00:00:00
hello and thank you for checking out
00:00:03
this audio revision guide from WWE mr.
00:00:08
Alsup history comm you can visit my
00:00:12
website to download free history
00:00:14
revision podcasts on this topic and a
00:00:17
whole load of others in this podcast
00:00:20
we're going to focus on the road to war
00:00:23
the origins of world war ii as we've
00:00:28
seen from the challenges to the League
00:00:30
of Nations in the 1930s international
00:00:32
tension was increasing massively and by
00:00:35
1939 this would develop into all-out war
00:00:39
this podcast is designed to consider the
00:00:42
key reasons for the breakout of world
00:00:44
war ii by discussing the different
00:00:46
impacts of hitler's aims and actions the
00:00:49
policy of appeasement the problems
00:00:52
caused by the peace treaties the
00:00:54
nazi-soviet pact and the failures of the
00:00:57
League of Nations with the wall street
00:01:00
crash in its ensuing world depression
00:01:02
from 1929 the Nazi Party was back on the
00:01:05
scene in Germany in 1933 they took
00:01:09
control of the Reichstag the German
00:01:10
parliament and Hitler quickly secured
00:01:12
complete control of the governmental
00:01:14
system and began working towards three
00:01:17
key aims he had made it clear in both
00:01:20
his election speeches and in his
00:01:22
autobiography mine camp that he believed
00:01:25
the Treaty of Versailles was unjust and
00:01:27
that he aimed to overturn its
00:01:28
limitations although by 1933 Germany had
00:01:32
stopped making reparation payments many
00:01:34
of the treaties terms were still in
00:01:36
place the second aim of Hitler was to
00:01:40
expand German territory uniting with
00:01:42
Austria was just one part of his plan
00:01:44
which clearly was a direct challenge to
00:01:46
the demands of the Treaty of Versailles
00:01:48
but it was also the embodiment of
00:01:50
Hitler's plan to extend German land into
00:01:52
Eastern Europe for Lebensraum or living
00:01:55
space for the German people Hillier was
00:01:58
also ardently anti-communist and wanted
00:02:01
to remove the threat of communism to
00:02:02
Germany in mine camp he clearly stated
00:02:05
how the first essential is the expulsion
00:02:08
of the marxist poison from the body of
00:02:11
our nation therefore it is possible to
00:02:13
map the event
00:02:14
leading to world war two against
00:02:16
Hitler's three broad aims for Germany
00:02:18
the abolition of the Treaty of
00:02:20
Versailles the expansion of German
00:02:22
territory and the defeat of communism
00:02:26
hilah's first action after becoming
00:02:28
Chancellor of Germany in 1933 was to
00:02:31
begin rebuilding the German armed forces
00:02:34
he prepared his military commanders for
00:02:36
an increase to three hundred thousand
00:02:38
men in the army from the one hundred
00:02:40
thousand permitted by the Treaty of
00:02:41
Versailles he ignored the treaties
00:02:43
demands for now air force and prepared
00:02:46
to build a thousand warplanes all this
00:02:49
took place in secret at first as at the
00:02:51
same time he was arguing at the Geneva
00:02:53
disarmament conference that the French
00:02:55
should disarm to the level of the
00:02:56
Germans or that the Germans should rearm
00:02:58
to the level of the French when the
00:03:01
French unsurprisingly refused he
00:03:03
withdrew from the conference but was
00:03:05
seen by the world's I as a politician
00:03:07
who had tried hard not to rearm Germany
00:03:10
in fact when he openly showed the growth
00:03:12
of his armed forces at a military rally
00:03:14
in 1935 the rest of the world did little
00:03:18
to stop Hitler's clear breaking of the
00:03:20
terms of the Treaty of Versailles
00:03:21
Britain France and Italy formed the
00:03:24
stresser front which issued a polity
00:03:26
against Hitler's rearmament but in real
00:03:28
terms did nothing to stop him in fact
00:03:31
countries such as Britain were beginning
00:03:33
to believe that the treaty had been too
00:03:34
harsh on Germany in the first place and
00:03:36
that Germany should be allowed more
00:03:38
troops to improve its chances of
00:03:40
defending itself against attack
00:03:42
particularly as it was in the perfect
00:03:45
geographical position to act as a buffer
00:03:47
against communism of which Britain was
00:03:49
also scared but that wasn't all that
00:03:53
Britain did in fact Britain could be
00:03:56
seen to have begun its policy of
00:03:57
appeasement in 1935 when it signed the
00:04:00
anglo-german naval agreement which
00:04:02
allowed Germany to increase its Navy to
00:04:04
around a third of the size of Britain's
00:04:06
a massive challenge to the Treaty of
00:04:08
Versailles Hitler had begun to push
00:04:11
Britain and Britain gave way allowing
00:04:14
Hitler to get away with this blatant
00:04:16
disregard for the agreement at
00:04:18
Versailles surely Hitler must have
00:04:20
thought if you could get away with
00:04:22
rebuilding his armed forces to such an
00:04:24
extent you will be able to challenge
00:04:26
other terms of the treaty
00:04:28
well yes and he did just that the
00:04:31
rhineland had remain part of Germany
00:04:33
after the treaty but was made into a
00:04:35
demilitarized zone although the Locarno
00:04:38
treaties signed by Germany in 1925
00:04:40
accepted that the Rhineland needed to
00:04:42
remain demilitarized many Germans felt
00:04:45
angered and weakened by the fact that
00:04:47
they had an area of their country that
00:04:49
they couldn't defend and one that was
00:04:51
right on the border with France so in
00:04:54
May 1936 while the world's attention was
00:04:58
turned to Mussolini and the Italian
00:05:00
conquest of Abyssinia Hitler ordered his
00:05:03
troops to move back into the Rhineland
00:05:04
and thus break one of the key terms of
00:05:07
Versailles it was an enormous gamble
00:05:10
despite the growth of the military
00:05:12
thanks to the rearmament program Germany
00:05:14
would never had been able to defend
00:05:16
itself if another nation tried to stop
00:05:18
the remilitarization and Hitler himself
00:05:20
would have been humiliated both at home
00:05:23
and abroad
00:05:24
however he'd watched the Manchuria
00:05:27
crisis unfold and noted that the League
00:05:29
of Nations had not acted against Japan
00:05:31
despite clearly having the ability to do
00:05:34
so the league was proving to be just as
00:05:37
ineffective against Italy in Abyssinia
00:05:40
Britain Hitler was convinced would not
00:05:42
intervene as it generally believed it to
00:05:44
be reasonable for Germany to have
00:05:46
military control over her own backyard
00:05:49
France despite being worried about the
00:05:52
move was approaching an election and no
00:05:54
politician there was prepared to
00:05:56
potentially plunge France into another
00:05:58
war against Germany in the end nothing
00:06:02
happened yet again Hitler had
00:06:04
successfully defied the terms of the
00:06:06
Treaty of Versailles and got away with
00:06:09
it it's possible to argue that if
00:06:12
Versailles had not been perceived as
00:06:14
harsh in the 1930s by countries such as
00:06:16
Britain Hitler would have struggled to
00:06:19
oppose it indeed the fact that he did
00:06:21
oppose it yet nobody was willing to
00:06:23
defend the terms of the treaty proved to
00:06:25
Hitler that he was justified in his
00:06:28
actions of denial but how far could he
00:06:31
go in 1936 Hitler joined Franco in
00:06:35
fighting the communist insurgents in the
00:06:37
Spanish Civil War demonstrating the
00:06:39
power and destruction of his new
00:06:41
force at Guernica in 1937 the
00:06:45
anti-common to impact of 1936 with Japan
00:06:48
aim to limit communist influence and
00:06:50
especially that of the USSR in 1937
00:06:54
Italy joined as well forming the axis
00:06:57
Alliance yet still the world looked on
00:07:00
and refused to challenge Hitler even
00:07:03
when he began to move towards unifying
00:07:05
Germany in Austria again prohibited by
00:07:07
the Treaty of Versailles there was no
00:07:10
international response other than a
00:07:12
suggestion from Britain's Lord Halifax
00:07:14
that Britain would not resist Germany
00:07:16
uniting with Austria with the Angelus
00:07:19
therefore completed in 1938 after a
00:07:22
plebiscite watched over by Nazi troops
00:07:24
returned a result of 99.75 percent of
00:07:28
all Austrians wishing to unite with
00:07:30
Germany the nation soldiers weapons and
00:07:34
natural resources were absorbed by the
00:07:36
ever expanding Reich yet Hitler had
00:07:39
again defied the Treaty of Versailles
00:07:42
with no response from either Britain or
00:07:44
France it was beginning to appear that
00:07:47
whatever Hitler did Britain and France
00:07:49
would just sit and watch they were
00:07:52
simply not prepared to go to war to stop
00:07:55
Hitler getting what he wanted
00:07:57
thus appeasement which arguably began
00:08:00
with the anglo-german naval agreement in
00:08:02
1935 was the policy adopted by the
00:08:06
Western powers throughout the 1930s
00:08:08
there are a number of arguments for and
00:08:11
against Neville Chamberlain's adoption
00:08:12
of this policy of giving Hitler what he
00:08:14
wanted but will just cover a couple of
00:08:16
them here firstly as suggested by
00:08:19
Britain's responses to some of Hitler's
00:08:21
moves against the Treaty of Versailles
00:08:23
many people felt that it was unfair to
00:08:26
Germany and that it was justified in
00:08:28
seeking changes to the treaty after all
00:08:31
Versailles had ended the Great War and
00:08:33
attempting to stop Hitler could have led
00:08:35
both Britain and France back into
00:08:37
another war even if it meant allowing
00:08:39
Hitler to rebuild his strength could
00:08:42
they afford such a war anyway even if
00:08:44
they did fight it both Britain and
00:08:46
France were suffering the effects of the
00:08:47
depression and needed to use their
00:08:49
finances to sort out their own internal
00:08:51
problems first rather than worrying
00:08:53
about upholding in turn
00:08:55
treaty's they also knew that the USA
00:08:59
wouldn't have stepped in to stop Hitler
00:09:00
anyway after all it was America who had
00:09:03
encouraged the founding of the League of
00:09:05
Nations but then refused to become a
00:09:06
part of it without America's help it was
00:09:09
unlikely that Britain and her allies
00:09:11
would have been strong enough to fight
00:09:13
the rearmed Germany at the very least
00:09:15
Britain itself would need time to build
00:09:18
up its Armed Forces to a level where it
00:09:20
could successfully engage Nazi Germany
00:09:22
on the flipside the policy of
00:09:26
appeasement was risky by refusing to
00:09:29
stand up to Hitler's early Gamble's
00:09:30
Britain and France encouraged him to
00:09:32
take bigger and bigger risks which began
00:09:35
over time to move away from Hitler
00:09:37
suppose a dame of correcting the
00:09:39
unfairness of the Treaty of Versailles
00:09:40
and towards Nazi domination of countries
00:09:43
for leoben's realm by assuming also that
00:09:46
Hitler would honor the promises he made
00:09:48
later over issues such as the
00:09:50
Sudetenland Britain and France were
00:09:52
ultimately trusting a liar it also gave
00:09:56
Hitler the time to build up his army and
00:09:57
readiness for war meaning that Britain
00:09:59
and France would have a lot of catching
00:10:01
up to do if they really were to stand up
00:10:03
to him effectively all this is easy to
00:10:06
say now however due to the gift of
00:10:08
hindsight it would have been impossible
00:10:10
for people at the time to have known
00:10:12
what was to come
00:10:14
by 1938 then Hitler's confidence was
00:10:18
growing as all his previous challenges
00:10:20
to the Treaty of Versailles had come and
00:10:22
gone without interference from Britain
00:10:24
or France Czechoslovakia meanwhile was
00:10:28
beginning to feel very threatened after
00:10:30
the Anschluss as they felt that they
00:10:32
would be next on Hitler's list I give
00:10:35
you my word of honor Hitler told
00:10:38
Chamberlain that Czechoslovakia has
00:10:40
nothing to fear from the Reich he lied
00:10:44
Hitler intended to regain some territory
00:10:47
lost at Versailles which contained large
00:10:49
numbers of German people after
00:10:51
sympathizers to the Nazis in the
00:10:53
Sudetenland area of Czechoslovakia began
00:10:55
to stir up trouble and demanding to be
00:10:57
part of Germany Hitler threatened the
00:11:00
Czechs with invasion tensions were high
00:11:03
throughout the summer and so on
00:11:05
September the 15th the British Prime
00:11:07
Minister Neville Chamberlain flew to
00:11:09
Munich to meet with Hitler in the hope
00:11:11
of avoiding war the talks appeared to go
00:11:14
well but a week later Hitler increased
00:11:17
his demands and told Britain that he
00:11:19
wanted all the Sudetenland Britain began
00:11:22
to mobilize but a final meeting on the
00:11:24
29th of September led to Chamberlain
00:11:26
agreeing that Hitler could have what he
00:11:28
wanted the whole of the Sudetenland in
00:11:31
return for a promise of no more
00:11:33
territorial demands the Declaration
00:11:36
which Chamberlain claimed would bring
00:11:38
peace for our time was called the Munich
00:11:41
Agreement but was ultimately not worth
00:11:44
the paper it was written on just six
00:11:46
months later on the 15th of March 1939
00:11:49
Hitler's troops took over the rest of
00:11:51
Czechoslovakia he had no excuse this
00:11:54
time there were no Germans living there
00:11:57
to unify no parts of the Treaty of
00:11:59
Versailles to correct this was simply
00:12:01
German expansion to create Levin's realm
00:12:03
living space for the people of the Reich
00:12:06
there was no doubt that war was brewing
00:12:10
appeasement had clearly failed as
00:12:12
Hitler's promises dissolved into the air
00:12:14
the moment he made them it was of little
00:12:17
surprise therefore that Hitler soon
00:12:19
moved on to his next target Poland under
00:12:22
the guise of regaining the Polish
00:12:24
corridor lost in the Treaty of
00:12:26
Versailles Britain and France Hitler
00:12:29
felt were weak and unwilling to risk war
00:12:31
for the sake of defending a distant
00:12:33
country Russia meanwhile was less
00:12:36
predictable and so for this reason
00:12:38
Hitler forged an alliance with Stalin
00:12:40
the nazi-soviet pact on the 24th of
00:12:44
August 1939
00:12:45
it's ensured that neither side would
00:12:48
attack each other and secretly agreed to
00:12:50
divide Poland between the two of them
00:12:53
for Hitler it cleared the way for an
00:12:56
invasion of Poland on the 1st of
00:12:57
September 1939 Hitler didn't expect
00:13:01
Britain and France to come to Poland's
00:13:03
aid but they did on the 2nd of September
00:13:06
they declared war on Germany Hitler's
00:13:10
belief that Britain would stay out of
00:13:12
his way was based on his understanding
00:13:14
of the policy of appeasement he simply
00:13:17
didn't believe that Chamberlain would
00:13:19
change his strategy and go to war when
00:13:21
for the past four years he had agreed to
00:13:23
every one of Germany's demands some
00:13:26
historians claim that appeasement was
00:13:28
the wrong policy because it had
00:13:30
encouraged Hitler to make ever
00:13:32
increasing demands that sent the world
00:13:34
into the Second World War
00:13:35
others however claimed it to have
00:13:38
successfully opposed Hitler Chamberlain
00:13:40
would have needed to drag Britain into
00:13:41
another war before it was properly ready
00:13:43
to fight even the people of Britain as
00:13:46
we discovered earlier were unlikely to
00:13:48
have supported another war with the
00:13:50
memories of 1914 18 still fresh in their
00:13:53
memories Britain's Empire was unlikely
00:13:55
to lend its own support and America was
00:13:58
happily keeping itself to itself more
00:14:00
importantly Britain's own army was not
00:14:03
ready to engage Hitler in battle
00:14:05
Hitler's rearmament from 1935 had made
00:14:09
Nazi Germany considerably stronger than
00:14:11
Britain and Britain needed to play for
00:14:13
time to close the gap
00:14:16
ultimately war broke in 1939 for a
00:14:19
combination of reasons in your exam you
00:14:23
may be asked to compare the relative
00:14:25
importance of different factors or
00:14:26
choose what you think was most important
00:14:29
remember that you can't be wrong but you
00:14:32
can answer badly if you are asked to
00:14:36
compare a list of given factors make
00:14:38
sure you include them all and if
00:14:40
relevant refer to other factors that
00:14:43
also had a part to play if you believe
00:14:46
that one factor was more important than
00:14:47
any other explain why and if you believe
00:14:51
that factors were interlinked in a
00:14:53
causal web be sure to explain it good
00:14:57
luck