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<text id=89TT2224>
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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.
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