Lexington Books
Pages: 256
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0255-8 • Hardback • September 2001 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
Klaus Urner is Professor and Head of the Archives for Contemporary History at the Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich. He is the author of numerous studies that deal primarily with twentieth-century history, including Die Deutschen in der Schweiz [Germans in Switzerland] (1976) and Der Schweizer Hitler-Attentäter [The Attempt of a Swiss to Assassinate Hitler] (1980).
Chapter 1 The Search for New Sources
Part 2 Hitler's Plans against Switzerland: Summer 1940
Chapter 3 Overlooked Setting of German Explorations about Invading Switzerland
Chapter 4 Dangerous Tendencies of Aggression among Germans and Their Leaders
Chapter 5 Military Measures of the Axis Powers for a Total Encirclement of Switzerland
Chapter 6 Hitler's Orders of June 23, 1940: Explore a Surprise Occupation of Switzerland
Chapter 7 Evening of June 23, 1940: Angry Outburst in the Führer's Headquarters
Chapter 8 Readying the 12th Army for the "Special Task" Switzerland
Chapter 9 Unsteady Security until Spring 1941
Part 10 German Economic Warfare to Close the Gap: Between Geneva and St. Gingolph
Chapter 11 Historical Aspects of the Last Escape Hatch between Switzerland and the Allies
Chapter 12 Transition Phase after the Armistice
Chapter 13 Creating Loopholes in the German Export Prohibitions
Chapter 14 Extortion Measures against Switzerland: The Offensive of the HWK Special Staff
Chapter 15 Partial German Success Due to French and Swiss Concessions
Chapter 16 Importance of the Gap until the Agreement of July 18, 1941
Chapter 17 Semi-legal and Illegal Attempts to Break Through the Counter-Blockade
Chapter 18 The "Little Border Traffic": The Hidden Door to the West until November 1942
Chapter 19 The Special Emigrant Railroad Car of the Swiss Alien Police
Chapter 20 The Final Phase: Contacts with the Resistance and Final Rescue Attempts
Part 21 Documents
Klaus Urner's fascinating study is an important contribution to the history of Switzerland during World War II.
— Neue Zürcher Zeitung