How did the war come about ???

Short summary, how did the war come about?

The person Adolf Hitler was elected democratically in the period after the Versailles Peace Treaty. The German people felt that the Versailles Peace Treaty after the First World War was unjust, regardless of whether people thought politically right or left, and many spoke of a shameful peace treaty.

The Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler, who at that time tried to represent the interests of the German people, did not live in a vacuum, like today’s heads of government, but his actions were also dependent on the actions of other heads of government, whether Polish, British or French, plus Austrian and Czech.

The connection of Austria

The connection of Austria became necessary after the Austrian opposition submitted a motion to annex the state of Austria to the German Reich.

The people of Austria were to be allowed to vote on whether Austria should be annexed to the German Reich or not.

The government of Austria sabotaged the proposal for a referendum on the topic in such a way that the Austrians only had the opportunity to vote for the independence of Austria on their ballot papers on the topic. A choice was therefore practically non-existent. The Austrian government had not provided for the possibility of agreeing to an connection to the German Reich, as the Austrian opposition parties wanted.

When some representatives of the Austrian opposition parties asked the Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler to help them and the Austrian people against the fraudulent government of Austria, Mr. Hitler remembered that he was born in Austria and helped the Austrian people and connected Austria.

At that time, when German soldiers entered Austria, there was probably more approval among the people than rejection.

The connection of the Czech Republic to the German Reich

The annexation of the Czech Republic took place at the request of Doctor Hacha, the then Czech president, who was observing unrest in neighboring Slovakia at the time and who feared that these unrest could spread to the Czech Republic.

For this reason, the then Czech President Doctor Hacha took a train to Berlin with his secretary and asked the Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler to protect Czechoslovakia militarily from the Slovaks, which then led to the entry of German troops into Czechoslovakia.

War against Poland?

The Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler was forced to act against the Polish state forced, since the Poles had already armed themselves with weapons before 1 September 1939.

German airliners flying from Berlin to Königsberg shot down the Poles closed German schools, trade union offices and churches where the People spoke German. In addition, Germans were deprived of inheritance rights, if they wanted to inherit land. According to the will of Versailles, the Germans were to Peace Treaty unfortunately partly in the newly founded state of Poland under a Polish government.

The Poles organized so-called pogroms on German shops and set fire to German farms  and expelled Germans between January 1939 and the end of  August 1939, more than seventy thousand Germans from Polish territories, or the Germans fled voluntarily after the Polish government arbitrarily expelled German people imprisoned.

Since they had a military alliance with France and Great Britain, the Poles wanted war against Germany and there are sufficient quotes from Polish officers and members of the government from 1936 onwards who were convinced of the will to war Poland against Germany. 

Even before 1 September 1939, Polish militias were deployed on German territory, setting fire to German farms and people were shot at.

(For more information, see the book “Truth for Germany” by Udo Walendy or the book “Poland – War Calculation, Preparation, Execution” by Dr. Stefan Scheill remove.) 

The state of the “German Reich” did not declare war on the Poles. There is no Declaration of war by the “German Reich” against Poland.

The Germans simply declared that “from 5:45 a.m. onwards we will shoot back.” 

If one interprets this generally (symbolically) to refer to the border violations of Poland against the German Reich between January 1939 and August 1939, so that reproduced correctly. 

Unfortunately, the Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler imagined that he could represent the interests his German compatriots who lived under Polish care in New Poland and the official historiography names the faked attack on the German radio station in Gleiwitz as the trigger, where, according to the Allies, the Germans  used German SD employees who attacked the station in Polish uniforms. The Allies cite an Alfred Naujocks who defected to the Americans in November 1944. In 1940 ,  the German government produced the propaganda film „Baptism of Fire“ in which the German people were explained why the attack on Poland had to be carried out and  did not mention the attack on the Gleiwitz radio station, but did mention the shelling of houses in Beuthen and the death of two Germans.

A brief aside: The Allies stated at the IMT Tribunal in Nuremberg, which was factually incorrect, that the  German Reich had attacked France and Great Britain. In reality, Great Britain and France had declared war on the German Reich as part of their  military alliance (mutual assistance pact) with Poland. The Soviets blamed the Germans for the Katyn massacre, even though they themselves were the perpetrators. I don’t know why the Allied states told unnecessary lies at the IMT Tribunal. But now I don’t know who started the Second World War. If the British and French deliberately told unnecessary lies, perhaps they also lied to us about the start of the war between the German Reich and Poland. I wasn’t there, so I can’t know that. 

Thus, Chancellor Hitler felt compelled to send German troops into to invade Warsaw. Whether other heads of government and chancellors foreign states today or in the past, would have acted in the same way I don’t know.

After the occupation of Poland, Chancellor Hitler tried again to initiate peace talks with Great Britain and France.

This phase lasted from October 1939 to May 1941 (the flight of Rudolf Hess to Great Britain). 

The so-called Western Allies would have  gladly agreed  to the peace efforts According to official historiography, from  November 1941  onwards there were no mass gassings of Jews.                    

Unfortunately, the Western Allied states, especially Great Britain, agreed to Hitler’s peace proposals  . In this context we remember again the Jewish declaration of war by the British „Daily Express“  in March 1933.

One can assume that the Jews already had some influence on the politics of the United Kingdom of Great Britain.

The Western Allies preferred to wage a bomber and bombing war against Germany and thus destroyed the  infrastructure in Germany.

The Allies destroyed cities such as Hamburg and the Ruhr area with their Incendiary bombs. However, Dresden also experienced this Allied suffering of the phosphorus bomb.

bardements. According to the British, between 

350,000 to 500,000  civilians.  Refugees from Breslau and other eastern regions plus the indigenous  population.  

Due to the destroyed factories, roads, bridges and railway tracks, the Food supplies in the concentration camps deteriorated day by day and so the Allied soldiers then (after the war) thanks to their own Allies war crimes (bombing  of civilian residential areas) of the so-called „world public“ pictures from the concentration camps where people had starved to death.

Unfortunately, many people today forget that German civilians outside the concentration camps also had a very bad life and that they often went hungry.

France attacked the German Reich

France attacked Germany first
(from the website „Alles Schall und Rauch“)

This historical fact came back to me after Merkel and Macron met in Tallinn on Friday and Merkel was full of praise for Macron’s keynote speech on his vision of the EU. There is a „maximum level of agreement between Germany and France,“ said the Chancellor. Macron spoke, among other things, of wanting to introduce a European army.

Speaking of the army and Franco-German friendship, it is known to very few and is rarely mentioned in history lessons, it was France that FIRST attacked and invaded Germany in 1939.

Yes, it was the Saar Offensive that began on September 7, 1939, just FOUR days after France declared war on Germany. The Wehrmacht was busy with Poland in the east and France took advantage of this in the west to conquer German territory.
The New York Times ran the headline on September 7, 1939. „… FRENCH INVADE THE REICH; BRITISH LAND IN FRANCE …“


There were 11 French divisions, part of the 2nd Army, which invaded Germany on a 32-kilometer-wide strip near Saarbrücken and encountered little resistance from the Wehrmacht.
The French army penetrated to a depth of 8 kilometers with 400 tanks and 4,700 artillery pieces and occupied 12 towns and villages: Gersheim, Medelsheim, Ihn, Niedergailbach, Bliesmengen, Ludweiler, Brenschelbach, Lauterbach, Niedaltdorf, Kleinblittersdorf, Auersmacher and Sitterswald (then also called Hitlersdorf).


French soldiers in front of the Kessler Inn in Lauterbach, September 1939

Very interesting, or rather revealing in retrospect, is the headline in the New York Times three days later on September 10, 1939: „… FRENCH ADVANCE FURTHER; GOERING APPEALS TO PARIS; BRITISH CABINET PREPARES FOR THREE-YEAR WAR“


I used the world’s most „respected“ newspaper as a source and because the USA was „neutral“ at the time.
On September 12, 1939, the French captured the town of Brenschelbach and destroyed the Schengen Bridge at the border triangle of France, Germany and Luxembourg.
I’m not trying to sugarcoat anything here, BUT the true story did not happen as we are told, France and England were completely unprepared at the start of World War II and were just victims of German aggression.

The fact is that France attacked Germany first, although there was a „non-aggression pact“ between the two countries. See „the German-French declaration of December 6, 1938“.
Berlin responded with a peace offer. As the headline shows, the British and thus the Allies wanted a long war (three years) and prepared for it.
Both countries were ready for war anyway, otherwise France would not have invaded Germany immediately after the declaration of war and the British would not have been able to land in France.

All of this happened a full 8 months BEFORE the Wehrmacht’s so-called Western campaign began on May 10, 1940!
I am also explaining these historical connections because the Western Allies are once again celebrating themselves as the good guys and the heroes with the feature film DUNKIRK, which was released in cinemas in July 2017.
As always, this film is part of the propaganda, presenting the entire course of the war and what led to it in a completely one-sided way, because as we know, the „victor“ writes history!
The Battle of Dunkirk took place in May and June 1940 as part of the Western campaign. As mentioned above, a large number of British soldiers, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), were already on the continent from September 1939.

On September 3, 1939, the British Kingdom declared war on the German Reich. The very next day, the first soldiers and their military equipment landed in France.
By September 27, 152,000 soldiers, 21,424 military vehicles, 37,000 tons of ammunition, and 25,000 tons of fuel had been brought over from the British Isles by ship. They were sent to the French-Belgian and French-German borders.
Over the months, more and more soldiers and weapons came to France, and by March 13, 1940, the force had increased to almost 400,000 soldiers.

In May 1940, the BEF consisted of 10 infantry divisions, an armoured brigade, and 500 Royal Air Force (RAF) fighters and long-range bombers.
It is claimed that the BEF was only there to defend France, but you can also see it the other way around, the British had come across the English Channel to join the French in attacking Germany.
What stopped them?
Why were the French soldiers withdrawn from the Saarland by October 17, 1939? The Wehrmacht’s quick victory over Poland.
The Polish campaign only lasted from September 1 to October 6, 1939.
Interestingly, the British and French declared war on Germany because of the September 1 invasion of Poland. On September 17, Soviet soldiers invaded Poland, but war was NOT declared on Moscow.
Why not?

London and Paris claimed that the reason for declaring war on Berlin was the obligation to assist Poland. Why declare war on Germany and not on the Soviet Union, which had done the same?
On the contrary, the Soviet Union later became an ally of the Western powers, although the Soviet occupation of Poland was characterized by the transformation of society along Soviet lines and was accompanied by terror, mass shootings and deportations.

Many crimes were blamed on the Germans, such as the Katyn massacre, although it was members of the Soviet People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) who shot around 4,400 captured Poles, mostly officers, in a forest near Katyn, a village 20 kilometers west of Smolensk, between April 3 and May 11, 1940.

This act was one of a series of mass murders of 22,000 to 25,000 professional or reserve officers, police officers and other Polish citizens, including many intellectuals.
The decision to carry out these mass murders was made by the Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, who then ordered them to be carried out by the Politburo of the Communist Party in at least five different locations in the Union Republics of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus.

After Hitler ordered the attack on the Benelux countries and France on May 10, 1940, the Wehrmacht’s tank units advanced very quickly, which was a complete surprise to all warring parties. On May 20, the 2nd Panzer Division of the XIX Army Corps had already reached the Channel coast near Abbeville.
This meant that the Allied Northern Group of around 1.2 million men (63 divisions: 29 French, 22 Belgian and 12 British) was surrounded by Army Group A in the south and Army Group B in the east between the Somme and the sea.

The British were in danger of the entire British Expeditionary Force being taken prisoner or wiped out. On May 19, the Royal Navy began preparing to evacuate troops back across the Channel on behalf of the British War Cabinet under Winston Churchill and at the suggestion of General Lord Gort (commander of the BEF).

The northern French city of Dunkirk was the BEF’s last evacuation port. The British and French managed to „defend“ the bridgehead until they had evacuated over 330,000 of around 370,000 of their soldiers in Operation Dynamo. The German Wehrmacht captured the city on June 4.

It is disputed why the British managed to bring the majority of their own soldiers back to the island by ship. There is Hitler’s „halt order“ of May 24, 1940, which stopped the Wehrmacht’s advance, even though General Guderian’s tanks were only 18 kilometers from Dunkirk and could easily have prevented the British evacuation.
Some historians attribute this to Hitler’s sheer eccentricity, that he wanted to assert himself as the leader and the supreme authority over the army command. I tend to think that Hitler was known to be an Anglophile and therefore stopped his own army and deliberately let the British soldiers go on the beach at Dunkirk.

Secretly, he thought that this would give him a plus for peace talks with London, which Churchill of course never saw as such; he regarded Dunkirk as a „miracle.“ This saving of an entire army was a cardinal mistake from a military perspective, because it meant that it could be used against the Wehrmacht again.
And so it was, because the British returned to France with the landing in Normandy on June 6, 1944.