One of the most searing events in German history occurred soon after Hitler
took office. On February 27, 1933, in what easily could be termed the 9/11
terrorist attack of that time, German terrorists fire-bombed the German
parliament building. It shouldn't surprise anyone that Adolf Hitler, one of
the strongest political leaders in history, would declare war on terrorism
and ask the German parliament (the Reichstag) to give him temporary
emergency powers to fight the terrorists. Passionately claiming that such
powers were necessary to protect the freedom and well-being of the German
people, Hitler persuaded the German legislators to give him the emergency
powers he needed to confront the terrorist crisis. What became known as the
Enabling Act allowed Hitler to suspend civil liberties "temporarily," that
is, until the crisis had passed. Not surprisingly, however, the threat of
terrorism never subsided and Hitler's "temporary" emergency powers, which
were periodically renewed by the Reichstag, were still in effect when he
took his own life some 12 years later.
-- Jacob G. Hornberger. "Why Germans Supported Hitler"
July 16, 2007. http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0703a.asp