Part of our History series on International Relations between the war, this slide set examines the drift towards war in the 30's. We look at the Abyssinian Crisis, and how the British and French attempts to appease Italy ultimately undermined the League of Nations and emboldened Hitler.
Italy invaded Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) in 1935, this was to draw from the country's fertile lands and mineral wealth, while increasing the size of the Italian Empire.
December 1934, Mussolini took advantage over who owned the land at the Wal-Wal Oasis and prepared to invade Abyssinia
Emperor of Abyssinia, Haile Selassie, appealed to the League for help
Abyssinia laid close to both French and British territories; the League's response would demonstrate its effectiveness
Phase 1: January to October 1935
Britain and France were attempting to negotiate with Italy after the invasion
Mussolini dispatched forces to Africa at this time
Britain and France wanted to remain friendly with Italy, and to stop an alliance between Mussolini and Hitler
April 1935, Britain, France and Italy sign the Stresa Pact (formal statement against German rearmament and stand against Hitler)
Abyssinia was ignored here, until British Foreign Secretary, Samuel Hoare mentioned Britain's commitment to the policy of collective security
A League Committee investigated the Wal-Wal incident, reporting in September 1935
The report claimed neither side could be blamed and Italy receive some Abyssinian territory
Phase 2: October to May 1936
Mussolini rejected the League proposals and invaded Abyssinia in October 1935
The League imposed sanctions on Italy (banned arms sales and financial loans to Italy, and exports of Italian rubber, tin and metals)
The Suez Canal, which was owned by Britain and France, was not closed to Mussolini's supply ships
Britain and France were afraid closing the route might result in war with Italy
December 1935 - British and French foreign ministers developed a plan to give Italy two-thirds of Abyssinia to end the invasion
They developed this plan without consulting Selassie or the League of Nations beforehand; resulted in the leaking of details to the press
Both foreign ministers, Samuel Hoare and Pierre Laval, were sacked
The US Congress was appalled by the actions of Hoare and Laval and exporters began to increase exports to Italy.
Further, on March 7, 1936, Hitler marched troops into the Rhineland, defying the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. With French attention elsewhere, Italy defied the League's orders and took full control of Abyssinia May 1936.
Consequences of Abyssinia:
The League failed in collective security
Hitler gained strength against the British and French
In November 1936, Mussolini and Hitler sign the Rome-Berlin Axis
Slide 4
Hitler Rises Up 1933-37
Hitler came to power on 30 January 1933 as the new Führer (dictator of Germany). As a strong nationalist, Hitler wanted to bring his ideology to Germany, which he outlined in his autobiography Mein Kampf:
Destroying Communism - believed Communism was a disease and persecuted communists in Germany
Militarism - regarded war as a measure of the health and strength of a nation
Racial theory and Lebensraum - claimed the Germans were a master race (Aryans). While claiming Jews and Slavs were inferior. Further, the German empire would rule these peoples and create an empire to give Germans needed 'living space' (Lebensraum)
British Response to Hitler's actions:
Responding to rearmament in Germany led to the signing of a naval agreement allowing Germany to establish a navy 35% the size of the British navy
This behaviour encouraged Hitler to believe that Britain did not mind his actions
French Response to Hitler's actions:
French felt threatened by Germany at the time of the Rhineland occupation in 1936
France sought an alliance with Britain against the Germans
The British refused, therefore, France sought alliance with the USSR