Actually he tried to save the world, if he had stopped at germany he would have succeeded.
I'm not sure he would have. Maybe postponed it for a generation or two.
>weak men create bad times; bad times create strong men; strong men create good times; good times create weak men.
What happened to Germany was penance for WWI wasnt it?
I'm sure if Germany won WWII they'd still be looking for reasons to get revenge and destroy the White race.
Franco didn't try to "save the world", just spain, and he had a commie invasion on his hands, and successfully dealt with it, now franco didn't have a stalin problem on the east, too... Now maybe germany wouldn't have had a stalin problem on the east if the last kaiser didn't support the bolshevik revolution...
Empires have a tendency to compete, not to cooperate
I watched francos motorcade as a kid, guardia lined the streets. It was in Torrejón de Ardoz. He was on the way to madrid. Air force brat here.
Nice
In hindsight, I think hitler shouldn't have gone after kikes like he did, I mean in such an explicit way
You just do, a crack down on... Communists, anarchists, subversives, shitstarters... Terrorists... Call it what you want. It just happens that oh surprise surprise there are fucktons of jews among them... It's like that, nothing personal that's just the way it is as it is... A couple of freemasons also... Enemies of state! Traitors to the nation... Perfect.
Now sure, it doesn't solve the stalin problem building up on the east, but at least you don't give the world jewry the stick to beat you.
That's pretty much what stalin did and to this day he got away with it. Everybody got fucked equally, and yeah there were jews in the pack, well, side effect of equality I guess...
So yeah, the stalin problem on the east... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalin's_Missed_Chance
>Stalin's Missed Chance is a study by Russian military historian Mikhail Ivanovich Meltyukhov, author of several books and articles on Soviet military history. Stalin's Missed Chance covers a theory of planned Soviet invasion raised by Viktor Suvorov, author of highly controversial books such as Icebreaker. Unlike Suvorov's works, Meltyukhov's book is based on archive materials, some of which were until recently classified. Contrary to many Western scholars (David Glantz, John D. Erickson, Richard Overy and others), Mikhail Meltyukhov concurs with Suvorov's claim that Stalin and the Soviet military leadership had planned an offensive against Germany in 1941. Meltyukhov rejects, however, Suvorov's claims that the German assault (Operation Barbarossa) was a pre-emptive strike: Meltyukhov affirms both sides had been preparing to invade the other, but neither believed the possibility of the other side's strike. Stalin's Missed Chance is an extensive study of archive sources, often quoting and summarizing wartime records of the Red Army and the Soviet Union. The book also draws on a legion of published primary sources from the years 1939 to 1941.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molotov%E2%80%93Ribbentrop_Pact
>The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was a non-aggression pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union that partitioned Eastern Europe between them. The pact was signed in Moscow on 23 August 1939 by German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov[1] and was officially known as the Treaty of Non-Aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.[2][3] Unofficially, it has also been referred to as the Hitler–Stalin Pact,[4][5] Nazi–Soviet Pact[6] or Nazi–Soviet Alliance.[7]
...
Maybe... Maybe maybe not...
Anyways, it's a bad idea to try to invade russia. It's a constant in european history, it's always a bad idea.
So what can you do? Knowing that you're surrounded by empires, british and french to name just them... And the french occupying the rurh because you didn't pay war reparations in full... Complicated.
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