Hitler Foreign Policy
Hitler Foreign Policy
Hitler Foreign Policy
Discontinuity?
- Hitler wasn’t driven by obtaining land that had once been lost, but by obtaining land
in the East.
- For example, in 1938, Hitler dismissed a number of conservative commanders when
they expressed concerns that Hitler was going beyond simply revising the land lost in
Versailles.
- Ralf Dahrendorf / Friedrich Meinecke
What are the main sources of evidence for Hitler’s foreign policy aims?
- The 25 points. The original Nazi manifesto in 1920.
- Mein Kampf (1925)
- Hitler’s second book, 1928. Written but not published.
- Four Year Plan Memorandum, 1936. Hitler’s plans to prepare the economy for war.
- Hossbach Memorandum, 1937. Notes from a meeting outlined Hitler’s foreign policy
objectives and discussed when Germany would be ready for war.
- Revising the ToV was not the ultimate goal for Hitler, but acted as part of the large
objective of winning lebensraum - breaking the treaty’s military restrictions was a
prerequisite for expansion.
- Hitler was committed to the creation of a Greater German Reich, which meant going
much further than the traditional nationalist programme.
- Hitler sought lebensraum for the German master race. The slavs would be slaves as
they were seen as inferior.
- Hitler didn’t deviate from the ideas he presented in Mein Kampf.
- Historians are divided over whether Hitler had planned to get Germany prepared for
total war prior to 1939.
- Some historians contend that Hitler never planned full mobilisation of the economy to
war, because he wanted short Blitzkrieg campaigns. Germany would be able to
exploit the economic resources of a captured country before launching the next bout
of Blitzkrieg.
- According to this theory, Hitler’s strategy failed when he became locked in a war of
attrition with the USSR from June 1941.
- Richard Overy suggests that Hitler was planning for total war, but miscalculated in
1939 as he didn’t think invading Poland would provoke a general European war.
1939 Poland
- Britain had signed a Treaty with Poland on 31 March, promising to defend it.
- Britain began conscription in April.
- Hitler assumed both actions were a bluff.
- He demanded of Poland the return of Danzig, a mainly Germany city. Hitler also
demanded rail and road access across the Polish corridor.
- Poland rejected.
September 1929
- Sep 1, Hitler invaded Poland.
- Sep 3, Britain and France declared war on Hitler.
- They were unable to help Poland however, who