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The foreign policy and war aims of the Nazis have been the subject of debate among historians. The Nazis governed Germany between 1933 and 1945. There has been disagreement over whether Adolf Hitler aimed solely at European expansion and domination, or whether he planned for a long-term global empire.
4.3.3 Plans for the economic domination of ... paraphrasing Hitler's vision: "World peace is certainly an ideal worth striving for; in Hitler's opinion it will be ...
A striking change noted in the Hossbach Memorandum is Hitler's new evaluation of Britain: from a prospective ally in 1928 in the Zweites Buch to a "hate-inspired antagonist" in 1937 that was unwilling and unable to accept a strong Germany. The change was a complete reversal of Hitler's view of Britain. [3]
Zweites Buch Hitler's Second Book: The Unpublished Sequel to Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler. Enigma Books. ISBN 978-1-929631-61-2. Hitler, A. (1945). My Political Testament. Wikisource Version. Hitler, A. (1945). My Private Will and Testament. Wikisource Version. Hitler, A., et al. (1971). Unmasked: two confidential interviews with Hitler in 1931.
According to historian Ian Kershaw, upon Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler's seizure of power on 30 January 1933, the Nazi mass movement was already "proto-genocidal" and "held together by the utopian vision of national salvation, to be achieved through racial cleansing at the core of which was the 'removal' of the Jews". [3]
The Generalplan Ost (German pronunciation: [ɡenəˈʁaːlˌplaːn ˈɔst]; English: Master Plan for the East), abbreviated GPO, was Nazi Germany's plan for the settlement and "Germanization" of captured territory in Eastern Europe, involving the genocide, extermination and large-scale ethnic cleansing of Slavs, Eastern European Jews, and other indigenous peoples of Eastern Europe categorized ...
The first series is set in a bizarre, campy, 1960s interpretation of World War II and follows a group of five international spies on a mission to kill Adolf Hitler and thwart his plans of world domination. [1] The second series is set in a similarly bizarre interpretation of 1982, with Hitler again the villain after somehow surviving the end of ...
Evans, Richard, In Hitler's Shadow: West German Historians and the Attempt to Escape the Nazi Past, New York, NY: Pantheon, 1989, ISBN 0-679-72348-X.; Fischer, Conan Review of German Foreign Policy from Bismarck to Adenauer: The Limits of Statecraft pages 347-348 from International Affairs, Volume 67, Issue #. 2, April 1991.