Category: Psychological Warfare
- The Hitler-British Connection
The Hitler-British Connection was the theory that Adolf Hitler was not simply an Austrian-born German extremist who rose through Munich politics after World War I, but a long-prepared British sleeper asset shaped through psychological training linked to Tavistock. In this version, Britain did not merely watch Germany’s instability; it cultivated a figure who could radicalize and destroy Germany from within. The theory is strongly retrospective, because the Tavistock Clinic was founded in 1920 while Hitler was already moving into organized nationalist politics by 1919. That chronological mismatch did not prevent the theory from spreading. Instead, Tavistock became a symbol of hidden British mind science, retroactively attached to Hitler as a way of explaining his charisma, mass influence, and catastrophic strategic utility to Britain.