German Expansion

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The Treaty of Versailles, made in 1919 at the end of the First World War, was intended to make a lasting peace. However, the treaty caused terrible resentment in Germany on which Hitler played in order to achieve power. Some believed that Hitler and Germany had genuine grievances, and that if these could be met Hitler would be satisfied and become less demanding.

Limits Under Versailles

According to the Treaty, the Rhineland, a strip of land inside western Germany bordering on France, Belgium and the Netherlands, was to be de-militarized. That is, no German troops were to be stationed inside that area or any fortifications built. Other terms restricted the German army to 100,000 men and the navy to just 36 ships. Germany objected to the terms of the treaty but was forced to sign it or the war would begin again.

Hitler was open about his refusal to accept many of the terms of Versailles. Soon after he became Chancellor of Germany in 1933 he began to re-arm the country by building up the military beginning from his own stormtroopers. This broke the restrictions placed on the German armed forces, then in 1936, he sent German troops into the Rhineland.

The League of Nations Fails to Respond

When Germany was not reprimanded for this breach, it empowered Hitler, and he began testing his limits. He would begin to seek to reunite all of the German peoples that had been divided after World War I. In March 1938, he brought his army into his homeland of Austria. The Austrian government surrendered before them and the two countries were joined together without a shot being fired. If you watch the newsreels, it seems that the people of Austria wanted it. This annexation is known as the Anschluss or “Joining.”

As you can see from the map above, Czechoslovakia was in a very compromised position. It was completely surrounded by German forces on its western half. They did have an alliance with both France and Russia who had vowed to come to their aid in the event of a German invasion. The Nazis claimed that they only wanted to reunite the German people of the Sudetenland into Germany, and England’s Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain stepped in to broker a peace deal.

A Deal With The Devil

In September 1938, Chamberlain got an international agreement that Hitler should have the Sudetenland in exchange for Germany making no further demands for land in Europe. Hitler lied saying that he had “No more territorial demands to make in Europe.” And Chamberlain called this move “Peace for our time.” So, on October 1st, German troops occupied the Sudetenland and again, Hitler had got what he wanted without firing a single shot.

Many wonder now if Chamberlain made this deal with Hitler not because he thought that it would completely stop Hitler, but rather because it delayed the onset of war long enough for Britain and its allies to increase their armament in preparation for war.

Six months later, however, in March 1939, German troops took over the rest of Czechoslovakia, and the world did nothing as Hitler broke another treaty. Hitler was continuing to spout his ideology that the German people needed living space or lebensraum.

To the watching world, it seemed that Poland would be the next most likely victim of Nazi aggression and Chamberlain made an agreement with the Poles to defend them if Germany invaded. It seems that Hitler did not think that Britain would go to war over Poland, since they had failed to step up to the plate over Czechoslovakia.

Alliance with Italy

Despite having some differing views on race, Mussolini and Hitler had a strong alliance as the first two European Fascist governments. Mussolini took a swipe at the Nazis in one of his speeches describing it as a “pity” how the Nazis expressed their racial views since the Germans were “the descendants of those who were illiterate when Rome had Caesar, Virgil, and Augustus.”

But after their joint efforts in vaulting Francisco Franco to power in the Spanish Civil War, Mussolini said of Hitler and Germany that they were the “axis” around which Europe would revolve, giving rise to the term “axis” powers. Then in May 1939, their alliance deepened with the “Pact of Steel,” a ten-year agreement that committed Rome and Berlin to supply each other with military and economic aid if either nation was at war.

Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact

However, the alliance that provided the biggest push for German expansion was a secret alliance that was made with one of their ideological enemies. Russia was Bolshevik Communist and Germany was Nazi-Fascist. These are the two opposite ends of the spectrum. Remember that Hitler came to power because of a fire in the Reichstag building that was blamed on a Communist plot. Germany and Russia were on opposite sides of World War I as well as the Spanish Civil War which ended in April 1939.

But on August 23, 1939, The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was signed in Moscow between the Foreign Ministers of each country for which the Treaty is named. It was a non-aggression pact, meaning that neither government would ally itself to or aid an enemy of the other. This allowed these two powers to secretly make agreements about agreed-upon borders and spheres of influence divide up Poland (in addition to Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and Finland) between them.

Please take the reading quiz below. Feel free to look for answers in the text. Also, please leave any comments or questions in the comments box. I’d love to get a conversation going about these crazy events that led up to the most deadly war in history.

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