By that time Hitler did put people he trusted into central positions of military power. Everybody who Hitler considered to be untrustworthy was already removed from power.
Nobody succeeded in running a coup against him but people did try at such dates as the 20 of July. The military didn’t follow Hitlers orders when it comes to subjects such as burning brides in Germany.
A few tried, even specifically operating under the theory that the failures in Russia would make a post-assassination coup politically possible, in Operation Spark.
I don’t think this much affects your point, though; by the time a sufficiently evil person and/or group is in power, there doesn’t seem to be any shortage of political and psychological mechanisms they can use to entrench there.
I think it’s somewhere in Sun Tzu’s Art of War. Often things are well hidden in plain sight.
Hitler’s biggest advantage was that nobody took him seriously.
And yet the German military didn’t overthrow Hitler when he started messing up military strategy in Russia.
By that time Hitler did put people he trusted into central positions of military power. Everybody who Hitler considered to be untrustworthy was already removed from power.
Nobody succeeded in running a coup against him but people did try at such dates as the 20 of July. The military didn’t follow Hitlers orders when it comes to subjects such as burning brides in Germany.
A few tried, even specifically operating under the theory that the failures in Russia would make a post-assassination coup politically possible, in Operation Spark.
I don’t think this much affects your point, though; by the time a sufficiently evil person and/or group is in power, there doesn’t seem to be any shortage of political and psychological mechanisms they can use to entrench there.