How did Aryan racial theory influence Nazi foreign policy?
Aryan racial theory:
How did this affect foreign policy?
- They led the Nazis to favour alliances with racially acceptable countries. However, their racial theory did not stop the Nazis from making alliances with ‘inferior’ countries to gain temporary advantage. What’s more, Nazi theories on race influenced their aim to expand German terrority and their aim to expand eastwards. It also influenced their implementation of Germanisation policies.
How did the Third Reich influence Nazi foreign policy?
Hitler’s desire and sense of entitlement can be interpreted as nostalgia. The Nazis focused on the sucesses of two earlier German empires.
Both empires had gained land and kept them. This strategy may have also influenced Hitler’s foreign policy. His foreign policy emphasised his desire for peace.
How did WW1 influence Nazi foreign policy?
The Treaty of Versailles affected Nazi foreign policy because opposing it made any political party popular and the Nazis rejected the Treaty. They aimed to overturn the terms of the Treaty. After the signing of Versailles, 6.4 million Germans found themselves outside the new borders. For the Nazis, therefore, uniting German-speaking people included endorsing a policy of expansionism and Germanisation.
What also encouraged the Nazis?
The response of the Allies also encouraged the Nazis to expand further and develop militarily. Some perceived the terms of the Treaty as too harsh and consequently turned a blind eye to Germany’s infringement of terms. Britain even signed a Naval Agreement with nazi Germany in 1935. They seemed to accept this reversal of unfair terms hoping that Germany would not pursue expansionist policies and they would not have to fight another war. Instead, Hitler and the Nazis were given the confidence to pursue expansionist policies in their foreign policy.
What are some facts about the German war economy?
Sucess:
Failure:
How did the Nazi propaganda machine help the Nazi regime survive between 1933 and 1945?
Radio:
The Hitler myth:
Aims of propaganda:
How did surveillance, repression and the establishment of a terror state?
Heinrich Himmler and the SS:
The courts:
The Gestapo:
Concentration camps:
How did Germany’s international strength help the Nazi regime survive between 1933 and 1945?
Diplomatic success:
- Support came from those Germaans who saw the Nazis as reversing the losses of the Treaty of Versailles and asserting the power of Germany in Europe.
How did economic recovery help the Nazi regime survive between 1933 and 1945?
Revival of the economy:
Social opportunities and rewards:
What is the historical debate?
In many ways, the causes of the Second World War can seem simple: Hitler’s ideology and aggression led the world to a conflict of appalling destructiveness. However, most historians argue that there were other causes of the Second World war. In order to understand them, it is neccessary to consider:
What is the influence of German history?
Some historians have argued that Germany’s modern development had followed a special path that caused the country to be more militaristic and aggressive than other developed nations. Historians who hold this view point to the authoritarianism and militarism of German culture, the fact that the Second Reich was created after a series of military conflicts and the influence of the militaristic traditions of the Prussian Army on German culture. According to this argument, these are the long-term causes of the war.
In what ways did Nazi foreign policy reflect previous German policy or attitudes?
What are the criticisms of this view?
Even though there were similarities between Nazi policies and some earlier policies and ideas, there are many historians who reject the notion that Germany had a Sonderweg. Critics argue that most other major European countries were imperialist and racist in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and yet this did not lead them to prepare for a major European war during the 1930s.
What else have historians argued?
Some historians have argued that long-term relations between France and Germany led to the outbreak of the Second World War.
What conclusions could be drawn?
Most historians would accept that the ideas of right-wing German and Austrian nationalists, such as the unity of all Germans and Lebensraum did influence Nazi ideas.
What else happened during the 1930s in terms of other countries?
What is appeasement?
Appeasement is the name given to the British and French policy towards Germany from 1935 to the invasion of Czechoslovakia in March 1939.
What were the causes of appeasement?
What were the consequences of appeasement?
Was appeasement misguided?
Chamberlain in particular is often criticised for the policy of appeasement. But appeasement gave the British time to rearm and prepare to fight Hitler. Between the signing of the Munich agreement andb the start of the war a year later, Britain developed radar and explanded its rearmament program. Nevertheless, by creating the impression that they would not resist German aggression, appeasement encouraged Hitler to think that his aggression would suceed.
Was there a lack of unity?
Concerted action by the USSR, France and Britain might have prevented Hitler’s attack on Poland, and therefore prevented the outbreak of war. However, the three countries did not work together.
Britain was reluctant to work with the USSR. British leaders did not want to share information with a communist country. Suspicion of communism made an alliance impossible.
Why did Hitler invade Poland in 1939?
The British, French and Polish guarantee:
- Even though the British government sought to avoid war, they were not prepared to allow Germany to grow too powerful. With this in mind, following the German takeover of Czechoslovakia, the British and French government signed the Polish guarantee in March 1939, in which they pledged to support Polish independence. French and British politicians hoped that this would persuade Hitler to stop German expansion.
Hitler and Poland:
- Hitler aimed to continue German expansion, while avoiding war with Britain and France. Crucially, Hitler did not take the Polish guarantee seriously. He viewed the British and French governments as weak, and failed to realise that, after the Munich agreement, Britain and France were determined to stop further German expansion.
Nazi-Soviet pact:
- In August 1939, the USSR and Germany signed the Nazi-Soviet pact.
Was it masterplan or miscalculation?
Historians disagree regarding how far the invasion of Poland was part of Hitler’s masterplan to take Europe to war, or how far it was a miscalculation.
Many historians have argued that Hitler did not seek a large-scale conflict in 1939. From this point of view, either he assumed that Britain and France would back down, or he assumed that any conflict would be short-lived. Either way, many historians claim that Hitler did not want a European war.
What else do historians claim?
Some historians claim that the policy of appeasement had convinced Hitler that Britain and France would not act against Germany. In this sense, they argue, Hitler misjudged the situation.