The History Book

(Tina Sui) #1

289


Adolf Hitler watches a victory parade
in Warsaw following the invasion of
Poland. He and Soviet leader Joseph
Stalin agreed to the invasion and
division of the country.

causing deep resentment. Germany
was forced to return Alsace and
Lorraine to France, and all of its
overseas colonies were annexed
by the Allies.
Germany’s Weimar Republic
began its economic recovery in the
1920s, but it could not survive the
blow that was inflicted by the
US economic crash of 1929. This
financial crisis aided the rise of
the National Socialist (Nazi) Party,
led by Hitler, who promised the
German people he would make
the nation great again.
Hitler had fought in World
War I, and the experience of trench
warfare, the shock of defeat, and
the terms of the Versailles Treaty
were to influence the rest of his
life. He developed extremist views
based on far-right nationalism; and
by the time he became chancellor
of Germany’s coalition government
in 1933, and dictator of the country
the next year, he ruthlessly pursued
his policies of nationalism, anti-
Semitism, and anti-communism.

Hitler’s Lebensraum
Under this creed, Hitler embarked
on an ambitious foreign policy.
In 1935, openly going against the
terms of the Versailles Treaty, he
began a massive program of
re-armament. In 1936 he occupied
the demilitarized Rhineland, but
none of the major powers
intervened. In March 1938, Hitler
annexed Austria to Germany,
before setting his sights on the
German-speaking part of
Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland.
British and French politicians
wanted to avoid a repeat of the
horrors of World War I and felt
that the Sudetenland was not
worth fighting for. In the Munich
Agreement of September 29, 1938,
the Sudetenland was handed to
Hitler in exchange for his promise
to end his land-grabs. British prime
minister Neville Chamberlain
declared that he had secured
“peace for our time,” only for the
Nazis to invade the remainder of
Czechoslovakia in March 1939.

Fascism in Europe
Italy’s Fascist dictator Benito
Mussolini also had aspirations for
foreign glory. In October 1935, he
invaded Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in
retaliation for the defeat the Italians
had suffered there in 1896. By May
1936, Mussolini had conquered
the country, facing no opposition
from the Western powers.
Further evidence of Western
democracies’ weakness in facing
up to the Fascist challenge was
provided the same year, when
both Mussolini and Hitler sent
“volunteers” to fight in the Spanish
Civil War, to aid nationalist
General Franco in his campaign
against left-wing supporters of
the Spanish Republic. Britain
and France took no action, and
Franco’s victory in 1939 bolstered
the Fascist cause. ❯❯

See also: The Battle of Passchendaele 270–75 ■ The Treaty of Versailles 280 ■ The Wall Street Crash 282–283 ■
The Reichstag Fire 284–85 ■ The Wannsee Conference 294–95 ■ The Berlin Airlift 296–97 ■ World War II in the Pacific 340 ■
The founding of the United Nations 340

THE MODERN WORLD


German troops crossed
the Polish frontier this
morning at dawn and
are since reported to be
bombing open towns. In
these circumstances there is
only one course open to us.
Neville Chamberlain

US_286-293_Invasion-of-Poland.indd 289 15/02/2016 16:44

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