“It takes quite a lot to make me cry, and I cried when I came out of that place,” he revealed. “I'm just sorry that I was an idiot (in saying what he said). I sincerely, genuinely apologise. I said I suppose he (Hitler) did, [in his] early days, a good job. He took Germany from a bankrupt country to a superpower in five years, so he probably couldn't have done that unless he made things happen. All sorts of people have done that in the past.
“The problem is we shouldn't use the word dictators; we should use the word leaders. It's a leader you want, not a dictator, because most dictators get things done by terrorising people, whereas a leader like Mrs Thatcher gets things done because people think what she's doing is leading them in the right direction and people support her.”
The reason for Ecclestone giving the interview in the first place remains unclear, but it has been mused that he was perhaps trying to state the case for the retention of a leader in F1 like the President of the FIA, rather than risking the anarchy that might result should the Formula One Teams' Association (FOTA) pursue its threat to break away and form its own, democratically-run championship.
Whilst there has been no reaction from within the paddock, the timing could scarcely have been worse. A meeting aimed at safeguarding the future of Hockenheim as an enduring venue in the top flight had been scheduled to take place over the weekend of the upcoming German Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, but that has since been cancelled in the wake of the scandal [see separate story –
click here].
Against the backdrop of the uneasy truce in the FIA/FOTA civil war, Germany's Central Council of Jews has called upon F1's teams to boycott the sport, with the organisation's vice-president Dieter Graumann telling the
Handesblatt daily newspaper: “If Ecclestone says he was an idiot, I will certainly not contradict him. Apologising is better than not apologising, but the glorification of a mass murderer is not a trivial offence. No team should work with him anymore.”
The World Jewish Congress, meanwhile, has called for Ecclestone to resign from his post, citing his apology as inadequate, but the Formula One Management (FOM) chief executive has insisted that its president Ronald Lauder does not possess the necessary authority to make such a demand.
“Mr. Ecclestone's comments were crass, ignorant and insensitive,” added Jon Benjamin, chief executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, in a statement issued to
CNN. “There is no excuse for praising one of history's most evil men for being good at being bad.”
What's more, the incident has re-awakened uncomfortable memories of the
News of the World sex scandal into which Ecclestone's long-time friend, ally and business partner Max Mosley found himself plunged early last year, when the Sunday tabloid falsely accused the FIA President of having introduced 'Nazi elements' into S&M fantasies in which he participated.
The Times interview is not the first time Ecclestone has courted controversy with his comments of late, having suggested that the racist abuse directed at McLaren-Mercedes' world champion Lewis Hamilton during testing in Barcelona in 2008 was merely 'a joke', and having only earlier this year opined that 'it would be fantastic to have a female driver who is black and Jewish' in F1, whilst quipping that 'they might take maternity leave'. Rarely a shrinking violet, he previously suggested that women should wear white 'like all other domestic appliances'.