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PRESCRIBED SUBJECT 3: THE MOVE TO GLOBAL WAR GERMAN AND ITALIAN EXPANSION 1933-1940 Name Class 1 THE IMPACT OF FASCISM AND NAZISM ON THE FOREIGN POLICIES OF ITALY AND GERMANY From the initial goal of revising the post-1918 territorial settlement to its culmination in the Second World War, territorial expansion became a defining characteristic of the ideologies and policies in both Italy and Germany, and played a crucial role in their eventual collapse in 1943-45. Both countries were highly nationalist, and sought to incorporate territory based on ethnic identification. An additional feature of the foreign policies of Italy and Germany, related to their ideologies, was anti-communism. Italian foreign policy objectives could be said to be based upon expansionary ultra-nationalism but were limited to desires to gain additional territories in the Balkans and in Northern Africa. German foreign policy objectives were huge in scope and related to their racially prejudiced attitudes especially toward Jews and Eastern European Slavs. Foreign policy aims in both Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany were heavily concerned with revising or rolling back many of the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles and other major agreements signed in the years following World War I. ITALY The rise of fascism in Italy, and the subsequent move towards an imperialistic and expansionary foreign policy, has roots in the Treaty of Versailles. 2 The above image shows the territory that was promised to Italy under the Treaty of London, an agreement signed in 1915 in which Italy aligned itself with the Triple Entente (Britain, France, and Russia). According to the terms of this treaty, Italy would be granted large pieces of territory along the eastern Adriatic and the Dalmatian Coast. By the end of World War I Italy had mobilized nearly 5 million troops and had suffered over 600,000 dead. However, despite Italy’s military contributions and the heavy losses that it experienced, the territory that it was ultimately granted under the Treaty of Versailles, which nullified the Treaty of London, was far less than originally promised. The map below describes the lands that Italy was actually granted: The Wilson line, seen above, drastically reduced what was given to Italy. Dalmatia was excluded, as was Fiume; so, too, were any colonial territories in Africa or Asia and any claim on Albania. Nationalists consequently argued that Italy had been robbed of its rightful gains. This unhappiness with the results of the Treaty of Versailles helped set the stage for the fascist rise to power in Italy and in turn helped shape Italian foreign policy under Benito Mussolini. Italy's foreign policy under Benito Mussolini had to be strong to show the world how powerful Italy was under his leadership. As leader of Italy, Mussolini wanted to 3 re-establish the greatness of the Roman Empire. Mussolini believed that conquered foreign territory was the sign of a great nation and a great power. He believed that Italy should be allowed a sphere of influence in the Mediterranean Sea as he believed that Italy was the most powerful Mediterranean country. Mussolini referred to the Mediterranean Sea as Mare Nostrum – the same as the Romans had done when they dominated Europe. Mare Nostrum translates as "Our Sea". However, the nation that effectively dominated the Mediterranean was Great Britain as Britain had strong naval bases in Malta, Gibraltar and Cyprus. Britain also controlled the Suez Canal, along with the French. Therefore, there was a non-Italian presence that undermined Italy’s standing in the Mediterranean. Britain could control the Mediterranean Sea – something Mussolini wished to do. With Italian claims to Albania and Abyssinia nullified, Mussolini felt trapped because Britain and France controlled the two major entrances to the Mediterranean – the Straits of Gibraltar and the Suez Canal. Driven by a fascist desire for expansion and strategic concerns that Britain and France could cut off Italy from trade and essential materials, Mussolini adopted a much more aggressive foreign policy. While Imperialism was always a facet of fascism it was not explicit until 1935. The need to provide space for Italian emigration was emphasized by the occupation of Abyssinia (present day Ethiopia) from 1935-36. The excuse for the attack came in an incident during December 1934 between Italian and Abyssinian troops at the Wal-Wal oasis on the border between Abyssinia and Italian Somaliland. Mussolini demanded an apology while also preparing the Italian army to invade. Italy quickly conquered the underprepared Abyssinians who were vastly outgunned by the Italian military forces. This push towards more overt imperialism highlights another way that fascism shaped Italian foreign policy: through strategic alliances, the most important of which was with Germany. Mussolini was frankly impressed by German efficiency, and was willing to overlook competing interests in Austria and the Balkans that might have negatively affected the relationship between the two countries. In 1936 Mussolini agreed to the Rome-Berlin Axis, pledging cooperation in central Europe. This marked a distinct shift in Italian foreign policy as it completely realigned the country away from Britain and France. Mussolini believed that aligning with Germany was the best way to revise or nullify the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. The next year, on November 6, 1937, Italy joined with Germany and Japan in the Anti-Comintern Pact, an alliance designed to offset the growing influence of the Soviet Union. The beginnings of the pact go back to 1935 when Germany was trying to balance its foreign policy with the country’s historical alliance with Japan. Lack of interest in China however, ultimately doomed it initially. A year later, in 1936, with the rise of Japanese military power and the influence of military officials in Japan’s government, 4 convinced Hitler to revive aspirations of the pact, this time focusing on Japan. Italy’s decision to join the pact with Germany and Japan is widely regarded as a response to collapse of the Stresa Front, a Franco-British initiative that included Italian participation and was designed to prevent German expansion. By the time that Italy had formalized its military ties with Germany in the so-called Pact of Steel in 1939, Mussolini had identified his country's interests with those of Hitler to the point that Italy had almost become a German satellite. Also known as The Pact of Friendship and Alliance between Germany and Italy, The Pact of Steel was the agreement with which Germany and Italy publicly entered into an alliance, pledging mutual support in war and war production, while requiring that, in the case of war, one nation could not negotiate for peace without agreement of the other. Secret clauses in the pact urged both nations to increase the level of cooperation in war planning and war production and to coordinate propaganda efforts. The agreement was signed by Count Galeazzo Ciano for Italy and Joachim von Ribbentrop for Germany, and the signing took place in Berlin, Germany. The nickname "The Pact of Steel" was coined by Italian leader Benito Mussolini, who thought the originally proposed nickname of "Pact of Blood" would be poorly received in Italy. It was this agreement that formally created the Axis Powers, which would later include Japan. Discussion Questions 1) Why was Italy so concerned with strengthening its presence in the Mediterranean? ment? 2) How did the Treaty of Versailles affect Italian foreign policy under the fascist govern 3) Why did Mussolini realign Italy with Germany? 4) How did anti-communism feature in Italian foreign policy? 5 GERMANY Following the Nazi rise to power, Adolf Hitler's government conducted a foreign policy based on several key provisions: - The incorporation of ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsche) living outside German borders into the Reich. - German domination of western Europe. - The acquisition of a vast new empire of "living space" (Lebensraum) in Eastern Europe. - Rearmament/remilitarization (FROM WHAT?) which would allow Germany to achieve their foreign policy objectives. - End the restrictions on Germany imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. Foremost among these factors was the Treaty of Versailles. Prior to the outbreak of war in 1914 Germany had grown into an advanced industrial and colonial power, overtaking both Britain and France in terms of productive capacity. The Treaty of Versailles erased these advances and all of its wartime gains. Germany was stripped of its global investments and colonies. The Rhineland, a strip of land bordering France, was demilitarized. Unification with Austria was forbidden and Germany lost both Silesia and Posen, rich agricultural areas. Germany was also forbidden to maintain an air force or submarine fleet, with a navy limited to six battleships and an army of only 100,000 men. Perhaps most damaging were the harsh financial and social penalties placed on Germany: Germany was forced to accept full responsibility for the war and was required to make reparations totaling over 32 billion dollars, a sum of money that would be nearly impossible to repay. Germany was also forced to accept complete blame for the war as codified in Article 231 of the Treaty, now known as “The War Guilt Clause”. 6 These restrictions deeply angered Article 231, often known as the War Guilt Clause, was the the German people and created opening article of the reparations section of the Treaty of rifts among the other allied powers Versailles. The article did not use the word "guilt" but it served as a legal basis to compel Germany to pay reparations. Germans as well, notably Italy who did not benefit from the terms of Versailles viewed this as a national humiliation. German politicians were vocal in their opposition to the article in an attempt to generate as much as France or Britain, international sympathy, while German historians worked to despite having suffered tremendous undermine the article so they could subvert the entire treaty. losses in the fighting. For the German people, resentment over these terms, and the terrible economic conditions that followed the post-war settlement, created the conditions that helped Hitler and the Nazi Party achieve political success and ultimately complete dominance over the German government. With this ascendance came a German foreign policy based on rolling back or revising most of the terms in the Treaty of Versailles and reestablishing Germany as the dominant European power. Like Italy, Germany followed a revisionist policy from 1933-1938 aimed at overcoming the restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles and seizing the diplomatic initiative from Britain and France. Germany withdrew from the League of Nations; began rapid rearmament; signed a non-aggression pact with Poland; reacquired the Saar territory through a plebiscite; militarily assisted the supporters of Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War; and remilitarized the Rhineland. Hitler believed that achieving German dominance of Europe would require war, especially in Eastern Europe. The "racially inferior" Slavs would be driven east of the 7 Urals, turned into slaves, or exterminated. Besides acquiring Lebensraum, Hitler anticipated that the "drive to the East" would destroy Bolshevism. From 1938-1945 Germany strengthened its ties to Fascist Italy and to Japan by signing the Anti-Comintern Pact, which aimed to combat international communism, the Pact of Steel – signed with Italy that would become the basis for the Axis powers and later included Japan, and the wartime Three-Power Agreement (with Italy and Japan). In 1938, Germany acquired new territories using the threat of war. In February, Hitler pressured Austrian chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg into signing the German-Austrian agreement, which brought Nazis into the Austrian cabinet. The next month, Germany carried out the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria. After a prolonged period of intense propaganda inside Austria, German troops entered the country on March 12, 1938, receiving the enthusiastic support of most of the population. Austria was incorporated into Germany on the following day. In April, this German annexation was retroactively approved in a plebiscite that was manipulated to indicate that about 99 percent of the Austrian people wanted the union the Anschluss with Germany. Neither Jews nor Roma (Gypsies) were permitted to vote in the plebiscite. Hitler then began demanding a solution to the Sudeten crisis, a conflict over the Sudetenland, a region of Czechoslovakia inhabited largely by ethnic Germans. The Sudeten Crisis had, in fact, been inflamed by Hitler himself who had ordered Konrad Henlein, leader of the Sudeten Germans, to keep making demands for concessions that the government in Prague couldn’t possibly grant. On September 30, 1938, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, an advocate of Appeasement, French Premier Edouard Daladier, Italian Prime Minister Benito Mussolini, and Hitler signed the Munich agreement, which ceded the Sudetenland to Germany. In March 1939, Germany occupied and dismembered the Czechoslovak state. Appeasement: In May, 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of Great Britain. His program for dealing with Hitler was one of appeasement, that is, of attempting to meet German demands in hopes of avoiding war. Hitler took advantage of this policy by annexing Austria on March 13, 1938. He then demanded the return to Germany of the Sudetenland, inhabited a part largely of Czechoslovakia by Germans. Czechoslovakia, assured by various treaties of the backing of France and the Soviet Union, prepared for war. In the 1925 Treaty of Locarno, Germany had recognized both the inviolability of its borders with France and Belgium and the demilitarization of the Rhineland. On March 7, 1936, however, Hitler repudiated this agreement and ordered the German armed forces, or Wehrmacht, into the demilitarized Rhineland. Hitler's action brought 8 condemnation from Britain and France, but neither nation intervened. In August 1939, Ribbentrop signed the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact. A temporary change from Germany's normally anti-Communist foreign policy, this agreement allowed Hitler the freedom to attack Poland on September 1, 1939, without fear of Soviet intervention. Britain and France, Poland's allies, declared war on Germany on September 3, 1939. Hitler's aggressive foreign policy resulted in the outbreak of World War II. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005203 Weinberg, Gerhard. (1970). The Foreign Policy of Hitler's Germany Diplomatic Revolution in Europe 1933–36 Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 342– 346. ISBN 0226885097 Eugene K. Keefe. at al Area Handbook for Italy (Washington, D.C.: Foreign Area Studies of the American University, 1977), pp. 28-33 1. What were the key features of Nazi foreign policy? 2. How did the racist nature of Nazi ideology affect German foreign policy? 3. What do you think the phrase “seize the diplomatic initiative” means? 4. Discuss the similarities between Italian and German foreign policies. 9 5. Discuss how the Treaty of Versailles affected international relationships in Europe. 6. How did the foreign policies of Italy and Germany, under fascism and Nazism respectively, increase political tensions in Europe? Common Destiny: Dictatorship, Foreign Policy, and War in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany MacGregor Knox. Cambridge University Press, Jun 12, 2000 This cartoon of February 1938 by cartoonist the British David Low shows Germany crushing Austria. Next in line is Czechoslovakia. back, Britain France, At the says who to is next-to-last: ‘Why should we take a stand about someone pushing someone else when it’s all so far away?’ 10 With reference its origin and purpose, discuss the values and limitations of the cartoon for Historians studying the Impact of Fascism and Nazism on the foreign policies of Italy and Germany in the years 1933-1940 (two values and two limitations). Origin: Purpose: Values: Limitations: 11 THE IMPACT OF DOMESTIC AND ECONOMICAL ISSUES ON THE FOREIGN POLICIES OF ITALY AND GERMANY DOMESTIC AND ECONOMIC ISSUES IN GERMANY For Germany the humiliation of defeat and the peace settlement that followed World War I were devastating. In 1918 the price of a loaf of bread in Germany was 0.63 marks (the German currency at the time). By the end of 1923 the price of a loaf of bread was 201,000,000,000 marks because of hyperinflation. A new currency, the Rentenmark, replaced the worthless marks on November 16, 1923 and 12 zeros were cut from prices, prices in the new currency remained stable. Germany's national pride and economy suffered greatly from the terms of the Treaty of Versailles that she was forced to sign at end of World War I. In 1933, when Hitler became Chancellor, the German economy was a mess. Unemployment peaked at 6 million or nearly 33% of the nation’s working population. The Nazis introduced a number of policies that brought down the unemployment figures. Women were no longer included in the statistics so any women who remained out of work under the Nazi’s rule did not exist as far as the statistics were concerned. Unemployed people were forced do whatever work was given to them by the government or they would be labeled "work-shy" and sent to a concentration camp. Jews lost their citizenship in 1935 and like women, were no longer counted among the unemployed. 1935 also saw the beginning of conscription which took men out of unemployment by putting them in the army. This would in turn strengthen the Germany military and give Hitler the means to later invade and occupy the Rhineland and later expand German territory beyond her actual borders as set by Versailles (or the Alt Reich) Despite the fact that many unemployed people were just relabeled, the Nazi party claimed they had achieved an “economic miracle” with unemployment all but disappearing by 1939. This boosted the image of Germany internationally and boosted the confidence of the German people. Under the Nazis there was work being created. Public work projects were created by the National Labor Service. Their work included digging irrigation ditches on farms, building autobahns (The German highway system), and planting forests. The men of National Labor Service wore a military style uniforms and lived in camps near where they were working. They received only pocket money for their work. 12 To ‘protect’ workers, the German Labor Front was set up. It was led by Robert Ley. The GLF took the role of trade unions which had been banned. Ley did not allow workers to be fired easily, but he also ordered that a worker could not leave his job without the government’s permission. Only government labor exchanges could arrange new jobs for people leaving employment. The Labor Front increased the number of hours worked from 60 to 72 per week (including overtime) by 1939. Strikes were outlawed. By early 1934 the focus shifted toward rearmament. By 1935, military expenditures accounted for 73 per cent of the government's purchases of goods and services. In 1936 the Four Year Plan, a plan to prepare Germany for self-sufficiency in four years (1936–1940), began. It was intended to speed up the rearmament program. The Four-Year Plan's four priorities were to increase agricultural production, to retrain key sectors of the work force, to increase government regulation of imports and exports, and to achieve self-sufficiency in the production of raw materials. The plan also emphasized building up the nation's military defenses which was in direct violation of the restrictions imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles. The Nazis plan was to reduce imports, reduce unemployment, channel government spending into a wide range of industries and make trade agreements with other nations. They wanted Germany to become self-sufficient in all industries so that as a nation she could survive a war. By 1939, Germany still imported 33% of its required raw materials. From 1933 to 1939, the Nazi government always spent more than it earned so that by 1939, government debt stood at over 40 billion Reichsmarks. 1) What was the cost of a loaf of bread in Germany in 1923? 2) What groups of people were not counted as unemployed by the Nazis? 3) Why was the German Labour Front established? 4) How much of Germany's raw materials were imported in 1939? 5) How could a lack of raw materials effect Germany's ambition for war? 13 DOMESTIC AND ECONOMIC ISSUES IN ITALY Benito Mussolini’ had a “thirst for military glory”. Mussolini believed his destiny was to rule Italy as a modern Caesar and re-create the Roman Empire. Because of these ambitions much of his early domestic policy was centered to consolidating power and to making Italy self-sufficient. At the beginning of Fascist rule economic policy was classical liberal (capitalist). Several policies were made to attract foreign investment. A 10% tax on investing in the banking and the industry sectors was repealed. Taxes on the directors of some companies were cut in half. Taxes on foreign capital were exonerated and luxury taxes were repealed. By 1921 Mussolini wanted increase the productivity and self-sufficiency. A series of protective tariffs were levied on foreign imports to lower competition and aid Italian industry. Up until 1925 Italy enjoyed some growth, but the country had also experienced increasing inflation. The Battle for grain was another policy Mussolini implemented to make Italy more self-sufficient by increasing the production of grains. The Policy offered grants to farmers to buy tractors and fertilizer. It offered the farmers a guaranteed a high prices for their grain. Of course this led to production increasing rapidly. Imports of grain dropped over 70% between 1925 and 1935. This provided Mussolini with fuel for his huge propaganda machine. Although it helped Italy become more self-sufficient it cause a decline in the production of crops such as olives and citrus fruits which were more suitable for land southern Italy and could be exported. With the guaranteed price of grain, the price of bread would rise for everyday Italians. The Battle for the Lira, the Italian currency at the time, was a policy implemented in the late 1920s. The Lira had been declining in value since the early 1920s. This was actually a positive factor in Italy's economy because it made Italy's exports cheaper and more competitive. Although this helped the economy it was disliked politically. Mussolini felt that the declining Lira would make Italy look weak to larger powers in Europe and the United States. Mussolini announced on August 18, 1926 in a speech in Pesaro the government would peg the exchange rate 92.46 lira against the British Pound Sterling. By making the Lira stronger it made imports cheaper and benefited heavy industry like steel and chemicals. These industries would provide the basis for an expanded rearmament industry and supported a more active foreign policy. While Mussolini was consolidating his position in Italy he pursued a peaceful and restrained foreign policy. He signed the Locarno Pacts in 1925 (by which Germany accepted her western frontiers and was admitted into the League of Nations), and the Kellogg-Briand Pact in 1928 (an agreement by which the signatories agreed to outlaw war as a form of foreign policy – an effort at lasting peace following WWI). Mussolini dismantled almost all constitutional and conventional restraints on his 14 power, in turn building a police state. In 1925 Mussolini's formal title was changed "president of the Council of Ministers" to "head of the government" (although he was still commonly referred to as "Prime Minister") and he was no longer responsible to Parliament and could only be removed by the King. Mussolini had in effect obtained absolute power. Having gained absolute power, Mussolini’s desire to forge a new Roman Empire and for future expansion was inevitable. Mussolini's ambitions of creating an east African empire would lead to the invasion of Abyssinia (modern day Ethiopia). This would undermine the League of Nations because of the failed Hoare-Laval Plan that followed. The Hoare–Laval Pact (proposed in December 1935) was a proposal by British Foreign Secretary Samuel Hoare and French Prime Minister Pierre Lava to end the war. Under the pact, Italy would gain parts of Abyssinian and economic influence over all the southern part of Abyssinia. Abyssinia would have a guaranteed corridor to the sea called a "corridor for camels" at the port of Assab. Mussolini was ready to agree to the Pact but it was rejected by opposing parties in Britain and France on moral grounds. The sanctions against Italy were used by Mussolini as a pretext for an alliance with Germany. Mussolini’s Domestic Policies 1919-1939 http://ibatpv.org/projects/italy/ned_domestic.html Denitz, Deidre. Hitler’s Domestic Policy http://ibatpv.org/projects/3rdreich/3rd_reich_domestic.htm Benito Mussolini http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/benito-mussolini Four Year Plan http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/four_year_plan.htm 15 1) What policies were made to attract foreign investment? 2) What did Mussolini do to increase productivity and self-sufficiency? 3) How did the Battle for Grain increase the production of grain in Italy? 4) Why did the price of grain rise for everyday Italians? 5) What did the Battle for the Lira do? 6) Why did Mussolini have a restrained foreign policy until the invasion of Abyssinia? 7) What was used by Mussolini as a pretext to an alliance with Germany? 16 CHANGING DIPLOMATIC ALIGNMENTS IN EUROPE In the years after the First World War, Britain and France were the two most powerful countries in Europe. Italy, despite being on the winning side in the First World War, was a far less influential country and Germany was an outcast among the nations – a pariah state. The Treaty of Versailles www.missevi.wordpress.com Germany had been reduced to the lowest of the low by the Treaty of Versailles. The treaty had stripped Germany of land, much of her military power, and forced to pay huge amounts in financial reparations to the victors of the First World War – or the Great War as it was known at the time because there had never been a war like it before, and nobody expected there to be a war like it ever again. The Treaty of Versailles had been signed to create a lasting peace, but this backfired with great irony as the very treaty singed to create a lasting peace, instead helped to set Europe on the path to another war even greater than the won that had just ended. The Treaty of Versailles had helped make the Great War not so much the war to end all wars – as the war to begin all future wars! The terms of the Treaty of Versailles turned Germany into a perfect breeding ground for Hitler and the Nazis. Hitler and the Nazis were able to play on the treaty and exploit the German people’s resentment of it. Hitler promised to rip up the treaty if he became German Chancellor (equivalent to Prime Minister), and that was a 17 vote-winner in the eyes of many Germans. The Nazis’ exploitation of Versailles and the German people’s resentment of it, along with the promise to make Germany great again, was one of the key factors in Hitler’s eventual coming to power in Germany. It was all too well known what path Hitler sent Germany and indeed all Europe on the road once he had become German Chancellor! If the Treaty of Versailles had not been so harsh there may very well have been no Adolf Hitler in German politics, the Nazi party would have remained an obscure fringe party with no influence beyond the German state of Bavaria, and there may therefore very well have been no Second World War. How Europe went from what everyone thought would be a lasting peace with Germany an outcast among the nations, to a Nazi Germany led by Hitler with plans to take over Europe is a catalogue of missed opportunities to forestall a major conflict, mis-judgements by the key European powers of the time, and numerous changes in attitudes and alignments between nations from Europe and beyond. 1) What is meant by a Pariah state? 2) In what three key ways was Germany hardest-hit by the Treaty of Versailles? 3) Why was the First World War initially known as the ‘Great War’? 4) How was the Treaty of Versailles such an effective political tool for Hitler and the Nazis? 5) To what extent do you agree that if the Treaty of Versailles had not been so harsh on Germany, there would have been no Adolf Hitler, no Nazi party in German national politics, and no Second World War? Why? Does the answer lie just with the situation in Europe, or also beyond? Why/Why not? 18 REALIGNMENTS BY ECONOMICS Relations between Germany and the rest of Europe did not stay this way permanently. It was not the case that the post-WWI relations between Germany on one hand and Britain and France on the other remained the same all the way through to the outbreak of WWII. In the interwar years there was a change in relations on this front, and there lay the change in diplomatic alignments in Europe. Germany started the interwar years as an outcast within Europe, but relations between Germany and the victors of WWI improved over time and alignments between European nations evolved for a number of reasons. With regard to Germany, Britain and France had ulterior motives for eventually improving their relations with Germany. In the first instance, reparations – ironically enough - created the first steps to something of a reconciliation. Germany was forced to pay huge amounts in reparations under the terms of the Versailles Treaty. The famous Economist J. M. Keynes had warned that the sum of £6600 million which was set at the Treaty of Versailles was too much to expect from Germany. The amount was certainly unrealistic and Germany could not possibly pay the full amount – certainly not without any assistance. In 1923 Germany faltered on her reparations to France and the French took over the Ruhr Valley (which is situated on the Franco-German Rhineland border) with a view to taking reparations in coal. The French eventually withdrew their troops from the Ruhr Valley, but not before the drawing up of the Dawes Plan. Cartoon depicting the French taking coal from the Ruhr Valley (BBC Germany 1918 to 1939) 19 Cartoon depicting the impoverished state of Germany whilst the French take what they can get of Germany’s resources (BBC Germany 1918 to 1939) The Dawes Plan (formed in 1924 and named after Charles Dawes who chaired the committee that agreed the plan, and became US Vice President the following year) was basically a payment plan for Germany to make the reparations bill more manageable. Germany still had to pay the full amount but the new installments made repayment more realistic and they came with a £40 million loan to help Germany pay. The payments were phased in steps of £50 million in the first year and building up to £125 million in the fifth year. The USA’s ulterior motive for this was to get Britain and France’s re-payments back to her! Britain and France owed the USA money, which they could not pay without Germany paying them her reparations, and Germany could not re-pay money it did not have! The Dawes Plan served as a means to get money back in circulation – and for the USA to finally get her money owed to her by Britain and France! By way of the Dawes Plan, the USA lent Germany money with which she could pay her reparations to Britain and France, who could then pay their debts back to the USA. There were three significant effects of the Dawes Plan: Firstly the Ruhr Valley was evacuated by the French in July 1925. Secondly Germany was treated as an equal for the first time since the end of WWI – as opposed to an entity beneath everyone else. Thirdly the Dawes Plan helped Germany’s economy improve under her Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann. 20 Gustav Stresemann – German Chancellor in 1923 and German Foreign Minister 1923-29 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Stresemann In 1929 Stresemann appealed to the USA for further assistance with reparations payments. Further to the Dawes Plan a committee headed by American Industrialist Owen Young reduced Germany’s reparations bill to £2000 million (less than a third of the £6600 originally set at the Treaty of Versailles). The Young Plan (as it is famously known) also set a time scale of 59 years for the amount to be paid. Under the terms of the plan payments would start in May 1930 and end in 1988. This was a much more realistic time scale for paying a much more realistic amount, and as such enabled better relations between Germany, France, and Britain. Stresemann’s efforts to achieve a better reparations deal for Germany - along with the successful outcome helped to achieve stability in Germany (after years of turmoil in the early years of the Weimar Republic), increased his popularity amongst the German people and his status as an international leader, and therefore improved Germany’s standing within Europe from her wretched Pariah status in 1919. 21 This improvement in prospects for Germany, and relations between Germany on one hand and Britain and France on the other however did not last. Barely had the Young Plan been agreed when everything was shattered by the Wall Street Crash on 24th October 1929. The consequent Great Depression spread through much of the world, and Germany in particular was hard-hit by the Depression. The USA called in all her loans and Germany was unable to pay anything by 1931-32. The Dawes Plan and Young Plan had helped improve Germany’s standing after WWI and improve relations between Germany on and France and Britain on the other, but the Wall Street Crash shattered all of this. There would be further re-alignments between Germany and other European nations, but these would be more ideological… Inter-War Diplomacy http://www.rpfuller.com/gcse/history/4.html 1) What was the original reparations sum for Germany set at the Treaty of Versailles? 2) Which region did the French occupy when Germany faulted on her reparations payments in 1923? 3) What was the USA’s ulterior motive for the Dawes Plan in 1924? 4) What were three significant effects of the Dawes Plan? 5) What was Germany’s reparations bill reduced to by the Young Plan in 1929? 6) How many years was Germany given to pay her new reparations bill under the terms of the Young Plan? When were the payments due to start and end? 22 REALIGNMENTS BY POLITICS As well as changes in alignments due to economic factors, there were changes also due to political factors. Germany’s boundaries had been greatly reduced by the terms of the Versailles. She had had land taken off her and given to other countries e.g. Alsace-Lorraine to France, Memel to Belgium, Upper Silesia and West Prussia to Poland, Schleswig Holstein to Denmark, and the Sudetenland to Czechoslovakia. Poland and Czechoslovakia were two new countries in Europe that had been created after the end of WWI and were the product of Wilson’s Fourteen Points. As time progressed various treaties took place to solidify Germany’s newly set frontiers. One of the first such treaties to take place was the Locarno Pacts in 1925. Britain, France, and Germany agreed to meet in Locarno, Switzerland where Germany accepted her frontiers with France and Belgium and agreed that they should remain unchanged. Germany further agreed not to change her borders with Poland or Czechoslovakia without first consulting with France and her ‘Little Entente Partners’ i.e. Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Yugoslavia. This treaty in itself helped improve relations between France and Germany because France now felt more secure about her boundaries with Germany and for Germany there was now some hope of regaining land on her eastern borders that had been taken off her in the Treaty of Versailles. Furthermore the Locarno Pacts were followed by Germany’s entry into the League of Nations as a permanent council member in 1926. Gustav Stresemann for German, Austin Chamberlain for Britain, and Aristide Briand for France at the Locarno negotiations http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locarno_Treaties 23 In 1926 Germany signed a Treaty of Neutrality with the USSR, which was a renewal of the Treaty of Rapallo in 1922 (in which normal relations were re-established between the two countries, all financial claims against each other were cancelled, and strengthened the countries’ economic and military ties). The Treaty of Rapallo was Germany’s first agreement concluded by Germany as an independent party since the end of WWI. It had angered the Western Allies (i.e. Britain and France) and the Treaty of Neutrality (which was a renewal of the Treaty of Rapallo) further worried the French. In light of this the French Prime Minister, Aristide Briand turned to the US Secretary of State, F B. Kellog for assistance, and in August 1928 a nine power conference took place in Paris and the end result was the Kellogg-Briand Pact, by which the 65 signatories agreed to outlaw war except in self-defense. As with the Locarno Pacts, the Kellog-Briand Pact had significant effects on changes in alignments in Europe, and Germany’s progress back amongst the other nations of Europe from her previous pariah status. The USSR was one of the signatories which gave her some recognition by other powers. Germany signed the pact and this allayed France’s fears of German aggression. Unfortunately the pact had no means of preventing war, and this would prove crucial in light of the Great Depression that would hit Europe within two years of the pact being singed. The Great Depression would destroy the economic apparatus by which Germany’s standing in Europe had improved, and pave the way for extremist groups in Germany. In Germany Hitler and the Nazis were able to use the Great Depression to their advantage and play on the German people’s anger at the futility of the established Weimar government to deal with the situation. This culminated in Hitler becoming German Chancellor and that in turn led to a major change in alignments in Europe… Inter-War Diplomacy http://www.rpfuller.com/gcse/history/4.html Treaty of Rapallo – European History http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/491362/Treaty-of-Rapallo 1) Which countries were given territory taken from Germany by the Treaty of Versailles? Which territory did these countries get? 2) What were the terms of the Locarno Pact? What hope did this giver Germany? 24 3) Which two treaties between which two countries angered the Western Allies and worried the French? 4) Which Pact allayed France’s worries with the above two treaties? 5) What was the problem with the above pact? REALIGNMENT BY IDEOLOGY AND AGGRESSION When Adolf Hitler became German Chancellor, the alignments that had been established in the ten years following the end of WWI were gone. Hitler’s Nazi Germany was as yet an unknown entity. Hitler had made it clear however that he intended to rip up the Treaty of Versailles. He also wanted to reunite all German speakers (which would entail taking back all German territory taken from her by the Treaty of Versailles), and taking German-speaking territory which had not belonged to Germany for hundreds of years. Hitler however would find these aims relatively easy to achieve in the early stages, as Britain and France embarked on a policy of Appeasement. It is wrong to say that Britain and France were determined to avoid another European war at all costs, but it is true that they both desired peace and still had vivid memories of the carnage of WWI and would have preferred to avoid a repeat of the carnage. Moreover it had taken four years for Britain and France to overcome Germany in WWI, and it had come with the help of the USA – who did not want any further involvement in European affairs, but rather to pursue a policy of isolationism (so Britain and France would not be able to count on American support another time). Connected to this, but at the same time a point in its own right was Britain and France’s general unpreparedness for war. Britain and France were simply not ready for another conflict and needed time to prepare. If nothing else, the policy of Appeasement would but Britain and France time until they were ready for war. There were other reasons for their Appeasement policy towards Hitler besides the desire to avoid another war. By the 1930s, both Britain and France felt that they had been too harsh on Germany with the Treaty of Versailles and as such they were prepared to make concessions. When Hitler re-took the Rhineland in 1936 there was no resistance by the British or the French. Neither was there any resistance when 25 Hitler invaded Austria in what was known as Anschluss or ‘reunification’ between the two countries, who had once both been one and the same country. The alarm bells did ring during the summer of 1938 when Hitler was looking eastwards to Czechoslovakia, but here too, Britain, France, and Italy agreed to Hitler having the Sudetenland area of Czechoslovakia (which had previously been German but was taken off her in the Treaty of Versailles). By allowing Hitler so much leeway Britain and France felt that they were making amends for their harsh treatment of German in the Treaty of Versailles. The Munich Agreement, in which this concession had been made however, also laid down the condition that Hitler was not to make any further territorial claims after taking the Sudetenland. Chamberlain (for Britain), Daladier (for France), Hitler (for Nazi Germany), Mussolini (for Fascist Italy), and Ciano (Fascist Italian Foreign Minister) at Munich before the Munich Agreement is signed http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munich_Agreement Another reason why Hitler was not stopped sooner was fear of Communism. Nazi Germany stood between Western Europe and the USSR (which was now ruled by Stalin). One needed only to look at the USSR to see what communism had done there; it had destroyed the old order, caused civil war and famine. As a capitalist country, British leaders did not want to see their positions destroyed and the whole country turned upside down. Moreover, the Russian Revolution had happened against the backdrop of WWI. If war meant revolution, then war was best avoided. Keeping with ideology, Fascism was aggressive but it did not harm non-Jewish capitalism. Anti-Semitism was not exactly non-existent in Britain so Hitler’s racial policies – at least in the early years did not “raise too may eyebrows”. Furthermore a number of Britain’s dominions – many of whom had made great sacrifices with 26 soldiers’ lives in WWI were more interested in an isolationist policy, and some – including South Africa – even sympathized with Hitler’s racial policies. Britain had interests and colonies around the world. Quite apart from her questionable ability to fight the Nazis and their allies combined, Eastern Europe - which Hitler was threatening by 1938-39 - was therefore considered a far-away region of no interest to her. When Hitler signed the Munich Agreement in September 1938, by which he was allowed the Sudetenland on condition that he made this the last of his territorial demands, it was thought that Britain and France had prevented another European War. The British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain even proclaimed the document on which Hitler’s signature was signed gave “peace in our time”! Hitler however was not fully content and in March 1939, he took the rest of Czechoslovakia – territory that had never been German, but which Hitler wanted anyway as extra living space for the German people – or Lebensraum. This was condemned by the ever-futile League of Nations, but no effective action was taken. Britain and France however promised that they would come to Poland’s aid if Hitler attacked her. Chamberlain returns to London for the Munich Conference with the paper that he claims will give “peace in our time”. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munich_Agreement What followed was the most surprising changes in alignments of them all; the Nazi-Soviet Pact! Hitler hated Communism, and Stalin hated Fascism, so why did these two ideological enemies sign a non-aggression pact? Poland had borders with 27 both Nazi Germany and the USSR. Stalin was afraid that the USSR would be vulnerable to a Nazi Attack when she too was not ready for war, and Hitler was afraid that an invasion of Poland would trigger war with the USSR, which he was not ready for. Hitler also hoped that if he signed a non-aggression pact with Stalin, Britain and France would reconsider their resolve to aid Poland if he attacked her. This latter hope was not realized however. Britain and France stood by their promise and when the Nazis invaded Poland, Britain and France declared war on Nazi Germany. In the space of twenty years, Britain and France had gone from regarding Germany as an outcast to treating her as an equal to discuss borders with, to allowing her to take back territory they took off her in 1919, to being back in a state of war with her. Germany too had additionally gone from hating Communism, to signing a non-aggression pact with the mother country of that very ideology. The surprise of such an alignment was not lost on the rest of Europe, where some quarters took a very cynical view. Road to War http://www.historyman.co.uk/road2war/ Stalin and Ribbentrop (Nazi-German Foreign Minister) after signing the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact on 23rd August 1939 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov%E2%80%93Ribbentrop_Pact 28 Cartoon depicting the cynical view that many held of the Nazi-Soviet No-Aggression Pact www.ssoltanhistory.weebly.com 1) By what two means would Hitler have to unite all German speakers? 2) Other than not wanting a repeat of the carnage and death of WWI, why else were Britain and France keen to avoid war with Nazi Germany? 3) For what two reasons did Hitler sign a non-aggression pact with Stalin? Did Hitler achieve his second intended objective with this? 29 It was not just Germany over which there was a change in alignments in Interwar Europe. Italy too was the center of alignment changes in Europe at the time. Italy had been on the winning side in WWI, but with little progress in the war on Italy’s part (but not without much loss of life), Italy did not get very much to show for her efforts at the Treaty of Versailles, and that caused wide-spread resentment amongst the Italians. Benito Mussolini was able to exploit this in Italy in much the same way that Hitler exploited it in Germany. Mussolini became Italian Prime Minister in 1922 and he had dreams if Italy becoming a great power in Europe once again. Italy had been the birth-place of the Roman Empire over 1000 years before, and Mussolini wanted to return Italy to such a status. Italy was anything but a great power in 1922. She had been given what have been described as the “crumbs from under the table” at the Treaty of Versailles. Mussolini had signed the Four Power Pact in 1933 which gave Italy, Germany, Britain and France equal standing amongst each other in Europe, at the same time as diminishing the standing of other European countries (and was regarded as the USSR as an anti-Soviet alliance). It gave Mussolini’s Italy some recognition as a valid European power. Mussolini claimed from this to have given Europe leadership and a sense of growing power for Italy as the other countries came to Italy to sign the pact. The signing of the For Power Pact in 1933 www.corbisimages.com Mussolini also wanted extra territory, and he got it in Abyssinia (modern-day Ethiopia). He invaded Abyssinia in 1935 and took it over in a very one-sided conflict in which Abyssinian forces with pre-WWI weapons were no match for a modern 30 Italian army. The League of Nations condemned this action and imposed sanctions – including oil. Britain and France took no further actions themselves however as they feared, in an over-estimation of Italy’s navy, Italian reprisals, and Britain even kept the Suez Canal open for Italy. Britain and France also agreed, in an attempt to end the fighting in Abyssinia, to give two large areas in Abyssinia to Italy and a gap in the middle of the country – the ‘corridor of camels’ - to Abyssinia. This plan, known as the Hoar-Laval Plan (named after Britain and France’s Foreign Ministers failed and the fighting continued in Abyssinia. Two member nations of the League of Nations had negotiated with an aggressing nation forcing its will on a weaker nation, and the League of Nations’ sanctions had failed. Mussolini had gone against his fellow Europeans but he had got away with it. Italian forces in Abyssinia in 1936 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Italo-Ethiopian_War Despite the failure of the League of Nations’ sanctions, Mussolini brought Italy out of the League of Nations in 1937, and over time grew closer to Hitler and Nazi Germany. This was out of fear, as when Hitler became German Chancellor in 1933, Mussolini saw him as a threat – given He had publicly stated his desire for a reunion – or Anschluss with Austria – with which Italy had a common border. If Hitler became an enemy this could spell bad news for Italy. Mussolini and Hitler were further brought together by similar foreign policy aims e.g. territorial gains. They both supported Franco in the Spanish Civil War for which they both sent their own ‘volunteers’ to fight on his side. A formal alliance was signed between Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany on 21st October 1936. This became known as the Rome-Berlin Axis. They were now bound to both follow a common foreign policy. In September 1937 Mussolini visited Hitler in Berlin, during which Hitler gave Mussolini a fine military display, by which he was 31 greatly impressed. Hitler had gone up in Mussolini’s ratings by a long way from the ‘silly little monkey’ as which Mussolini had dismissed him in 1933. Mussolini had become convinced that Nazi Germany was the country to side with and not Britain or France. Hitler had originally looked upon Mussolini as his role model. By 1937 however the shoe was on the other foot! Nazi Germany was the dominant power in Europe now and Mussolini knew it! Mussolini therefore aimed to side with Nazi Germany to bolster Italy’s own standing in Europe. Mussolini and Hitler in Berlin http://www.pacificwar.org.au/historicalbackground/HitlerfindsAlly.html In 1938 Hitler took Austria (the Anschluss) without warning Mussolini. Mussolini was powerless to do anything. It was clear that Fascist Italy was the junior partner in the Hitler-Mussolini partnership. In the summer of 1938 Europe was faced with war over the Sudetenland crises (the Sudetenland was the territory taken off Germany by the Treaty of Versailles that was given to Czechoslovakia). It was Mussolini who, against this backdrop, suggested a meeting in Munich to settle the crises. This meeting ended in the Munich Agreement which British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain prematurely claimed brought “peace in our time”. Mussolini got the credit for this and it put him at the peak of his popularity. In the eyes of many it made him Europe’s savior, which in turn Mussolini assumed made him Europe’s premier statesman. When Hitler violated the terms of the Munich Agreement and invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 Mussolini was angered. Hitler was clearly carving an empire for himself when Mussolini was not! Mussolini made up for this by taking Albania on Good Friday 1939, whereupon King Victor Emmanuel of Italy was offered 32 the title of King of Albania. To Mussolini this was a sign of Italy’s expanding power in Europe, although this was not much a triumph considering that Albania had been under Italian influence for years before then. Mussolini also let it be known to Hitler that he wanted a sphere of influence in the Adriatic. Hitler and Mussolini’s alliance was cemented by the Pact of Steel in May 1939. Both countries were hereby committed to support each other if one or the other went to war. The Italian Foreign Minister, Galleazo Ciano (who was also Mussolini’s son-in-law) saw that this pact was potentially highly damaging for Italy but Mussolini was more interested in the prestige of allying with Europe’s most dominant power rather than the politics of it. He felt very committed to the pact and as such, he felt that the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact applied just as much to him as to Hitler – even though Italy did not sign it! Hitler and Mussolini sign the Pact of Steel in May 1939. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pact_of_Steel#/media/File:Patto-acciaio.jpg Mussolini was very fickle in his alignments. He wanted to be on the side that would enable him to realize his goal of a great Italy. He first sided with Britain, France, and Germany in the Four Power Pact, having got little from them at Versailles in 1919. He then sided specifically with Germany out of fear following Germany’s Anschluss with Austria in 1938, and also out of realization that Nazi Germany was the big European power by 1938-399. Despite this, Mussolini did not bring Italy into WWII until June 1940 when it looked like Nazi Germany would indeed win and she had taken all of Western Europe. Mussolini was clearly out for himself and he would change alliances as many times as it took to get Italy where he wanted her in the world. Italy and Germany 1936 to 1940 http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/modern-world-history-1918-to-1980/italy-1900-t o-1939/italy-and-germany-1936-to-1940/ 33 1) What was the Four-Power Pact? 2) Why was Mussolini’s invasion of Abyssinia such a one-sided conflict? 3) What was the Hoare-Laval Plan? 4) What was the Rome-Berlin Axis? 5) What were the terms of the Pact of Steel? 6) How was Mussolini fickle in his alignments? 34 RENDEZVOUS HITLER: “THE SCUM OF THE EARTH I BELIEVE?” STALIN: “THE BLOODY ASSISSIN OF THE WORKERS I PRESUME?” Cartoon by David Lowe published in the Evening Standard (a British Newspaper) on 20th September 1939. russiasperiphery.blogs.wm.edu 35 With reference its origin and purpose, discuss the values and limitations of the cartoon for Historians studying the changes in alignments in Europe in the years 1933-1940 (two values and two limitations). Origin: Purpose: Values: Limitations: 36 GERMAN CHALLENGES TO THE POST-WAR SETTLEMENTS (1933-1938) BACKGROUND OF GERMAN OPPOSITION TO THE POSTWAR TREATIES After the devastation of World War I, western powers imposed a series of harsh treaties upon the defeated nations. These treaties stripped the Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary, joined by Ottoman Turkey and Bulgaria) of much territory and forced them to pay large amounts of money in reparations. The Treaty of Versailles, presented for German leaders to sign on May 7, 1919, forced Germany to concede territories to Belgium, Czechoslovakia, and Poland . Alsace and Lorraine, annexed in 1871 after the Franco-Prussian War, returned to France. All German overseas colonies became League of Nation Mandates, and the city of Danzig, with its large German population, became a Free City. The treaty demanded demilitarization and occupation of the Rhineland As a direct result of war, the German, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, and Ottoman Empires ceased to exist. The Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye of September 10, 1919, established the Republic of Austria, consisting of most of the German-speaking regions of the Habsburg state and prevented unification with Germany, a goal long desired by "Pan-Germanists" and an active aim of Austrian-born Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist (Nazi) Party. 37 When German leaders signed the armistice, many of them believed that President Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points would form the basis of the future peace treaty, but when the heads of the governments of the United States, Great Britain, France, and Italy met in Paris to discuss treaty terms, the European contingent of the "Big Four" had another plan altogether. Viewing Germany as the country mainly responsible for the war, the European Allied Powers imposed very strict treaty obligations upon the defeated Germany. Map images online, courtesy GCSE History. PD Probably the most humiliating part of the treaty for Germany was Article 231, commonly known as the "War Guilt Clause," which forced Germany to accept complete responsibility for initiating World War I. Germany was made responsible for all material damages, and France's premier Georges Clemenceau particularly insisted on imposing heavy reparation payments. Aware that Germany would probably not be able to pay such a towering debt, Clemenceau and the French nevertheless greatly feared rapid German recovery and a new war against France. Hence, the French sought in the postwar treaty system to limit Germany's efforts to regain its economic superiority and to rearm. 38 The German army was to be limited to 100,000 men, and conscription proscribed. The treaty restricted the Navy to vessels under 100,000 tons, with a ban on the acquisition or maintenance of a submarine fleet. Moreover, Germany was forbidden to maintain an air force. Germany was required to conduct war crimes proceedings against the Kaiser and other leaders for waging aggressive war; the Leipzig Trial, without the Kaiser or other significant national leaders in the dock, resulted mainly in acquittals and was widely perceived as a sham, even in Germany. Wilson’s Fourteen Points Wilson presented his fourteen points to a joint session of Congress on January 8, 1918. Eight of the fourteen points dealt with territorial issues. Five of the other six concerned general principles for a peaceful world: open diplomacy; freedom of the seas; free trade; reduction of armaments; and adjustment of colonial claims based on self-determination. The fourteenth point proposed what was to become the League of Nations These points were later taken as the basis for peace negotiations at the end of the war. Image via: http://webpages.scu.edu/ftp/jgiedt/Images/hwv -e-ww.jpg The newly formed German democratic government saw the Versailles Treaty as a "dictated peace" (Diktat). Although France, which had suffered more materially than the other parties in the "Big Four," had insisted upon harsh terms, the peace treaty did not ultimately help to settle the international disputes which had initiated World War I. On the contrary, it tended to hinder inter-European cooperation and make more fractious the underlying issues which had caused the war in the first place. The dreadful sacrifices of war and tremendous loss of life, suffered on all sides, weighed heavily not only upon the losers of the conflict, but also upon those combatants on the winning side, like Italy, whose postwar spoils seemed unequal to the terrible price its nation had paid in blood and material goods. For the populations of the defeated powers—Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Bulgaria—the respective peace treaties appeared an unfair punishment. Their governments, whether democratic as in Germany or Austria, or authoritarian, in the case of Hungary and, intermittently, in Bulgaria, quickly resorted to violating the military and financial terms of the accords. Efforts to revise and defy the more burdensome provisions of the peace became a key element in their respective foreign policies and proved a destabilizing element in international politics. For example, the 39 war guilt clause, its reparation payments, and the limitations on the German military were particularly harsh in the minds of most Germans. Revision of the Versailles Treaty represented one of the platforms that gave radical right wing parties in Germany, including Hitler's Nazi Party, such credibility to mainstream voters in the early 1920s and early 1930s. Promises to rearm, to reclaim German territory, particularly in the East, to remilitarize the Rhineland, and regain prominence again among the European and world powers after such a humiliating defeat and peace, stoked ultranationalist sentiment and helped average voters to often overlook the more radical tenets of Nazi ideology. In fact, it was the punitive nature of post war treaties that helped give rise to the Nazi party in Germany and set the stage for their takeover of the government. Once successfully in power, Hitler and the Nazi government began a systematic program to challenge and revise the post-World War I agreements, in many cases seeking out conflict and forcing other European governments to either take action or allow Germany to continue with its actions. During the remilitarization of the Rhineland, German civilians salute German forces crossing the Rhine River in open violation of the Treaty of Versailles. Mainz, Germany, March 7, 1936. At the Lausanne Conference of 1932, Germany, Britain, and - US Holocaust Museum France agreed to the formal suspension of reparations payments imposed on the defeated countries after World War I. Thus, when Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany in January 1933, the financial provisions of the Treaty of Versailles (the post-World War I peace agreement) had already been revised. Hitler was determined to overturn the remaining military and territorial provisions of the treaty and include ethnic Germans in the Reich as a step toward the creation of a German empire in Europe. The German armed forces engaged in secret rearmament even before the Nazi takeover of power. Thereafter, the Nazis supported rearmament and rapidly expanded arms production. Military conscription was reintroduced on March 16, 1935, in open violation of the Treaty of Versailles. At the same time, Hitler announced the expansion of the German army to more than 500,000 men. In the 1925 Treaty of Locarno, Germany had recognized both the inviolability of its borders with France and Belgium and the demilitarization of the Rhineland. On March 7, 1936, however, Hitler repudiated this agreement and ordered the German armed forces into the demilitarized Rhineland. Hitler's action brought condemnation from Britain and France, but neither nation intervened. 40 After a prolonged period of intense propaganda inside Austria, German troops entered the country on March 12, 1938, receiving the enthusiastic support of most of the population. Austria was incorporated into Germany on the following day. In April, this German annexation was retroactively approved in a plebiscite that was manipulated to indicate that about 99 percent of the Austrian people wanted the union (known as the "Anschluss") with Germany. Neither Jews nor Roma (Gypsies) were permitted to vote in the plebiscite. GERMANY AND THE KELLOGG-BRIAND PACT The Kellogg–Briand Pact was a 1928 international agreement in which party states promised not to use war to resolve "disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them. " Parties failing to abide by this promise "should be denied the benefits furnished by this treaty." It was signed by Germany, France, Frank Kellogg (left) and Aristide Briand (right), the authors of the and the United Kellogg-Briand Act. Image from Instructional Resources Corporation States on August 27, 1928, and by most other nations soon after. Sponsored by France and the United States, the Pact renounced the use of war, promoted peaceful settlement of disputes, and called for collective force to prevent aggression. It was named after its authors: United States Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg and French foreign minister Aristide Briand. As a practical matter, the Kellogg–Briand Pact did not live up to its aim of ending war, and in this sense it made no immediate contribution to international peace and proved to be ineffective in the years to come. Moreover, the pact erased the legal distinction between war and peace since the signatories, having renounced the use of war began to wage wars without declaring them. Nevertheless, the pact is an important multilateral treaty because it bound the particular nations that signed it. It has also served as one of the legal bases establishing international norms that threat or use 41 military force in contravention of international law, as well as the territory gained from it, is against the law. Notably, the pact served as the legal basis for the creation of the notion of crime against peace. Germany’s most direct challenges to the Kellogg-Briand Act came during its occupation of Austria, its support for Italy during the fighting in Abyssinia, the extension of support to General Franco during the Spanish Civil War, and, in 1938, during the Sudeten Crisis and the partition of Czechoslovakia. THE FOUR POWER PACT On March 19, 1933 Benito Mussolini called for the creation of the Four-Power Pact as a better means of insuring international security. Under this plan, smaller nations would have less of a voice in Great Power politics. Representatives of Britain, France, Germany, and Italy signed a diluted version of Premier Benito Mussolini's Four-Power Pact proposal. The treaty reaffirmed each country's adherence to the Covenant of the League of Nations, the Locarno Treaties, and the Kellogg-Briand Pact. Mussolini’s chief motive in suggesting the pact was the wish for closer Franco-Italian relations. If Mussolini’s purpose of the pact was to calm Europe’s nerves, he achieved the opposite result. Rather than allay suspicions and bring the stability the pact instead opened a rift between France and its allies in eastern Europe, which increased their susceptibility to German pressure. Furthermore, Germany’s involvement in the negotiations, which took place in Rome, provided Hitler a number of ways to continue with his goals of revising post-war settlements: it provided Germany with a conciliatory and diplomatic veneer. Hitler, realizing that the big European powers were wary of Germany’s aims, used the negotiations during the Four Power Pact as a way to continue the rearmament program and to consolidate his plans for expansion while simultaneously appearing diplomatic and conciliatory. The pact also aided German foreign policy by weakening the network of alliances between Europe’s most powerful countries – Britain, France, and Italy – and their relationship to the bloc of less powerful nations, the fractious environment ensured that no clear consensus would emerge later to deal with German actions. German withdrawal from the League of Nations, subsequent to signing the treaty put the Pact on hold. Throughout the next six years Britain made vain attempts to make it work at nearly any cost, but the failure of the Four-Power Pact served as a warning of Germany's continued withdrawal from diplomatic relations with France and Britain in the buildup to the Second World War. 42 THE MUNICH AGREEMENT AND THE PARTITION OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA Having secured Anschluss with Austria, Hitler turned his attention to the Sudetenland, a western region of Czechoslovakia inhabited mostly by German-speakers. In 1938, Hitler threatened to unleash a European war unless the Sudetenland was returned to Germany. This area, ethnically German, had been stripped from Germany in the aftermath of World War I and given to Czechoslovakia, itself a new nation, carved out of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire and Germany by the Treaty of St Germain (September 1919). But Hitler had no respect for this treaty or for Czechoslovakian sovereignty. He began claiming ethnic Germans in the Sudetenland were being persecuted by Prague. A small but vocal pro-Nazi group in the Sudetenland, led by Konrad Henlein, echoed these grievances, though most were exaggerated or fabricated. In April 1938 Henlein’s party demanded political autonomy for the Sudetenland. Through mid-1938 they organised terrorist attacks against Czechoslovakian government troops and facilities. Hitler, in an ominous speech in Berlin, promised to protect the Germans in western Czechoslovakia. The leaders of Britain, France, Italy, and Germany held a conference in Munich, Germany, on September 29-30, 1938. At the first of these meetings, on September 15th, Chamberlain agreed to Hitler’s demands; Britain subsequently urged Czechoslovakia to concede the Sudetenland to Germany. The two leaders met again a week later and Hitler’s position had hardened: he demanded German forces be granted immediate access to the Sudeten region. On September 29th Hitler, Chamberlain, Benito Mussolini (Italy) and Edouard Daladier (France) met in Munich to resolve the crisis. They signed an agreement approving the Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland, provided Hitler proceed no further into Czechoslovakia. The Czechoslovak leader Benes was told he could submit to the occupation of the Sudetenland or resist the Nazis alone; he chose the former. Chamberlain returned to Britain where he famously – and incorrectly – said the Munich agreement had secured “peace for our time”. German troops rolled into the Sudetenland two days later. In December 1938, elections there returned a 97.3 per cent vote for the Nazi Party. Czechoslovakia, which was not a party to the Munich negotiations, agreed under pressure from Britain and France. On March 15, 1939, Hitler violated the Munich agreement and moved against the Czechoslovak state. The Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia were proclaimed a German protectorate and were occupied by German forces. Slovakia became an 43 independent state, closely allied with Germany. Hungary, which had annexed territory in southern Slovakia after the Munich conference, seized the Transcarpathian Ukraine. Czechoslovakia ceased to exist. Little more than a week later, on March 23, 1939, German troops suddenly occupied Memel. Memel, also known as Klaipeda, was a port city located in Lithuania. Prior to the Treaty of Versailles, Memel had been a part of the Prussian and German empires and contained a large ethnic German population. From 1919-1923 the city and surrounding area had been governed by a French commission then from 1923-1938 Lithuanian troops had occupied and overseen the area. In Mar 1938, the relationship between Lithuania and Poland deteriorated, and Germany, which desired the region, mobilized for an occupation if a war started between Lithuania and Poland, but to Adolf Hitler's disappointment the two countries de-escalated diplomatically. Unable to find an excuse or create an incident, German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop image via: http://wps.ablongman.com/wps/media/objects/419/429222/illustrations/WALL5295900.gif simply demanded it on 20 Mar 1939, citing the ethnic German population in the city as the reason for its unification with Germany. The German Navy steamed toward Memel, with Adolf Hitler aboard the battleship Deutschland, to back up Ribbentrop's demands with force. After failing to secure support from other European powers, President Antanas Smetona submitted to German demands in the early hours of 23 Mar. Later on the same day, Hitler gave a passionate speech from a theater balcony, announcing the bloodless reconquest of the city. It was to be the last of such bloodless 44 conquests for Germany. In this map of pre-war German territorial expansion from 1933-1939 Lithuania can be seen at the top right. Memel, or Klaipeda, is a city on the coast on Lithuania located in the small red area indicating German occupation. This provided Germany with a strategic port city and additional access to the Baltic Sea. Image credit: The History Place With no support from other European powers, and with inferior forces, Lithuania was unable to prevent this occupation. Hitler also raised territorial demands on Poland in the spring of 1939. He demanded the annexation of the Free City of Danzig to Germany and extraterritorial access for Germany through the so-called Polish Corridor to East Prussia. Convinced that Hitler would not negotiate in good faith, Britain and France guaranteed the integrity of Polish territory against German aggression. With Hitler determined to attack Poland, Europe was on the brink of war in late summer 1939. Boundless. “The Kellogg-Briand Pact.” Boundless U.S. History Boundless, 19 Jun. 2015. Retrieved 23 Jun. 2015 https://www.boundless.com/u-s-history/textbooks/boundless-u-s-history-textbook/fro m-isolation-to-world-war-ii-1930-1943-26/non-interventionism-200/the-kellogg-brian d-pact-1101-9025/ Nazi Germany – The road to war http://alphahistory.com/nazigermany/the-road-to-war/ 45 United States Holocaust History Museum http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005439 Jarausch, Konrad Hugo: "The Four-Power Pact, 1933" The American Historical Review 1) Why do you think the demilitarization of the Rhineland was such an important issue for major European powers after World War I? 2) How and why did France seek to contain Germany after the war? 3) Discuss the ways in which the Treaty of Versailles acted as a destabilizing force in European and world affairs. 4) What was the Kellogg-Briand pact? What impact did it have on German expansion from 1933-1938? 5) What strategy did Germany use to expand eastward into Czechoslovakia? 6) Why was Memel important to Germany? 7) What major weaknesses in the post-war agreements, if any, allowed Germany to expand so quickly? 8) What changes could European nations have made to contain Germany? 46 ITALIAN EXPANSION: ABYSSINIA (1935-1936), ALBANIA, ENTRY INTO THE SECOND WORLD WAR One of Benito Mussolini's goals was to restore Italy to the glory of the Roman Empire. Even before Mussolini, Italian leaders believed Italy deserved an overseas empire similar to those of other European powers. Italy had arrived late in the colonial race, so Italy would forge their Empire during the Scramble for Africa. Because of Italy's relative weakness in international affairs it depended on Britain, France and Germany's compliance towards her empire-building. In the 1880s Italy would make various treaties with other European powers to create the An Ethiopian painting commemorating the First Italo-Abyssian War colony of Italian Somaliland. On May 2, 1889 Italy signed the the Treaty of Wuchale with King Menekik II, the Emperor of Abyssinia (modern Day Ethiopia). The treaty gave Eritrea to the Italians and provided Abyssinia with financial assistance and military supplies. The treaty was written in two languages Italian and Amharic (the Ethiopian language). The versions of the treaty did not only differ in language. The Italian version Italian and Amharic versions differed in the amount of autonomy Abyssinia held due to a mistranslation. Because of the Ethiopian refusal to abide by the Italian version of the treaty the Italian government decided on a military solution to force Italian soldiers recruited in 1935 in Montevarchi to fight the Ethiopia to abide by the Second Italo-Abyssinian War. Italian version of the treaty. The First 47 Italian-Abyssinian War broke out and would end as an embarrassing defeat for the new Italian Empire. The control of Abyssinia would be fought over by the two sides once again almost 40 years later. In the late 1920s, imperial expansion became a favorite theme of Mussolini's speeches. He argued that colonial settlements were a demographic and economic necessity for a country like Italy. Mussolini said that he would make Italy become a true empire, equivalent in power to the Roman Empire. In 1928 the Italo-Abyssinia Treaty was signed between the two countries. The treaty settled the location of the border between Italian Somaliland and Abyssinia. In 1930 the Italians built a fort at the Walwal oasis in the Ogaden desert well beyond this border. The fort was garrisoned it with Somali troops commanded by Italian officers. In November of 1934, 1000 Abyssinian territorial troops protested the Walwal fort as a form of incursion and asked the 60 soldiers to withdraw. The Italian force refused and alerted Italian troops in the nearby garrison of Uarder. The next day the Italian troops arrived. A British-Abyssinian border commission also arrived. The British officers protested, but they withdrew to avoid an international incident. The Italian and Abyssinian troops remained encamped in close proximity. In early December, the tensions erupted in a clash that left 150 Abyssinians and 50 Italians dead. This resulted in the Abyssinia Crisis at the League of Nations. Italy soon began to build up its forces on the borders of Abyssinia in Eritrea and Italian Somaliland. With an attack appearing inevitable, Emperor Haile Selassie of Abyssinia ordered a general mobilization. The Abyssinian armies were poorly equipped. His new recruits consisted of around 500,000 men, many of whom were armed with nothing more than spears and bows. Other soldiers carried more modern weapons, including rifles, but many of these were from before 1900 and were badly outdated. Only about 25% of the Abyssinian had any military training. They had outdated artillery and a few World War I era tanks. The Italian forces where much more equipped. The Italians had tons of ammunition, food, and other necessary supplies. The Italians also had vehicles to move supplies and troops while the Ethiopians carried supplies in horse drawn carts. 1) What colony would Italy create through treaties with other European counties in the 1880s? 2) Who won the First Italian-Abyssinian War? 48 3) What did the Italian-Abyssinia Treaty settle? Three Albanian soldiers are shown here in an unidentified location fleeing North with peasants towards Yugoslavia April 12, 1939. Mussolini dreamed of sending millions of Italian settlers to Italian East Africa, and Italians had high hopes of turning the area into an economic asset. On October 3, 1935, Marshal Emilio De Bono advanced into Abyssinia from Eritrea without a declaration of War. De Bono had a force of 100,000 Italian soldiers and 25,000 Eritrean soldiers under his command. A smaller force of Italians, Somalis, and Libyans, under the command of General Rodolfo Graziani, advanced into Abyssinia from Italian Somaliland. Italy was able to launch its invasion without interference primarily due to the United Kingdom and France placing a high priority on retaining Italy as an ally in case hostilities broke out with Germany. By overrunning Abyssinia, a member of the League of Nations, Italy attracted widespread international hostility. The invasion was condemned by the League of Nations, although it was unable to take any remedial action. It also breached the Kellogg-Briand Pact on non-aggression, of which Italy was a signatory. Italy annexed Abyssinia on May 7. King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy was proclaimed emperor on May 9. Italy merged Eritrea, Abyssinian, and Somaliland into a single state known as Italian East Africa. The war would be the crowning achievement of Mussolini bringing him prestige at home and internationally, and emboldening him for further conquest. As Germany annexed Austria and conquered Czechoslovakia, Mussolini decided to proceed to annex Albania to extend his own empire. Although King Victor Emmanuel III did not approve Mussolini offered King Zog I of Albania an ultimatum in the form of money in exchange for full colonization of his country. King Zog refused. As news of an Italian invasion reached Albanian citizens Protests broke out in the streets of 49 Albania demanding that the country be defended at all cost. Mussolini prepared the attack. Albania had long been of considerable strategic importance to Italy. The port of Vlore and the island of Sazan were strategically located at the entrance in the Bay of Vlore and gave Italy control of the entrance to the Adriatic Sea. The region of modern-day Albania had been an early part of the Roman Empire which made it fit in to Mussolini's narrative of a new Roman Empire. Italy had retained strong links with the Albanian leadership and considered it firmly within its sphere of influence. Also, Albania provided a launching ground for an eventual invasion of Greece, which was on Mussolini's agenda. On April 7 Mussolini's force of 100,000 men 137 navel units and 400 airplanes led by General Alfredo Guzzoni invaded Albania, attacking all Albanian ports simultaneously. The Albanian army had 15,000 poorly equipped troops who had been trained by Italian officers. By 1:30 pm all Albanian ports were in Italian hands. King Zog and his family fled to Greece taking with them the Albanian gold reserves. On April 12, the Albanian parliament voted to depose Zog and unite the nation with Italy "in personal union" by offering the Albanian crown to Victor Invading Italian soldiers entering an Albanian city. Emmanuel III. A fascist government was established under Shefqet Verlaci. The Albanian armed forces were merged into Italian military. Resistance to the Italian occupation grew in the mountainous regions. By the 1943 most of the interior of Albania was controlled by resistance fighters. By the outbreak of World War II Mussolini was already aligned with Adolf Hitler. Mussolini had ambitions of an Empire that would consist of parts of northern Africa, Greece, parts of Eastern Europe, and the Balkan region. Following the German conquest of Poland Mussolini hesitated to enter the war. On June 10, 1940, as the French government fled to Bordeaux during the German invasion Mussolini felt the conflict would soon end and declared war on Britain and France. Both countries had been at war with Germany since September of 1939 following the invasion of Poland. Mussolini believed if he invaded France he would be granted a seat at the peace conference. After initial success, the Italian offensive into southern France stalled at the Alpine Line (the part of the Maginot Line that defended southern France). France would soon surrender to Germany, but now Italy was an active participate in World War II. 50 Italian Empire http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Italian_Empire Italian invasion of Albania 1939 https://www.onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1900s/yr30/fitalyalbania1939.htm Albania's Reemergence after World War I http://countrystudies.us/albania/25.htm Zog’s Kingdom http://countrystudies.us/albania/29.htm H, Jim. Invasion of Albania (1939) http://www.comandosupremo.com/albania.html 1) What did Italy merge Eritrea, Abyssinian, and Somaliland into? 2) What action by Germany prompted Mussolini to annex Albania? 3) When were all Albanian ports were in Italian hands? 4) What happened to the Albanian military? 5) When did Italy finally join World War II? 51 THE INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE TO GERMAN AGGRRESSION (1933-1939) BACKGROUND: THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND HITLER’S RISE TO POWER The Great Depression marked a turning point in inter-war history. Not only did it weaken the economic and social stability of the world’s major powers, but it also dealt a blow to the progress made since 1924 towards creating a new framework for peaceful international cooperation. It had a huge international impact. To a great extent the economic recovery in Europe after 1924 had been dependent on short-term US loans, of which $4 billion went to Germany. After the Wall Street stock exchange crash, US investors abruptly terminated these loans and no more were forthcoming. This was a devastating blow to the European and world economies. Between 1929 and 1932 the volume of world trade fell by 70 per cent. Unemployment rose to 13 million in the USA, to six million in Germany and to three million in Britain. The Depression’s long-term impact on the politics of the three democracies – Britain, France and USA – was equally disastrous. It delayed their rearmament programs and created an international climate in which they suspected each other of causing the financial and economic difficulties. It thus prevented any effective collaboration between them at a time when it was important to deter the aggressive nationalism of Japan and Germany and to deal with the global economic crisis. As international trade collapsed, the Great Powers attempted to make themselves economically self-sufficient. The British and the French with their huge empires had a decisive advantage over the Germans, Italians and Japanese, who increasingly began to assert their right to carve out their own empires, spheres of interest. In Germany, the depression helped the Nazis take control of the government and the tempo of the German campaign against Versailles quickened once Hitler came to power in 1933, although for two years, at least, he appeared to pursue the same policy as his three predecessors. Hitler’s immediate priorities In 1933 Hitler’s first priority was to consolidate the Nazi takeover of power and to rebuild Germany’s military strength. This would eventually put him in a position to destroy what remained of the Versailles system. However, while rearming, he had to 52 be careful not to provoke an international backlash. He followed a cautious policy of avoiding risks and defusing potential opposition, while gradually withdrawing Germany from many commitments, such as being a member of the League of Nations, which might prevent him from pursuing an independent policy. He hoped to isolate France by negotiating alliances with Britain and Italy. Hitler’s immediate aim was to extricate Germany from the World Disarmament Conference, but he was careful to wait until the autumn of 1933 before he risked withdrawing from both the conference and the League of Nations. He had first skillfully reassured Britain and Italy of his peaceful intentions by signing in June 1933 the Four Power Pact, proposed by Mussolini, which aimed at revising Versailles through joint agreement of the Great Powers. Although on the face of it this seemed to limit Germany’s Benito Mussolini Signs the Four Power Pact in Rome, Italy, on July freedom of action, Hitler calculated, 25, 1933. Germany’s accession to this agreement provided Hitler’s correctly as it turned out, that the government more time to consolidate their expansionary plans. Image credit: Corbis Images, French would never ratify it. Germany did begin to rearm as http://www.corbisimages.com/stock-photo/rights-managed/BE065942 soon as Hitler seized power. In /mussolini-signing-four-power-pact February, Hitler announced a long-term plan for increases in the armed forces. Ultimately his intention was to mobilize the whole German economy and society for war. In July 1933 the decision was taken to create an independent air force and a year later the July program was unveiled, which envisaged the construction of some 17,000 airplanes. The majority of these were training planes to familiarize future pilots with flying so that the air force could be greatly increased in size in the near future. On 18 December 1933 the Defense Ministry unveiled a new program that aimed to create a peacetime army of 300,000 men. In March 1935 Hitler announced the reintroduction of conscription, despite the fears of his advisers that this would lead to French intervention. 53 THE REACTION OF THE GREAT POWERS TO NAZI GERMANY 1933-1945 For the Great Powers 1933–5 was a period in which they had to come to terms with the reality of Nazi Germany. In 1933, even though Germany was only just beginning to rearm, its strength was potentially far greater than in 1914, as it was enhanced by a ring of weak states which had been created in 1919 out of the ruins of the Austrian and Russian Empires around its eastern and southern frontiers. France France’s economy had been belatedly hit by the Depression and its social cohesion threatened by a wave of rioting sparked off in February 1934 by the exposure of a series of financial scandals. French society was deeply divided as the right wanted to negotiate with Hitler and Mussolini, while the left wanted to fight fascism and looked to Russia as an ally. Even if France had still possessed the will to intervene militarily in Germany, the Locarno Treaties prevented it from reoccupying the Rhineland. Neither could it rely on Poland after the German–Polish Non-aggression Pact of January 1934. France’s response to the new Nazi Germany was therefore hesitant and sometimes contradictory. The French sought to contain Germany, as they had done since 1919, through a network of alliances and pacts but, like the British, they also tried to negotiate with Hitler. Although ultimately Britain remained France’s major European partner, it was not ready in 1935 to commit itself to an alliance with France. The French therefore attempted to strengthen the Little Entente, an alliance formed in 1920 and 1921 by Czechoslovakia, Romania and Yugoslavia with the purpose of common defense against Hungarian revision of Versailles, and negotiate agreements with Italy and Russia. However, this was by no means an easy task as in 1933 its relations with both powers were strained. - Franco-Italian negotiations and the Rome Agreement In its attempts to negotiate an Italian alliance, France was greatly assisted by the abortive Nazi coup in Vienna, which more than anything convinced Mussolini that a military agreement with France was essential. In January 1935 both countries signed the Rome Agreement by which they undertook not to meddle in the affairs of their Balkan neighbors and to act together in the event of German rearmament or another threat to Austrian independence. In June direct Franco-Italian military staff talks started to discuss joint action in the event of a German attack on Austria, Italy or France. 54 - Franco-Russian negotiations Parallel with these negotiations, talks were proceeding between the French and the Russians. Paris did not show the same enthusiasm for a Russian alliance as it did for one with Italy. This was partly because Soviet Russia had been regarded as scarcely less of a threat to the West than Germany and partly because it no longer had a common border with Germany. The French intended to enmesh Soviet Russia in an elaborate treaty of regional assistance or, in other words, an eastern European version of the Locarno Treaty, which would be signed not only by Russia but also by Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia and the Baltic States. This was to be strengthened by a separate Franco-Russian agreement which would associate Russia with the Locarno Agreements in western Europe and France with the proposed eastern pact. But the whole plan came to nothing as both Germany and Poland refused to join. The Poles were more suspicious of the Russians than of the Germans. France had therefore little option but to pursue a mutual assistance pact with Soviet Russia alone. By May, the Franco-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance had been signed, but Paris refused to follow up the treaty with detailed military staff talks between the two armies. The main aim of the pact was to restrain Russia from moving closer to Germany. Great Britain Like France, Britain’s reaction to Nazi Germany was conditioned by its military, economic and strategic vulnerability. In 1933 it faced a growing threat not only from Germany in Europe, but also from Japan in the Far East. Consequently, the main aim of British policy towards Germany was to blunt Hitler’s aggression by continuing to modify the Treaty of Versailles peacefully while simultaneously drawing Germany back into the League where it could Foreign Minister Pierre Laval of France, Prime Minister Benito Mussolini of Italy, and Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald of Great Britain (l to r) at the Stresa Conference, where the three nations offered a united front against German intransigence on the Treaty of Versailles. 55 Image Credit: Corbis Images, http://www.corbisimages.com/stock-photo/rights-managed/B E027261/premiers-at-close-of-stresa-conference be tied down in multilateral agreements on security. Britain also worked hard for an overall settlement with Germany. Despite the reintroduction of German conscription in March, Simon went to Berlin later in the month to explore the possibility of a comprehensive settlement with Germany involving German recognition of Austrian independence, its participation in an ‘eastern Locarno’ and return to the League. British ministers attended the Stresa meeting on 8 April, but they were determined at that stage not to join any alliances or pacts directed against Germany as they was convinced that the pre-1914 alliance system had been a major cause of the very war it was aimed to prevent. In June this policy seemed to be rewarded with success when the Anglo-German Naval Agreement was signed. Italy Mussolini, who had extensive territorial aims in the Balkans and North Africa, at first attempted to maintain a special position as negotiator between Germany and Britain and France, hoping that would bring him concessions from both sides. However, the increasing German threat to Austria began to convert Mussolini from a critic and potential revisionist of the Treaty of Versailles to a supporter of the territorial status quo. As early as August 1933 Mussolini met Engelbert Dollfuss, the Austrian Chancellor, and discussed arrangements for Italian military support in case of German intervention in Austria. Mussolini’s conversion to a defender of the existing territorial settlement was accelerated by the abortive Nazi putsch in Vienna in July 1934 and by the German announcement of conscription the following March. By the spring of 1935 Italy appeared to have aligned itself firmly with Britain and France in their desire to preserve what was left of the Versailles settlement. Soviet Russia Stalin, like the other European leaders, reacted cautiously to the Nazi takeover of power. His distrust of the West was at least as great as his fear of Nazi Germany. Consequently, even though he negotiated a defensive agreement with the French and sought collective security by joining the League of Nations in September 1934, he also attempted to maintain good relations with Germany. The Soviet negotiations with the French in the spring of 1935 were also accompanied by a series of secret talks with the Germans, which mirrored the French tactics of trying for a settlement with Hitler in the summer of 1935 as an alternative to the Nazi–Soviet Pact. Soviet–Nazi talks continued intermittently right up to February 1936. Only with the ratification of the Franco Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance by the French parliament were they broken off, but were renewed in the summer of 1939. The USA In 1933 there was considerable sympathy in the USA for the economic hardships that Germany was suffering as a result of the Depression, while both Britain and France were viewed with some suspicion on account of their huge colonial empires. However, with the coming to power of Hitler and beginning of the persecution of the Jews, public opinion in the USA began to become more hostile to Germany, but 56 nevertheless US foreign policy remained firmly isolationist. Indeed, the Temporary Neutrality Act of 1935, by empowering President Roosevelt to ban the supply of arms to all belligerents – whether aggressors or victims of aggression – in the event of the outbreak of war, strengthened the US policy of non-involvement. THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE ABYSSINIAN WAR - 1935 The Italian invasion of Abyssinia in 1935 eventually led to a strategic realignments in Europe. The crisis was a crucial turning point in the 1930s. Not only did it irreparably weaken the League and provide Hitler with an ideal opportunity for the illegal remilitarization of the Rhineland , but it also effectively destroyed the Franco-Italian friendship and ultimately replaced it with the Rome–Berlin ‘Axis’. This eventually enabled Hitler in 1938 to absorb Austria without Italian opposition. The ‘Axis’ was also to threaten vital British and French lines of communication in the Mediterranean with the possibility of hostile naval action and thus seriously weaken their potential response to future German aggression. THE REMILITARIZATION OF THE RINELAND - 1936 The remilitarization of the Rhineland marked an important stage in Hitler’s plans for rebuilding German power. The construction of strong fortifications there would enable him to stop any French attempts to invade Germany. Hitler had originally planned to reoccupy the Rhineland in 1937, but a combination of the favorable diplomatic situation created by the Abyssinian crisis and the need to distract domestic attention from German economic problems brought about by the speed of the rearmament program persuaded him to act in March 1936. A banner headline in this newspaper illustrates how seriously the world took Hitler’s actions. In violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the spirit of the Locarno Pact, Nazi Germany remilitarized the Rhineland on Saturday, March 7, 1936. France could not act due to political instability at the time. Hitler took a risk when he sent his troops to the Rhineland. He told them to 'turn back and not to resist' if they were stopped by the French Army. The French did not try to stop them because they were currently holding elections and no president wanted to start a war with Germany. Image Credit: Timothy Hughes Rare Newspapers http://www.rarenewspapers.com/view/547928 Crucial to the success of his plan was the attitude of Italy. Mussolini, isolated from the other Stresa Powers because of his Abyssinian policy, had little option but to reassure Germany that he would not co-operate with the British and French to enforce Locarno 57 if German troops entered the Rhineland. German troops marched into the Rhineland on 7 March 1936. In order to reassure France that they did not intend to violate the Franco-German frontier they were initially, at any rate, few in number and lightly equipped. So why did the French army not immediately intervene? The French general staff refused to invade the Rhineland unless they had full backing from the British. The most the British government was ready to do was to promise France that, in the event of an unprovoked German attack on French territory, it would send two divisions of troops across the Channel. THE ARMS RACE: BRITAIN, FRANCE, AND GERMANY – 1936-1939 It was not until 1935 that the scale of German rearmament became clear. Inevitably this triggered an arms race with Britain and France. Unlike in 1914, there was no calm assumption that the next war would be soon over. All three countries, learning from the First World War, expected a long struggle. Even though the tank and airplane had restored mobility to the battlefield, most military experts still thought in terms of First World War tactics. The French built the Maginot line, which was an enormous series of concrete fortifications along their frontier with Germany, while the Germans built the Westwall along the east bank of the Rhine. The German rearmament program would not be completed until the mid-1940s. This would not, however, stop Hitler from waging a limited war against Czechoslovakia or Poland if he believed that Britain and France would stand aside. The British and French programs, on the other hand, were planned to be ready by 1939–40. Neither Britain nor France wanted war, and both were ready to seek agreement with Nazi Germany to prevent it, but if there was no option but war, then 1939–40 was the best possible date for it to occur. Beyond that date both countries would find it increasingly difficult to maintain the spending that their armament programs demanded. 58 GERMAN AGGRESSION AND THE INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE: MARCH 1938 – MARCH 1939 In March 1938 Germany moved again. By pressure and bullying tactics, Hitler succeeded in bringing a Nazi to power in Austria and obtaining an invitation for Germany to occupy the nation. German troops marched in without resistance, and the forbidden Anschluss took place as Austria unified in violation of the Treaty of Versailles.Image source: became a province http://www.historyonthenet.com/nazi_germany/anschluss.htm of Germany. Once again, the French and British did nothing but protest. In late 1938 Hitler demanded that Czechoslovakia cede what Hitler called the Sudetenland to Germany. This Czech territory, which bordered on Germany and the former Austrian Republic, consisted primarily of ethnic Germans. But the area had been a part of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire and not of Germany. In March of 1938 Nazi troops entered Austria and the two countries were On September 15 and again on September 22, the British prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, flew to Germany to see Hitler and try to avert an international crisis. After his first meeting, Chamberlain wrote to his sister, “In spite of the hardness and ruthlessness I thought I saw in his face, I got the impression that here was a man who could be relied upon when he had given his word.” On September 29 Chamberlain returned to Germany, where at Munich he and Hitler were joined by Mussolini and the French premier, Edouard Daladier. Czechoslovakia was not invited to participate in the conference; neither was the Soviet Union, which had pledged to come to the aid of Czechoslovakia in case of aggression, providing France did so first. France, on the other hand, although it had a defensive alliance with Czechoslovakia, agreed with Britain and Italy that the Sudetenland was to be given to Germany. Neither France nor Great Britain had kept up with the German rearmament, and their intelligence services depicted Germany as even more powerful than it really was. Neither was yet ready to risk war. French military thinking was symbolized by the 59 Maginot Line, a long series of defensive fortifications built on France’s eastern front between 1929 and 1934; such defensive-mindedness ill prepared France to come to the aid of its Czechoslovakian ally. The signatories of the Munich Agreement had promised to guarantee what remained of Czechoslovakia against aggression. In March 1939, however, Hitler took over most of what was left of that unfortunate nation except for an eastern portion, Ruthenia, that he allowed Hungary to add to its previous gains. A little later that month, Lithuania, faced with an ultimatum, allowed Germany to annex its Germanic city of Memel. Hitler then began putting pressure on Poland for return of the city of Danzig, with its overwhelmingly German population, while also demanding special rail and road rights across the Polish Corridor separating East Prussia from the rest of Germany. By this time, however, the British and French governments had finally seen the light. Despite continuing doubts about their countries’ military readiness, public opinion, especially in Great Britain, had been awakened by the events of March 1939. Appeasement was not working; Hitler always came back for more. On the last day of March, Chamberlain announced that he and the French leaders had agreed to back Poland fully if it was threatened. THE UNITED STATES REMAINS NEUTRAL Like Great Britain and France, the United States had great difficulty creating an effective response to Hitler’s and Mussolini’s aggressive actions in Europe. The U.S. public viewed the upheavals in Europe with mixed emotions. On the one hand, there was some concern about the persecution of Jews in Germany and some fear of Hitler’s threat to European democracy and to the United States. On the other hand, some Americans, like many Europeans, regarded a strong Germany as a barrier against Soviet Communism. Many New Deal liberals feared that involvement in European conflicts would distract energy and money from domestic reforms. An even larger number of Americans simply believed that intervention in World War I had been a mistake, and they opposed any actions that would involve the United States in another war. Americans were thus mainly isolationists, and when Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts, 1935–1937, it reflected public opinion. In this legislation, Congress prohibited U.S. vessels from transporting war material to belligerents, prohibited loans to belligerents, declared the United States neutral in the Spanish civil war, and forbade U.S. citizens to travel on belligerent ships. By such actions, Congress hoped to prevent U.S. trade from dragging the United States into war, as had happened in World War I. Roosevelt and his administration went along with Congress reluctantly, although the effect of the Neutrality Acts was to strengthen Germany. 60 As aggression in Europe mounted, the United States, distracted by Japanese advances in China and in hopes of preserving peace in Europe, pursued a policy of appeasement similar to that of Great Britain and France. Roosevelt raised little or no objection to Hitler’s advances in the Rhineland, Austria, and the Sudetenland. However, Hitler’s seizure of the rest of Czechoslovakia and Mussolini’s conquest of Albania shocked Americans and began to bring them around to the belief that aggression in Europe should be stopped. Roosevelt appealed to Hitler to refrain from attacking a list of European nations, but Hitler viewed the United States as degenerate and incompetent and ridiculed Roosevelt’s appeal. Despite Roosevelt’s change of position, Congress refused to repeal the neutrality legislation, and the United States remained a spectator. Bell, P. M. H. The Origins of the Second World War in Europe 1986. Boyce, Robert, and Joseph Maiolo, eds. The Origins of World War Two: The Debate Continues Watt, Donald Cameron. How War Came: The Immediate Origins of the Second World War, 1938–1939. 1989 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005203 American Isolationism in the 1930’s https://history.state.gov/milestones/1937-1945/american-isolationism From Appeasement to War http://www.kpsdschools.org/cms/lib02/NJ01001889/Centricity/Domain/425/9th%20G rade%20World%20History%20Textbook/17%20Chapter%2017.1.pdf 61 1. Compare and contrast the different international responses. Which do you think were the most effective? Which do you think were least effective? 2. To what extent do you think the strategy of appeasement was responsible for causing World War II? What other strategy do you think might have been more effective? 3. How did the redrawing of boundaries after World War I influence the later ambitions of Hitler? 4. What role did Italy play in trying to contain German aggression? How did this role change over time? 5. France attempted repeatedly to balance the growing strength and aggression of Germany. Why do you think its efforts failed? 6. Which country do you think is most responsible for allowing Germany to become an increasingly belligerent power? 7. Discuss the effect of prevailing economic conditions on the international response to German aggression. 8. What role did the United States play in European politics during this time? How did US involvement, or non-involvement, affect the outcome of the post-war order? 62 INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE TO ITALIAN AGRESSION (1935-1936) The crisis in Abyssinia from 1935 to 1936 brought international tension to Europe. It also drove Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy together. The affair highlighted the weakness of the League of Nations. On January 3 1935, Abyssinia appealed to the League of Nations for arbitration of the dispute arising from the Walwal incident. But the league's response was inconclusive. A subsequent analysis by an arbitration committee of the League of Nations absolved both parties of any culpability for what had happened. On January 7 1935, a meeting between Ministry of Foreign Affairs Pierre Laval and Mussolini resulted in the "Franco-Italian Agreement". This treaty gave Italy parts of French Somaliland, redefined the official status of Italians in French-held Tunisia, and essentially gave the Italians a free hand in dealing with Abyssinia. In exchange, France hoped for Italian support against German aggression. In October 1935, the Italian army invaded Abyssinia. The Abyssinians could not hope to stand up to a modern army. They were equipped with pre-World War One rifles and little else. The Italians used armored vehicles and even mustard gas in their attack. The capital, Addis Ababa, fell in May 1936 and Haile Selassie was removed from the throne and replaced by the king of Italy, Victor Emmanuel. Somaliland, Eritrea and Abyssinia were all united under the name Italian East Africa. When the Italians had invaded in October 1935, the Abyssinians had appealed to the League of Nations for help. On June 30, Haile Selassie made a powerful speech before the League of Nations in Geneva in which he set forth two choices--support for collective Cover of Time magazine, 3 November 1930 Haile Selassie 63 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haile_Selassie#/media/File:Sela ssie_on_Time_Magazine_cover_1930.jpg security or international lawlessness. The emperor stirred the conscience of many and was thereafter regarded as a major international figure. The League condemned the attack and all League members ordered to impose economic sanctions on Italy. It took six weeks for the sanctions to be organized and they did not include vital materials such as oil. Italy could cover the sanctions imposed on gold and textiles, but a ban on oil could have had a major impact on Italy’s war machine. The argument put forward for not banning oil, was that Italy would simply get her oil from America a non-League country. 1) What crisis in 1934-35 brought tension to Europe? 2) What was the League of Nations response to the Walwal incedent? 3) Who made a powerful speech to the United Nations on June 30, 1935? Britain and France, however, soon recognized Italy's control of Abyssinia. Among the major powers, the United States and the Soviet Union refused to do so. Britain and France were concerned about provoking Mussolini in the Mediterranean Sea where Britain had two large naval bases in Gibraltar and Malta. The Italian navy was vastly overestimated by both the British and the French, but it was this overestimation (and fear) which lead Britain to allow the Italians to use the Suez Canal. If this route had been cut, then Italy would have had extreme difficulties supplying her armed forces in the region during the conflict. Britain and France considered the war too far away to be of any importance to them. They were not prepared to risk their naval power in the Mediterranean for the sake of a country barely anybody in either France or Britain had heard of. In an effort to end the war, the British Foreign Secretary Samuel Hoare and the French Prime 64 Pierre laval (1883-1945). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Laval#/m edia/File:Pierre_Laval_a_Meurisse_1931.jpg Minister Pierre Laval met in December 1935. They came up with the Hoare-Laval Plan. This gave two large areas of Abyssinia to Italy and a gap in the middle of the country – the “corridor of camels” – to the Abyssinians. The south of the country would be reserved for Italian businesses. In return for this land, the Italians would have to stop the war. Mussolini accepted the plan but in Britain there was a huge national outcry. It was believed that Samuel Hoare had betrayed the people of Abyssinia. The protests caused Hoare to resign and the plan was dropped. Mussolini continued with the invasion. This plan had indicated was that the two major European League members were prepared to negotiate with a nation that had used aggression to enforce its will on a weaker nation. The sanctions also failed. The League’s involvement in this event was a disaster. It showed nations that its sanctions were half-hearted even when they were enforced and that member states were prepared to negotiate with aggressor nations to the extent of effectively giving in to them. The actions by the League, even if they were a failure, lead to Italy leaving the league. In 1934 Mussolini and Hitler's relationship would hit a strain. Mussolini supported the independence of Austria. Austrian Nazis assassinated Chancellor of Austria Engelbert Dollfuss in a failed coup. Mussolini also mobilized a part of the Italian army on the Austrian border and threatened Hitler with war in the event of a German invasion of Austria. Relations between Germany and Italy recovered however, due to Hitler's support of Italy's invasion of Ethiopia in 1935, while other countries condemned the invasion and advocated sanctions against Italy. Sir Samuel Hoare https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Hoare,_1st_Viscount_Templewood#/media/File: Sir_Samuel_Hoare_GGBain.jpg 65 Chancellor Dollfuss in Geneva, 1933 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engelbert_Dollfuss#/media/File:DollfussEnGinebra193 3.jpeg Trueman, C. N. “Abyssinia 1935 to 1936” Abyssinia http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/modern-world-history-1918-to-1980/italy-1900-t o-1939/abyssinia/ Haile Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, warns the League of Nations that he is going to mobilise his forces after threats of invasion by Italy http://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/haile-selassie-emperor-ethiopia-warns-league -nations-he-going-mobilise-his-forces-after 1) What did the League of Nations do in response to the invasion of Abyssinia? 2) Why did the British reject the Hoare-Laval Plan? 3) Which Austrian leader was killed in 1934? 66 INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE TO GERMAN AND ITALIAN AGGRESSION (1940) By 1940, Britain was at war with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. Britain and France declared war on Nazi Germany on 3rd September 1939 after the Nazis invaded Poland. By doing this they were honoring a promise they had made to Poland that they would come to aid if Nazi Germany attacked her. This amounted to little more than a gesture of moral support however, because Britain and France were unable to carry out any effective counter-attack against Germany in Poland’s aid. Neither France nor Britain could attack Germany across the Siegfried line (a fortified defense line across the Franco-German border). There was also the fear of an aerial attack on London and Paris by the German air force (or Luftwaffe). Even if Britain and France had launched an attack it is doubtful that Poland could have been saved in time. What followed was a lull for Britain as she entered a ‘phony war’ i.e. no real fighting appeared to take place from Britain even though a state of war officially existed between Britain and Nazi Germany. By the terms of the Pact of Steel, Fascist Italy should immediately have declared war on Britain and France in support of Nazi Germany, but Mussolini instead waited on the sidelines to ensure that doing so would be beneficial to him. Only on 10th June 1940, when it looked like Britain was on the brink of surrender, and Germany would surely win the war in Europe, did Mussolini enter the war on the side of Nazi Germany. Mussolini’s first act of aggression once Fascist Italy had declared war on Britain was to ordered an invasion of Southern France on 17th June 1940, the date that France surrendered to the Nazis. Needless to say therefore the Italian invasion never happened! Once again, Mussolini acted only when he thought it was safe to do so and he thought he needed to in order to get a good seat at the victors’ table! THE USSR It is well known that eventually the USSR entered the war on the side of the Allies after she was invaded by the Nazis in 1941, but prior to this of course she was in a neutral alliance with Nazi Germany after the two ideologically opposed powers had signed a mutual non-aggression pact in August 1939! The world was shocked by this sudden pact between two such ideologically opposed powers – including Britain and France (although it was in part because the USSR had been unable to come to a collective security agreement with Britain and France that Stalin agreed to a non-aggression pact with Hitler. It is widely assumed that Hitler and Stalin signed the Non-Aggression Pact for the most cynical of reasons. They were both planning to turn on each other when they saw the time was right for them to do so, and certainly they were under no illusion about each other. Nevertheless the two leaders (Hitler and 67 Stalin) meant to make the most of this most unlikely partnership and exploit it as much as they could for as long as they could. As such there was no condemnation from the USSR over the Nazi invasion of Poland – especially when the USSR and Nazi Germany had secretly agreed between them as part of the Non-Aggression Pact to divide Poland between them – indeed both powers aided each other over Poland and the consequent war in general. For obvious reasons the USSR liked to keep quiet about this aspect of her part in WWII (i.e. collaboration with the Nazis) – preferring instead to be remembered for her role in defeating the Nazis! THE USA In 1940, the USA was pursuing a policy of isolationism. President F. D. Roosevelt had promised the USA that she would never again be dragged into another foreign conflict. With Poland overran by the Nazis and the USSR however, Hitler turned his attention westwards. He needed to defeat Britain and France, and he wanted control over the North Sea and an easy passage of German warships and submarines into the Atlantic. Hitler easily overran the Netherlands and Belgium (jointly known as the “Low Countries”), en route to invading France. At this point many in the US administration saw that the Nazis could conquer and rule all of Europe. What would this mean for the USA? Would the Nazis next try to conquer the USA? Even of the Nazis did not try to conquer the USA, could the US economy effectively compete in a Nazi German-dominated world? It was questions like these that made the US re-think its strategy. The USA could not officially enter the war but she could send aid to Britain in the war against Nazi Germany. As an aside this raises questions as to whether the USA foresaw the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 with a view to this being her excuse to enter the war in Europe – a war which maybe she was fighting for her own ulterior motives! German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact: Germany-Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [1939] http://www.britannica.com/event/German-Soviet-Nonaggression-Pact From Neutrality to War: The United States and Europe 1929-1941: Lesson 3: U.S. Neutrality and the War in Europe, 1939-1940 http://edsitement.neh.gov/lesson-plan/us-neutrality-and-war-europe-1939-1940#sect-b ackground Trueman, C. N. The Invasion Of Norway 1940 http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/world-war-two/world-war-two-in-western-europ e/the-attack-on-western-europe/the-invasion-of-norway-1940/ 68 Rossi, A. “(Chapter VI) German – Soviet Collaboration during the ‘Phoney War’” The Russo-German Alliance: August 1939 – June 1941 https://www.marxists.org/history/ussr/great-patriotic-war/soviet-german-pact/tasca/ch 6.htm Roberts, Andrew Britain at War: The Phoney War and the Fall of France http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/britain-at-war/3153329/Britain-at-War-The-Phone y-War-and-the-Fall-of-France.html Motyl, Alexander. J Soviet-Nazi Collaboration and World War II http://www.worldaffairsjournal.org/blog/alexander-j-motyl/soviet-nazi-collaboration-a nd-world-war-ii 1) Why was Britain and France’s declaration of war on Nazi Germany little more than an act of moral support? 2) What did Britain and France both fear if they had attacked Nazi Germany in support of Poland? 3) What is meant by the term “Phony War” 4) What was Mussolini’s characteristic behavior in his support of Hitler in the Pact of Steel? 5) For what role in WWII would the USSR want to be remembered less for? 6) Why was the USA not prepared to enter WWII as soon as Britain and France did? What could she do instead and why did it suit her to do this? What questions does this bring about concerning Imperial Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941? 69 THE FALL OF NORWAY, EXITCHAMBERLAIN, AND ENTER CHURCHILL The Nazis wanted control over the North Sea and during the winter of 1940 they imported iron ore from Sweden via the Norwegian port of Narvik. Britain responded to this by laying mines along the Norwegian coast. On April 9th 1940, Nazi Germany launched a full invasion of neutral Norway and in a series of surprise attacks they took the Norwegian capital, Oslo, and Norway’s main ports. Attempted Allied intervention was a failure, but the Nazi invasion was costly for the Nazi German Navy (the Nazi German Navy’s new cruiser Blücher, was sunk by Norwegian coastal guns at Oslo, and scattered German ships were vulnerable to counter attacks by the British Royal Navy, (which scored a notable victory at Narvik). There were further losses and damage to Germany’s few modern warships inflicted by Allied submarines and aircraft. On land however, troops were poorly equipped, out-numbered, and out-gunned. Most had been evacuated by 2nd May but fighting went on in Narvik until the Nazis invaded Belgium and France and the remaining 24,000 Allied troops were needed elsewhere. The attempted Allied intervention had been a failure and this was just one factor to go against Neville Chamberlain. His Appeasement policy had failed, his handling of the war had not been successful and had been criticized all round. Finally, in May 1040 Chamberlain was accused of having been in office too long and doing too little to have been of any good to anyone, and in a debate in the House of Commons, was told by an MP “In the name of God, go!” Chamberlain got the message and resigned on 10th May 1940. He was succeeded by fellow Conservative and Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill. Churchill’s warning about Hitler in the 1930s had been ignored, but now, in May 1940, Churchill had been proven right all along in his suspicions of Hitler and now he had everyone’s ear. Churchill said in his war memoirs that he felt that his whole life had been a preparation for this hour. Hewitt, Nick How Neutral Norway Fell To The German Blitzkrieg In 1940 http://www.iwm.org.uk/history/how-neutral-norway-fell-to-the-german-blitzkrieg-in-1 940 70 Neville Chamberlain - British Prime Minister 1937-39 www.npg.org Winston Churchill – Britain’s Wartime Prime Minister - www.otrcat.com 71 1) For whom was the Nazi invasion of Norway costly? 2) What was the name of the Nazi German Navy’s new cruiser which was sunk by Norwegian coastal guns? 3) Until when did fighting continue in Narvik? 4) In which month and year did Neville Chamberlain resign as British Prime Minister? 5) In which role did Churchill serve before succeeding Churchill as British Prime Minister? THE FALL OF FRANCE By June 1940, France was defeated and under Nazi occupation. The Nazis invaded France on 10th May 1940 and by 17th France had fallen to Nazi Germany. France was officially ruled thereafter by a Nazi satellite government; the Vichy regime led by French WWI veteran Marshal Philippe Petain, whose capital lay at Vichy in central France. Not all the French took Nazi-directed Vichy France lying down however. A number of resistance groups were formed at the risk of severe reprisals by the occupying Nazis. General Charles de Gaulle, another veteran and indeed hero of WWI, set up a Free French army and government in exile from London, where he remained until the Allied liberation of Paris from the Nazis in August 1944. BBC History – The Fall of France (by Dr. Gary Sheffield) http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/fall_france_01.shtml 72 Marshall Petain – Leader of Nazi-collaborating Vichy France www.conter-currents.com General Charles de Gaulle – Leader of the Free French https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_de_Gaulle 1) On which date did the Nazis invade France and on which date did France fall to the Nazis? 2) What was the name of the pro-Nazi collaborating regime in France and who was its leader? 3) Who led the Free French and from where did he lead this? 4) In what month and year was Paris finally liberated from Nazi occupation? 73 THE BATTLE OF BRITIAN With France under Nazi occupation, Britain was left to stand alone against the Nazis, but under the leadership of the new British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, Britain stood her ground and refused to go down. The scene was set for the Battle of Britain, the outcome of which would determine Britain’s fate against the Nazis just 21 miles across the channel from Britain in a nearly fully Nazi-occupied Europe. Although Britain was – at its narrowest – just 21 miles across the English Channel from mainland Europe, this nevertheless meant that Hitler required air superiority over the English Channel to successfully invade Britain, and that meant a battle with Britain’s Royal Air Force (or RAF). The RAF did not have strength in numbers of planes, pilots, or of experience – that fell with the Nazi German air force or Luftwaffe. The RAF did have the edge however in shorter distance and radar with which to detect pending attacks by the Luftwaffe. The RAF continued to fight off Luftwaffe attacks on airfields and radar bases, as well as on their own fighter planes. Despite the Luftwaffe’s superior numbers, it was clear by September 1940 that the Luftwaffe could not achieve air superiority over Britain, and so Hitler postponed his planned invasion of Britain (code-named ‘Operation Sea Lion’) and turned again to the East – and this time to the USSR – in an act that would ultimately change the course of WWI. Britain had been saved from invasion by the Nazis. She was indebted to the RAF, whose members included not only British pilots but French and Polish pilots as well. As Churchill himself said of the RAF when the Nazi invasion of Britain was called off by Hitler; “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.” BBC History – The Battle of Britain - http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/battle_of_britain 74 Portrait of British fighter planes in the Battle of Britain (not the fallen German plane in the foreground) www.forwallpaper.com Commemorative poster of the Battle of Britain www.togsplace.blogshot.com 75 1) What did Hitler need before he could invade Britain? 2) What advantage did the Luftwaffe have over the RAF? 3) What advantage did the RAF have over the Luftwaffe? 4) What was the code-name for Hitler’s planned invasion of Britain? 5) Where did Hitler turn his attention after calling off his planned invasion of Britain? Which country did this include? BRITIAN’S RELIANCE ON THE USA As well as having saved herself from immediate invasion from the Nazis, she was also being kept afloat in the long-term by the USA, who although not in a position to declare war on Nazi Germany (remember that President F. D. Roosevelt had promised American citizens that he would not bring the USA into another conflict), could still send vital supplies to Britain to keep her in the war until the USA herself was brought into the war by the Imperial Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The USA’s own interests were also at stake over the war between Britain and Nazi Germany… 1) How could the USA help Britain in the war against Nazi Germany? How could she not help Britain and why? 2) Why was the USA helping Britain at this stage of the war at all? 76