Hitler (?)

Personally speaking i don't think Japan would have attacked either America or British colonies if they had not been preoccupied else where. Lets face it most of the the recent major military victories came about by attacking the opposition before declaring a war
 
Doppleganger said:
There would have been another world war after WW1, Hitler or no Hitler. Hitler was a sign of the times, not a cause of it.
I'm not so sure. Hitler was insane enough to start war with almost entire world. If no Hitler, there maybe could be some local-scale war in Europe, but most likely no WW2.
Doppleganger said:
If Hitler hadn't been around there was still Josef Stalin to contend with.
Right, Stalin was more pragmatic. If there was no Hitler and Germany with expansion politics, Stalin alone would not launch attack on Western world. Even Winter War was carried out in moment, when there were no significant threats to Finland become wide supported by western democracies since those were in war with Hitler and they did not need another enemy. If there was no war in West, although in form of `phony war`, Stalin most likely wouldn't be decided to attack Finland. He need a appropriate moment do it. And such moment could not occure if there was no Hitler.
Doppleganger said:
Hitler, in a sense, was born in the wrong time. Had he been born in 300BC, 400AD or 1200AD, we'd be reading about the 'great conquerer' Adolf Hitler in our history books, instead of the inhuman monster he is known as today. He did nothing worse than what his predecessors did - the main difference was the scale.
Agree.
perseus said:
Perhaps the European war, what about the Pacific theatre? It has been said that either would have happened without the other.
I think war in Pacific could happen, but without European Allies and theatre of war the Pacific war could be just large-scale local war, not World War. Something like Folklend War, just in bigger scale.
 
There would have been another world war after WW1, Hitler or no Hitler. Hitler was a sign of the times, not a cause of it.


If Hitler hadn't been around there was still Josef Stalin to contend with.

I watched this movie called Europa Europa and about half way through the movie, the nazis invaded Russia, in a scene where the nazis were pursuing a large group of Russians, the Jews were the only ones that kept running from the nazis towards Russian troops, everybody else actually preferred to face Hitler as opposed to Stalin. I thought that was an intriguing part of the movie, I wonder if that was truly the sentiment of many people that were in these border regions?
 
I watched this movie called Europa Europa and about half way through the movie, the nazis invaded Russia, in a scene where the nazis were pursuing a large group of Russians, the Jews were the only ones that kept running from the nazis towards Russian troops, everybody else actually preferred to face Hitler as opposed to Stalin. I thought that was an intriguing part of the movie, I wonder if that was truly the sentiment of many people that were in these border regions?

Plenty of Ukranians thought he was ok (they hated Stalin) for a while until the SS started to cut loose behind the front lines.

The Vichy French were quite helpful to Hitler in collecting Jews to send to the Death camps.
 
Plenty of Ukranians thought he was ok (they hated Stalin) for a while until the SS started to cut loose behind the front lines.

The Vichy French were quite helpful to Hitler in collecting Jews to send to the Death camps.

Yeah, hard to tell which country got screwed harder in WWII, Poland or Ukraine.
 
Yeah, hard to tell which country got screwed harder in WWII, Poland or Ukraine.

At the time The Ukraine was not a country. It was a province of the Soviet Union. And before that it was the western most part of the Russian Empire. For hundreds of years people living in this area referred to themselves as Russian. That is except for a tiny group in western Ukraine who viewed themselves as Ukrainians. In successive years the group did get a lot bigger. This group welcomed the Nazi's until the Einsatsgruppen began their whole-sale murder. Even then a tiny group tolerated the Nazi's and hoped for some sort of Federation with the German's. It didn't happen.
 
There would have been another world war after WW1, Hitler or no Hitler. Hitler was a sign of the times, not a cause of it.


If Hitler hadn't been around there was still Josef Stalin to contend with.


Hitler, in a sense, was born in the wrong time. Had he been born in 300BC, 400AD or 1200AD, we'd be reading about the 'great conquerer' Adolf Hitler in our history books, instead of the inhuman monster he is known as today. He did nothing worse than what his predecessors did - the main difference was the scale.

I'm not so sure a World War would have taken place without Hitler. Hitler may have been a sign of the times in Germany, but the rest of Europe didn't have that kind of fanatic and extremist walking around. You say that the world had Joseph Stalin to deal with. But this isn't true. Stalin had enough problems in the Soviet Union to keep him busy for decades.
As for Hitler being born in the wrong time; whatever time you want to insert him he would be judged the same. World leaders in the later Greek and the Roman world would be thought of in terms of shame for the whole-sale slaughter of innocents. That also holds true for the later Medieval world. The only thing that changes with time is the technology. Human beings were just as sophisticated in these earlier times. To think that there morality was different doesn't make too much sense.
 
I watched this movie called Europa Europa and about half way through the movie, the nazis invaded Russia, in a scene where the nazis were pursuing a large group of Russians, the Jews were the only ones that kept running from the nazis towards Russian troops, everybody else actually preferred to face Hitler as opposed to Stalin. I thought that was an intriguing part of the movie, I wonder if that was truly the sentiment of many people that were in these border regions?

In Lithuania the Germans really only targeted Jews, but the Russians targeted EVERYONE. Their standard operating procedure was to overwrite the indigenous culture with their own communist garbage, and kill anyone who so much as uttered a word of dissent. When they got a resistance member, they'd drag the body through the streets by tank and imprison or kill anyone who cried. So yes, at least in that country the Russians were hated far, far more than the Germans. The resistance managed to hold on till the mid-50s, but the British agents who were sent to help ended up flipping to the Russians.

My grandparents were faced with the choice of either fleeing to Germany (lucky grandma was blonde with blue eyes) then America, or becoming second-class slaves in the Soviet Union while Russians settled in their country. They tried three times to cross to the west, but the Americans turned them back every time. Fortunately there was a black soldier who finally let them through. It's funny, I would not have been born if World War II didn't go the way it did, and that particular soldier hadn't been there.
 
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I'm not so sure a World War would have taken place without Hitler. You say that the world had Joseph Stalin to deal with. But this isn't true. Stalin had enough problems in the Soviet Union to keep him busy for decades.
What problems did Stalin have internally that would keep him busy for decades? If he indeed had these problems, it did not stop him installing puppet Communist regimes in half of Europe after WW2. If it wasn't for Nazi Germany, the whole of Europe would have turned communist in no more than 10 years. Stalin was preparing for a major war of conquest and the Red Army was undergoing a massive reorganization and rearmament when Hitler struck in June 1941.

As for Hitler being born in the wrong time; whatever time you want to insert him he would be judged the same. World leaders in the later Greek and the Roman world would be thought of in terms of shame for the whole-sale slaughter of innocents. That also holds true for the later Medieval world. The only thing that changes with time is the technology. Human beings were just as sophisticated in these earlier times. To think that there morality was different doesn't make too much sense.
Morality was not different but what was deemed acceptable in war certainly was. Genghis Khan put millions of innocent people to the sword, including razing entire cities. The figure is as high as 60 million people, which is far more than Hitler ever killed. Yet is Genghis Khan demonized as an inhuman monster?

Hardly.
 
What problems did Stalin have internally that would keep him busy for decades? If he indeed had these problems, it did not stop him installing puppet Communist regimes in half of Europe after WW2. If it wasn't for Nazi Germany, the whole of Europe would have turned communist in no more than 10 years. Stalin was preparing for a major war of conquest and the Red Army was undergoing a massive reorganization and rearmament when Hitler struck in June 1941.




Morality was not different but what was deemed acceptable in war certainly was. Genghis Khan put millions of innocent people to the sword, including razing entire cities. The figure is as high as 60 million people, which is far more than Hitler ever killed. Yet is Genghis Khan demonized as an inhuman monster?

Hardly.

Yes Genghis Khan was a monster and so was Attila but as the old joke goes, They weren't bigoted, they would kill anybody.

Joseph Stalin set up puppet Goverments in a third of Europe because that idiot Adolph Hitler decided to bang heads with him. He actually started a war with Russia while still fighting England. He also started a war with someone bigger than himself. Not only bigger but with better Armour and an infinate supply of soldiers. By the way, if you are saying Stalin was planing some sort of war of conquest on the rest of Europe----maybe it's time for you to take your medication.
 
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Joseph Stalin set up puppet Goverments in a third of Europe because that idiot Adolph Hitler decided to bang heads with him. He actually started a war with Russia while still fighting England. He also started a war with someone bigger than himself. Not only bigger but with better Armour and an infinate supply of soldiers. By the way, if you are saying Stalin was planing some sort of war of conquest on the rest of Europe----maybe it's time for you to take your medication.
You still haven't cleared up why you think Stalin had enough problems internally to keep him busy for decades. And why don't you think Stalin wasn't planning a war of conquest. There hasn't been a leader of a large powerful empire yet that didn't desire or plan for conquest - it's human nature. Plus there's more enough evidence to suggest that Stalin was no more content to let Nazi Germany prosper than Hitler was the other way. Finally it's pretty much endemic in Bolshevik doctrine that it requires to be exported to the people, wherever they are and whether they want it or not.

http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v19/v19n6p40_Michaels.html
 
You still haven't cleared up why you think Stalin had enough problems internally to keep him busy for decades. And why don't you think Stalin wasn't planning a war of conquest. There hasn't been a leader of a large powerful empire yet that didn't desire or plan for conquest - it's human nature. Plus there's more enough evidence to suggest that Stalin was no more content to let Nazi Germany prosper than Hitler was the other way. Finally it's pretty much endemic in Bolshevik doctrine that it requires to be exported to the people, wherever they are and whether they want it or not.

http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v19/v19n6p40_Michaels.html

Sorry for not using paragraphs. I'm having trouble with my keyboard / and or something else which doesn't allow me to section properly without great difficulty. If I can't fix it I'll buy another keyboard next week and see what happens.



The trouble with Surmise is we may be wrong.

The problem with projecting our personal understanding onto what a historical figure may have done is the amount of uncertainty rife in such excercises. If we look at what the Soviet Union did before the advent of The Russo-German clash, there is evidence of paranoia, but no grand scheme for a war of conquest.

From the outset of the creation of the Soviet State, The Western Nations tried many times unsuccessfully to topple the red government. We should also remember The Finnish War started after the Finns refused to lease the Soviets an area which posed a danger to their security. And yes Doppelganger, that should have been the end of it. Russia should have accepted the Finn's refusal. But Germany and to a lesser extent Italy had everyone concerned for their own safety. After the fall of France, Stalin annexed the three Baltic states. He also took a good chunk of Bessarabia, enraging the Rumanians. Then came the famous two dictator polka which wiped out Poland. By this time Stalin was appeasing Hitler in his own way. Its quite apparent this territory grab didn't help at all when hostilities came to a head on June 22, 1941..

But Stalin had serious problems. The state of the Red Army was dismal. The great purges began in 1936 practically destroyed the officer class. His other great problem was strategic. The U.S.S.R.'s western frontier was huge. It began in the arctic and ended in the Black Sea. When Stalin put a huge amount of equipment and armies into this new territory, anyone with intelligence in the USSR, including Molotov, tried to explain he was making a mistake. But in certain ways Stalin was a lot like Hitler. He thought he knew better.

Before hostilities came to a head, Stalin refused to listen to anyone who warned of a German invasion. Right up until the invasion Russian Goods, especially Oil, metals and lumber were sent to Germany. This just does not seem like the policy of a man who was plotting war. Truthfully the USSR was in no shape to start a war for at least 10-15 years. And there is no proof that would have happened.
 
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