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was apprehensive of the possibility of war and so negotiated interminably with Hitler and eventually conceded to him. That destroyed any chance of the plot succeeding since Hitler was then seen in
Germany as the "greatest statesman of all times at the moment of his greatest triumph", as was stated by
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Theodor Kordt, who acted as Chargé d'Affaires at the London embassy, was considered a vital contact with the
British on whom the success of the plot depended; the conspirators needed strong British opposition to Hitler's seizure of the Sudetenland. Erich used his brother as an envoy to urge the
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in
November 1937. In February 1938, when Ribbentrop became foreign minister, he was named as head of the Foreign Office's "Ministerial Bureau".
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for whom he developed a personal dislike and a professional disdain. Still, he became a member of the
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of 1938, which was a proposed plan to assassinate Adolf Hitler if
Germany went to war with
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crisis, in the hope that Army officers would stage a coup against Hitler.
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A convinced
Anglophile, Kordt spoke perfect English after gaining a
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as German Consul, where he worked as an agent for the Soviet spy
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when
Japanese Intelligence discovered his espionage activities.
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Both Erich Kordt and his brother, Theodor, played a part in the
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until 1944. He narrowly avoided being killed by a
Japanese
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242:In June 1939, Kordt went to London to warn
53:. Unsourced material may be challenged and
230:another member of the German Resistance,
117:Learn how and when to remove this message
311:Assassination attempts on Adolf Hitler
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51:adding citations to reliable sources
257:In April 1941, Kordt was posted to
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356:Failed assassins of Adolf Hitler
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182:Joachim von Ribbentrop
299:University of Cologne
281:In June 1946, at the
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287:Ernst von Weizsäcker
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232:Erwin von Witzleben
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204:Oster Conspiracy
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331:1969 deaths
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212:Sudetenland
170:Switzerland
130:Erich Kordt
320:Categories
186:Nazi Party
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238:Espionage
210:over the
34:does not
305:See also
291:Vatican
277:Postwar
263:Nanking
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271:hitman
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