General
der Infanterie Dietrich von Choltitz (left) surrender to Général de
brigade Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque (Commander 2e Division
Blindée), 25 August 1944. On 7 August previously he was appointed as
Kommandierenden General und Wehrmachtbefehlshaber von Groß-Paris
(Military Governor of Paris). At a meeting in Germany the following day,
Hitler instructed him to be prepared to leave no Parisian religious
building or historical monument standing. After Choltitz's arrival in
Paris on 9 August, Hitler confirmed the order by cable: "The city must
not fall into the enemy's hand except lying in complete rubble." A week
later Hitler, in a rage, screamed, "Brennt Paris?" (Is Paris burning?).
On 15 August 1944, the Paris police went on strike, followed on 19
August by a general insurrection led by the French Communist Party. The
German garrison under Choltitz fought back but was far too small to
quell the uprising. He brokered a ceasefire with the insurgents on 20
August, but many Resistance groups did not accept it, and a series of
skirmishes continued on the next day. On 25 August, Choltitz surrendered
the German garrison of 17,000 men to the Free French, leaving the city
largely intact. Because Hitler's directive was not carried out, Choltitz
has been described by some as the "Saviour of Paris". General von
Choltitz later claimed in his memoir of 1951 that he defied Hitler's
order to destroy Paris because he loved the city and had decided that
Hitler was by then insane. It is known that the Swedish consul-general
in Paris, Raoul Nordling, and the president of the municipal council,
Pierre Taittinger, held several meetings with Choltitz, during which he
negotiated the release of political prisoners. The all-night
confrontation between Nordling and Choltitz on the eve of the surrender,
as depicted in the 1965 book and 1966 film, Is Paris Burning?, and
again in the 2014 film Diplomacy — in which Nordling persuades Choltitz
to spare the city in return for a pledge to protect his family — was
reported as factual in some newspaper stories, but lacks a definitive
historical basis.
Source :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dietrich_von_Choltitz
https://wtop.com/europe/2019/05/rare-color-footage-brings-d-day-memories-alive-75-years-on/
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