World War II -- a Catastrophic Event that Changed the World
What was the most crucial and important cause of World War II?
It would be fair to look to the Nazis and Hitler's fanaticism as the most crucial and important cause of World War II. And certainly historians and scholars have few doubts as to Hitler's accountability in the tragic, bloody and catastrophic slaughter in Europe. But what were the events and issues that allowed the Nazis to come to power? What propaganda did the Nazis use to seal their hold on Germany? Other causes need to be weighed in the matrix of WWII prior to making the judgment that the Nazi obsession for expansion and for building an Aryan race constituted the most crucial cause of the war.
Thesis: The main, the most crucial and important underlying cause of WWII was the Treaty of Versailles. This paper will detail the specific parts of the treaty that the Germans considered grossly unfair and which led to Hitler's effective use of propaganda to promote nationalism and his own demonic strategies.
Main Causes of WWII -- Treaty of Versailles: Meantime there were other important causes that led to the carnage of WWII. The Treaty of Versailles, a very harsh treaty that officially brought an end to WWII but paved the way for a lingering bitterness toward the allies by Germany. The treaty was "ruinous to Germany in many ways," according to Angelfire.com. Article 231 of the Treaty dumped all the financial reparation responsibilities on the backs of the Germans. This was an unreasonable demand as an end-of-war sanction, and what it actually produced was a "war-guilt clause" Angelfire.com reports. The enormous amount of money that it would have taken to rebuild all the structures (bridges, roads, buildings, rail lines, factories and more) damaged during the war was beyond what Germany could muster. The Treaty also called for the purging of the German air force, a huge cutback in German naval resources, and a "maximum allowance of 100,000 troops for the army in Germany.
Beyond those reparations, Germany was forced to give up territories to France, to Poland, and to change its form of government to a democracy. Moreover the Treaty was so brutally harsh...
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