Hitler and The Immediate Causes of World War II
Hitler and The Immediate Causes of World War II
Hitler and The Immediate Causes of World War II
Hitler's actions put Europe on the brink of war. He was the aggressor; Britain
and France had sought only peace. It was clear that Poland would be Hitler's
next target. Britain and France had failed to respond to the occupation of
Czechoslovakia, but now warned Germany that an attack on Poland would
mean war. The policy of appeasement they had pursued throughout the
1930s was at an end. Britain and France attempted to back this threat up
with an agreement with the USSR.
During the summer of 1939, however, Stalin was also meeting with the
German Foreign Minister, von Ribbentrop. On 24 August 1939, Germany
pulled off one of the most controversial agreements in modern history, the
NaziSoviet Pact.
Essentially, the two ideological enemies agreed not to attack one another,
and secretly they agreed to divide Poland between them. Although Hitler had
signed an agreement with the country he intended to invade, this was a
short-term strategic triumph as it would allow Germany to invade Poland
without the risk of a two-front war, and gain a
0 launch pad for the later
goal of conquering the USSR.
The most immediate cause of World War II was the conflict over the
independence of Poland. If you refer back to Chapter 4, you will see how the
Allied powers had created an independent Polish state that was given a land
'corridor' to the sea through territory that was formerly German. The
important German port of Danzig was to be a 'free city' under League of
Nations supervision, which meant the Poles could use it, both sides knew that
this solution would be a cause of future tension, and the Germans never
accepted it.
Soon after Hitler came to power, the National Socialists won a majority in the
city's government. Yet Poland was not only threatened by a resurgent
Germany; the Soviets had also laid claim to the newly independent Polish
territory. Poland had been given more territory in the east than it had before
the peace settlements, In 1920, the Red Army (Soviet Army) had invaded in
an attempt to crush this new state and consolidate their control in Eastern
Europe.
The Poles had rallied and managed to defeat the Red Army in the battle for
Warsaw. This victory was key to the Poles' new sense of national identity, and
it was important in their determination not to make concessions to either the
Soviets or the Germans in 1939. In November 1938, Hitler had told his armed
forces to prepare a plan for the forced seizure of Danzig, and by the
beginning of 1939 Hitler was demanding the city's return. The Poles decided
that they would have to meet German demands with force.
We have a clear conscience. We have done all that any country could do to
establish peace, but a situation in which no word given by Germany's ruler
could be trusted, and no people or country could feel themselves safe, had
become intolerable... For it is evil things we shall be fighting against: brute
force, bad faith, injustice, oppression, and persecution. And against them I
am certain that right will prevail.
From Neville Chamberlain's speech to the British nation announcing war with
Germany, 3 September 1939 Chamberlain's policy was grounded in the idea
that Germany had three key issues that needed to be resolved territorial
grievances, economic problems and absence of raw materials. His solutions
were to give territorial concessions, economic credits, and colonial
concessions. Appeasement would then lead to the strengthening of the more
moderate groups in Germany, and a move away from the pursuit of the policy
of autarky. Britain would then benefit by being able to reduce arms spending,
plus international markets would improve and manufacturers could sell to
Germany. Chamberlain himself did not believe in peace at any price, and it
has been argued that appeasement was buying time for Britain to rearm.
After World War 1, Britain had reduced its fighting forces, and was thus
militarily unable to oppose Hitler in the mid 1930s. In 1936, the German
government launched a Four Year Plan for rearmament. Between 1934 and
1939 the defence budget increased fourfold. Between 1938 and 1939 it
doubled. During the crisis over Czechoslovakia, the British government
ordered the digging of air raid shelters and distributed gas masks. Richard
Overy argues that appeasement was pragmatic until 1939/40, when Britain's
rearmament was at a stage that the nation could resist, if not defeat, Hitler.
Of course, the French also followed a policy of appeasement, although it can
be argued that this was because they had little choice. The French could not
act independently, and so they took their lead from Britain. However, their
situation was also complex, as the case study of the remilitarization of the
Rhineland suggests. Why, given the strategic importance of the Rhineland to
the French and their concern that it be remilitarized, had they then not
challenged the Germans when they sent in troops in 1936? The French
government believed that the German Army might have forcibly resisted any
French counter-force, and they might have received support from the
population as they had done in the Ruhr in 1923. The French military were not
ready for this kind of campaign; the focus of military planning from 1929 to
1934 had been the Maginot Line chain of border defences, and so the military
could not give the government clear advice. In addition, the government in
control was weak due to internal divisions, and some suggested that a
military response would actually strengthen support for the Nazi regime.
Perhaps the key to understanding the policy of appeasement in the inter-war
years is the fact that throughout the West there was genuine fear of
communism. Hitler was seen by many, including leading politicians, as the
'lesser of two evils: Indeed, it was hoped that Hitler's Germany would provide
a strong bulwark against the spread of communism across Europe. In this
case, the fear of one extreme ideology fostered another.