Large areas in Eastern Europe, like Soviet
Union and Poland to provide living space for
growing Germans
Establish a superior Aryan race
By rebuilding armed forces
and exterminating “inferior
races”
How did Hitler conduct his expansionist policy?
1. Withdrawal from
League of Nations and
Geneva Disarmament
Conference
Hitler wanted France to disarm to the level
of armaments allowed to Germany
France objected
Hitler withdrew from the
Disarmament conference
and League of Nations as
he felt that Germany was
not protected
Hitler rearmed German
2. Conscription and
rearmament
Nazis quickened the rearmament plan to
strengthen and rebuild Germany’s national
pride after TOV
Reintroduced conscription
which was compulsory(an
army of 550,000)
Rebuilt navy, air force and army
Conscription only announced to the world in
1935. Allies’ were concerned but they only
protested verbally and did no action
Germany’s military power was built up
Remilitaristion of Rhineland
Hitler used the 1935 France-Soviet
alliance as an excuse to remilitarise
the Rhineland so as to act as
defense for Germany
3. German involvement in
the Spanish Civil War
Hitler sent soldiers and equipment to
support the Spanish Nationalist forces
during the Spanish Civil War in 1937
Divert France and
Britain’s attention
from his plans for
expansion into
eastern Europe
Also allowed Hitler
to test the
strength of his
army and air force
Portrayed that he
was supporting
anti-communist
rebels
League of
Nations, France
and Britain did
not take action
Hitler became bolder as Britain and France were seen as weak by him
from the lack of action
6. Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact
Germany and Soviet Union signed
a pact in 1939 to avoid 2 front war
The pact allowed Hitler to invade Poland as he would not have to face Britain, France and
the Soviet Union at the same time. It also stated that the two countries would be on
friendly terms and to split Eastern Europe into Soviet and German spheres of influence,
with Poland divided into two
5. Czechoslovakia – Munich Agreement
People in Sudentenland area
in Czechoslovakia are largely
Germans and they demanded
to be part of Germany
Hitler threatened to go to
war for Sudentenland if
needed
In 1938, Munich agreement
was signed between France,
Britain, Germany and Italy
Czechoslovakia and the Soviets
were not consulted. Germany had
control of Sudentenland but was
told not to invade
Leading to Czech leader resigning
Hitler now wanted Czechoslovakia too
Germany invaded and conquered
Czechoslovakia on 1939
France and Britain then realised
Hitler could not be trusted and
warned him that they would go to
war with Germany if he invades
Poland
4. German Unification with Austria
Hitler encouraged Austrian
Nazis to support the Anschluss
with Germany
Pressured the Austrian
chancellor to agree to an
Anschluss
A plebiscite was held and
99.75% of Austrians
agreed on unification with
Germany
Germany and Austria was
unified on 1938
However, France and Britain took no
action although Hitler breached the
Treaty of Versailles. Austria’s
resources now belonged to Hitler
7. Invasion of Poland
Hitler demanded Danzig to be part of Germany
Hitler wanted a railroad built across
Polish Corridor to reconnect Germany
with East Prussia
Britain and France were willing to
negotiate with Germany about Danzig
but their negotiations did not go
according to what he hoped
Hitler invaded
Poland in 1939
France and Britain
declared war on
Germany 1939
Weakness of the League Of Nations
Failure of disarmament
Attempts at disarmament
Locarno Treaties(1925)
League Commission to
prepare for World
Disarmament
Conference(1926)
Washington Naval Conference(1921)
Kellogg-Briand Pact(1928)
World Disarmament Conference (1932-1934)
Why was the league unable to enforce disarmament successfully?
Lack of USA involvement
Major Powers feared being vulnerable
Stronger nations acted
on their own interests
Britain and France placed their national interests above
the League's as they were severely weakened by WW1
and the Great Depression
Led to distrust and tension among nations
which would eventually lead to WW2
Powerful countries still had military
capacity for war and there was
nothing capable of stopping them
from engaging in conflicts
Failure to intervene in the Abyssinian crisis
Reasons for Mussolini's invasion of Abyssinia
Wanted to
make Italy a
great power
Exact revenge for
Italy's defeat to
Abyssinia in 1896
Exploit
Abyssinia's
mineral wealth
Measures taken by
League of Nations and
the major powers
Abyssinian
Emperor Haile
Selassie appealed
to the League for
help
Measures taken by the League of Nations
After Italy invaded Abyssinia in 1935, the
League condemned Italy as they went against
its covenant and imposed economic sanctions
on them, but did nothing else to stop Italy
Measures taken by Britain
and France
Britain and France did not intervene as they
did not want to offend Italy, and they had
signed the Stresa Front, a treaty between
the three
Implications of the Abyssinia
Crisis
Signaled that the League of Nations
was ineffective and did not have the
ability to maintain world peace and
resolve conflicts
Convinced Britain and France to
take things into their own hands
rather than rely on the League
Hitler and Mussolini
signed the Rome-Berlin
axis Treaty in November
1936
Italy conquered Abyssinia in
May 1936, emboldening
Mussolini and Hitler in their
ambitions
The Policy of Appeasement
Appeasement
policy
Britain and France adopted the policy of
appeasement in their interaction with
Hitler. Both France and Britain did not
stand up against him. They chose to
negotiate and appease Hitler to avoid war
Reasons for appeasement policy
1. Fear of another
war
Britain and France are
economically and
militarily unprepared for
another major war
They suffered badly from World War 1
2. Weakness of
the League of
Nations
The League of Nations was
incapable of solving
conflicts
Britain and France
who plays a big role in
the League of Nations
was ineffective
handled things in
their own ways
Chose
appeasement to
satisfy Hitler
3. Buying time
to rearm
WW1 had weakened
France and Britain
greatly in terms of
economically and
militarily
Both countries needed time to
strengthen their military
Appeasement was chosen as it
seemed as the best way to postpone
war
4. Genuine sympathy for
Germany over Treaty of
Versailles
Many British politicians
through Treaty of Versailles
was too harsh on Germany
The British thought that German
grievances were justified and by
giving in could avoid another war
5. Chamberlain's
misjudgment of Hitler
British Prime Minister(Neville
Chamberlain) believed Hitler was
reasonable and would be satisfied
with the negotiation terms
Chamberlain believed Hitler would
keep his promises but Hitler broke them
Hitler got Sudentenland and
continued invading
Czechoslovakia and Poland
6. Fear of Communism
Britain and France hated
communism as it
contradicted their beliefs of
capitalism and democracy
After Hitler banned the communist party in Germany,
France and Britain believed that allowing Hitler to rearm
would make Germany stronger which would act as an
shield against Soviet Union and communism
Hitler was seen as a potential ally
against communism