader claims of Jewish dominance in Weimar institutions, resulting in over 60 libel lawsuits filed by Weiss against Goebbels, many successful.[11][16]Another focus involved sustained assaults on Jewish-owned department stores such as Tietz and Wertheim, depicted as predatory entities exploiting Aryan workers and consumers while undercutting small German businesses.[17] In its fifth issue, Der Angriff published a Goebbels-authored cartoon satirizing these chains' owners as parasitic figures profiting from "Aryan" labor, tying their success to alleged racial betrayal.[17] These articles advocated economic boycotts, portraying the stores as symbols of Jewish economic "enslavement" and fueling street-level agitation against Jewish commercial influence in Berlin.[6]
Opposition to Communists and Social Democrats
Der Angriff positioned itself as a combatant against the left-wing dominance in Berlin, targeting the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) through relentless propaganda that framed them as betrayers of German workers and agents of foreign or degenerative influences. Launched in July 1927 with the subheading "For the Oppressed—Against the Exploiters," the newspaper appealed to proletarian discontent while differentiating National Socialism from Marxist ideologies.[1] Goebbels, as editor, employed satire, invective, and promises of "true socialism" to erode the KPD's and SPD's hold on the unemployed and industrial laborers in the city's "red" districts.[1]Opposition to the KPD emphasized its alleged subservience to Moscow, portraying the party as a "Russian foreign legion on German soil" that prioritized international Bolshevism over national interests. In a November 21, 1927, article titled "Hail Moscow!," Goebbels attacked Marxism as a Jewish-orchestrated doctrine fostering class hatred, pacifism, and proletarian despair, citing examples like communist leaders' personal failings and Soviet expulsions of Bolsheviks to undermine the ideology's credibility.[18][1] The newspaper justified SA violence against communists as countering their street terrorism, particularly after the February 1930 shooting of SA Sturmführer Horst Wessel by KPD members, which Der Angriff amplified to cast Wessel as a Nazi martyr slain by "degenerate" aggressors.[1] A September 1931 flyer distributed alongside the paper vowed to dismantle capitalism while mocking KPD weakness, aiming to siphon radicalized workers.[1]Attacks on the SPD focused on its role in sustaining the Weimar Republic's "un-German" democracy, which Der Angriff blamed for economic misery and national humiliation. Goebbels derided the SPD in August 1930 as "Germany’s most shameless party," accusing it of bolstering capitalist exploitation and failing the masses it claimed to represent.[1] The paper contrasted SPD "Marxist" internationalism with Nazi volkisch socialism, portraying Social Democrats as enablers of Jewish influence and system-preserving compromisers rather than revolutionary forces.[1] This rhetoric sought to fracture the left's united front, provoking SPD-led authorities while rallying Nazi supporters for electoral and paramilitary confrontations in Berlin's working-class strongholds.[1]
Role in Nazi Party Dynamics
Support for Berlin Gau Operations
Der Angriff functioned as the central propaganda and coordination mechanism for the NSDAP's Berlin Gau, directly aiding GauleiterJoseph Goebbels in orchestrating local party activities amid Berlin's hostile political climate. Established on 4 July 1927 during a Prussian ban on Nazi public assemblies following violent clashes, the weekly publication circumvented restrictions by rallying dispersed members through printed appeals, event announcements, and tactical directives for Sturmabteilung (SA) deployments. It disseminated reports on Gau operations, such as counter-demonstrations against communist strongholds in working-class neighborhoods like Wedding and Neukölln, thereby synchronizing street-level agitation with broader mobilization efforts. This operational support was essential in a city where the NSDAP held fewer than 1,000 members upon Goebbels's arrival in 1926, enabling incremental gains through targeted recruitment and visibility.[3][1]The newspaper's content explicitly linked editorial agitation to Gau fieldwork, with Goebbels's articles outlining strategies for infiltrating Berlin's labor unions and youth groups while glorifying SA militants as defenders against "Marxist terror." Circulation, starting at 15,000 copies per issue, grew to over 100,000 by 1930, amplifying calls for participation in specific operations like the 1928 electoral campaigns and anti-Versailles Treaty protests, which correlated with membership surges to approximately 20,000 by early 1931. By framing routine Gau tasks—such as block warden assignments and fund collection—as frontline combat, Der Angriff sustained activist morale and operational tempo, particularly during economic downturns when it promoted soup kitchens and mutual aid as party-building tools.[7][12]In maintaining internal cohesion, the paper enforced discipline by denouncing factional rivals, as seen during the 1930–1931 SA mutiny led by Walter Stennes, where editorials portrayed rebels as traitors undermining Berlin operations and mobilized loyalists to suppress the revolt. Frequent confiscations—exceeding 30 instances from 1927 to 1933—reinforced its role as a symbol of resistance, prompting rapid reissues that realigned disrupted Gau schedules. These mechanisms collectively fortified Goebbels's control over the district, transforming Der Angriff from a mere gazette into an extension of Gau command structure.[2][19]
Intra-Party Power Struggles
Upon his appointment as Gauleiter of Berlin on November 12, 1926, Joseph Goebbels inherited a fractious NSDAP branch marked by factionalism and weak leadership, with significant influence held by Gregor and Otto Strasser, who dominated the party's northern apparatus and press organs.[20][21]Goebbels, aligning closely with Adolf Hitler, sought to centralize authority under his control, employing both organizational maneuvers and propaganda to marginalize rivals.[22]Der Angriff, launched as a weekly on July 4, 1927, amid a Prussian ban on NSDAP activities, served as Goebbels' primary vehicle for intra-party combat, circumventing the Strassers' monopoly on party publications like the Nationalsozialistische Briefe.[3][21] The newspaper's inaugural issues emphasized loyalty to Hitler and Goebbels' vision, while denouncing "disloyal" elements within the Berlin Gau, including holdovers from prior leadership cliques such as the "Zech group," portrayed as ineffective or ideologically deviant.[8] By framing internal dissent as betrayal akin to external threats, Goebbels cultivated a cult of personality among local SA units and members, accelerating his purge of opponents through public shaming and calls for disciplinary action.[3]This strategy intensified ideological rifts, particularly with the Strasser faction's advocacy for a more socialist economic program, which Goebbels derided in Der Angriff as diluting National Socialist purity.[23] Articles and editorials, often laced with personal invective, accused rivals of opportunism or communist infiltration, bolstering Goebbels' position ahead of key 1928 party conferences like Bamberg, where Hitler sided against the Strassers.[8] By late 1928, circulation reached approximately 15,000 copies, reflecting growing adherence to Goebbels' line and the erosion of rival influence in Berlin.[3]Der Angriff's role extended to fabricating narratives around internal "martyrs," such as SA clashes with dissenters, to justify expulsions and consolidate Goebbels' unchallenged dominance in the Gau by 1929, setting a precedent for propaganda-driven purges replicated nationally in later crises like the 1932 Strasser resignation.[7][20] This intra-party weaponization underscored the paper's function not merely as an agitator against Weimar foes, but as a mechanism for enforcing hierarchical discipline within the NSDAP.[3]
Circulation and Reach
Early Circulation Figures
Der Angriff, founded by Joseph Goebbels on July 4, 1927, as the official organ of the Berlin Gau of the Nazi Party, began publication as a weekly newspaper with an initial circulation of approximately 2,000 copies.[24] This modest figure reflected the limited reach of the Nazi Party in Berlin at the time, where it competed against established left-wing and centrist publications in a city dominated by Social Democrats and Communists.[25]By October 1927, circulation had increased to around 4,500 copies, indicating early but incremental growth amid ongoing financial challenges and frequent bans by local authorities.[26] The newspaper's aggressive, confrontational style under Goebbels' editorship aimed to appeal to working-class readers, yet subscriber numbers stagnated through 1928, remaining in the low thousands as the publication shifted to a bi-weekly format in late 1928 to manage costs.[26]In 1929, despite intensified propaganda efforts, Der Angriff's circulation stayed below 10,000 subscribers by year's end, underscoring its marginal influence prior to the Nazi Party's national breakthrough in the September 1930 Reichstag election.[25] These figures, drawn from party records and contemporary analyses, highlight the publication's reliance on party militants for distribution rather than broad commercial appeal during its formative phase.[24][25]
Growth During Weimar Republic
Der Angriff debuted on July 4, 1927, as the official organ of the NSDAP's Berlin Gau, printed weekly with an initial run of about 2,000 copies to rally party members during a regional ban on Nazi activities.[27] Under Joseph Goebbels's editorship, the paper adopted a combative style targeting the Weimar system's perceived weaknesses, including economic instability and political fragmentation, which resonated amid Berlin's high unemployment and street violence. Its modest start reflected the NSDAP's marginal position in the capital, where membership hovered around 1,000 in mid-1927.[1]Frequent prohibitions by Weimar courts—imposed under laws against incitement and defamation—temporarily halted publication multiple times between 1927 and 1930, yet Goebbels leveraged these as propaganda victories, portraying the bans as evidence of establishment suppression.[28] Circulation nonetheless rose progressively through aggressive distribution tactics, such as street sales by SA members and bundled subscriptions with party dues, paralleling the NSDAP's organizational buildup in Berlin. By 1929, the paper shifted to semi-weekly issues, broadening its reach as Nazi rallies drew larger crowds and electoral participation yielded initial gains, like the party's jump from 0.6% to 12% in Prussian votes by September 1930.[29]This expansion accelerated after 1930, with Der Angriff achieving daily status by late 1932 amid the NSDAP's surge to 33% nationally in July elections, though Berlin remained a tougher bastion of leftist resistance. The paper's print run climbed into the tens of thousands by early 1933, fueled by economic despair and anti-communist fervor that boosted Gau membership from under 5,000 in 1928 to over 40,000, enabling wider dissemination via expanded printing facilities.[1] Such growth underscored the symbiotic link between the newspaper's vitriolic output and the party's grassroots mobilization, transforming a fringe outlet into a pivotal tool for Nazi consolidation in urban proletarian districts.[29]
Impact on Nazi Ascendancy
Mobilization in Berlin
Der Angriff served as a primary instrument for Joseph Goebbels, as BerlinGauleiter, to mobilize Nazi Party members and Sturmabteilung (SA) units against perceived enemies in the Weimar Republic's capital, a bastion of communist and social democratic influence. Launched as a weekly in July 1927, the newspaper employed vitriolic rhetoric, cartoons, and fabricated or exaggerated reports of leftist aggression to frame Nazis as protectors of German workers, thereby spurring recruitment and street-level activism. Goebbels directed its content to coordinate SA deployments for rallies, counter-demonstrations, and brawls, transforming political propaganda into calls for immediate action that bolstered the party's visibility amid Berlin's fractious environment.[7][8]The paper's mobilization efforts intensified following violent clashes, such as those in the late 1920s between SA detachments and communist Rotfrontkämpferbund fighters, where Der Angriff published sensationalized narratives depicting communists as brutal invaders funded by foreign powers, while glorifying Nazi resilience. These accounts, often appearing in subsequent issues, served to vindicate SA participants, attract new volunteers from disillusioned youth and unemployed workers, and justify escalatory tactics like provocative marches through red districts. By November 1930, upon converting to a daily edition, the newspaper amplified this cycle, with circulation enabling broader dissemination of directives for SA musters and boycotts against Jewish-owned businesses, directly correlating with spikes in paramilitary enrollment during electoral campaigns.[30][1]A notable example occurred during the Blutmai disturbances of May 1, 1929, when communist-led protests against police turned into riots; Der Angriff portrayed the inter-leftist discord between the KPD and SPD as a strategic opening, urging SA mobilization to seize territory and propagandize against the "system." Goebbels' editorials exhorted readers to form combat-ready groups, mirroring KPD tactics but infused with antisemitic and nationalist appeals, which facilitated Nazi incursions into working-class neighborhoods and contributed to the party's vote share rising from 1.8% in Berlin's 1928 Reichstagelection to over 14% by 1930. This pattern of incitement through print not only sustained SA morale amid frequent bans and arrests but also embedded Nazi messaging in factories and taverns via reader-distributed excerpts, eroding leftist dominance.[31][1]
Contribution to Electoral Gains
Der Angriff significantly bolstered the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP)'s electoral performance in Berlin, a stronghold of leftist politics, by serving as a primary vehicle for Joseph Goebbels' propaganda targeting disaffected workers and the unemployed. Established as a weekly publication in July 1927 and elevated to daily status in November 1930, the newspaper adopted the subtitle "For the Oppressed—Against the Exploiters" to frame the NSDAP as a radical alternative to the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and Communist Party of Germany (KPD), critiquing their perceived failures while promising socialist renewal under Nazi leadership.[1][3]The paper's relentless polemics against political rivals, integration of antisemitic tropes, and appeals to economic grievances amid the Great Depression helped erode support from traditional left-wing bases. Goebbels leveraged Der Angriff to depict the NSDAP as defenders of the proletariat against "Jewish-Bolshevik" influences, fostering a narrative of inevitable Nazi triumph that resonated in Berlin's industrialized districts. This approach not only amplified party visibility but also synchronized with street-level agitation by the Sturmabteilung (SA), creating a multimedia offensive that converted propaganda into voter mobilization.[1][3]Electoral data from Berlin illustrates the tangible outcomes: in the May 1928 Reichstag election, the NSDAP garnered 39,000 votes, or 1.6% of the local electorate, reflecting its marginal pre-Der Angriff presence. By the September 1930 election, amid rising unemployment, votes exploded to 396,000, positioning the party as Berlin's third-largest force and signaling a breakthrough in proletarian recruitment. Scholars, including Russel Lemmons, credit Der Angriff's institutional role under Goebbels with driving this expansion, as it cultivated mythic figures like the murdered SA member Horst Wessel—whose 1930 death was mythologized in the paper to symbolize Nazi martyrdom and resilience—thereby sustaining momentum through the Weimar Republic's final years.[1][3]These local advances contributed to the NSDAP's national surge, with Berlin's gains mirroring broader patterns where propaganda outlets like Der Angriff undercut competitors by exploiting socioeconomic despair. In the March 1933 Reichstag election—the last under semi-free conditions—the party secured 31.3% of Berlin's vote, a culmination of sustained ideological penetration that solidified Goebbels' gauleiter position and paved the way for nationwide dominance. While economic factors and SA violence were concurrent drivers, Der Angriff's targeted messaging proved instrumental in translating abstract Nazi appeals into concrete ballot support, as evidenced by the party's transformation from fringe outlier to electoral heavyweight in Germany's capital.[1][7]
Developments After 1933
Official Organ Under Reich Ministry
Following the Nazi seizure of power on January 30, 1933, and Joseph Goebbels's appointment as Reich Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda on March 13, 1933, Der Angriff integrated into the regime's centralized propaganda framework.[32] As the official publication of the NSDAP's Berlin Gau, over which Goebbels presided as Gauleiter, the newspaper aligned its editorial line with ministry directives, prioritizing the dissemination of state-approved ideology, including virulent antisemitism, glorification of the Führer, and mobilization against internal and external threats.[33] Prior bans and censorship under the Weimar Republic ended, allowing unrestricted publication and amplifying its reach as a Berlin-based mouthpiece for national policy.[34]Contemporary observers and reports identified Der Angriff as the organ of the Propaganda Minister, reflecting Goebbels's direct influence despite his shift away from daily editing by 1935 to prioritize ministerial responsibilities.[35][7] The paper published content synchronized with ministry campaigns, such as attacks on Jewish communities during events like Kristallnacht in November 1938, where it justified violence without remorse, stating "we shed not a single tear for them."[36] This role extended to relaying official announcements, promoting Gleichschaltung across media, and countering dissent, though its prominence waned nationally as the ministry consolidated control over broader outlets like radio and film.[37]Under the ministry, Der Angriff exemplified the fusion of party and statepropaganda organs, with Goebbels leveraging his dual authority to ensure ideological conformity, though it retained its formal status as a Gau publication rather than a central Reich organ like the Völkischer Beobachter.[38] Its operations benefited from state resources, including subsidized printing and distribution, reinforcing the regime's narrative dominance in the capital until wartime constraints altered its format.[34]
Wartime Adaptations
During World War II, Der Angriff underwent significant physical adaptations due to escalating resource shortages, particularly paper and ink, which affected the entire Nazi-controlled press. By 1944, the Reich government mandated reductions in newspaper size, limiting publications first to eight pages, then four, and finally two pages per issue to conserve materials for the war effort.[39] As a prominent party organ, Der Angriff complied with these directives, transitioning from its pre-war daily format of broader scope to a more compact edition focused on essential propaganda content, while maintaining irregular distribution amid Allied bombing campaigns that disrupted Berlin's printing facilities.[39]Content-wise, the newspaper shifted emphasis toward total war mobilization under Joseph Goebbels' direct oversight as Reich Minister of Propaganda, amplifying calls for civilian sacrifice, industrial output, and ideological resolve against perceived Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracies driving the Allied assault. Articles glorified early victories, such as the 1940 Western campaign, while later editions post-Stalingrad in 1943 promoted narratives of inevitable German resurgence through "wonder weapons" and unyielding Volk community spirit, often featuring Goebbels' editorials urging radicalization of the home front.[40] This adaptation aligned with broader Reich Press Chamber policies enforcing censored, uplifting reports that omitted defeats, prioritizing morale-boosting rhetoric over factual reporting to sustain public adherence amid mounting losses.[39]Der Angriff's wartime role extended to intra-party coordination, publishing directives for Berlin Gau operations and anti-partisan incitements, though production increasingly relied on decentralized printing to evade disruptions, ceasing operations entirely with the Soviet capture of Berlin in April 1945.[41] These changes reflected not voluntary innovation but coercive necessities of a collapsing regime, where propaganda volume trumped depth, contributing to the paper's diminished influence compared to its Weimar-era peak.[3]
Controversies and Responses
Legal Challenges and Bans
Der Angriff faced repeated legal scrutiny under the Weimar Republic's press regulations, particularly Section 14 of the 1874 Reich Press Law, which permitted authorities to confiscate issues and impose short-term publication bans for content deemed to incite public disorder, hatred, or breaches of decency. As a mouthpiece for aggressive Nazi propaganda, including virulent antisemitism and attacks on republican institutions, the newspaper experienced multiple such interventions between 1927 and 1933, though these were typically brief, allowing resumption after compliance or appeals.[42]The most prominent challenges stemmed from libel suits initiated by Bernhard Weiß, Berlin's Jewish deputy police president and a frequent target of Der Angriff's cartoons and articles portraying him as emblematic of alleged Jewish influence in law enforcement. Weiß prevailed in several defamation cases against Joseph Goebbels, resulting in court-ordered fines that the editor paid while intensifying his campaign through pseudonyms and allusions, such as referring to Weiß as "the man one is not allowed to call Isidor" following a 1928 ruling.[11][1][43]Goebbels encountered further repercussions in April 1931 when Prussian police arrested him amid escalating street violence and inflammatory reporting in Der Angriff on recent SA-police clashes, with prior judicial proceedings having imposed fines for slanderous content traceable to the paper. These actions reflected broader Weimar efforts to curb Nazi agitation, yet they often proved counterproductive, enhancing the publication's martyr status among supporters without halting its output.[44][43]
Accusations of Incitement
Der Angriff, under Joseph Goebbels' editorship, regularly published articles employing vitriolic rhetoric against Jews, Communists, and the Weimar government, portraying them as existential threats to Germany and urging militant response. Critics, including police authorities and Jewish organizations, accused the paper of fostering hatred and provoking violence, citing specific content that depicted Jewish influence as a conspiracy warranting immediate confrontation. For instance, Goebbels' pieces often framed Berlin's Jewish population as cultural polluters, with calls to "cleanse" the city that were interpreted as direct appeals to SA street actions.[16]Weimar Republic officials frequently responded with confiscations and temporary bans under press laws prohibiting incitement to class or racial hatred, such as Section 4 of the Law for the Protection of the Republic. Goebbels faced personal prosecution for such offenses; in one case, he received a six-week prison sentence for "incitement to violence without result" stemming from Der Angriff's provocative editorials.[45] The paper's launch in July 1927 coincided with heightened SA activity in Berlin, leading to claims that its content served as a blueprint for organized brawls against political rivals.[2]A notable escalation occurred in August 1932, when Prussian authorities suppressed Der Angriff for one week, charging it with "inciting to disobedience and resistance against the State" amid rising Nazi-Communist clashes. Jewish leaders protested similar issues as preludes to pogroms, pointing to headlines and cartoons that demonized figures like Reichstag president Paul Löbe as part of a "Jewish-Bolshevik" plot, which they argued mobilized readers toward extralegal action.[46][47] Goebbels defended the paper's tone as necessary counter-propaganda against perceived systemic suppression, though contemporaries documented correlations between its publications and subsequent assaults on targeted groups.[45]These accusations persisted into the early Nazi era but diminished after 1933, as Der Angriff transitioned to state-sanctioned agitation without legal repercussions. Postwar analyses, drawing from Goebbels' diaries and trial records, affirm the paper's role in normalizing violent rhetoric, though Nazi apologists later framed bans as evidence of Weimar bias against nationalist expression.[16]
Cessation and Archival Legacy
Final Editions in 1945
As Soviet forces launched the Battle of Berlin on 16 April 1945, Der Angriff continued limited publication amid intensifying artillery barrages, supply shortages, and infrastructural collapse in the Nazi capital.[48] From 19 February 1945 onward, the newspaper had operated in a merged format as Der Angriff vereinigt mit der Berliner Illustrierte Nachtausgabe, consolidating resources under the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda to sustain output during escalating wartime deprivations.[48] This adaptation reflected broader Nazi efforts to maintain informational control, though print runs dwindled due to paper rationing, power failures, and direct threats to printing presses.The final edition appeared on 24 April 1945, just days before Adolf Hitler's suicide on 30 April and Berlin's unconditional surrender on 2 May.[12][49] Under Joseph Goebbels' editorial oversight as Reich Propaganda Minister, the issue prioritized exhortations of unyielding loyalty to Hitler, portraying the encirclement as a transient ordeal surmountable through fanatic resolve and Wunderwaffen deployment.[50] Content denied the imminence of defeat, framing Soviet advances as overextended bluffs and Allied coordination as illusory, while rallying civilians and soldiers for totaler Krieg amid reports of street fighting and civilian evacuations. Circulation, once reaching hundreds of thousands prewar, had contracted severely by this stage, with distribution confined to central Berlin bunkers and party strongholds.Printing halted irrevocably thereafter, as Red Army assaults neutralized remaining facilities; no verifiable issues postdated 24 April, marking the effective terminus of Der Angriff's 18-year run initiated on 4 July 1927. Surviving copies, preserved in microfilm at institutions like the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, document the publication's terminal phase of ideological intransigence amid empirical collapse.[51] Post-cessation evaluations by Allied authorities classified the paper's finale as emblematic of Goebbels' "scorched-earth" media strategy, prioritizing morale over realism until physical impossibility intervened.[52]
Postwar Evaluations
In the Nuremberg Military Tribunals following World War II, Der Angriff served as a key source of documentary evidence demonstrating the Nazi regime's systematic use of propaganda to incite antisemitism and undermine democratic processes. Prosecutors cited passages from the newspaper, including a May 14, 1944, article by Robert Ley asserting that "the second German secret weapon is Anti-Semitism because if it is constantly pursued by Germany, it will become a universal weapon," to illustrate the party's ideological commitment to racial hatred as a strategic tool.[53] Similarly, pre-1933 editorials by Joseph Goebbels in Der Angriff were referenced to show early intentions to exploit parliamentary democracy for authoritarian ends, such as his April 30, 1928, declaration: "We enter parliament in order to supply ourselves, in the arsenal of democracy, with its own weapons."[38] These evaluations framed the paper not merely as journalism but as an instrument of premeditated agitation that facilitated the regime's crimes against humanity.Historiographical analyses since the 1950s have consistently portrayed Der Angriff as a prototype of Goebbels' propaganda methodology, emphasizing its role in mobilizing working-class support for the Nazis in Berlin amid Weimar-era street violence. Russel Lemmons' 1994 monograph details how the newspaper's crude, sensationalist content—featuring relentless antisemitic caricatures, fabricated scandals against Jews and communists, and glorification of SA "martyrs"—helped transform the Berlin Nazi Gaue from a marginal fringe into a formidable force, contributing to electoral gains from under 2% in 1928 to over 30% by 1932.[3] Lemmons argues that this success stemmed from Goebbels' tactical adaptation to urban proletarian grievances, using personal invective and visual agitprop to foster a siege mentality, though he critiques the paper's reliance on verifiable falsehoods as evidence of its demagogic rather than substantive appeal.[8]Later scholarship reinforces this view, highlighting Der Angriff's causal link to escalating political violence, such as the 1929 Bloody May clashes, where its inflammatory reporting amplified Nazi-SA confrontations with police and leftists, eroding public order and Weimar legitimacy.[54] Evaluations in denazification proceedings and educational contexts in postwar West Germany condemned the paper's content as hate speech that normalized extremism, yet some historians, like Lemmons, acknowledge its propaganda efficacy in exploiting economic despair without excusing its ethical bankruptcy.[14] Archival studies post-1990, drawing on declassified Goebbels diaries, further substantiate that the paper's pre-1933 circulation, peaking at around 100,000 daily by 1932, reflected targeted success in Berlin's districts, underscoring its function as a "fighting organ" rather than objective reporting.[3] These assessments prioritize empirical circulation data and content analysis over moralistic dismissal, revealing how Der Angriff's tactics prefigured the Third Reich's total media control.