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The Path to War Hitler’s Germany and its path towards World War II The Ascension of Hitler ► Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf: “The army was never defeated in 1918. Germany was stabbed in the back by traitors at home and betrayed by the Allies. Most of the woes of Germany were caused by the Jews, who had manipulated finances to the ruin of Germany and who could never be loyal to Germany or to any other government. Germany had to become strong again. The country must be cleansed of traitors, and the Versailles Treaty must be scrapped!” The Ascension of Hitler ► Nazi rallies were masterpieces of political display. ► Hitler mesmerized crowds with his frenzied tirades. ► Hitler viewed the masses merely as tools, and he was actually contemptuous of them. ► In Mein Kampf Hitler wrote: “…the intelligence of the great masses is small. As a result, all effective propaganda must be limited to a few points… ► Many believe that most political campaigns since the 1930’s have been influenced by this Nazi style. The Ascension of Hitler ► Hitler became German chancellor in January 1933. With that, the Third Reich was born. (The First Reich, or empire, was begun by Charlemagne in 800 and abolished by Napoleon in 1806, the Second Reich began in 1871 with German unification and ended in 1918). ► Hitler claimed the Third Reich would last 1000 years. The Ascension of Hitler ► Through the Enabling Act (March, 1933), Hitler became dictator. He stripped the Reichstag of any real power. ► He dissolved opposition parties; outlawed labor unions; censored the press; suspended civil liberties. ► He threw out laws not beneficial to Nazism. The Ascension of Hitler ► In 1933, the Nazis established labor camps and concentration camps. ► The first camp was at Dachau, near Munich. ► These camps were initially for political enemies (like Socialists/Communists, and later for Jews and homosexuals, etc.) The Ascension of Hitler ► Hitler proclaimed himself der Fuhrer (the leader) and immediately required all members of the armed forces to take an oath of loyalty (the Blood Oath), not to Germany or the German Constitution, but to Hitler himself. ► The Nazis hired over 100,000 informers to report anyone (even parents) suspected of disloyalty. The Ascension of Hitler Hitler’s (and Germany’s) Anti-Semitism to Hitler, Germans were Aryans (which means “noble” in Sanskrit) and were the “master race” or “super race.” All others, particularly Jews and Slavs, were inferior. Jews were to be eliminated and Slavs were to be made into slaves. ► According ► Hitler said “Nature is cruel…so we may be cruel, too…I have a right to remove millions of an inferior race that breeds like vermin.” Hitler’s (and Germany’s) Anti-Semitism ► Looking for scapegoats to blame for Germany’s problems, Hitler consistently blamed the Jews. ► In the mid-1930’s, Germany’s Jewish population represented less than 1% of the total population (about 500,000 people). ► In 1935, Hitler began to eliminate Jews from German national life with the Nuremberg Laws. The Nuremberg Race Laws ► Known as the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor. ► These deprived Jews of most civil liberties. It was the beginning of the German tactic of isolating them from the rest of the population. ► There was a national boycott of Jewish businesses. ► Jewish doctors were forbidden to treat nonJews and Jewish lawyers were not allowed to advise clients. The Nuremberg Race Laws ► Jewish children were barred from German schools. ► Books written by Jewish authors were banned and/or burned. ► Intermarriage was prohibited. Kristallnacht ► In October, 1938 a 17 year-old shot and killed a German embassy official in Paris. ► The teenager was reacting to his parents’ harassment and humiliation from the Nuremberg Laws. ► The Nazis retaliated on the night of November 9, 1938, when violence against Jews (a pogrom) broke out across Germany and Austria. This was called Kristallnacht, (the night of the broken glass). Kristallnacht ► Over 1,000 synagogues were burned or destroyed, 7,000 Jewish business were trashed and looted, over 350 Jewish people were killed and several hundred wounded, and Jewish cemeteries, hospitals, schools, and homes were looted. ► The next day, 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and sent to concentration camps. Kristallnacht ► Jewish businesses could not reopen unless they were managed by nonJews. ► New curfews were placed on Jews. ► Any person identified as being Jewish now had to wear the yellow Star of David. Kristallnacht Kristallnacht The Third Reich was organizing for War ► The Nazis molded the minds of German citizens through a program that glorified war. Textbooks were rewritten. ► Hitler began massive preparations for the expansion of Germany (“lebensraum”), which included food rationing laws (designed to make Germany self-sufficient in the event of war). ► These laws regulated the amount of food each person could have and where they could buy it. The Third Reich was organizing for War ►Germany was also short of raw materials so laws were set up so nothing was wasted. ►Shopkeepers were allowed a specified amount of wrapping paper; households were to save empty toothpaste tubes, waste animal fats, and paper (to be recycled into useful items for warfare). The Third Reich was organizing for War ►Economic revival through “pump priming” (stimulating the economy through public works programs) built popular support for the Nazis. ►From building tanks and airplanes (thus violating the ToV) to farm production and the Autobahn, unemployment went from over 6M in 1932 to 1.6M in 1936 (nearly a 75% decrease). The Third Reich was organizing for War ► The Autobahn highway system was built to permit the rapid movement of troops around the country (but built under the guise of getting thousands of unemployed men working). The Third Reich was organizing for War Germany and Geopolitics ► Geopolitics is the study of government and its policies as affected by physical geography. ► Created in Germany in the 1920’s, geopolitics initially stated that the country that controlled eastern Europe would be able to control the “Heartland,” the area extending from southwestern Russia to Mongolia. Command of the Heartland would lead to control of the World-Island, consisting of Europe, Africa, and Asia (roughly 2/3’s of Earth). Germany and Geopolitics ► Picture of World Island Germany and Geopolitics ► Hitler believed that under German control, eastern Europe, with its vast mineral and agricultural resources, would become a great industrial region. ► This would enable Germany to control the Heartland. By controlling the Heartland, vital industries could be moved to remote regions, beyond the range of attack. The result would be world domination by Germany. ► Geopolitics was a major factor leading Hitler into Eastern Europe and then Russia. Germany Defied the Democracies ► Hitler had Germany withdraw from the League of Nations in 1933. ► In March 1935, Hitler denounced the Treaty of Versailles and announced he was rearming Germany (on the grounds that other nations had failed to disarm in accordance with the Treaty). He quickly took the army from 100,000 troops to nearly 600,000. Germany Defied the Democracies ► Having correctly assessed the spinelessness of Britain and France, in March 1936 Hitler sent German troops into the demilitarized Rhineland, totally violating the Treaty of Versailles. Germany Defied the Democracies ► Only a token force of three German battalions (a battalion is between 300-1200 soldiers) actually entered the Rhineland, and they were under strict orders from their nervous generals to withdraw at once if the French responded to this breach of the treaty with military force. ► The German generals knew that the much larger French army could crush their army at this time, and believed that Hitler was taking a dangerous gamble. Germany Defied the Democracies ► The British were obliged under the Treaty of Locarno (1925) to provide France with military support in such a situation, but when asked by France for that support, the British government refused to honor its treaty obligation. ► Despite having thirty army divisions at the border in readiness to cross and disperse the three German battalions, the French lost their nerve in the absence of support from Britain. Germany Defied the Democracies ► Hitler’s successful challenge of the hated Treaty of Versailles increased his popularity in Germany. ► The western democracies denounced his moves but took no real action. ► France and Britain did not want a war with Hitler. Entering the Rhineland Germany Defied the Democracies ► Many in Britain thought Hitler’s moves were justified since they thought Versailles was too harsh on Germany. “Why should not Hitler have the right to fortify his own territory? If this demand can be satisfied, Germany will likely become a good neighbor.” ► What do think might have happened if Britain honored its obligation to France and France forced the Germans out of the Rhineland? Germany Defied the Democracies ► If France had acted firmly in what would have been little more than a police action, and Britain had fulfilled its treaty obligations to France, the German troops would certainly have been instantly withdrawn, and Hitler's prestige would have been dealt a deadly blow from which it might never have recovered. ► The last opportunity to bring Hitler into compliance, and halt the rise of a militarized, aggressive Germany without risk of a serious war, had been thrown away by weak politicians. Germany Defied the Democracies ► The western democracies adopted the policy of appeasement, giving into the demands of an aggressor in order to keep the peace. ► In both Britain and France, many saw Hitler as a defense against a more insidious evil-the spread of Soviet Communism. Germany Defied the Democracies ►The Great Depression also sapped the energies of the democracies. ►Finally, widespread pacifism and lasting disgust from World War I pushed many governments to seek peace at any price. Germany Defied the Democracies ► In 1936, Hitler and Mussolini sent in troops and supplies to help the Fascists take over Spain. ► This brought Mussolini and Hitler closer together and in October 1936, the Rome-Berlin Axis was announced. Germany Defied the Democracies ► One month later, Japan was added to the Axis as the three signed the Anti-Comintern Pact (promising to unite against Communism). ► By the end of 1936, Hitler was convinced that no one would stand up to his aggression. Germany Defied the Democracies ► In 1938, Hitler annexed Austria (the Anschluss) creating a union between the two largest German speaking countries. ► Hitler forced the Austrian chancellor to appoint Nazi’s to key government posts and when the chancellor refused other demands, Hitler sent in the German army to “preserve order,” essentially taking over the country. ► The western democracies again took no action. German Troops enter Austria Germany Defied the Democracies ► Hitler’s next victim was Czechoslovakia. In 1938, Czechoslovakia was one of the two remaining democracies in eastern Europe (the other was Finland). About three million Germans lived in the western Czechoslovakian region known as Sudetenland, and Hitler claimed that area. Germany Defied the Democracies ► In September 1938 at the Munich Conference, Britain and France again chose appeasement. Hitler assured Britain and France that if the Sudetenland was given to him without a fight, he had no future plans for expansion. Germany Defied the Democracies ► Returning from the Munich Conference, the British PM, Neville Chamberlain, told the crowd in London he had achieved “peace for our time.” In the House of Commons, he declared that the Munich Pact had “saved Czechoslovakia from destruction and Europe from Armageddon.” Germany Defied the Democracies ► In response to Chamberlain, Winston Churchill said “They had to choose between war and dishonor. They chose dishonor; they will have war.” Germany Defied the Democracies ► As Churchill predicted, Munich did not bring peace. Less than six months later (March 1939), Hitler had gobbled up the rest of Czechoslovakia. The western democracies finally realized that appeasement failed. ► Britain and France now promised to protect Poland, the next likely target of Hitler’s expansion. ► Britain and France also finally began programs of preparedness, but it was too little too late. Hitler and Stalin ► In August 1939, Hitler stunned the world by announcing a nonaggression pact with his great enemy—Josef Stalin. ► Publicly the NaziSoviet Pact bound Hitler and Stalin to peaceful relations. Hitler and Stalin ► Secretly the two agreed: 1) not to fight if the other went to war, and 2) to divide up Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe between them. ► The Pact was not based on friendship or respect but need. Hitler wanted to protect his eastern flank from a Russian attack when Germany would be at war with Poland. It gave Stalin some time to build up Soviet military strength. ► Soon Germany would betray the agreement. Hitler and Stalin