What was the main thrust of Hitler's economic policy how was its connected to the foreign policy and his initial military success in Europe
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When Hitler came to power in 1933, he seemed to have quite clear ideas about what
Germany’s relationship to other states should be. You are already familiar with many
of Hitler’s foreign policy aims including:
• revenge for the humiliation of Germany’s loss in the First World War;
• revocation of the Treaty of Versailles, especially restoring lost territory to truncated
Germany and increasing the size of Germany’s army and munitions;
• destruction of Soviet communism (through a policy of “anti-Bolshevism”);
• racial struggle against “non-Aryans,” particularly Jews and eastern European Slavs
whom the Nazis viewed as “sub-humans” (Untermenschen);
• German expansion in “the East” as embodied in the concept of Lebensraum
(“living space”);
• placating the concerns of the international community by taking care not to engage
too openly in measures that could be considered threatening (as you work through
this week’s topic you will notice that this became less important as Hitler’s
confidence and power increased).
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