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To What Extent Were the Consequences of Wwi the Causes of Wwii

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To what extent were the consequences of WWI the causes for WWII

At the end of World War One, Europe was left in a devastating state, four major empires disappeared and the economy was profoundly damaged. The first global war had taken place and fear of a second one was strongly felt across the continent. In order to bring political order to European politics and to prevent such a catastrophe from ever happening again, the Paris Peace Settlement took place. The outcomes were the signing of the Treaty of Versailles and the foundation of the League of Nations in 1919. Despite the inherently weak attempts to prevent a repetition of WW1, twenty years later, WWII broke out upon the invasion of Poland by Germany. Although exploding from a …show more content…

Germany was now desperately seeking a strong leader that would rescue their country. The domestic crisis was the source of their anguish and Hitler who called for self determination and the abolition of the Treaty of Versailles appealed to the people. According to the revisionist views “The depression also helped to destroy German democracy and contributed to Hitler’s rise to power, and it was his dictatorship which brought war”. The rise of the Nazis cannot therefore be blamed solely on the reparations, the Weimar Republic and the Wall Street Crash both independent factors from the consequences of WWI highly contributed to the rise of the Nazis.
Once the Nazis were in power, the fear of communism and outbreak of another world war affected European diplomacy which gave way to appeasement: a major factor contributing the causes of WWII. Hitler was carrying out his 4 aims in foreign policy which included: lebensraum, racial purity, an end to the treaty of Versailles, and the unification of the German peoples; threatening his neighboring countries. Britain resorted to appeasement which was meant to put off war and grant Germany its wishes as in reality the country had been undergoing a constant struggle for the past decades and Britain felt partly responsible. Allowing Germany to do

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