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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper discusses the role of Adolph Hitler in the development of the Nazi party, his use of military tactics and his eventual downfall. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MBnazi.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of Hitler like leaders and regimes is obvious. What has changed one hopes is that the Global Community has learned to recognize them and is unwilling to let the mistakes
such as the Versailles Treaty, and the other factors, such as oppressive economic sanctions as well as over leverage and over borrowing from foreign countries grow out of control. To
allow these factors to get out of control would be to repeat the past in a way that we have only to imagine. To that end, an assessment of the
Nazi German machine and why it was so successful is needed. Many have stated that the Nazi Foreign policy was rooted in the German diplomatic tradition. But, what was actually
the case, was that it was only loosely based on this structure and eventually departed from it. The Weimar Republic came into power shortly after World War I and had
the questionable honor of having to hold the country together before, during and after the Treaty of Versailles was leveled on Germany. The Weimar Republic consisted of several different political
parties, all representing those small factions that splintered off from their original parties during the first war. This brief government was doomed to failure from the beginning, it can be
said in hindsight. Consider that the average German citizen blamed Weimar personally for acquiescing to the contentions of the Treaty. This served as an already volatile atmosphere. Politically, Germany was
in a shambles. This can be said to have been reflected in all the splintered political groups that abounded during this time, all of whom hoped to gain enough popularity
with their platforms to be able to secure power over the failing country. It can be stated with some certainty that most Germans did not even believe that the German
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