'' of 28 September 1941, accuses Jews of creating Marxism was justified as a part of the anti-Communist struggle.
Walter Laqueur traces the Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy theory to Nazi ideologue
Alfred Rosenberg, for whom Bolshevism was "the revolt of the Jewish, Slavic and
Mongolian races against the German (
Aryan) element in Russia". Germans, according to Rosenberg, had been responsible for Russia's historic achievements and had been sidelined by the Bolsheviks, who did not represent the interests of the Russian people, but instead those of its ethnic Jewish and Chinese population. Michael Kellogg in his Ph.D. thesis argued that the racist ideology of Nazis was to a significant extent influenced by
White émigrés in Germany, many of whom, while former subjects of the Russian Empire, were of non-Russian descent:
ethnic Germans, residents of Baltic lands including
Baltic Germans, and
Ukrainians. Of particular note was their
Aufbau organization (Aufbau: Wirtschafts-politische Vereinigung für den Osten (Reconstruction: Economic-Political Organization for the East), whose leader was instrumental in making
The Protocols of The Elders of Zion available in German. He argues that the early Hitler was rather
philosemitic, and became rabidly antisemitic after 1919 under the influence of White émigré convictions about a conspiracy of Jews, an unseen unity from financial capitalists to Bolsheviks, to conquer the world. Therefore, he concluded, White émigrés were at the source of the Nazi concept of Jewish Bolshevism. Annemarie Sammartino argues that this view is contestable. While there is no doubt that White emigres were instrumental in reinforcing the idea of 'Jewish Bolshevism' among Nazis, the concept is also found in many early post–World War I German documents. Also, Germany had its own share of Jewish Communists "to provide fodder for the paranoid fantasies of German antisemites" without Russian Bolsheviks. Adolf Hitler primarily viewed
Bolshevik Revolution as an usurpation of power from Nordic-Germanic elites by Jews. Hitler classified Slavs as among the inferior races and believed that they lacked an independent ability for statecraft. Hitler wrote in
Mein Kampf that the
Russian Empire had been dominated by an Aryan Germanic aristocracy who ruled over Russian masses, whom he viewed as primitive. During the 1920s, Hitler declared that the mission of the Nazi movement was to destroy "Jewish Bolshevism". Hitler asserted that the "three vices" of "Jewish Marxism" were democracy, pacifism and internationalism, and that Jews were behind Bolshevism, communism and Marxism.
Nazi propaganda also used the trope to advance
anti-Slavic racism, depicting Slavs as primitive hordes controlled by Jews to attack Aryans. Hitler ordered
Operation Barbarossa with firm convictions of an inevitable German victory, due to his beliefs that Judeo-Bolshevism had liquidated Russia's Aryan aristocracy, which in his view, made the country into a
failed state. In
Nazi Germany, this concept of Jewish Bolshevism reflected a common perception that Communism was a Jewish-inspired and Jewish-led movement seeking world domination from its origin. The term was popularized in print in German journalist
Dietrich Eckhart's 1924 pamphlet "" ("Bolshevism from Moses to Lenin") which depicted both
Moses and Lenin as Communist and Jewish. This was followed by
Alfred Rosenberg's 1923 edition of
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion and
Hitler's
Mein Kampf in 1925, which saw Bolshevism as "Jewry's twentieth century effort to take world dominion unto itself". According to French spymaster and writer
Henri Rollin, "Hitlerism" was based on "anti-Soviet counter-revolution" promoting the "myth of a mysterious Jewish–Masonic–Bolshevik plot", entailing that the
First World War had been instigated by a vast Jewish–Masonic conspiracy to topple the Russian, German, and Austro-Hungarian Empires and implement Bolshevism by fomenting liberal ideas. A major source for
propaganda about Jewish Bolshevism in the 1930s and early 1940s was the pro-Nazi and antisemitic international '''' news agency founded in 1933 by
Ulrich Fleischhauer. Within the German Army, a tendency to see Soviet Communism as a Jewish conspiracy had grown since the
First World War, something that became officialized under the Nazis. A 1932 pamphlet by
Ewald Banse of the Government-financed German National Association for the Military Sciences described the Soviet leadership as mostly Jewish, dominating an apathetic and mindless Russian population. By the mid thirties, the
Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda had created a special agency called the
Anti-Komintern, dedicated to creating anti-communist propaganda and heavily publicizing their theory of Judeo-Bolshevism. Propaganda produced in 1935 by the psychological war laboratory of the German War Ministry described Soviet officials as "mostly filthy Jews" and called on
Red Army soldiers to rise up and kill their "Jewish commissars". This material was not used at the time, but served as a basis for propaganda in the 1940s. Nazi Propaganda Minister
Joseph Goebbels speaking at the Nuremberg Party Rally in September 1935 said: Members of the Nazi
Schutzstaffel (SS) were encouraged to fight against "Jewish Bolshevik sub-humans". In the pamphlet
The SS as an Anti-Bolshevist Fighting Organization, published in 1936,
Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler wrote: After
Operation Barbarossa Nazi propaganda depicted the war as a "European crusade against Bolshevism" and
Waffen-SS units consisted largely or solely of foreign volunteers and conscripts. Nazi propaganda presented Barbarossa as an ideological-racial war between German Nazism and "Judeo-Bolshevism", dehumanising the Soviet enemy as a force of Slavic
Untermensch (sub-humans) and "Asiatic" savages engaging in "barbaric Asiatic fighting methods" commanded by evil Jewish commissars whom German troops were to grant no mercy. The vast majority of the Wehrmacht officers and soldiers tended to regard the war in Nazi terms, seeing their Soviet opponents as sub-human. ==Outside Nazi Germany==