Abstract

Hitler’s coming to power in 1933 clearly represents a sea change in the world balance of forces and a crucial point in the story of the coming of World War II. This is the way we see it today. At the time, however, the main effect of the advent of Nazism on the world scene was to give greater freedom to the foreign policy of Mussolini’s Italy, suggesting a possible balance of power, or at least a distraction, among those likely to oppose Italian expansionism. Germany’s own war potential was certainly not such as to create an immediate worry. Hitler himself was reasonably well known, but there was no consensus as to his intentions, still less any general recognition of a blueprint for conquest. Mein Kampf was known in German-language editions, with a one-volume abridgement appearing in London and New York in 1933. Translation into French came only in 1934. Dozens of other translations were to appear in following years. Karl Radek, the leading Soviet expert on Germany, told Louis Fischer that he and his associates translated many passages for Stalin, along with all of Hitler’s speeches. Stalin read them carefully. The British Foreign Office summarized Mein Kampf in an eleven-page memo to Prime Minister Ramsey MacDonald, with a note appended by the Oxford historian E. L. Woodward. There was at least some recognition of the outlines of Hitler’s expansionist ideas, his lust for lands in the Soviet Union, his aim to win by diplomacy the adhesion of Britain and Italy to his plans. Aside from Robert Vansittart and his circle in the Foreign Office, most British politicians did not study the text nor consider it crucial until after the Munich Conference that divided Czechoslovakia for German benefit in 1938.

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