Change Territorial
Settlement by
regaining lands
inhabited by German
people that had been
taken e.g Saar and
Danzig
Bring the 7 million German
speaking in Austria and the 4
million in Czechoslovakia and
Poland into his empire
Involved destroying the peace
settlement of 1919
Build up German army
so he was supported by
force
Expand in the east, probably
against communist USSR
Hitler hated Communism
Aim for the future when TOV had
been overturned and German
was in great power in Europe
1st stage was the strengthen lands in Europe
Could not be done alone so Hitler felt that the
main enemies of Germany- France and USSR- had
to be enemies of Britain and Italy who they were
already allied with
German Rearmament
Germany allowed to join League of Nations in 1926
One aim was to maintain peace by reducing arms of
all countries
Little success by 1932 when the
Disarmament Conference began
German allowed to attend
Hitler withdrew from the Conference and LEN
He insisted that Germany wanted peace
and would disarm if other countries did
1935- Germany began to rearm
1935 Conscription in Germany
Hitler's excuse was that France had
increased its term of conscription
from 12 to 18 months meaning the
number of trained soldiers would
increase
Against TOV
Why didn't France and Britain react?
Only opposition was the short-
lived Stresa Front to protest
against conscription in German
Soviet Russia joined the LON- afraid of Germany
Many in Britain felt the TOV was unfair and unjust
Differences
between France
and Britain
Hitler took advantage
to further his aims in
foreign policy
He often threatened to use force to achieve his
aims
But whenever he went against the TOV
he followed it with peaceful promises
Britain payed more attention to
the peaceful acts than the reversal
of TOV
France felt TOV needed to be
strengthened
Could they invade Germany?
Tried in 1923 when they occupied the
Ruhr because Germany had fallen
behind on reparation payments
Failed
France wouldn't disarm
because of fears that German
would invade again
10 year non aggression pact
1934
Hitler signed with Poland
Guaranteed the boundaries of Poland
Satisfied the Poles that Hitler
would not try to take the Polish
Corridor
Pleased Britain who saw it as further
proof that Hitler's aims were peaceful
Germany had accepted the frontier with Poland set up in
TOV
Failed Anschluss
1934
Hitler suffered knockback to his aims
He encouraged the
Austrian Nazi Party to
rebel
Resulted in murder of
Austrian Chancellor,
Dollfuss
Looked as if Anschluss would be achieved
But prevented by Mussolini
moving his army to the frontier of
Austria and guaranteeing
Austrian independance
Hitler realised his army was not
strong enough so he backed
down and denied involvement
with the Austrian Nazi Party!
Anglo- German Naval Agreement
More successful for Hitler
1935
Hitler's willingness to sign
was further proof to Britain
of his peaceful intentions
TOV limited the Germany navy to 35% of British fleet excluding submarines
By signing, Britain were agreeing to
Germany rearming
Britain now felt it was important to limit the size of
the German navy
Success for Hitler because the
agreement weakened the Stresa
Front as Britain had not consulted
France and Italy
Led to Germany proceeding with rearmament without opposition
1938
German Army had 800,000
Navy- 47 Submarines and 2,000 aircrafts
Return of the Saar
January 1935
Plebiscite was held in the Saar
to decide whether
Remained under
control of LON
8%
Returned to
German control
90%
Nazi propaganda took advantage
Published as being a removal of an
injustice of the TOV
Hitler announced to the world
that all cause of grievance
between France and Germany
had now been removed
Return of the Saar was legal
TOV said after 15 years
a plebiscite was to be
held
Join France
2%
Remilitarisation of the Rhineland
Events
7th March 1936
German soldiers marched into the Rhineland
Against TOV and Locarno Pact
The German Government had
willingly signed in 1925
Followed with promising that Germany would
sign a 25 year non aggression pact and had no
further territorial ambitions in Europe
France, Britain and LON
should have acted against
this
All that happened was that
German action was condemned by
the League
When the vote was held,
only Soviet Russia voted in
favour of imposing
sanctions on Germany
Hitler had chosen
the right moment
Britain and France were more
concerned about Mussolini
He had invaded Abyssinia
French government were
divided and didn't want to react
without the help of Britain
Britain didn't think Hitler was doing
anything wrong
The TOV was unjust and so
Hitler had a right to take back
his own territory
Unlike Mussolini who was invading another country
No-one wanted war
Took more notice of the promise
that followed
End of March 1936, Hitler held a vote in
Germany on his policies
99% in favour of them
Hitler could have been stopped!
He sent his soldiers against the
advice of his generals who said the
army were not strong enough
He also went against the advice
of his financial ministers who
feared the effect that economic
sanctions could have on
Germany
Hitler dismissed all of
this advice
He judged foreign reactions perfectly
Germany could have been stopped but there was no support for opposition
Sanctions would have crippled Germany
When the soldiers were sent the generals ordered
that if there was any opposition against them from
the french they were to immediately withdraw
French army were much stronger than
that of Germany in 1936
Anschluss with Austria
Union of Germany and Austria
Forbidden by TOV
Hitler was born in the boundaries of Austria and said in his book, "Mein
Kampf" that he felt the rightful place of Austria was in union with Germany.
In 1934 the Austrian Nazis, encouraged by Hitler, had
tried to seize power after the murder of Dollfuss
This had been prevented by
Mussolini who had previously
been prepared to give support
to Austria
1938
Situation had changed
Mussolini was not allied with Germany
and occupied in the Spanish Civil War
He was unlikely to give help to Austria
Hitler wanted to unite all German speaking people
Austrians were German speaking
Nazi Party remained strong in Austria in 1938
There were rumours of another Nazi plot to
overthrow the Austrian government
Schuschnigg, the Austrian Chancellor,
appealed to Hitler for help to end the plotting
Hitler refused
Instead of helping he put pressure
on Schuschnigg and forced him to
appoint Seyss- Inquart
Leader of the Nazi Party in Austria
This was followed by riots and demonstrations by the Nazis in Austria
In spite of his position, Seyss
Inquart supported the
demonstrations and did nothing
to stop them
Schuschnigg, however,
made a bold move the
end them and save the
independence of Austria
He called a plebiscite on whether the Austrian
people wanted to remain independent or not
Alarmed Hitler
Hitler wasn't prepared to take the risk!
It was clear that Schuschnigg had defied Hitler by calling the plebiscite without asking his permission
He could not afford
anything other than an
overwhelming vote in favour
of unification with Germany
To make this certain Hitler moved German troops to the border
He forced Schuschnigg to call off the
plebiscite and resign from the office
Schuschnigg was probably
expecting Britain and France to
give assistance to Austria
When it was clear this wouldn't happen, Schuschnigg resigned to avoid blood shed
Seyss- Inquart replaced
He invited the Germans into Austria to restore order
German army entered on 12th March
1st- Opponents of Hitler were removed
Around 80,000 were rounded up and put in concentration camps
Power was handed to Hitler and Anschluss was proclaimed
14th March
Hitler processed in triumph through Vienna
Followed by plebiscite in April
99.75% of voters agreed with Anschluss
Hitler could now claim he was only fulfilling
the idea of self determination expressed in
Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points
Britain and France protested
LON was not consulted
Anschluss was against the TOV but
Britain had sympathy for Germany
because the Austrians were German
speaking and traditionally German
British government feared communism in the USSR more than it did Nazism
Britain welcomed a strong
Germany because it saw it a a
barrier to the USSR and
communism
Hitler's anti communist views strengthened this
Many Austrians favoured Anschluss because
they felt that the Austrian economy was too
weak to remain independent