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- <title>
- Aug. 28, 1989: Road To War
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Cover Stories
- Aug. 28, 1989 World War II:50th Anniversary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD WAR II, Page 40
- PART 2: Road to War
- Every time a Hitler threat ended in compromise, Hitler won
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <qt>
- <l>Accurate scholarship can</l>
- <l>Unearth the whole offence</l>
- <l>From Luther until now</l>
- <l>That has driven a culture mad</l>
- </qt>
- <p>-- September 1, 1939, by W.H. Auden
- </p>
- <p> When the German delegation of 180 diplomats and technicians
- went to Versailles in 1919 to negotiate a peace treaty ending
- World War I, the French forced their train to creep along at 10
- m.p.h. so that the Germans would get a vivid sense of the
- devastation their armies had wrought. In Versailles's Hall of
- Mirrors, Premier Georges Clemenceau had ominous words for them:
- "The hour has struck for the weighty settlement of our account."
- </p>
- <p> That account dated back not just to the murderous
- offensives on the Somme in 1916, but to 1870, when Prussian
- Chancellor Otto von Bismarck provoked Emperor Napoleon III into
- declaring war, then smashed him at Sedan, annexed the iron-rich
- provinces of Alsace and Lorraine and imposed on France a heavy
- financial indemnity. But the Germans had their own view of this
- account, in which they had repeatedly been attacked and
- despoiled by the French, by Napoleon, by Louis XIV. Indeed, this
- conflict went back beyond the birth of either nation, to the
- time when the Romans subdued the Gauls but not the Germans, thus
- establishing the Rhine as the frontier of what was then
- considered the civilized world.
- </p>
- <p> The Allied terms at Versailles were harsh. France would
- regain Alsace and Lorraine, as well as a trusteeship over the
- rich coal mines of the Saar. The Austro-Hungarian and Turkish
- empires would be chopped up into a goulash of new nations like
- Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. A newly independent Poland
- acquired parts of the German industrial area of Upper Silesia,
- Posen and West Prussia, providing it with a corridor to the
- Baltic Sea. Germany alone would be disarmed, forbidden to
- maintain more than 100,000 troops or have any major warships,
- submarines, warplanes or tanks. Germany would have to admit
- formally to being guilty of aggression and pay all war damages,
- a sum estimated at more than $100 billion (around $600 billion
- in today's dollars). Until the Germans accepted these terms, the
- Allies would continue the strangling naval blockade they imposed
- in 1915. The Germans signed.
- </p>
- <p> Germany was in a state of turmoil, ruin and mass hunger. It
- had lost nearly 2 million men, and its mutinous army had
- virtually disintegrated. Kaiser Wilhelm II had fled into exile
- in Holland. The Social Democrats had proclaimed a republic, with
- themselves in charge, and the Communists were challenging them
- for control of the streets. And in a hospital northeast of
- Berlin, raging at the nation's defeat, lay a 29-year-old
- Austrian corporal partly blinded by mustard gas. "In vain all
- the sacrifices," Adolf Hitler later wrote in Mein Kampf (My
- Struggle). "In vain the death of 2 million...Hatred grew in
- me, hatred for those responsible for this deed...I decided
- to go into politics."
- </p>
- <p> His start was less than auspicious. He joined a tiny
- Bavarian outfit that called itself the German Workers Party. He
- began making speeches, denouncing Bolsheviks, capitalists, the
- Jews, the French. Germany had lost the war only because it had
- been betrayed at home by a "stab in the back." By 1923, as the
- new Weimar Republic was sinking into deep economic troubles,
- Hitler staged an absurd "beer-hall putsch" and led a march
- through Munich. He was arrested and sentenced to five years in
- prison (he served nine months). "You may pronounce us guilty a
- thousand times over," he declared at his trial, "but the goddess
- of the eternal court of history acquits us."
- </p>
- <p> Larger forces were aggravating the conflicts that Hitler
- would eventually exploit. In 1923 the Germans stalled on their
- reparations payments and the French seized the industrial Ruhr
- to compel payment. The German mark, declining ever since the
- war, began plunging: 7,000 to the dollar in January, 160,000 in
- July, 1 million in August. A kind of madness swept the country.
- People carried suitcases of money to a store to buy a sausage.
- And the mark kept falling, to an all-time low of 4.2 trillion
- that November. Everything was for sale, all savings were
- destroyed, and nothing seemed to have any value any longer. No
- less than military defeat and social upheaval, the
- hyperinflation undermined all the traditional securities of
- German society.
- </p>
- <p> Recovery did come eventually, with lots of American and
- British loans, but the Wall Street Crash of 1929 started a
- worldwide depression to which the shaky German economy was
- especially vulnerable. Unemployment soared. The feeble Social
- Democratic coalition government collapsed. And Adolf Hitler,
- whose Nazi Party held an insignificant twelve seats in the
- Reichstag, suddenly became a voice that attracted attention. He
- was one of the first 20th century figures to master radio as an
- important political medium. His message: Down with the system.
- Vote for a leader who will bring us back to greatness.
- </p>
- <p> The economic crisis provided Hitler not only with a strong
- message but also with manpower. He recruited the unemployed as
- his Storm Troopers, put them in brown shirts and boots and sent
- them out to do battle. "Hate exploded suddenly, without warning,
- out of nowhere, at street corners, in restaurants, cinemas,
- dance halls," wrote Christopher Isherwood in The Berlin Stories,
- which eventually became Cabaret. "Knives were whipped out, blows
- were dealt with spiked rings, beer-mugs, chair-legs or leaded
- clubs." In September 1930 the Nazis won 6.5 million votes, and
- their 107 Reichstag seats made them the second strongest party.
- </p>
- <p> Split between Nazis and Communists as well as several
- traditional parties, the Reichstag became ungovernable. That
- gave crucial political power to a man who was supposed to be a
- figurehead, President Paul von Hindenburg, commander of
- Germany's armies during the war. Hindenburg was 83, vain,
- righteous and inclined to long naps. Since the Reichstag could
- not agree on a policy, he appointed some of his favorites as
- Chancellors, letting them rule by presidential decree.
- </p>
- <p> But the Nazis kept winning elections. In the summer of
- 1932, the Nazis doubled their Reichstag seats, to 230 out of
- 608; Hitler's blustering, barrel-shaped lieutenant, Hermann
- Goring, became president of the legislature. Hindenburg despised
- Hitler, "that Austrian corporal," but he asked him to serve as
- Vice Chancellor under Hindenburg's protege, Franz von Papen.
- Hitler rejected any compromises.
- </p>
- <p> In the first week in January, everything suddenly changed.
- Papen, bent on revenge for having been replaced as Chancellor
- by General Kurt von Schleicher, decided to make a deal with
- Hitler. At a secret meeting, several prominent financiers
- promised credit to the financially pressed Nazis. Once again,
- Hindenburg proposed a Papen-Hitler coalition, only with Hitler
- as Chancellor. This time Hitler agreed. And so, on Jan. 30,
- 1933, this half-educated ex-Austrian with a genius for
- manipulation and deceit became, quite legally, the leader of
- Germany.
- </p>
- <p> Hindenburg and the other conservatives were confident that
- they could keep Hitler under control. They held eight of the
- eleven Cabinet seats, including such power centers as the
- Foreign Ministry and the Economics Ministry. What they did not
- seem to appreciate was that Goring was not only a national
- Minister Without Portfolio but also the Prussian interior
- minister; that put him in charge of the police in the state of
- Prussia, which covered Berlin and two-thirds of Germany.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler had no sooner taken office than he had Hindenburg
- dissolve the Reichstag and order new elections. With Goring in
- charge of the police, 40,000 Nazis became special officers,
- invading opposition meetings, beating and arresting opposition
- speakers. Just a week before the election, Berliners saw a red
- glow in the night sky and learned that the Reichstag was on
- fire. At the scene, Goring was shouting wildly: "This is a
- Communist crime against the new government! We will show no
- mercy! Every Communist deputy must be shot!"
- </p>
- <p> Independent experts assumed from the beginning that the
- Nazis had started the fire, but Hitler immediately made it his
- pretext for seizing power. He persuaded Hindenburg to sign a
- decree that gave the government broad powers to make arrests,
- search homes, confiscate property and impose "restrictions on
- personal liberty, on the right of free expression of opinion."
- The Storm Troopers were in power now, and mass arrests began.
- "My mission is only to destroy and exterminate," said Goring.
- </p>
- <p> In their last free (or semifree) elections, held March 5,
- 1933, the Germans gave their new dictator 44% of their votes.
- Hitler never won a majority in an election, but that 44% brought
- the Nazis, along with their right-wing allies of the Nationalist
- Party, their first majority in the Reichstag. So Hitler
- presented the Reichstag with an "enabling act" that would
- surrender most of its powers to what was now very much his
- Cabinet. Some Communists and socialists--those not already in
- jail--protested, but while the Nazi delegates cheered and
- shouted, the Reichstag docilely voted itself out of business.
- All that remained for Hitler's assumption of total power was the
- death of Hindenburg, which occurred the following year. Hitler
- simply abolished the presidency, named himself Fuhrer and had
- his decision ratified in a plebiscite by nearly 90% of the
- people.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout these first years of the Third Reich, Hitler
- imposed a process that the Nazis called Gleichschaltung, which
- means standardization or making things the same. All political
- parties except the Nazis were banned as divisive. Leftist union
- leaders were arrested and replaced by Nazis preaching the
- harmonious unity of the working classes (strikes were banned).
- Joseph Goebbels, the Propaganda Minister, rallied students to
- a vast bonfire outside the University of Berlin, where the works
- of illustrious liberals (Emile Zola) and Jews (Heinrich Heine)
- were consigned to the flames. Jews were barred from public
- office, the civil service and professions like teaching and
- journalism. The basic idea behind all this was embodied in the
- slogan "Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" (One people, one
- nation, one leader).
- </p>
- <p> Some of the best and brightest left the country. Thomas
- Mann left, and Albert Einstein, Hans Bethe, Bertolt Brecht, Kurt
- Weill, Paul Tillich, Walter Gropius, Mies van der Rohe, Fritz
- Lang, Billy Wilder. Some of the less fortunate fell into the
- hands of Goring's police and ended up in a little village
- outside Munich where the Nazis had built their first
- concentration camp. It was called Dachau. This was not yet the
- era of the gas chambers but rather of the truncheon, not mass
- murder but the gradual silencing of all opposition. "They came
- first for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't
- a Communist," said Pastor Martin Niemoller, a former U-boat
- commander who had once briefly supported the Nazis but
- eventually spent four years in Dachau. "Then they came for the
- Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they
- came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a
- Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time there was
- no one left to speak up."
- </p>
- <p> Throughout these ugly years, though, the majority of
- Germans seemed fairly content with their New Order. "The Nazi
- terror in the early years affected the lives of relatively few
- Germans," recalled William Shirer, author of The Rise and Fall
- of the Third Reich, who went to report on Germany in 1934, "and
- a newly arrived observer was somewhat surprised to see that the
- people of this country did not seem to feel that they were being
- cowed and held down by an unscrupulous and brutal dictatorship.
- On the contrary, they supported it with genuine enthusiasm.
- Somehow it imbued them with a new hope."
- </p>
- <p> They had some very practical reasons. Hitler had
- substantially revived the economy. Unemployment, so pivotal in
- bringing him to power, had dropped from 6 million to less than
- 1 million between 1933 and 1937, this at a time when the U.S.
- was still wallowing in the Depression. National production and
- income doubled during the same period. This was partly owing to
- Hitler's rearmament policy, but also to more benign forms of
- public spending. The world's first major highway system, the
- autobahns, began snaking across the country, and there was talk
- of providing every citizen with a cheap, standardized car, the
- people's car, or Volkswagen.
- </p>
- <p> One of the most impressive of the new public buildings was
- the Olympic stadium in Berlin, and there Hitler welcomed the
- powerful and famous of other lands--for example, the
- celebrated American aviator Charles Lindbergh--to his
- refurbished capital. And despite the fuss over a black American,
- Jesse Owens, winning four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin
- Olympics, the team that scored the most points overall was Nazi
- Germany's.
- </p>
- <p> It was inevitable that an economically reviving Germany
- would increase its pressure for major revisions in the
- Versailles Treaty. When the new President Roosevelt proposed the
- abolition of all major offensive weapons, Hitler was quick to
- agree--easy enough since Germany had been forbidden to possess
- such weapons. "Germany would also be perfectly ready to disband
- her entire military establishment...if the neighboring
- countries will do the same," Hitler declared. That "if" was the
- shield behind which he planned to rearm. When Britain and France
- declined, Hitler indignantly announced that Germany was leaving
- the Geneva disarmament talks and the League of Nations.
- </p>
- <p> In secret, Hitler had already told his generals that he
- wanted to triple the German army from the Versailles ceiling of
- 100,000 men to 300,000 by October 1934. The navy, which was not
- supposed to have any ships of more than 10,000 tons, got orders
- to start building two 26,000-ton battle cruisers. In the spring
- of 1935, Hitler announced that he was reintroducing universal
- military service to create an army of 500,000 men. The Allies
- protested but did nothing.
- </p>
- <p> At dawn on March 7, 1936, Hitler made the first bold use of
- his growing Wehrmacht. Though his generals had warned him that
- the French would resist and that Germany was still too weak to
- fight, Hitler sent three battalions across the Rhine to occupy
- the supposedly demilitarized Rhineland. "We have no territorial
- demands to make in Europe," he proclaimed. "Germany will never
- break the peace!" It was all bluff. "If the French had then
- marched into the Rhineland, we would have had to withdraw with
- our tails between our legs," Hitler later said. "A retreat on
- our part would have spelled collapse."
- </p>
- <p> There were several reasons for this Western irresolution.
- The memories of the war ran deep, and nobody was eager for more
- bloodshed. Both Britain and France were concerned with their
- own serious economic troubles. But particularly in Britain,
- there was a widespread view that Versailles had indeed been
- unfair, that the Germans had a strong case. George Bernard Shaw,
- for example, spoke of Hitler's "triumphant rescue of his country
- from the yoke the Allies imposed."
- </p>
- <p> With hindsight it is clear that the Allies should and
- easily could have stopped Hitler by force, and their failure has
- long been condemned as "appeasement." But to the leaders of
- Britain and France, appeasement was a proudly proclaimed policy,
- meaning simply negotiating rather than fighting. "Appeasement
- between the wars was always a self-confident creed," Churchill
- biographer Martin Gilbert wrote in The Roots of Appeasement. "It
- was both utopian and practical. Its aim was peace for all time,
- or at least for as long as wise men could devise it."
- </p>
- <p> Unlike the Allied leaders, though, Hitler was fully
- prepared to back up his policies by force, even if only
- obliquely or by proxy. When General Francisco Franco launched
- a military revolt against the Republican government of Spain in
- 1936, Hitler saw a chance not only to acquire a new ally but
- also to discomfit the neighboring French. He sent bombers, tanks
- and "volunteers." Goring used Spain as a training ground for "my
- young Luftwaffe." Its most notorious action, one that other
- nations would soon experience, was the aerial destruction of the
- Basque town of Guernica.
- </p>
- <p> The Allied leaders also did not understand that Hitler
- repeatedly lied about his plans and intentions. In a speech
- justifying rearmament in 1935, he declared, "Germany neither
- intends nor wishes to interfere in the internal affairs of
- Austria, to annex Austria or to conclude an Anschluss
- (unification)." He even signed a treaty with Austria in 1936
- promising not to interfere in its internal affairs. But he was
- an Austrian, after all, and the idea of uniting the two Germanic
- nations can never have been far from his mind. By 1937, when he
- called in his generals and told them to prepare for war, he
- said, "Our first objective...must be to overthrow
- Czechoslovakia and Austria."
- </p>
- <p> He had actually made an abortive attempt to seize Austria
- in 1934, when some 150 SS men dressed in Austrian army uniforms
- burst into the Chancellery in Vienna and shot down Conservative
- Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss. That was supposed to be the
- start of a Nazi coup, but Justice Minister Kurt von Schuschnigg
- rallied the police and had the assassins arrested. Italy, which
- had guaranteed Austrian independence, mobilized four divisions
- on the frontier. Hitler backed down. By 1938, however, he had
- built a threatening army and had won the support of Italy's
- Mussolini (they had signed a secret protocol in 1936 creating
- what Mussolini called the Rome-Berlin axis). It was time to try
- again.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler's strategy was a classic example of what came to be
- known as a war of nerves. All through 1937, Austrian Nazis,
- armed and financed from Germany, staged demonstrations, street
- fights, midnight bombings. Schuschnigg, now Chancellor, banned
- the party and kept arresting its agents. In February 1938 Hitler
- invited the Austrian leader to his Alpine retreat in
- Berchtesgaden. There he stormed at his visitor, declaring that
- the Austrian problem must be solved or his army would demand its
- "just revenge." When Schuschnigg asked what it was that Hitler
- wanted, he was handed a typed "agreement" and told that no
- changes would be allowed. It called for all arrested Nazis to
- be amnestied, the ban on the party to be lifted, Nazis to be
- appointed to head the Police and War ministries and an economic
- merger of the two nations. When Schuschnigg balked, Hitler
- shouted, "Fulfill my demands within three days, or I will order
- the march into Austria!"
- </p>
- <p> Schuschnigg surrendered and returned home. But President
- Wilhelm Miklas, who had not experienced Hitler's persuasion,
- refused to accept the deal. When Hitler heard that, he ordered
- the Wehrmacht to mobilize, as publicly as possible. Schuschnigg
- tried to defend his regime by announcing a plebiscite in four
- days, on March 13, to decide whether Austrians wanted "a free,
- independent, social, Christian and united Austria." Hitler,
- apoplectic, ordered the Wehrmacht to invade Austria on March 12
- unless Schuschnigg called off the plebiscite. Once again
- Schuschnigg surrendered, but Hitler kept increasing his demands.
- Now he insisted that Schuschnigg resign and be replaced by Nazi
- leader Arthur Seyss-Inquart. Schuschnigg again surrendered, and
- resigned, but President Miklas refused to name Seyss-Inquart.
- </p>
- <p> By now Nazi mobs had encircled the Chancellery, shrieking
- "Sieg Heil! Heil Hitler!" On the telephone from Berlin, Goring
- dictated a telegram to Seyss-Inquart in which "the provisional
- Austrian government" asked Germany to send troops to restore
- order. On March 12 the Wehrmacht came streaming across the
- border--not only unopposed but warmly welcomed by thousands
- of Austrians who genuinely wanted union with Germany. Next day,
- Seyss-Inquart issued a decree that announced, "Austria is a
- province of the German Reich." Hitler returned in triumph to the
- Vienna where he had once lived as a virtual derelict. Papen
- described him as being "in a state of ecstasy."
- </p>
- <p> Britain and France again protested but did nothing, so
- Hitler's aggressiveness had conquered a whole country without
- a shot being fired. And with that conquest came severe
- repression. When Hitler went to Vienna, Heinrich Himmler's
- police began to arrest 79,000 "unreliables." Schuschnigg was
- kept in a single room at police headquarters and assigned to
- cleaning toilets for 17 months, then shipped to Dachau. Jews
- were rounded up and made to get on their hands and knees and
- scrub away Schuschnigg campaign slogans.
- </p>
- <p> In Germany too the treatment of Jews kept getting worse.
- The Nuremberg racial laws of 1935 deprived them of German
- citizenship and forbade them to marry or have sexual relations
- with "Aryans." In 1938 they were barred from practicing law or
- medicine or engaging in commerce. Along with such laws came all
- forms of discrimination--signs barring them from grocery
- stores or drugstores or even whole towns--and the constant
- threat of violence from any bad-tempered policeman, any unruly
- crowd.
- </p>
- <p> In November 1938, after a Jewish student assassinated the
- Third Secretary at the German embassy in Paris, the Nazis staged
- a nationwide pogrom, burning Jewish homes and synagogues and
- smashing so many windows that the rampage became known as
- Kristallnacht (death toll: 91). Yet again the Western Allies
- protested but did nothing. London maintained its strict limits
- on Jews' going to British-ruled Palestine, and the U.S. resisted
- any increase in its immigration quotas.
- </p>
- <p> Each triumph filled Hitler with ever greater confidence in
- his invincibility, in his political instincts and in the
- irresolution of his antagonists. Having easily conquered
- Austria, he decided in the spring of 1938 to attack
- Czechoslovakia. Like Poland, Czechoslovakia had been carved out
- of the Habsburg Empire by the mapmakers at Versailles, and its
- boundaries included an awkward mixture of roughly 6.5 million
- Czechs, 3.3 million Germans, 2.5 million Slovaks and about
- 800,000 Hungarians and Poles. Unlike Poland, it was a genuine
- democracy with a large and well-equipped army; it also had
- signed a treaty that pledged France to defend it against any
- attack.
- </p>
- <p> As in Austria, Hitler's war of nerves began with a wave of
- terrorist bombings and street riots. Berlin sponsored this
- violence with payments to Konrad Henlein, leader of
- Czechoslovakia's Sudeten German Party. It also gave him his
- instructions, which Henlein himself once summed up: "We must
- always demand so much from the Czechs that we can never be
- satisfied." When Czech President Eduard Bene first asked Henlein
- what he wanted, the list included political autonomy, payment
- of damages, separate citizenship for Sudeten Germans and freedom
- to practice "the ideology of Germans." Bene refused.
- </p>
- <p> Rumors, possibly false, suddenly spread in May 1938 that
- German troops were concentrating on the Czech frontier. Bene
- ordered a partial mobilization, the British expressed "grave
- concern," and the French warned Berlin that they were ready to
- fight. One of Hitler's top generals thereupon announced that it
- had all been a mistake, that there had been no German troop
- movements. By appearing to stand firm for the first time, the
- Allies seemed to have made Hitler back down. But this apparent
- victory had two important results: the Allies were appalled at
- how near to war they had come, and Hitler determined on revenge.
- He told his generals, "It is my unalterable decision to smash
- Czechoslovakia by military action in the near future." He even
- set a date: Oct. 1.
- </p>
- <p> Hitler's antagonists had changed over the years, and now
- the important newcomer on the international scene was Neville
- Chamberlain, who had replaced Stanley Baldwin as Conservative
- Prime Minister of Britain in the spring of 1937. Chamberlain's
- background was in business; he believed in orderly negotiations.
- He had no experience in dealing with an unscrupulous improviser
- like Hitler, but he nonetheless invited himself to a meeting
- with the Fuhrer. Hitler received him in Berchtesgaden, and soon
- began ranting about the Czechs. He said he would not "tolerate
- any longer that a small, second-rate country should treat the
- mighty thousand-year-old German Reich as something inferior."
- Shocked, Chamberlain threatened to leave. Hitler, who had never
- previously asked to take over part of Czechoslovakia, now
- claimed that he wanted "the principle...of self-
- determination."
- </p>
- <p> Chamberlain said he would have to consult with his
- associates, which amounted to seeing whether either the British
- or the French were ready to fight for Czechoslovakia. They were
- not. Chamberlain then had to persuade Bene to give Germany every
- area inhabited more than 50% by Germans. That would mean the
- surrender of the entire Sudetenland, which represented not only
- one-fifth of Czechoslovakia's territory but also its industrial
- heartland and its defensible natural frontier. Bene at first
- refused, but when the British and French told him that he would
- have to fight alone, he gave in.
- </p>
- <p> The next day Chamberlain returned to Germany to tell Hitler
- he could have everything he asked. "Do I understand," asked the
- Fuhrer, "that the British, French and Czech governments have
- agreed to the transfer of the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia
- to Germany?"
- </p>
- <p> "Yes," said Chamberlain.
- </p>
- <p> "I am terribly sorry," said Hitler, "but that no longer
- suits me." The German leader seemed determined to humiliate the
- Czechs and expose the weakness of the British and French. He no
- longer wanted a plebiscite. The Czechs would simply have to hand
- over the Sudetenland by Oct. 1, or the Germans would invade. Now
- Chamberlain was angry. Returning to London, he found that the
- French were reluctantly ready to meet a German invasion with
- force, a decision in which he unhappily concurred. In London
- people began digging trenches to provide shelter from the
- expected air raids. "How horrible, fantastic, incredible it is,"
- Chamberlain said in a radio speech to the nation, "that we
- should be digging trenches...here because of a quarrel in
- a faraway country between people of whom we know nothing."
- </p>
- <p> Having reached the brink of war, the warriors hesitated.
- Chamberlain sent a message to Mussolini suggesting a meeting
- with Hitler and French Premier Daladier. Hitler agreed.
- Chamberlain was in the midst of addressing Parliament when he
- received Hitler's invitation to Munich the following day; he
- almost gasped with relief as he announced his acceptance. The
- Czechs were not even invited, so it took only twelve hours for
- the four leaders to agree on Sept. 30 on the dismemberment of
- Czechoslovakia. And they were pleased with what they had done.
- When Chamberlain returned to London, he proudly uttered his most
- famous and most tragically mistaken declaration: "I believe it
- is peace for our time." The crowds outside 10 Downing Street
- sang, "For he's a jolly good fellow."
- </p>
- <p> Having won everything, Hitler still could not be satisfied.
- The following spring, deciding that he now wanted more than
- just the Sudetenland, he held a conference with Czech President
- Emil Hacha in Berlin (Bene had resigned and gone into exile
- after Munich). Hacha was 66 and suffering from heart trouble,
- so it did not help to have the meeting begin at 1:15 a.m. on
- March 15, 1939. Hitler told his guest that the Czechs were still
- guilty of "Bene tendencies," and therefore the Wehrmacht would
- invade Czechoslovakia at 6 that morning. The only question was
- whether the Czechs would resist and be "ruthlessly broken" or
- cooperate and gain a certain "autonomy." Hacha and his Foreign
- Minister "sat as though turned to stone," said a German witness.
- "Only their eyes showed that they were alive."
- </p>
- <p> The Czechs then withdrew to another room to decide their
- course. The documents had already been laid out for them to
- sign, and Goring and Ribbentrop pursued them around the table,
- pushing documents and pens at them. Hacha fainted dead away.
- Hitler's personal doctor came and gave him an injection, and
- just before 4 a.m. he recovered sufficiently to sign away his
- country. The western provinces of Bohemia and Moravia became a
- German "protectorate"; Slovakia was granted a shadowy
- "independence."
- </p>
- <p> There were the usual protests, with the usual results, but
- Hitler's seizure of Bohemia and Moravia had two important
- consequences. First, Chamberlain finally realized that
- appeasement would not suffice to restrain Hitler. So when Hitler
- began talking to the Poles in that same month about the Germans'
- need to regain the port of Danzig, plus free passage through the
- Polish Corridor, Chamberlain offered the Poles an unsolicited
- guarantee of British military support. It was that guarantee
- that Hitler flouted the following September.
- </p>
- <p> The second important consequence was convincing Stalin that
- the Western powers would never resist Hitler's increasingly
- aggressive expansion eastward. Stalin had several times
- proposed a treaty with the Western powers to check Hitler's
- ambitions, but he had been ignored. With the treachery
- characteristic of him--he had purged dozens of his top army
- officers on false charges of conspiring with the Germans to
- overthrow him--he began exploring the possibility of signing
- an alliance with those same Germans. To Hitler, who had been
- ranting about "the struggle against Bolshevism" for nearly 20
- years, it seemed like an offer he couldn't refuse.
- </p>
- <p> If the German conflicts with France ran back for centuries,
- so did those with the Poles, conflicts tinged with contempt.
- Long before Hitler, General Hans von Seeckt, the haughty army
- commander during the Weimar Republic, had said of the frontiers
- established by Versailles, "Poland's existence is intolerable,
- incompatible with the essential conditions of Germany's life.
- Poland must go and will go." That was the mission that Hitler
- now vowed to carry out.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-