“My honour is my loyalty.”
Heinrich Himmler formulated this as the watchword of the Schultzstaffel (SS), an organisation that eventually became a vast organisation ranging from the staff of the concentration camps to the Gestapo and SD, to the Waffen-SS and Hitler’s personal soldiers. Above all else, Himmler and the rest of the NS leadership stressed the importance of loyalty to the Reich and the Führer.
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Unfortunately, Himmler was also the one who betrayed his own ideal of loyalty. Under the destructive influence of his close staff (Schellenberg, Kersten usw.), his loyalty to the Führer began to waver around 1942–1943. He ended up negotiating with enemy intelligence services and with Jewish representatives. When the Führer found out about his betrayal (I think it was on the 28th of April, if I’m not mistaken), he threw Himmler out of the Party and stripped him of his rank as Reichsführer-SS.
When he met Hitler’s loyal pilot Hanna Reitsch in May 1945, he tried to excuse his shenanigans with the Allies by claiming he had acted to “save German blood.” In the end, he was captured by the British, the very people he hoped to negotiate with and present himself to as some sort of anti-Bolshevist ally, and he was cold-bloodedly killed. (I highly recommend watching Joseph Bellinger’s lecture on the murder of Himmler on archive.org.)
Himmler may have had his merits in the early and middle stages of National Socialism, but he ultimately ended up as a naive, Allies-deceived and embarrassing failure who, out of vanity, hoped to outlive the Führer and play the big shot in an Allied-dominated Europe.