Did
Hitler Want War?
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
On
Sept. 1, 1939, 70 years ago, the German Army crossed
the Polish frontier. On Sept. 3, Britain declared
war.
Six
years later, 50 million Christians and Jews had
perished. Britain was broken and bankrupt, Germany
a smoldering ruin. Europe had served as the site
of the most murderous combat known to man, and
civilians had suffered worse horrors than the
soldiers.
By
May 1945, Red Army hordes occupied all the great
capitals of Central Europe: Vienna, Prague, Budapest,
Berlin. A hundred million Christians were under
the heel of the most barbarous tyranny in history:
the Bolshevik regime of the greatest terrorist
of them all, Joseph Stalin.
What
cause could justify such sacrifices?
The
German-Polish war had come out of a quarrel over
a town the size of Ocean City, Md., in summer.
Danzig, 95 percent German, had been severed from
Germany at Versailles in violation of Woodrow
Wilsons principle of self-determination.
Even British leaders thought Danzig should be
returned.
Why
did Warsaw not negotiate with Berlin, which was
hinting at an offer of compensatory territory
in Slovakia? Because the Poles had a war guarantee
from Britain that, should Germany attack, Britain
and her empire would come to Polands rescue.
But
why would Britain hand an unsolicited war guarantee
to a junta of Polish colonels, giving them the
power to drag Britain into a second war with the
most powerful nation in Europe?
Was
Danzig worth a war? Unlike the 7 million Hong
Kongese whom the British surrendered to Beijing,
who didnt want to go, the Danzigers were
clamoring to return to Germany.
Comes
the response: The war guarantee was not about
Danzig, or even about Poland. It was about the
moral and strategic imperative to stop Hitler
after he showed, by tearing up the Munich pact
and Czechoslovakia with it, that he was out to
conquer the world. And this Nazi beast could not
be allowed to do that.
If
true, a fair point. Americans, after all, were
prepared to use atom bombs to keep the Red Army
from the Channel. But where is the evidence that
Adolf Hitler, whose victims as of March 1939 were
a fraction of Gen. Pinochets, or Fidel Castros,
was out to conquer the world?
After
Munich in 1938, Czechoslovakia did indeed crumble
and come apart. Yet consider what became of its
parts.
The
Sudeten Germans were returned to German rule,
as they wished. Poland had annexed the tiny disputed
region of Teschen, where thousands of Poles lived.
Hungarys ancestral lands in the south of
Slovakia had been returned to her. The Slovaks
had their full independence guaranteed by Germany.
As for the Czechs, they came to Berlin for the
same deal as the Slovaks, but Hitler insisted
they accept a protectorate.
Now
one may despise what was done, but how did this
partition of Czechoslovakia manifest a Hitlerian
drive for world conquest?
Comes
the reply: If Britain had not given the war guarantee
and gone to war, after Czechoslovakia would have
come Polands turn, then Russias, then
Frances, then Britains, then the United
States.
We
would all be speaking German now.
But
if Hitler was out to conquer the world
Britain, Africa, the Middle East, the United States,
Canada, South America, India, Asia, Australia
why did he spend three years building that
hugely expensive Siegfried Line to protect Germany
from France? Why did he start the war with no
surface fleet, no troop transports and only 29
oceangoing submarines? How do you conquer the
world with a navy that cant get out of the
Baltic Sea?
If
Hitler wanted the world, why did he not build
strategic bombers, instead of two-engine Dorniers
and Heinkels that could not even reach Britain
from Germany?
Why
did he let the British army go at Dunkirk?
Why
did he offer the British peace, twice, after Poland
fell, and again after France fell?
Why,
when Paris fell, did Hitler not demand the French
fleet, as the Allies demanded and got the Kaisers
fleet? Why did he not demand bases in French-controlled
Syria to attack Suez? Why did he beg Benito Mussolini
not to attack Greece?
Because
Hitler wanted to end the war in 1940, almost two
years before the trains began to roll to the camps.
Hitler
had never wanted war with Poland, but an alliance
with Poland such as he had with Francisco Francos
Spain, Mussolinis Italy, Miklos Horthys
Hungary and Father Jozef Tisos Slovakia.
Indeed,
why would he want war when, by 1939, he was surrounded
by allied, friendly or neutral neighbors, save
France. And he had written off Alsace, because
reconquering Alsace meant war with France, and
that meant war with Britain, whose empire he admired
and whom he had always sought as an ally.
As
of March 1939, Hitler did not even have a border
with Russia. How then could he invade Russia?
Winston
Churchill was right when he called it The
Unnecessary War the war that may
yet prove the mortal blow to our civilization.