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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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1930
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(1930s) On To War
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1930s Highlights
</history>
<link 05281>
<link 07828>
<link 07830>
<link 00059><link 00060><link 00061><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
On to War
</hdr>
<body>
<p>(April 17, 1939)
</p>
<p> Step by step, like a long-harried elephant finally facing an
enemy, Britain last week turned in her tracks. It was an
impressive and world-shaking spectacle. Hard as it was for
Britain to change, in one short week she turned her back on a
long established policy of nonmilitary commitments in Europe
east of the Rhine--turned, whole-elephant, and guaranteed that
the British Fleet, along with the French Army (and the combined
Air Forces of the two nations) would fight to protect the States
of Eastern Europe from further Nazi aggression.
</p>
<p> For Britain the step marked the end of a six years' effort,
to get along with Adolf Hitler. Time after time Fuhrer Hitler
has torn up treaties, ignored agreements, threatened neighboring
States with invasion. As many times Britain has looked the other
way. When, three weeks ago, the Fuhrer moved into a
Czechoslovakia which he had already dismembered last autumn,
even the most credulous of British statesmen were shocked. They
recognized then that Herr Hitler had embarked on a policy of
conquest aimed at nothing less than domination of Europe, if not
the world. Last week they reacted.
</p>
<p> Flush from the Czech seizure, the Fuhrer began to threaten
Poland. The German Army was already partly mobilized. Troops
were moved toward the Polish Corridor and toward Danzig, the
Free City on the Baltic, where Poland has large interests and
investments. East Prussia had become an armed camp. Finally the
Nazi Government submitted its demands: German absorption of
Danzig, a German auto road across the Polish Corridor, a Polish
signature on the German-Italian-Japanese anti-Comintern Pact.
</p>
<p> Last week Poland got what Czechoslovakia had pleaded for in
vain. Before a hushed, crowded House of Commons 70-year-old
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, former arch-exponent of
appeasing the dictators, announced that the British Government
was prepared to consider the Vistula, the river the flows
through the Polish Corridor, just as much it frontier as it has
long considered the Rhine. He added:
</p>
<p> "In the event of any action which clearly threatened Polish
independence and which the Polish Government accordingly
considered it vital to resist with their national forces. His
Majesty's Government would feel themselves bound at once to lend
all the support in their power. They have given the Polish
Government an assurance to this effect."
</p>
<p> [The only trouble with the loosely worded British pledge was
that Britain had no control over its invocation, and once
invoked, there was almost nothing Britain could do to aid Poland
except to go to war and defeat Hitler. Meanwhile, Germany seized
Memel in Lithuania, and Italy occupied tiny Albania.
</p>
<p> Omens of aggression to come were the sacking of Stalin's
longtime Foreign Affairs Commissar, Maxim Litvinov, who was
Jewish, and his replacement by Vyacheslav Molotov. Three weeks
later, a "pact of steel" was concluded between Soviet Russia and
fascist Italy.
</p>
<p> The summer of impending crisis wore on. Britain and France
began to look to the Soviet Union as a potential ally in
stopping Hitler. A military mission went to Moscow to scout out
the possibilities for anti-Axis cooperation. But in late August
they found to their shocked horror that Stalin had made an end
run around them and concluded a non-aggression pact with
Germany. War followed within days.]
</p>
<p>(August 28, 1939)
</p>
<p> Late Sunday night--not the usual time for such announcements--the Soviet Government revealed a pact, not with Great
Britain, not with France, but with Germany. And at Monday
midnight the official German news agency announced from Berlin:
</p>
<p> "The Government of the Reich and the Soviet Government have
decided to conclude a non-aggression pact with each other. The
Reichminister of Foreign Affairs, von Ribbentrop, will arrive
in Moscow Wednesday to conclude the negotiations."
</p>
<p> To the bewilderment of almost everybody else in the world, and
the consternation of the non-totalitarian four-fifths of it,
the announcement was confirmed in Moscow next morning. Russia
had got into a peace pact, but not with the nations she had been
doing the public dickering with.
</p>
<p> A nightmare which the European democracies and their
satellites only whispered about was the alliance of great
Communist Russia with great Fascist Germany, a mighty cordon of
non-democracy stretching one-third around the world from the
Atlantic to the Pacific. There was no comfort in the hindseen
reasons which made this Red & Black team if not inevitable, at
least understandable:
</p>
<p> 1) Russia wanted as much peace as she could get, even at the
expense of pulling her punches in Spain from 1938 on. If she
joined the Allies, it might work out that she had merely
balanced the European war scales, joining Germany tipped them,
she could hope, to an imbalance the lighter side would not dare
to challenge.
</p>
<p> 2) Russia, while suspicious of Germany, was suspicious of the
democracies. Joseph Stalin having served notice in March that
he did not propose to be pitted against Germany by the Allies,
only so that both countries might be knocked out after each had
knocked the other groggy.
</p>
<p> 3) Russia's rulers still smarted at being uninvited to Munich,
where, according to high diplomatic humor, the democracy looked
the totalitarians knowingly in the eyes and nodded in the
direction of the Ukraine.
</p>
<p> 4) Russia, and her raw materials, and Germany, and her
industries, make an economic combination.
</p>
<p>(September 11, 1939)
</p>
<p> World War II began last week at 5:20 a.m. (Polish time)
Friday, September 1, when a German bombing plane dropped a
projectile on Puck, fishing village and air base in the armpit
of the Hel Peninsula. At 5:45 a.m. the German training ship
Schleswig-Holstein lying off Danzig fired what was believed to
be the first shell: a direct hit on the Polish underground
ammunition dump at Westerplatte. It was a grey day, with gentle
rain.
</p>
<p> In the War's first five days, hundreds of Nazi bombing planes
dumped ton after ton of explosive on every city of any
importance the length & breadth of Poland. They aimed at air
bases, fortifications, bridges, railroad lines and stations, but
in the process they killed upward of 1,500 noncombatants.
</p>
<p> Recapture of what was Germany in 1914 was the first
objective: Danzig, the Corridor, and a hump of Upper Silesia.
It is believed that Adolf Hitler, if allowed to take and keep
this much, might have checked his juggernaut at these lines for
the time being. When Britain & France insisted that he withdraw
entirely from Polish soil or consider himself at war with them,
he determined on the complete shattering and subjugation of
Poland.
</p>
<p>(September 18, 1939)
</p>
<p> This week, after only eleven days of fighting, it was a grave
question whether Poland was not already crushed. Perhaps
Marshall Smigly-Rydz was to blame, for having his generals
resist too long; perhaps the speed and power of the German
advance surpassed even German calculations, perhaps the weather
made the difference, staying dry and leaving the roads passable
for motorized advance: perhaps the German air-power exceeded all
expectations, breaking Poland's wings before they left the
ground, smashing defensive positions before they could be
organized. Certainly all these factors combined to make half
Poland a shambles and her stand at Warsaw a desperate siege, as
ghastly as Madrid.
</p>
<p> Stefan Starzynski, mayor of Warsaw, was a demon in its
defense. He rallied civilians to help the soldiery, exhorted
Poland's women to fight beside their men, took to the radio to
order the city's life. "Go to the slaughter house," he said,
"for pigs have arrived. Help the butchers there. Go to the post
office and pick up your mail yourselves. The banks are open, so
do your banking. All stores must be kept open."
</p>
<p> Such details as these sounded ludicrous amid the lethal
pandemonium in which the city was living. Flights of Nazi
bombers passed over the city every hour and oftener. Sometimes
there was as many as 70 of them at once. They dropped 800-lb.
demolition charges. Bridges, public building, Lazienki Gardens
erupted debris.
</p>
<p>(September 25, 1939)
</p>
<p> Eleven stirring, martial notes, the opening phrase of one of
Composer Frederic Francois Chopin's Polonaises, sounded every
30 seconds from the Warsaw radio station all last week to let
the world know that Poland's capital was still Polish. Hour
after hour, day after day, the notes came like hope rising from
an inferno. For the world also knew what other sounds filled
Warsaw--the bellow of bombing planes in power dives, the
scream of fighting planes on the attack, the sharp whanging of
anti-aircraft guns, the mighty thump, boom and roar of half-ton
bombs plowing up the city's remaining defenses. To the North,
the continuous thunder of artillery made a background for the
nearer hammering of defense guns on the East, hurling shells
over the rooftops toward the German positions in the western
suburbs.
</p>
<p> After the bomb explosions came screams of the dying.
Hospitals were full; wounded had to be dragged into what was
left of private houses. The city was crumbling, but still Warsaw
fought on, both sexes and all ages behind the barricades. Mayor
Straczynski went down into the streets, picked up a shovel and
dug trenches. When German tanks blasted their way into the
suburbs, the defense hurled bottles of gasoline against them,
trying to set them afire. Still the Polonaise sounded over the
radio.
</p>
<p> The battlefront disappeared, and with it the illusion that
there had ever been a battlefront. For this was no war of
occupation, but a war of quick penetration and obliteration--Blitzkrieg, lightning war. Swift columns of tanks and armored
trucks had plunged through Poland while bombs raining from the
sky heralded their coming. They had sawed off communications,
destroyed stores, scattered civilians, spread terror. Working
sometimes 30 miles ahead of infantry and artillery, they had
broken down the Polish defenses before they had time to
organize. Then, while the infantry mopped up, they had moved on,
to strike again far behind what had been called the front. By
week's end it mattered very little whether Warsaw stood or fell.
The Republic of Poland, aged 20, was lost.
</p>
<p> A German officer entered Warsaw under a flag of truce,
delivered an ultimatum that the city must surrender in 24 hours
or siege guns would be moved up. General Czuma refused to
receive the message. Nazi airplanes then dropped leaflets
repeating the ultimatum. General Czuma agreed to parley on
evacuating all civilians and the Nazi high command ordered his
spokesmen to come out of the city in a car at night, with truce
flags specially spotlighted. All firing must cease.
</p>
<p> Shortly after that news, the Polonaise was heard no more from
Warsaw. A curtain of German propaganda fell.
</p>
<p> [On the Western Front between Germany and France, there was
little action, giving rise to the illusion of "phony war." In
the East, however, Stalin took advantage of his new alliance to
launch his own conquests.]
</p>
<p>(December 11, 1939)
</p>
<p> Russia, Germany's silent and equivocal partner, having made
a jackal's feast off conquered Poland, and having taken
advantage of the western conflict to subject the tree smaller
Baltic countries, ran into armed resistance when she tried the
same move on Finland.
</p>
<p> Unlike their occupation of Poland, where they marched in upon
the rear of an already demoralized foe, this attack was upon a
well-prepared, straight-shooting, determined people facing
front. It was at least 2,000,000 trained men and 5,000 airplanes
against 200,000 trained men and 150 airplanes, but the
tough-fibred Finns provided a test for the Red war machine which
the rest of the world watched intently. From the outset it was
apparent that the Reds could not match the Nazis at Blitzkrieg.
</p>
<p>(December 18, 1939)
</p>
<p> Nastiness was in store for the Russians--especially in the
Karelian Isthmus, historic gateway into Finland and the one
Alexander I stormed with 17,000 men in 1808. Not only were
roads, bridges and buildings mined--even a new bicycle left
leaning against a fence was a detonator--but the Finns had
utilized the geographical peculiarities of their country
shrewdly.
</p>
<p> Lowlands had been flooded, augmenting the chain of lakes
across the isthmus and leaving only narrow strips of land
between the lakes as passageway for invaders. This land, wooded
and boulder-studded, was a natural anti-tank defense, to which
the Finns had added long lines of jagged, diamond-shaped
boulders, three deep, as their main lines of defense against
tanks. Above the narrow roads other huge boulders had been
poised, so that the mere cutting of a cord sent them hurtling
into the road. Concrete pillboxes, sunk into the earth and
covered with sod, guarded all main avenues of passage. In the
thick fir forests hid the Finns themselves, trained since
childhood to use their knives as cleverly as an Alabama Negro
uses his razor, and since joining the Army to aim their machine
guns as accurately as a sharpshooter aims his rifle. Finally;
there was the snowstorm. </p>
</body>
</article>
</text>