Notes: Between the Wars
Spielvogel Chapter 26
- An Uncertain Peace: The Search for Security
- French Coercion (1919-24)
- France wants strict enforcement of Versailles treaty
- Attempt to force Germany to pay all reparations ($33B)
- Impossible – French move in and take over German industrial areas (Rhur Valley)
- Germans hate Versailles treaty – totally unfair
- Germans passively resist – print more money –
- horrible inflation
- 1914 – 4.2 marks = $1
- 1923 – 4.2 trillion marks = $1
- Hitler makes first attempt at German takeover – small group of National Socialists
- Germany’s economy bankrupt
- 1924 – France agrees to another approach
- Hopeful Years (1924-29)
- New governments take over in Britain, France, and Germany
- More conciliatory – sense of optimism for a peaceful future
- League of Nations
- Created to avoid another war
- Too weak to stop big powers
- U.S. refused to join
- Locarno treaty (1925)
- Germany, Italy, Britain, Belgium, France agree not to go to war over boundaries (border)
- Germany admitted to League of Nations (1926)
- Kellogg – Briand Pact (1928)
- U.S. – France and 61 other nations agree to ban war as part of national policy
- All will fail - no way to enforce any of it without a strong League
- The Great Depression (1929)
- Stock market crashed in NYC 1929 (Oct.) – caused by stocks being priced beyond their real value & people buying on margin
- American investors recall European loans
- Without American loans, Germans can’t pay reparations
- Without reparations, allies can’t pay debts to U.S.
- In industrial world – prices fall, factories close, masses out of work
- Germany hardest hit – others bad – France least – Russia exception
- Between 1929-1934, world trade shrinks by 65%
- Seen by Marxists worldwide as a step toward the collapse of capitalism – all countries to fall to communism
- Govts. Spend huge sums to relieve suffering of homeless and hungry
- Pass laws to stimulate their own economies without regard to other countries – raised tariffs
- To accomplish these goals, govts. became more centralized and authoritarian
- Some look to cast blame and establish dictatorships
- Communism and Fascism become popular
- Democracy questioned, particularly in new nations
- New Economics
- John M. Keynes (British) -- Keynesian Economics
- money goes in a circular pattern
- requires consumption
- Great Depression caused by hoarding finances
- "prime the pump" - government injects money
- usually to poor - because they spend it
- also by controlling interest rates
- Retreat from Democracy: Authoritarian and Totalitarian States
- Fascist Italy
- Fascism defined
- Fascist comes from Latin – “bundle of sticks” – Roman symbol of State power
- Authoritarian - dictatorship
- Totalitarian – entire life of people controlled by government
- people expected to give everything - lives, time, heart & soul - to state
- Conflict necessary
- Social Darwinism
- Saw the West as pacifist sissies
- Hated communists – workers rule is antithesis of "pure" society
- Benito Mussolini
- Came from modest family
- Charismatic
- Gave impression of vigor and activity – speed on motorcycle
- Black Shirts - formed in 1919, when Italy unhappy with Versailles
- raised hand salute, black uniforms
- not official military
- 1922 – socialists call strike – fascists oppose violently
- Mussolini presses his Black Shirts for march on Rome – seize power by violence – invited by the king to restore order
- Made premier for Victor Emanuel III 1924 – Mussolini sells him on the idea of the preservation of the Italian state – had won power through legal election process
- 1925 – Italy is totalitarian state
- Mussolini introduced the “corporate state” concept (substitute for unions)
- Everyone expected to sacrifice for the good of the state
- Mussolini becomes "Il Duce"
- Hitler and Nazi Germany
- The Weimar Republic
- Established for Germany – July 1919 – to replace the Empire
- Germany had no experience in republican government
- Simply replaced emperor with a president
- Increased the power of the Reichstag
- Centrist – attacked from left and right
- Economic chaos – inflation and depression
- Provided chaotic environment for Hitler to take advantage
- Rise of Hitler
- Early Life
- 1923 – year after Mussolini’s march on Rome – Adolph Hitler attempts coup d'état in Germany – Beer Hall Putsch
- Failed – imprisoned – writes Mein Kampf in jail – “My Struggle” – his ideas of Germany’s past and future
- Orphaned, lived in Vienna – developed hatred for nobility, people of wealth, Marxism, Jews
- Served in German army – identified with Germans
- Settled in Bavaria – became leader of National Socialist Party (Nazi) – developed oratory talent – emotional – inflaming
- On the national stage
- 1929 Depression – second chance
- Hitler attacks Treaty of Versailles and Weimar Republic, Communists and Jews (blamed for Germany's defeat)
- Nazi Party gets more and more power in Reichstag – gains majority – Lower house of German parliament
- President Hindenburg
- Appoints Hitler Chancellor in January 1933
- Reichstag burns Feb. 1933 – Hitler blames communists, stirs up terror
- Hitler declares national emergency - takes dictatorial power provided by Weimar constitution
- Hindenburg dies August 1934
- August 1934 Hitler holds plebiscite
- 85% of Germans support Hitler as dictator
- Office of president abolished
- The third Reich had begun – all legal, all supported by majority of Germans
- The Nazi State (1934-39)
- Eliminated unemployment by govt. spending programs
- Govt. becomes propaganda machine – brainwashes the nation
- Control of press and radio
- Mass meetings excite crowds
- Constant repetition
- Nazi flag (Swastika) replaces Weimar flag
- Pushed extravagant devotion to Hitler – der Fuhrer (leader)
- Nazis have total control -- SS (Schutzsteffel [black uniforms ] - police
- people feel the illusion of participation in other ways
- 1934 – Nazi party purge – disloyal members killed by Gestapo – secret state police (part of SS) – leftist dissenters killed – Brown Shirts destroyed
- Pressure against church – intent to dominate lives of young – (Swing Kids movie)
- Key leaders – Herman Goering (air force), Joseph Goebbels (propagandist), Heinrich Himmler (Head of SS & Gestapo)
- Anti-Semitism
- Believed in pure Aryan race – caused persecution of Jews
- Nuremberg Laws of 1935 – removed Jews from public service – not citizens – prohibited marriage with others – total outcasts
- Kristallnacht – 1938 (night of broken glass) Jewish businesses destroyed, many beaten and murdered, synagogues burned, many arrested due to a killing of a German diplomat by Jewish boy – further isolation
- The Nazi Woman
- Dedicated to love, marriage, family, motherhood
- Create a mood in which German men must want to live or die for the German woman
- The Soviet Union
- Existing conditions
- Civil War’s over – communists pay attention to condition of the country
- Greatest difficulty – economics
- The New Economic Policy (1921-1927)
- Lenin flexible enough to see the problem
- Slows drive to communism 1921 – introduces the “New Economic Policy” (NEP)
- Govt. maintains control of big industry (factories, transportation, banking, foreign trade)
- Allows peasants some ownership of business and land and sell surplus
- Peasants were taxed rather than being subject to requisition of material
- Foreign engineers and scientists hired to help – capitalists
- Terrorism and censorship lessened
- Economy begins to recover
- Lenin dies (of stroke) 1924
- The Stalin Era (1928-39)
- Power struggle between Trotsky and Joseph Stalin
- Stalin had job of detailing party organization – had his supporters in key positions
- Wanted “socialism in Russia” as opposed to Trotsky’s international socialism
- Defeats Trotsky and in solid control of Russia by 1928
- Trotsky in exile – moves about working against Stalin – finally murdered in Mexico - 1940
- The Five-Year Plans - Command Economy
- 1928 – Stalin begins first 5-year plan
- 1928-33 and 1933-38 – interrupted by WWII
- Believed Lenin had gone soft – enough force and terror could get anything done
- Agricultural Plan
- Collectivization of farms
- Excess labor forced to move to cities
- Apartment complex description
- Opposition - mostly by peasants - vocal peasants killed
- Millions die from famine in early 1930s
- Industrial Plan
- Forced rapid industrialization - people forced to move to do the work
- The Purges – 1934-38
- 4M accused of crimes against the state – nearly 800K executed – countless others die in concentration camps
- Stalin solidifies his hold on Russia
- Eliminate potential problems (class, plots, revolution) before they can start
- Wipe out any possible future competition
- Total dead under Stalin's regime: Between 14 - 30 million
- Communist Society in the U.S.S.R.
- U.S.S.R. official in 1924
- First of the modern totalitarian states
- No limits to its control in the work, lives, thoughts of its citizens
- The Communist Party dominated the State
- Stalin dominated the party
- “Party Line” (policy) determined by small control organ of the party – Politburo (political bureau)
- All parts of govt. – local to national – controlled by Communist Party
- Secret Police
- Command Economy
- Excessive focus on military
- Administrators better paid – more privileges
- Ordinary workers – little freedom – made party membership an envious thing
- Church forced underground – govt. was the religion
- All education keyed on communist propaganda – strong emphasis on engineering and science
- Press strictly controlled Pravda (truth) official line – music, art, ballet to reflect and glorify working class
- Spanish Civil War (1936-39)
- King deposed 1931 –
- Replaced by a republican government that collapses in 1936
- General Francisco Franco
- Nationalists (ultra right wing party & army) - fascists
- join Berlin Axis in 1936
- Loyalists (left wing) supported by U.S.S.R. – Communists
- Western democracies stand by and watch – some mercenaries there from western nations
- Good way to try out new weapons & warfare style
- Franco victorious – sets up fascist regime – lasts until 1975 – stays neutral in war
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