Thursday, September 1, 2016

September 1, 1939: big bet of Adolf Hitler.


ADAM Tooze

Professor of History at the University of Cambridge. Author of "The Wages of Destruction: Building and demolition of the Nazi economy"

... "Speech of January 30" mentioned already widely regarded as a defining moment in the history of his regime, because half of his speech, over two and a half hours, he made the statement bolder public "question of the Jews" . If, he said, "international Jewry inside and outside Europe will once again devised a world war", the result would be "no victory for the Jews, but the destruction of the Jewish race in Europe". The key term here is the minimum "world war", which gives an idea whose speech addressed. A few weeks earlier, on January 14, during the annual speech to the nation, President Roosevelt had directly challenged Hitler. After the Anschluss, the Sudeten crisis and Kristalnahtit, Roosevelt declared that every nation that has no respect for religion and democracy "as international confidence" is a direct danger to the security of the United States ...

Hitler and the SS leadership was vetëbindën the center of the Jewish world conspiracy was moved across the Atlantic in Washington and on Wall Street. This exchange did rebound to Europe, because of America's tentacles "plot" lay up in British foreign policy and franchise ..

... He probably would have wanted to fight a major war against Britain and France when their own choosing, at any moment in the early forties, but already at the beginning of 1939, the pace of events had made impracticality such plans long-term . America, England and France seemed increasingly approaching each other, there was no time to lose. If the sworn enemies of Hitler were improvised, and so do not let him. It was time, he said as Goering in August 1939, to bet everything. Otherwise, the face of a vibrant global coalition of his implacable enemies of Jews, Germany would face certain destruction ...


(September 1, 1939 / German invasion of Poland and Western betrayal) Poland was reborn as an independent nation after the First World War, and the collapse of Austro-Hungary, Russia and Germany. Polish borders were redefined in part by the Treaty of Versailles, but a series of armed conflicts with Germany, Czechoslovakia, Lithuania and Ukrainian nationalists, and a major war with the Soviet Union, gave them final shape ...

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