In
1941 Hitler, realising that an immediate defeat of Britain was not forthcoming,
decided to turn toward the East for the great reckoning with its old ideological
adversary, but present ally, the Soviet Union. He made the same mistake Napoleon
made about 130 years earlier. At first he had great success. Later the enormous
recourses of Russia, and the Russian winter turned his campaign in to a
catastrophe. The remaining unoccupied part of France was taken by the Germans in
that year as well. The Japanese attack on the United States brought that country
into the war on the Allied side. The United States under President Roosevelt had
already supported Britain with the “Lend and Lease Act” which allowed the US to
“lend” arms to Britain. Britain’s first great success was the winning of the
North African war, in which German troops attacked the British in Egypt, from
the Italian colony of Libya. Now an Allied attack on Sicily induced Italy to
change sides. Defeat at Stalingrad, on the Eastern Front turned the tide
definitely. Tito's communist partisans took hold of mountainous parts of
Yugoslavia. Germany was now slowly but surely losing the War.
Enormous resources went
into a program to kill Europe's Jewish population. Hitler’s strain of
nationalism was fiercely racist, and in this vision, the Jews embodied the
"powers of darkness" that stood in the way of the happiness of the European
peoples. So they had to go. The program was set up like an international
industry with resources, an infrastructure and an end-product. Jews, the basic
commodity, were rounded up all over Europe and transported by train to death
camps (mainly in Poland and Ukraine) where they were gassed with frightening
industrial efficiency. The end-products were six million dead.
In
1944 Germany was retreating on the Eastern front. It had tried to reoccupy Italy
and was fighting a war to regain that country. In the West, the British and
Americans with other allies invaded France in Normandy. A year later Germany was
defeated and the war
in Europe
was over.
