Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Road to War
- The Nazi Soviet Pact 1939
- Having agreed to
appeasement with Hitler,
everyone realised that Hitler
was targeting Poland
- Chamberlain (Britain) had promised to protect Poland
from German attack but really they were too far away
and had only a small army
- So in April of 1939, Stalin suggested an
alliance should be formed between Britain,
Russia and France against Germany to
protect Poland
- Germany
would not
attack Poland if
it would risk
war with Russia
- However discussions
dragged on because:
- Britain did not like
communist Russia
- Poland didn't
want Russian
Soldiers in Poland
- Russia did not trust that France
and Britain would resist Germany
- Suddenly, in August that same year, Hitler had made
a deal with Stalin, called the Nazi-Soviet Pact, to not
go to war with each other and secretly to invade
Poland and split it between the two of them
- This news shocked many, but from Stalin's
point of view
- He would need to re-arm before
Hitler invaded Russia if he had
allied with France and Britain
- Stalin would have to go to war if he
joined with Britain and France but if
he joined with Hitler he would
receive half of Poland and not have
to go into war
- In 1940 Hitler broke the pact and
invaded Russia
- Hitler's Aims
- The main objective behind Hitler's aims
was to turn Germany into the great power
it had formerly been and he planned to do
this by:
- Destroying the nationally reviled
Versailles settlement
- building his army/
rearmament
- Recovering lost territory such as
the Saar and the Polish Corridor
- Bringing all Germans together
within greater Germany and
carving out an empire in
Eastern Europe to give
Germans extra "living space"
- Rearmament 1934-1939
- In an attempt to evade future
casualties as bad as the First World
War the reduction of weapons was
widely suggested however no country
was actually to follow through with
this
- Aggravated that no one else would
disarm Hitler withdrew from the
disarmament conference and set
about rebuilding his army
- At this point Britain and
France were expected to
intervene but didn't
because
- Rearmament was seen as a
legitimate way of reducing
unemployment in an
economically distraught country
- Britain as well as many other countries
thought the Treaty of Versailles was too
harsh and it was unfair that Germany
were so vulnerable to attack
- A strong Germany would be
a strong buffer against
communism
- The Saar 1935
- The Saar was returned to
Germany after a plebiscite
resulting in a 90% vote in
favour
- Hitler declared all causes of
grievance between France and
Germany had been removed
- The Rhineland 1936
- Encouraged by Mussolini's
fall out with Britain and
France, Hitler took the risk
of sending troops into the
demilitarised zone of the
Rhineland in March 1936
- Though troops had orders to
withdraw at the first sign of
French opposition no more
than the usual protests were
offered so the risk paid off
- This had provided Hitler
with buffer to stop French
troops from coming to aid
the Eastern European allies
- The French and British didn't
intervene because:
- The French didn't want to
go to war without Britain's
backing
- Many British politicians felt
that Hitler should be
allowed to go "back into
his own garden"
- The British public did not
yet see Hitler as a threat,
rather he seemed a strong
potential
- The Spanish Civil
War 1936-1939
- The Spanish civil war
was a conflict between
fascist rebels, lead by
General Franco, and
and the left wing
republican government
- Hitler was quick to see the
opportunity and respond by
providing aircraft and 6000
German troops to Franco
- This was the first time that aerial
bombing had been used against civilians
most notably in the bombing of Guernica
- The Spanish Civil War ended in a
fascist victory for General Franco
in 1939
- Most people saw Hitler's
involvement in the war as an
excuse to try out new warfare
techniques
- Anschluss with
Austria 1938
- The Austrian Nazis staged massive
demonstrations calling for union with
Germany that Chancellor Schuschnigg
could not control
- Schuschnigg announced a
plebiscite to determine whether or
not Austria should once again be
united with Germany
- Afraid that the plebiscite would go
against his favour, Hitler sent in
German troops to ensure a
"trouble-free vote" which resulted in
99.75% of Austrians supporting the
union with Germany
- Britain did not protest because
they felt it Germany and Austria's
right to unite and the Treaty of
Versailles was wrong to punish
them
- Czechoslovakia was now afraid
due to the fact that they could be
attacked from the North, South and
west
- Appeasement
- This was the policy of giving in to
some of the demands that dictators
like Hitler and Mussolini in the hope
that they would be satisfied and not
ask for me
- This policy has been most closely
identified with British and French
foreign policy in the 1930s lead by
Neville Chamberlain
- It was a very popular part of
British Foreign Policy
- The Sudetenland
and the Munich
Agreement 1938
- Following Anschluss Hitler turned
his attention to Czechoslovakia, the
three million Sudeten Germans
inhabited by it and the fact that
Germany bordered it on 3 sides now
- Czechoslovakia was a country created
following the end of WW1 however no part
of it had ever been part of Germany before
so it did not break the terms of the treaty
- The Sudeten Germans inhabited the
most wealthy and industrially
successful areas of Czechoslovakia
- Hitler and encouraged the
demands of Sudeten
Germans who wanted to
join Germany which
resulted in numerous riots
and marches
- In order to resolve the
situation Chamberlain met
Hitler on three occasions
- Berchtesgaden-
15th September
1938
- Chamberlain made it clear to Hitler that
Britain would accept self-determination for
the Sudetenland but secretly Hitler wanted
ans excuse to invade the whole of
Czechoslovakia, not just the Sudetenland
- Godesberg- 22nd
September 1938
- Britain and France planned to give
Hitler the parts of the Sudetenland that
he wanted but Hitler wante the whole of
the Sudetenland
- Munich- 29th
September 1938
- Britain, France, Italy and Germany decided
to give Hitler the Sudetenland and in a
separate meeting Chamberlain also agreed
a pact promising peace between the two
countries
- Outcomes of the Sudeten Crisis
- Hitler Became Increasingly
popular in Germany achieving
Victory without war
- Czechoslovakia
was destroyed
- The USSR had not been included in
the Munich Agreement and Stalin
felt compelled to develop his own
arrangement with Germany
- Chamberlain bought time at
Munich, time in which Britain
could rearm for conflicts in the
future
- In March 1939, Hitler's conquest of
Czechoslovakia was completed
making it clear he could not be trusted
from now on