Download The Fall of the Third Reich - York Region District School Board

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Occultism in Nazism wikipedia , lookup

Sonderweg wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The Fall of the Third
Reich
Delegating Responsibility
Angela Chung
The European Theatre




Rise of Nazi GermanyAnschluss, appeasement,
invasion of Poland – World
War II
Fall of France in June 1940
Germany seemed to have
to upper hand; commonly
perceived that Britain
faced hopeless odds
In reality, Germany faced
a network of opponents
Countries under Axis
influence at the peak
of Nazi Germany
The spread of Nazi
Germany
The Tides Change

Unsuccessful invasion of Britain

Deterioration of Germany’s relations with its allies

Aerial view of
destruction in
Catastrophic decision to postpone Operation
Berlin.Barbarossa
& disastrous attack on Russia

D-Day landings

Battle of the Bulge

Dissent within Nazi-occupied Europe

Invasion of Berlin
Bombed-out
buildings, May
1945, after the
Battle of Berlin
Fall of the Third Reich

May 8, 1945, Victory
in Europe declared

Nazi regime ended

In hindsight,
historians have
asked, who was most
responsible for the
collapse of seemingly
infallible Third Reich?
• Western Allies? Soviet
Union? Resistance? Or
Germany itself?
Questions




What was the state of Nazi Germany’s
economical, military, social, and political
systems near the end of WWII?
What were the decisive battles of Europe in
World War II?
On how many fronts was Germany fighting?
What was the political dynamic within the
Third Reich?
Questions

How were German relations with its allies
(Axis powers)?

How many countries did the Resistance
movement span?

How has the Resistance movement affected
the structure of the Third Reich?

Was it Allied supremacy, or German blunders
that made the decisive battles against
Germany successful?
Thesis Statement
The Third Reich, because of its flawed
foreign policy, resistance within
Nazi-occupied Europe, and dire
tactical blunders, was most
responsible for its own defeat in World
War Two.
Argument 1
The forming of
unfavourable
alliances and the
making of bad
diplomatic
decisions crippled
Nazi forces, and in
consequence,
delayed crucial
operations and
put Germany at a
grave
disadvantage.
Axis Alliance, 1939-1941
Map from the United States
Holocaust Museum
Evidence

ill-advised diplomatic decisions
Alliance with Mussolini



“[The ‘Pact of Steel’] was a declaration of friendship and
alliance- it committed Germany and Italy to a military alliance
that formed what was known as the Axis powers… When
Germany went to war much sooner than expected, Italy was
unprepared, and did not fulfil her commitments under the
treaty.”
“[Mussolini] decided to show Hitler that Italy could do just as
well on its own, and on October 28, 1940, Italian troops set
about invading Greece. Mussolini, however, had underestimated
his opponents, and with Allied help the Greeks pushed his
troops back.”
“The failed Italian attempt to invade Greece had left Hitler with
little option but to step in and recover the situation.”
Evidence

ill-advised diplomatic decisions
Alliance with Japan and Germany’s
declaration of war on America


“[Hitler’s] primary goal was still to persuade Japan to attack Britain
in East Asia and thus indirectly to deter America from intervention
in Europe.”
“Indeed it does not seem easy to say why, when the German
campaign against the Soviet Union was stuck in the snow in front of
Moscow and when Britain was still undefeated, Germany should
take on as an additional enemy the very power to whom it had
succumbed in World War I.”
Rebuttals



ill-advised diplomatic decisions
Italy seemed to be a feasible ally at the
time
The Alliance with Japan was not an illadvised decision because Germany needed
Japan to distract the Soviets and the
United States from the European theatre
America would have declared war on
Germany anyways because of the Alliance
with Britain
Argument 2
Often overlooked in history, the
Resistance movement against the Nazi
regime played a critical role in bringing
down the Third Reich through its
underground movement, network of spies,
attempted coups and assassinations, and
vocal opposition throughout World War
Two. This resistance within Nazi-occupied
Europe crippled Germany, making it more
vulnerable to Allied attack.
Evidence

resistance within Nazi-occupied Europe
Sabotage



“Yugoslav partisans waged a continuous guerrilla campaign against
the Nazi occupation of their country from 1940 through to the end
of the war…”
“Before the D-day landings of Allied troops in June 1944, the
French resistance had become an effective army operating inside
France. Under the leadership of General Koenig, the French Forces
of the Interior (FFI) sabotaged bridges, communications,
transport, and power stations.”
“On D-Day, the [Resistance] in the Calvados region blew up eight
bridges, destroyed over 100 vehicles, and cut innumerable railway
lines… They also cut the trunk telephone link from Caen to
Smolensk and
the cables
connecting
the headquarters of the
French
Resistance
sabotaging
LXXXIV Corps
in St. Lô with the 91st Division in Valognes as well
railroad
as the St. Lô-Jersey link and Cherbourg-Brest connections.”
Evidence

resistance within Nazi-occupied Europe
Spying

“The ideal spy had
perhaps just been
unearthed in Berlin:
No one could be
more useful than a
well-informed
German official,
close to the centre of
power and decision
making, and inclined
to transmit his
knowledge on a
regular basis… a
German agent
working at the
German Foreign
Ministry.”
Fritz Kolbe,
German
diplomat &
American
spy
Gave America details of:





German expectations on site of D-Day
landings
V-1 & V-2 rocket programs
the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter
Japanese plans in Southeast Asia
Exposure of German spy (Elyesa
Bazna) working in a British embassy
Evidence

resistance within Nazi-occupied Europe
Attemped coups/assassinations

Famous July 20, 1944 attempt by Colonel
Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg:
•
“Inside the briefcase, he had brought a bomb to
the situation barrack where the dictator was
studying maps with his generals and negotiating
about the situation on the Eastern Front… Five
people in the same room were killed instantly…
The table, under which the briefcase containing
the bomb had been placed, blew up into pieces.
But that very table saved the life of Hitler… on
20th July, 1944, Colonel Claus Schenk Graf von
Stauffenberg was very close to change the final
outcome of the World War II.”
Stauffenberg

Many other close calls  victory parade in
Paris in July, 1940; parade down the ChampsElysées;
bomb,
suicidal bombing
Hitleraircraft
showing
Mussolini
the aftermath of
attempt
at explosion
a museum in the conference room.
bomb
the
Argument 3
Nazi Germany,
led by Hitler, made
a large number of
tactical mistakes
and misguided
military decisions
that allowed the
Allies to gain the
upper hand,
ultimately costing
Germany the war.
Hitler in process of
planning
Evidence

dire tactical blunders
Yugoslavia (In reaction to the Serbian revolt
against Prince Paul of Yugoslavia & the signing of
the Tripartite Pact)
• “Hitler was furious and raged that Yugoslavia ‘must be
regarded as an enemy and beaten down as soon as
possible.’ He postponed Operation ‘Barbarossa’ – the
invasion of Russia – and went to war with both Greece
and Yugoslavia.”
• “Outcome: Greece and Yugoslavia fell to the Axis; the
German invasion of Russia was delayed, with serious
consequences.”
• Acting out of sheer spite and anger, decided to postpone
the Russian invasion to concentrate on destroying
Yugoslavia for revenge – disastrous decision; delay =
Russian winters
Evidence

Russia
dire tactical blunders
• “The original timetable called for the launching of the
campaign in May [1941]… But the campaign did not
begin until late June… they gambled with the weather,
which in the late autumn was favourable, just as it was
to Napoleon in 1812, and kept saying, “We can risk it.”
Then came the bitter weather… Clothing was prepared
for a hard German winter, but it was inadequate for a
severe Russian winter. The transport failed because
German locomotives were not equipped for extremely
low temperatures.” - Heusinger
• Stalingrad  Even against hopeless odds, Hitler refused
to withdraw his Sixth Army & chose instead to resupply
them with the Luftwaffe  diverted Luftwaffe from battle
to resupply a useless cause; his refusal to retreat
doomed Sixth Army
Counter-Arguments
1.
2.
3.
The Allies were overwhelmingly superior
to the Axis powers in supplies and
armament.
The Allies won the war due to the
efficiency of their Intelligence unit at
cracking codes.
The Allies won through sheer superiority
of their air force over the Luftwaffe.
Works Cited
Collotti, Enzo. Hitler and Nazism.
New York: Interlink Publishing Group, 1999.
Delattre, Lucas. A Spy at the Heart of the Third Reich.
Paris: Éditions Denoël, 2005.
Fowler, Will. D-Day: The Normandy Landings on 6 June 1944.
United Kingdom: Amber Books Ltd., 2006.
Galante, Pierre. Operation Valkyrie: The German Generals’ Plot Against Hitler.
New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1981.
Hook, Alex. Defining Moments: World War II.
United Kingdom: Grange Books, 2005.
Jäckel, Eberhard. Hitler in History.
London: University Press of New England, 1984.
“Resistance Movement”. Hutchinson Encyclopedia. 2004. Oct. 4 2007.
http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/resistance+movement
Rich, Norman. Hitler’s War Aims: Ideology, the Nazi State, and the Course of Expansion.
New York: W.W. Norton & Company Inc., 1992.
Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany.
London: Bison Books Ltd., 1994.
Von Plehwe, Friedrich-Karl. The End of an Alliance: Rome’s Defection from the Axis in 1943.
London: Oxford University Press, 1971.