What was Hitler's ultimate goal in launching in WWII?
Adolf Hitler - Dictator of Germany
Hitler’s ultimate goal in WW2 was to have world domination and only have one race. Hitler rise to power was interesting and if things didn’t happen then most of this devastating stuff wouldn’t have happened. “Germany’s war strategy was assumed by Hitler from the first. When the successful campaign against Poland failed to produce the desired peace accord with Britain, he ordered the army to prepare for an immediate offensive in the west. Bad weather made some of his reluctant generals postpone the western offensive. This in turn led to two major changes in planning. The first was Hitler’s order to forestall an eventual British presence in Norway by occupying that country and Denmark in April 1940. Hitler took a close personal interest in this daring operation.” German was the first country Hitler would go after Poland. Since, Hitler was successful in his plans in Poland but now with British… He decided immediately that he was on the offense with the western hemisphere. But, lucky was there for Great Britain because of constant bad weather. So, this led to two huge major changes in plans that were made originally. Hitler made it his own personal goal for the extreme plan. “Hitler hoped that the British would negotiate an armistice. When this did not happen, he proceeded to plan the invasion of Britain, together with the elimination of British air power. At the same time preparations were begun for the invasion of the Soviet Union, which in Hitler’s view was Britain’s last hope for a bulwark against German control of the continent.” Hitler was hoping his plan to invade Great Britain would go as planned. Because, in his plan of his invasion for Great Britain he wants to eliminate their air power. Also, during around the same time was his planning for the invasion in the Soviet Union. This plan to invade Britian and Germany was his last try to control that whole continent. “Hitler’s success was due to the susceptibility of postwar Germany to his unique talents as a national leader. His rise to power was not inevitable; yet there was no one who equalled his ability to exploit and shape events to his own ends. The power that he wielded was unprecedented, both in its scope and in the technical resources at its command. His ideas and purposes were accepted in whole or in part by millions of people, especially in Germany but also elsewhere.” The only reason for Hitler’s success was that he was a leader during the postwar in Germany. So, him being in the postwar gave him natural leader talents and techniques. His rise to power was indeed imminent and no leader, leader, or emperor could ever have the ability to get their way like he did. The power he had was truly scary and unstoppable and which made it easier for him to brainwash people. That’s why millions of people were so influenced by him and accepted/believed in his ideas in Germany of course.
Author: Wilfred F. Knapp
Contact Info: Their are various numbers, emails, and addresses in different countries
Date: Nov.9. 2014
Contact Info: Their are various numbers, emails, and addresses in different countries
Date: Nov.9. 2014
How did World War 2 start, 75 years ago today?
Date: 3 Sep 2014
Contact Info: Phone Number & Email @ Bottom of Page
Author:Dennis Publishing
Contact Info: Phone Number & Email @ Bottom of Page
Author:Dennis Publishing
To avoid being arrested for evading military service in Austria-Hungary, Adolf Hitler left Vienna for Munich in May 1913 but was forced to return–then he failed the physical. He volunteered for the Bavarian army the following year and served during all of World War I on the Western Front. His experiences in the fighting affected his thinking about war thereafter. "Last year, Germany marked the 80th anniversary of Adolf Hitler's appointment as chancellor. Angela Merkel presided over the opening of an exhibition in the former SS headquarters in Berlin that charted Hitler's rise to power. Hitler's emergence had been made possible, Merkel conceded, because "the majority had, at the very best, behaved with indifference. Hitler denounced the Treaty of Versailles, mounting furious attacks on the unfair terms of the settlement. The treaty incensed Germans, but it had not managed to contain Germany's potential, and by the mid-1930s the country was surrounded by weak, divided states. "This offered a golden opportunity for Germany to make a second bid for European domination," the BBC says."
The Impact of WW2 That Hitler and Stalin
Author: Christopher Woolf
Date: August 21, 2014
Contact Info: On Contact link you can make an account to login & ask question
Date: August 21, 2014
Contact Info: On Contact link you can make an account to login & ask question
In the summer of 1941, Germany and a number of other European Axis powers launched a surprise attack on the Soviet Union. Hitler realized that for this attack to succeed, Germany would require substantial contributions in terms of troops, rights of passage, and raw materials. He therefore exerted considerable pressure on Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia, who were offered economic aid in return. In addition, Romania was offered a portion of the Russian territory that would be occupied by Germany. "But the Nazi-Soviet pact didn't last. In late 1939, the Soviets also tried to invade Finland. The Finns refused to roll over. Despite being tremendously outnumbered and outgunned, they improvised a defense and made the best of the terrain and the ferocious winter weather.The Germans were astonished at how badly the Soviets performed in the Winter War, a performance that made them believe they could turn on Stalin before finishing off the stubborn Brits in the west. In June 1941, Hitler attacked. Moorhouse and other historians say that Stalin was stunned by the invasion and refused to accept that the news was true, leading to disastrous losses by the Red Army in the early days of the war."