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Hitler



             equally. Yet the personal nature of this conflict in historical scholarship.
             has created an unnecessary polarization of views. Unfortunately the majority.
             of historians that have written on this topic, except the notable work of.
             Ian Kershaw, have been unwilling to fathom any shades of grey, any.
             relationship between the two camps.
             Hitler did have a foreign policy program that he laid down, however.
             sickening it was, in 1925 with the writing of Mein Kampf.(4) In this book.
             Hitler described to all the world his three main foreign policy intentions. .
             Germany needed rearmament and domestic consolidation, coupled with the.
             gaining of alliances with Britain and Italy. Then would come the.
             subjugation of France in the west, to protect its rear. All allowing for.
             the conquest of Lebensraum or living space in the east for the cramped.
             German folk at the expense of Judeo-Bolshevism. This foreign policy program.
             fit nicely with his racial dogma that was based on a vulgarized view of.
             social darwinism. Hitler believed that the history of mankind was really.
             only a struggle for space among peoples, and that the strong survived by.
             gaining the necessary living space from which they could continue to grow.
             numerically, and in terms of racial quality. The rise and fall of.
             civilizations was due to their success or failure in maintaining racial.
             purity. The internal divisions of society were racially determined, and.
             this was seen when the Jews caused the internal collapse of Germany in 1918.
             Hitler wished to eliminate this racial disparagement in phase one of his.
             program, thus allowing for the supreme goal of attaining Lebensraum.(5).
             Through his reign he was of course subject to "forces at work, both in and.
             outside Germany, conditioning the framework of Hitler's actions, which.
             naturally, did not take place in a vacuum as a free expression of autonomous.
             will." (6) He was therefore in no way immune to structural determinants,.


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