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To What Extent Can The Second World

War In Europe Be Described As Hitler?s War Essay, Research Paper


To what extent


can the Second World War in Europe be described as Hitler?s war? There has been much debate over


the subject of to what extent Hitler can be blamed for the outbreak of the


Second World War in 1939. Historians disagree over to what extent Hitler can be


blamed.? Different historians have gone


to opposite extremes over this issue. Hugh Trevor Roper takes the following


view: ?The Second World War was Hitler?s personal war in


many senses.? He intended it, he


prepared for it, he chose the moment for launching it.? (1953) However, A.J.P


Taylor takes a diametrically opposite viewpoint in his book ?The Origins


of the Second World War (1961) and even goes as


far as saying that: ?Little can be discovered so


long as we go on attributing everything that happened to Hitler? How much can we attribute the war to Hitler? To


what extent can Nazi Germany?s strong dictator be blamed for the commencement


of the Second World War? At the Nuremberg trials, much was


contributed to the Hossbach memorandum, and it was claimed that this proved


Hitler?s warring intentions. This document was emphasised too strongly at


Nuremberg; however, it is not a source to be ignored.? Hitler appears to give this document extraordinary importance,


even instructing those present to regard it as his last will and testament in


the event of his death.? A.J.P.Taylor


questions its importance saying that those present at this meeting bar Goering


were not Nazis but conservatives and not the people that Hitler would confide


in.? However, the memorandum does give a


vague indication as to Hitler?s intentions. As A.P.Adamthwaite says in his book


?The making of the Second World War (1979) ?The Hossbach memorandum


confirms the continuity of Hitler?s thinking: the primacy of force in world


politics, conquest for living space in the east, anti-Bolshevism, hostility to


France.? Hitler?s warlike intentions


were now explicit.? Adamthwaite takes his argument one stage too far


and certainly Hitler?s ?warlike intentions? were not made explicit in the


Hossbach memorandum, but it certainly went someway towards indicating that


Hitler did harbour some aspirations toward war. In Mein Kampf, Hitler


clearly states his expansionist tendencies. His desire for Lebensraum


for the excess German population is apparent. Hitler foresaw an Eastern Europe


populated by Arian Germans. Hitler knew that this aim could not be achieved


without a war.? In this policy alone


then, we see that Hitler is prepared to fight in order achieve his objectives.


Many of Hitler?s policies were achievable only through war; in short Hitler


knew that for him to succeed, Germany must become embroiled in a European


conflict of some sort. Hitler was prepared to take risks to achieve his


territorial gains. His invasion of the Rhineland was a high-risk gesture.? The fact that he was unopposed was due to


the British and French policy of appeasement.?


However, this policy could have been aborted at any stage had either


Britain or France decided enough was enough.?


Each knew territorial invasion was a leap of faith on Hitler?s


part.? Hitler must have realised that


the ?appeasement? policy would not last forever; therefore, Hitler must have


been prepared for war.? With each new


invasion, Germany moved one step closer to European war.? The question was not if Hitler would


engineer a war but when! Although Hitler did not intend to start the Second


World War with his invasion of Poland, he willingly took a risk and he was


prepared to fight if necessary.? He was


aggressive and his expansionist policies led to European war. Hitler simply


underestimated how long the British and French would continue to ?appease?


him.? On the other hand, the German expansionist


tendencies had existed for centuries.?


From Bismarckian times, there was a Prussian history of expansionist policies,


the unification of Germany, the search by the Kaiser for colonies and the First


World War were all examples of these policies.?


In recent modern history, Prussia and later Germany under Prussian

rule


had been the instigator of European territorial war.? The German people had long wanted to dominate Europe both


territorially and politically.?


Therefore, it was not simply Hitler that wanted to expand German borders


and spheres of influence; he received support from the German people as a


whole. Furthermore, the Treaty of Versailles had


humiliated the German people and caused deep routed resentment among them. The


warring tendencies that had remained dormant since the end of the First World


War in 1918 were awoken by Hitler?s oratory skills. It was not just Hitler?s


expansion, but Hitler on a wave of public feeling that led to expansion.? Hitler cannot be held solely to blame for


Germany?s expansion in the late 1930?s as the feelings of the German nation


must also be taken into account.? Hitler


was supported by public opinion and therefore the German people must take some


of the blame for the outbreak of war. Hitler did not intend to go to


war over the Polish invasion.? He did


not plan for a full-scale war with Britain and France and indeed he still felt


that some form of understanding with Britain was possible.? Hitler was intent on preventing a war on two


fronts, and as the land he required for Lebensraum lay to the east, he


therefore looked for peace on the western front.? Hitler did not plan a war with Britain and France and indeed, had


he felt that invading Poland would lead to war; it is unlikely that he would


have done so.? The war in 1939 was


accidental on Hitler?s part and was certainly not the war that he envisaged to


take place somewhere between 1943 and 1945. ?The Third Reich was a chaotic system of government and it is


difficult to determine to what extent Hitler controlled foreign policy. As Hans


Mommsen says in his book ?National Socialism: Continuity and Change?


(1979): ?Hitler was in some respects a weak dictator? Although Hitler evidently


determined much of Nazi policy, amongst the chaos it is difficult to say to


what extent Hitler can be held responsible for the key decisions that led to


the outbreak of war in 1939.? At the


Nuremberg trials, Goering claimed a personal role in the outbreak of war.? He claimed to have planned the annexation of


Austria, and Germany?s rearmament as well as the training of the new soldiers.? This claim has been attributed to personal


vanity. However, the evidence of Goering?s testimony at Nuremberg begs the


question how many of the key decisions were made by Hitler and to what extent


the men around him like Goering made the decisions for him?? This is near impossible to determine,


however, it is apparent from records such as the Hossbach memorandum that


Hitler consulted his advisors on key decisions. Although, Hitler often had the


final word on issues, he cannot be held entirely responsible for the outbreak


of war; his advisors must share the blame. In conclusion, the Second World


War came about almost by accident.? As


A.J.P.Taylor says: ?Hitler never planned to get his end not by war ?


merely by threatening war, raising the tensions which he thought would throw


his enemies into disarray? In this statement Taylor assumes


too much, Hitler certainly did intend to go to war eventually, however, in the


late 1930?s, Taylor?s analysis of Hitler?s intentions is correct.? Hitler, spurred on by the German people,


planned territorial expansion without war initially, by abusing the appeasement


policy.? It was only when Britain and


France took an unexpected stand over the issue of Poland that Hitler was


thwarted.? Hitler can in part be held


responsible for the outbreak of war; after all it was he that gave the order to


invade Poland.? However, he did not plan


to go to war in 1939, nor did he plan to fight Britain and France.? Furthermore, Hitler can only be held


responsible for the war to the extent that it was undertaken under his


leadership.? It was the backing and


assistance that he received from the German people and the Nazi party that made


the war possible.? Therefore, despite


his warring tendencies, Hitler can only be held partially responsible for the


outbreak of the Second World War, and much of the blame must be placed elsewhere.

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