The Rest Is History - 529. The Nazis' Road to War: Showdown in Munich (Part 2)
Episode Date: January 9, 2025On 17th September 1938, in Munich, one of the most extraordinary meetings in history took place. Neville Chamberlain launched an extraordinary and unprecedented diplomatic coup. Boarding a plane, he s...et off to meet Adolf Hitler in a desperate attempt to prevent war over Czechoslovakia, following the Nazis’ territorial incursions into Czechoslovakia. Little did he know that Hitler was already planning to launch a full blown war on the first of October - just two weeks later. Chamberlain, in his own mind the man of the hour, boldly wrestling the fate of Europe back under control, left with the goodwill of the British public behind him. Arriving at the Berghoff, Hitler’s fabled eerie, the two men talked and debated for three hours. Finally, Hitler agreed not to precipitate military action while Chamberlain discussed the situation with his Cabinet. Ominously, both men were delighted by the turn of events. Upon returning home, Chamberlain declared himself convinced of Hitler’s reliability, despite knowing full well of the atrocities he had already committed. Finally, in September 1938, another totemic emergency meeting of the main European powers took place in Munich, and an agreement - the consequences of which would change the world - was reached. Chamberlain would return to Britain a hero, but given the war that would follow, should he instead have been cast as a traitor? Join Tom and Dominic as they discuss the Munich Agreement: one of the most discussed, and infamous diplomatic instances in history, which has forever since shaped the way that Western nations have addressed international affairs. Had Neville Chamberlain delayed war with Germany, or inevitably doomed Czechoslovakia and Poland to the ruthless ravages of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi party? _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Editor: Jack Meek Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I felt quite fresh and was delighted with the enthusiastic welcome of the crowds who were waiting in the rain and who gave me the Nazi salute and shouted hail at the tops of
their voices all the way to the station. There we entered Hitler's special train for the
three-hour journey to Berchtesgaden. All the way up there were people at the
crossings, the stations, and at the windows of the houses, all hiling and
saluting. We drove to the brown house a good deal higher up the mountain. Halfway
down the steps stood the Fuhrer, bare-headed, and dressed in a khaki-colored coat of broadcloth
with a red armlet and a swastika on it, and the military cross on his breast. He wore black trousers, such as we wear in the evening, and black
patent-leather lace-up shoes. His hair is brown, not black. His eyes blue. His expression
rather disagreeable, especially in repose, and altogether he looks entirely undistinguished. You would never notice him
in a crowd, and would take him for the house painter he once was. After saying some words
of welcome, he took me up the steps and introduced me to a number of people, among whom I only distinguished General Keitel, a youngish, pleasant-faced, smart-looking
soldier.
We then entered the house, and passed along a very bare passage to the celebrated chamber,
or rather hall, one end of which is entirely occupied by a vast window. The view towards Salzburg must be magnificent.
But this day there were only the valley and the bottoms of the mountains to be seen.
That was Neville Chamberlain who was writing to his sister Ida after his trip to Hitler's
mountain lair on Thursday the 15th September 1938. And Dominic seems to have been completely obsessed with what Hitler was wearing.
Amazing attention to detail.
But I suppose it's a novelty for Chamberlain. Hitler's shoes.
Yes. Black patent leather lace up shoes.
Yeah. You would never, you would take him for the house painter he once was.
Which he wasn't, was he?
No, he was never a house painter. He was a postcard painter. The fact that
Chamberlain is describing it in such banal detail to his sister, this extraordinary meeting is a reminder of an unprecedented moment
it is, right? People don't normally do this. So in the last episode, the first of our two
part series on Munich, we talked about how rare it is for European statesmen to do this,
to fly to each other's countries at the drop of a hat for an emergency
summit. This didn't happen in the buildup to the First World War. Chamberlain is doing
something extraordinary here. He's boarded his plane, we ended last time, a Heston aerodrome.
He's launching this remarkable diplomatic coup in a desperate attempt to avoid war over
Czechoslovakia, a war that Hitler is planning to launch on
the 1st of October, which is just two weeks away.
And which Chamberlain doesn't know that, of course.
No, Chamberlain doesn't know that at all.
So just on Chamberlain and his flight, Chamberlain left with the goodwill of the British press
kind of ringing in his ears.
Every newspaper in Britain said it was brilliant that Chamberlain was doing this.
They were so excited.
The news from Paris, you know, Paris sent him kind of messages of support.
The French are delighted that he's doing it.
Crucially, I think for Britain, the Dominions, that is Australia, Canada, and so on, New Zealand,
they have made it clear to him they are very, very reluctant to be dragged into a war in Central Europe.
Right, because if the British don't want to die for Czechoslovakia, I guess if you're in
Wellington or Sydney, I mean, even Madder.
Exactly.
So off he goes with their goodwill.
It's actually not his first flight.
This is one of the things that people think about Chamberlain that is wrong.
He got up with, with, um, with the future George VI, hadn't he?
At some air show or something.
Is that right?
That's an industrial fair in Birmingham in the 1920s.
That's so chaste.
It is, yeah. And they'd only like gone, circled the field and then landed again,
but he had been in a plane before that.
It was great fun.
Anyway, he's traveled this time with his closest aide, who is a guy called Sir Horace Wilson,
who is one of the civil servants, who was one of the key architects of the appeasement policy.
Basically, let's solve the European issue by giving into what they're more reasonable demands.
That's how they see it. So they have ham sandwiches and they drink whiskey on the flight. I think
that's an excellent combination actually. I think more airlines should offer that as an option.
It's a smooth flight, but then they get into Munich and there's a bit of a storm, a bit of turbulence.
Oh, there's an omen there. Yes. It is an Omen.
Yeah.
They are escorted by a German plane to the ground.
Chamberlain comes out of the plane and he's very happy.
He's smiling for the cameras.
He's very confident.
In his own mind, I think it's really important for people to get this in their heads about Munich.
Chamberlain is not doing all this sort of reluctantly, grudgingly, like he is the victim in all this.
He's seizing the moment.
In his mind, he is the star.
He is the hero of the hour.
He is the man of destiny, the modern politician who has seized European history by the scruff
of its neck.
The arbiter of the continent's fate.
That's exactly how he sees himself.
Although that said, the anti-appeasement MP Harold Nicholson said that Chamberlain
and Horace Wilson arrived in Germany with, and I quote, the bright faithfulness of two
curates entering a pub for the first time.
That's a brilliant description.
Which I think is pretty close to the mark. So you sort of get a sense of that from Chamberlain's
from that reading, right?
He gets this big sort of-
It's very pooterish quality.
Yeah. There were lots of cars, people saluting, Hitler had some smart shoes on.
He wore black trousers.
So he arrives at the Berghof, Hitler's Eyrie, his eagle's nest. It's pouring with rain,
it's very cloudy, which is why he says he can't see Salzburg. He's not the first British visitor
to go there. David Lloyd George.
And the Duke of Windsor who had been Edward VIII notoriously had been there.
Exactly. And Hitler as he describes, he's waiting from the steps, they shake hands.
If you look at the photos, they both look very jolly. Chamberlain of course has his
umbrella and his hat. He obviously makes this remark about Hitler looking like a house painter.
And actually he's even more damning. I mean mean British snobbery is a great theme with these episodes. When he goes back to the cabinet later on he says Hitler wasn't
a quote the commonest little dog he had ever seen, though it was impossible not to be impressed
with the power of the man. So he despises Hitler and yet at the same time he recognizes
that there is a kind of demonic quality to Hitler, though as we will see I think Chamberlain
completely misreads the balance
of power between himself and Hitler. Anyway, he's arrived at the eagle's nest. Hitler says,
come into my study. They go into his study. Ribbentrop, who is hanging around, is not invited
in. So that would have improved his mood. No, no, he hates Chamberlain, hates Britain, loves German
sparkling wine, but hates Britain. He's not allowed into his Red Cross. And for three hours they talk and there's the storm raging outside,
very kind of vulcanarian. Hitler is speaking quite softly. It's all been translated by
his interpreter, who's a guy called Paul Schmidt. And he's going on and on about how
badly the Sudeten Germans are treated. And Chamberlain says, look, if you will rule out
force, I will consider anything to make
you happy.
Now we can talk about any kind of solution, but you must not fight.
Hitler at this point loses his temper and he says, well, I mean, you talk to me about
force, he says, but Benesh and the Czechs, they're already using force against my countrymen
in the Sudetenland.
I will not accept this.
You know, I will settle this question, all this kind of thing. And then he starts a trouble with Hitler. He can't
control himself. He goes off on a rant, doesn't he? He goes on a massive rant. He says, I
don't care if there's a world war. You know, if I want to settle this, I'd rather have
a world war. Frankly, I'd have a less of a world war. And Chamberlain is very cross with
this point. Chamberlain does not give in to him. Chamberlain is not a wimp and a weed.
Chamberlain says, well, if you think like that, then I've completely wasted my time. There's no point in coming. He says,
if that's your intention, why did you have me come into Berketer's garden at all? Under
these circumstances, I think it's better if I leave straight away. And amazingly, Hitler
backs down at this point. People don't normally talk like this to Hitler. Hitler says, oh,
well, well, let's go back to your previous thing. You said you would grant self-determination
to the states and Germans. Well, maybe we could, maybe let's talk about how that would
work in reality. And Chamberlain obviously thinks to himself at this point, you stand
up to this bloke and he will back down, he will be reasonable.
How are we getting this? Is this from Schmidt or Hitler or from Chamberlain?
So this is a combination of Schmidt wrote memoirs later on where he talked about all
this. Schmidt is an amazing source, but also Chamberlain reports all this to his cabinet,
and he also writes about it to his sisters. So the letter to Ida that we began with. So
we get kind of different...
So there is a possibility that he might be slightly bigging up his...
Oh, I think throughout this Chamberlain is definitely bigging himself up a bit.
I don't think there's any doubts about that.
In Chamberlain's version of the conversations, he is always the star and he is playing Hitler.
Whereas I think in reality, it's the other way around.
Anyway, they agree.
Chamberlain will go back to Britain and we'll talk to his cabinet and Hitler says,
fine, I'll wait for that and I won't order any precipitate military action.
And so Chamberlain goes off and he goes down and stays at a hotel down at the bottom of the mountain in Berchtesgaden. Now Chamberlain
thinks great, I've got a good result. Hitler, once Chamberlain has gone is delighted and
he's rubbing his hands with glee, literally rubbing his hands and he says to Ribbentrop,
well, I've got Chamberlain to give me this Sudetenland. He says it's win-win. If the Czechs refuse and won't go along with this, then we'll have
a war. And if they say yes, then I'll take the Sudetenland and maybe I'll just come back
for the rest of the Czechs to back here later.
And they all think that Chamberlain is a fuddy-duddy old bloke with an umbrella, don't they?
They do.
They're all kind of laughing at him and thinking he's ridiculous. And doesn't, Hitler does kind of make an offer, say that he might go to
London, but he's worried that he will be heckled by British Jews.
He'll be poorly treated in his own mind. Exactly. So he never does.
That never happens.
No, I think probably best for British, for Britain's image that we never had Hitler over.
He went to Liverpool, didn't he?
Yeah.
So the thing about Hitler's offer here, right, is that it is quite a departure from what he previously wanted.
Up to this point, he's been talking about the Sudetenland merely as a
pretext to get the whole of Czechoslovakia.
He doesn't just want the Sudetenland, he wants to break up the whole of Czechoslovakia.
But now he's saying, well, maybe I will just take the sedation land and I'll come back for
Czechoslovakia for the rest later. So to that extent, he has kind of slightly blinked. Anyway,
Chamberlain goes back to London, everyone says, oh, you've done brilliantly. Well done. What a
tremendous man you are. And he goes straight in to brief the cabinet. And here I think it's sometimes
tempting to just be unremittingly hostile to Chamberlain.
But here is a point where I think it's very difficult to be anything but hostile because
he clearly has completely misread the situation because he says, I've met Hitler, I'm absolutely
convinced that Hitler's objectives are strictly limited.
He says, I believe Hitler when he says he only wants to bring German speakers in.
Like George Bush gazing into Vladimir Putin's eyes.
Yeah.
Seeing a good man.
This is exactly what he says. He says, well, in spite of the harshness and ruthlessness
I thought I saw in his face, I got the impression that here was a man who could be relied upon
when he had given his word. I mean, given what we know
about Hitler, so they know about the lights and the long knives, they know about the Anschluss,
they know all this. That's a mad thing for Chamberlain to say.
Yeah. Well, also the other thing is what about the Czechs at this point? Because they're
not present at this meeting, which is deciding the fate of their country. So again, I kind of looked this up and checks, so leading checks are describing everyone involved in this in
kind of very understandably, very abusive terms. So they described the Horace Wilson
as a sow. They referred to the French foreign minister as the swine. So there's a lot of
kind of poor sign based imagery. They, they, they, they referred to Chamber French foreign minister as the swine. So there's a lot of kind of porcine based imagery. They refer to Chamberlain as the old man. And one of them writes, the
Chamberlain government is treating our head of state as if he were N word chieftain ruling
some troublesome colonial tribe.
Yeah, the Czechs, they feel absolutely furious.
And they're right. I mean, the Nazis are obviously behaving in a very colonial manner, but the
British are as well. It's kind of like, you know, let's draw a line on the map here and whatever.
Yeah. I mean, you could say exactly. If you're a Czech, listen to this podcast, you're like,
the British are behaving with complete arrogance here. That's basically signing half our country
away. I mean, that's the story of Munich, isn't it? The Czechs, the story of the next few days
is actually really simple. The British with very enthusiastic French backing say to the Czechs,
right, you've got to give them the Sudetenland.
And no, you probably shouldn't even organize a referendum.
Just hand it over.
That's the quickest thing to do.
So here's my question.
Couldn't the Czechs have fought on anyway?
They've got all this industrial hinterland.
They've got arms.
They've got this incredible Maginot line in the mountains.
Very, very impressive, which they will lose if they hand over the
Sudetenland, because it's on the flank of the Sudetenland.
Why don't they just fight?
Particularly because the German economy is on the point of collapse at this point.
Because, well, first of all, they don't know that about the German economy,
but also they will lose.
The Germans have done their war games. They're pretty confident they can win in a matter of weeks.
But they're going to lose anyway.
I guess they think they're being put under enormous pressure by their supposed friends.
Be reasonable. Give them the Sudetenland. It's full of German speakers anyway.
But the thing is with those defences, they would have had perhaps a chance. If they surrender
those defences, they haven't got any chance at all. I mean, they're, you know, you're quite right. You're quite right. And lots
of listeners to this podcast will no doubt say you were right. I think it's because they think,
given that we'll lose either way, maybe if we get an international guarantee,
we give them the Sudetenland and then we get a guarantee by the French and the British.
I mean, you've made comparisons with Russia and Ukraine. I mean, everyone in the West assumed that Ukraine would lose the moment the Russians crossed the border.
The Czech seem in a stronger position to me than the Ukrainians.
Yeah, and the Czechs are arguably in a stronger position than the Poles were a year later.
For sure.
Poland, that took about a month.
Could the Czechs have held out for two months or longer?
I mean, ultimately, I think the Germans would have won.
And the Czechs with no allies?
That's a big ask.
I suppose. And they've got the Hungarians and the Poles sniffing around as well, haven't they?
Oh yeah.
Your neighbors fancy a bit of you as well.
I just wonder though, I mean, the tragedy of this is that they, they are very,
very impressively defended.
Yeah.
They have to give all that up.
Yeah, of course.
Of course, of course. Because what happens is that basically after a few days, they give
him under unrelenting French and British pressure. On the 21st of September, they get a message
from Prague, the Czechoslovak government sadly accepts the French and British proposals,
but they say that on the condition that you will do everything to safeguard our vital interests, i.e. the Sudetenland will be given away, but you will
maybe give us a guarantee or give us a pledge or give us something anyway.
Yeah, which would obviously not be worth the paper it's written on.
Well, that's the thing, isn't it? So meanwhile, what's Hitler been doing during all this?
He has been doing his usual thing, which he does when he's stressed and he has massive
lions, watches these terrible films.
Works at holes in flag poles.
Exactly. Does all this kind of thing. He thinks that the Czechs probably won't give him what
he wants, but he now having seen Chamberlain, he thinks, hey, that guy's not going to fight.
That guy's never going to go to war. So he says to Goebbels, I think we can probably
push for a bit more actually. I think, I think let's think let's up the ante. So let's get to the 22nd of September.
Now we welcome back to the rest of this history.
Yeah.
A great theme of all our series about Germany between the wars, which is the
spa hotel theme.
So people will remember we had a lot of spa hotels in the last season.
Particularly the Night of the Long Knives, wasn't it?
Which was all based in spas pretty much.
Weddings and spas.
Well, it's like a fan favourite location. We're revisiting one of the Night of the Long Knives
spa hotels because the next meeting between Chamberlain and Churchill is scheduled for a
spa hotel in Bad Gordersberg on the Rhine River near Bonn. So, a fume of sulfur. Yeah. Yeah.
Enormous sweating Germans beating each other with birch twigs or whatever they do.
Mugs of hot water.
Yeah. Drinking like filthy water. Like laughing at nothing. Just dreadful. Anyway, Chamberlain
lands at Cologne Airport just after midday. He's got his umbrella as is traditional. He
has to inspect a detachment of SS troops, then he's driven to this hotel
on the right bank of the Rhine, the Petersberg Hotel. It's been decorated for him by Ribbentrop,
who stuffed it, I read, with fruit, cigars, hydrangeas and eau de cologne.
So common.
So, yeah, exactly. You turn up and there's a load of eau de cologne. That's common.
Nikki Haslam would hate that.
Hitler was on the other bank of the Rhine, a fan favourite, the Dresden Hotel.
This was where he had planned the murder of Ernst Röhm.
So happy memories for him.
But he's in terrible form, Tom.
He's all nervous.
Chamberlain's coming.
The journalists, journalists are there, the place is swarming the press and they see him
looking strained and twitching. And it's at this point that they start a rumor, some of the press, the
German press actually, that he choose the carpets.
So they nickname him the Teppich-Fresser, which means the carpet biter.
And this becomes a big nickname for Hitler in the kind of 1930s,
1940s among the press people say, Oh, Hitler, he's always biting the,
he's always biting the carpet. Anyway Hitler, it's always biting the carpet.
Anyway, so Hitler's there biting the carpet. Finally, that afternoon, Chamberlain comes over
to the spa hotel to the Dresden. Chamberlain's delighted with himself. Chamberlain thinks,
well, I've done a brilliant thing here. I've done a great bit of work. The checks are given in,
you can have the Sudetenland. We will give a guarantee to the Czechoslovakia for the
rest of its borders.
And he says, maybe it would be a nice thing if you signed a non-aggression pact with Prague
as well to show your good intentions and then job done.
We can all go home.
Hooray.
Brilliant day's work.
And Hitler says, I'm sorry.
Actually, I've changed my mind.
The circumstances have changed and I have more demands. He says, my friends in Hungary and Poland also have
territorial demands on Czechoslovakia and I need them to be satisfied. And actually,
now that I think about it, I don't really want to wait for the Czechs to give me the
Sudetenland because they're mistreating our people every hour. I would like to send in
my army right now, please. That's my plan. So I'm actually going to send in, I would like to send in my army right
now please. That's my plan. So I'm actually just going to go for it. And Chamberlain,
he sits there and the kind of blood drains from his features. He says, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but,
but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but And he basically storms off back to his hotel and refuses to come out again.
So they're in their kind of rival hotels. Power play.
Very, very much.
Chamberlain doesn't show up the next day, the next day's meeting.
He sends a letter instead and he says...
A firmly worded letter.
A firmly worded letter.
He says, British public opinion will not stand for this.
This is very poor.
He says, also, the Czechs will fight you if you try to go in without a deal.
Hitler sends him a letter back, a polite letter actually by Hitler's standards,
and eventually they agree that they will meet that evening. So back at Hitler's hotel,
Chamley goes in and Hitler says, I've changed my mind actually, they can have four days. They've
got to be out on the 28th and then I'm going days. They've got to be out on the 28th
and then I'm going in. They've got to be out. In other words, it's war.
Chamberlain is very shocked at this. And then another twist. We do like a twist in this series.
A man comes in with a note for Hitler. Hitler opens this note and he says,
my God, the Czechs have mobilized their army.
And there's this long silence.
And Chamberlain apparently thought that Hitler was just going to go absolutely berserk and order an invasion right then and there on the spot.
And then Hitler says, fine.
They can have a bit more time.
They have to be out by the 1st of October.
I'll give them more days.
Because this seems a bit more time. They have to be out by the first of October. I'll give them more days.
Because this seems a great tragic moment. The Czechs have shown their determination.
They've mobilised. They've presumably occupied all these fortresses. It just seems awful
that they then just surrender it.
Yeah. You're taking this very personally, Tom, and not unreasonably. I mean-
I just think it's a terrible thing. I mean, it's a terrible story and we behave so badly,
although obviously not as bad as the Nazis, but no, no, it's all point of stress that I think
we're not the, we're not the chief villains in this. And of course it sells this to Chamberlain
by appealing against Chamberlain's vanity. He says to him, this concession that I'm making that they
can have till the 1st of October. I'm only making this for you because
of how much I respect you. I wouldn't make this for anybody else. And of course he loves this
because he thinks I am the star of the show. I have once again pulled off this coup. So
Chamberlain goes back to London. Hitler goes back to Berlin. Hitler spends that next day, which is Sunday strolling in the gardens, the
Reich Chancellor of Goebbels, and he says, look, what we're going to probably end
up with now is we'll get the Sudetenland.
We'll probably have to leave it at that.
And then we'll come back next year or whenever for the rest of Czechoslovakia.
Meanwhile, Chamberlain is meeting his cabinet and many of them
are actually really shocked.
They're much more
shocked than Chamberlain was that Hitler had been asking for more. Hitler had kind of changed
the terms of the game and they say, well, what we'll do is we'll send to Horace Wilson,
to Chamberlain's kind of right-hand man, civil servant, send him back to Berlin and we'll
tell Hitler, look, we're stressed to him. You cannot attack the Czechs. We have to get
the deal. If you use force at all, then the French will enter the war and Britain will
support France. They are taking a firmish line on it.
And they're starting to kind of get ready for war themselves, aren't they?
They are. Exactly.
So the French are kind of sending troops up to the Maginot line.
Yeah.
There is a sense that France and Britain are gearing up to take a strong position.
Yes, absolutely there is. 26th, 27th of September, this is when they start making really serious
preparations. Anti-aircraft batteries are being called up and there's thoughts about evacuating
people from cities. Gas master children and things.
Exactly. So the next day, Monday the 26th, Horace Wilson gets to Berlin,
gets there in the afternoon and he finds Hitler in a very peculiar mood because Hitler has got a big
speech that evening at the Sportpalast in Berlin. Oh, sport again. It's this En-Bus-P theme. Yeah,
exactly. It's going to be all these people in the stadium, indoor stadium. With medicine balls.
Hitler's going to address, 20,000 It's going to address them and hit us.
He was in a very, you know, sort of grumpy mood.
And he says to RS Wilson, I'm sick of all this, like negotiations
and hotels and stuff.
He says, basically the checks have to be out by the 1st of October.
And, or if they're not, I'll attack them.
And he says, and I quote, if France and England want to strike, let them go ahead.
I don't give a damn.
And he says to Wilson, if you do not think that we want to fight, come and see
my speech. So Wilson goes along to see this speech and Hitler is absolutely ranting and
raving like a lunatic. William Shire, the American journalist who we've quoted a few
times, he was there and he said, Hitler was shouting and shrieking in the worst state
of excitement I've ever seen him in
with a fanatical fire in his eyes. He's screaming about German-dom and the Germans being oppressed
and we will stand and fight and all this kind of thing. And his audience, who are keen Nazis,
go absolutely berserk. Every sentence they applaud and at the end they chant for minutes Führerbefehl, wir folgen, Leader Command, we will follow
you know this sort of quite chilling scene
So not the way that Chamberlain would address the good people of Birmingham
Not at all
No not at all
I've picked up a rather nice tea cosy
Yeah exactly, people of Birmingham would enjoy a kind of an indoor arena I've picked up a rather nice tea cozy. Yeah, exactly.
People at Birmingham would enjoy a kind of an indoor arena.
It's with a sort of, they could do it. The NEC, the NEC in Birmingham.
Villa Park.
It's not indoors though, is it?
It's not the same.
No, it's not, I suppose.
Um, anyway, this is spiraling off.
The next day, Horace Wilson goes back to the Reich Chan Street and he says,
look, I've had a new message from Chamberlain. Chamberlain says, don't use force. If you don't use force,
we will guarantee, Britain will guarantee that the checks will clear out of the Sudetenland.
So Britain is actually really now.
Yeah, get out of your well prepared fortifications.
Yeah. Britain is letting itself down, I think, at this point, Tom, it's fair to say. And Hitler actually is very sulky at this point. He says, well, I don't care what
Britain does. I don't care what you do. Or all I care about is the checks have got to be out by
the 1st of October. He says, look, I want an answer in two days. Are they going to clear out or not?
If they do not clear out, he says, I will smash the checks. He repeats that two more times. I
will smash the Czechs.
And Wilson, who is a very tall man, he kind of draws himself up to his full height. He says, I am warning you, if you do that, and if France feels honor bound to fight in
defense of its obligations to Czechoslovakia, quote, the United Kingdom would feel obliged
to support her.
And Hitler just stares in with those cold blue eyes and he says, if
France and England strike, let them do so. It's a matter of complete indifference to
me. I am prepared for every eventuality. It is Tuesday today, he says, and by next Monday,
we shall all be at war.
Yet another cliffhanger. I mean, you've promised cliffhangers and they keep coming.
Like fire from a machine gun, from a Bren gun, perhaps. So let's take a break now and
when we come back, we'll find out if Britain and Germany do end up at war in 1938.
Hi everyone, it's Catty here from The Rest Is Politics US. Anthony Scaramucci and I want
to tell you about our new series that looks at one of the darkest days in modern American history, the Capitol riots of January the 6th.
You know, four years have passed since Donald Trump supporters stormed the Capitol building
and tried to overturn the 2020 election results. And Cady and I are going to explore the tensions
and the personalities at the heart of that storm.
Yeah, we're going to look at the whole story, starting off with, of course, the 2020 election
result itself, Joe Biden's victory, Donald Trump's attempts to undermine that result
right up until January the 6th and those horrifying scenes that all of us watched on television
back then.
So don't miss it.
Go and search The Rest Is Politics US wherever you get your podcast to hear just how Donald Trump tried to defy American democracy. And we've included
a clip from the series for you to listen to at the end of this episode.
First of all, I must say something to those who have written to my wife or myself in these
last weeks to tell us of their gratitude for my efforts and to assure us of their prayers
for my success.
Most of these letters have come from women, mothers, or sisters of our own countrymen, but there are countless others besides from France,
from Belgium, from Italy, and even from Germany, and it has been heartbreaking to read the
growing anxiety they reveal.
If I felt my responsibility heavy before to read such letters has made it seem almost overwhelming. How
horrible. Fantastic. Incredible it is that we should be digging trenches and trying on
gas masks here because of a quarrel in a faraway country between people of whom we know nothing.
It seems still more impossible that a quarrel which has already been settled in principle
should be the subject of war.
But as long as war has not begun, there is always hope that it may be prevented.
a gun, there is always hope that it may be prevented. And you know that I am going to work for peace to the last moment.
That is Neville Chamberlain, of course, on Mistakeable Tones, addressing the British
people on the night of the 27th of September 1938 with a great rousing piece of oratory that deserves to stand beside the address
of Henry V before the Battle of Ashing Core, the colours rung up by Nelson before the Battle
of Trafalgar, ringing stuff.
Yeah. I mean, listen to that.
Yeah. He's not the most stirring of...
No, no, listen to that. You're not going to like, you know, reach for your gun and rush to the battlefront, are you?
I mean, Chamberlain, you know, he was never a war leader.
He said explicitly, I am a man of peace to the depths of my soul.
Armed conflict between nations is a nightmare to me.
He's completely upfront about that.
And frankly, if you've been through the Great War, that's a completely reasonable position
to take.
Because that famous line, how horrible, fantastic, incredible it is that we should be digging
trenches and trying on gas miles here because of quarrel in a faraway country between people
of whom we know nothing, very famous phrase and always used to condemn him.
But I mean, there he is absolutely articulating what the mass of people in Britain feel.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that when Churchill, for instance, who is the most famous anti-apes, says that what Britain
is contemplating is shameful, they don't want to hear him say that.
No, I think that's absolutely right.
I think because people probably deep down know that it's shameful.
And yet at the same time, they think we must do anything to avoid a rerun of the Great War.
They would be worse, wouldn't it?
Because it would be, it would be a London and other cities would burn.
Exactly.
That's exactly.
Now, even as Chamberlain is preparing that speech, people are queuing up for
gas masks in British town halls and village halls, the first children, blind
children are being evacuated from London.
They've installed anti-aircraft batteries on Westminster Bridge.
There is this sense that a war that nobody wants is coming and will happen within days.
Interestingly, the mood in Germany is very similar.
So that same day, the 27th, that Chamberlain made that speech, Hitler had arranged for a
motorized division to pass through Berlin towards the Czech
border and this was basically, he wanted really to impress the diplomatic corps with Germany's
readiness for war and Germany's war enthusiasm. And there's an amazing description of it by
William Shire, the journalist who mentioned a lot, and he talks about how the motorized division goes
through the tanks or the armored cars or whatever they are, and people won't look at them. People turn away, they duck into the subway, they don't
cheer, there is total silence. He says it was one of the most striking demonstrations against
war that I've ever seen. And actually, you know, Goebbels and the Nazi High Command,
they're all quite disappointed with the Berlin reaction.
But actually, even in the Nazi High Command, there is massive anxiety, isn't there? So
Ribbentrop is all, you know, he's all in favor of it. But other members of the Nazi high
command are thinking, oh, not really, not sure about this.
Yeah. War with Britain and France. Really, are we ready?
And also in the German army. I mean, they're really nervous about it. So the figures on that is that on
Germany's Western flank, they are hugely outnumbered by the French army.
Yeah. As they would be in 1939.
But in 1939, the Western allies did not have an independent Czechoslovakia with strong
front-line defences.
That's right. Well, we'll see about this point about the Nazi high commanders are really
important one and it's about to produce another of these twists in the story.
So the next day is Wednesday, the 28th of September, the house of comments
in London holds an emergency debate.
And at this point, most people think we will probably be at war within,
could be within hours, because if Hitler gives the go ahead, France will feel honor bound to
defend Czechoslovakia and we will feel honor bound to fall in behind France.
So Chamberlain is giving this enormous speech, this slightly plodding speech to these fellow
MPs explaining the whole backstory, all the negotiations with Hitler, all being for nothing,
all this kind of thing.
And then there's an amazing, I mean, it really is an amazing moment.
He has passed a note.
It kind of comes down the chain along the bench and a piece of paper, piece of
paper, so John Simon who's sitting next to him hands in this piece of paper and
it's news from the British ambassador in Berlin and he stops talking.
He reads it, pauses, clears his throat, very theatrical.
And then he says, I have something further to say to the house.
He says, I've got an invitation.
I have an invitation from Hare Hitler to meet him in Munich tomorrow morning.
He's also invited Signor Mussolini and Monsieur de Ladier.
Signor Mussolini has accepted, I've no doubt, Monsieur de Ladier,
he's the French prime minister, will also accept. I need not tell you, he says, what my answer will be. As in I'm definitely
going to go. And when people hear this, there's this colossal roar of relief.
Peace in our time.
I mean, people are literally shouting, because people credit Chamberlain with this, right?
They say he called to, he called for
peace to the last moment and Hitler has blinked and they are cheering, they're waving their order
papers. People are literally shouting, thank God for the prime minister, hurrah for the prime
minister and all this kind of thing. And the debate is brought to a premature conclusion.
People are crowding around Chamberlain, they pat him on the back. And actually the last person to go up and shake his hand is Winston
Churchill, who says to him, Godspeed.
And off he goes, he's going to go off on this mission to try and, and
bring peace to Europe.
And actually what lies behind this is an intervention from a character who's, you
know, he's well known to our listeners.
He's been very quiet in the last few episodes. I think it's fair to say-
He's been off hunting.
A bad man, but a memorable man, because we finally welcome back to the rest of history,
the sweating white suited bulk of Herman Goering.
So it's around this time that the Italian foreign minister bumps into Göring and finds in him a slight suggestion of Al Capone. So Göring at this point is an
absolutely enormous man. If you see him in this suit, the suit is like multiple sizes
too small for him. He's got all kinds of diamond studded tie pins in the shape of swastikas
and things. Yeah. So Göring who's a sweaty man as it is, he's been sweating like a
beast for the last few days because he's in a massive funk about the idea of a European war.
He thinks the European war is bonkers. We're going to get the Sudetenland. What do we want to fight
France and Britain for? He hates Ribbentrop with an absolute passion. He keeps saying to Ribbentrop, stop asking for a war, you fool.
And at one point they have a massive row.
Goering says, well, I know what war is.
He says, if Hitler wants a war, I'll be on the first plane over Britain.
But he says to Ribbentrop, well, I'll make sure you're strapped in next to me on that
plane.
Imagine if you were on that plane with, what a terrible nightmare that is.
Who am I going to sit next to? He's so large, isn't he? That it's going to crash that plane. Imagine if you were on that plane with what a terrible nightmare that is. Who might be sitting next to you? He's so large isn't he that it's going to crash the plane.
I'm in the middle of the three between Goering and Ribbentrop. What a nightmare. Anyway,
what actually happens? Goering goes behind Hitler's back. He sends messages to Mussolini
and informal messages to London and Paris. And he says to Mussolini, I think you should
call, if you call for a peace conference, you're Hitler's ally.
Hitler will have to go along with it.
And actually, if Mussolini calls for a peace conference,
it's a brilliant way for Hitler to kind of back down a bit
on the war thing without losing too much face.
He will look like a person who in the final analysis
was prepared to be reasonable because he gave into his
great pal's request. And so this is exactly what happens. Earlier that day, the Italian ambassador
had gone to see Hitler and said, oh, the Duce thinks you could postpone the invasion, have one
more meeting with the British, invite the French along. And Hitler's kind of trapped. You know,
he can't, when he could ignore Mussolini completely, but that would risk his alliance with his biggest ally in Europe.
So Hitler says, yeah, fine.
Whatever.
Yeah.
All right.
So that is the cue.
That is what lies behind the infamous Munich Peace Conference, which begins the very next day.
And I think at this point, we've been leading up to Munich, but it's actually
worth pausing to make a point that I think is often lost.
If you've been listening to all their story, it should be obvious at this point
that Munich is not the great turning point.
No, because the betrayal has already happened.
The British and French have already basically told the Czechs to give over
the Sudetenland and made it very clear they will not fight for the Sudetenland. So actually, what's happened at Munich is
not Chamberlain and de Lattier backing down. It's Hitler backing down. It's Hitler not
forcing his war on the Czechs and on the world because of Goering and Mussolini going behind
his back. Chamberlain is not going to give away anything that he hadn't given
away weeks earlier actually. And this is fatal for Hitler's willingness in future to listen to
anything that Goering has to say on foreign policy. So he calls him an old woman, doesn't he?
Exactly, he does.
Furious about it.
Hitler feels cheated and this will run through the rest of this episode and indeed next week's
episodes. Hitler's sense of being cheated of his war.
Now Chamberlain doesn't get this at all.
Chamberlain still thinks I'm the star of this story.
I mean, everyone in Britain kind of treats him like he's the star of the story.
When he flies out the next day, the whole cabinet comes to the aerodrome to see him off.
The high commissioners of Australia, Canada, Ireland, and South Africa, they all come to
see him off.
Godspeed, good luck, all that kind of thing.
They think he is the architect of this, which he absolutely isn't.
And Chamberlain loves it.
He says, he has this quotation to the cameras.
When I was a little boy, I used to repeat, if at first you don't succeed, try, try, try
again.
That's what I'm doing.
When I come back, I hope I will be able to say as hot spur says in Henry the fourth out of this nettle danger, we pluck
this flower safety. Of course, hot spur lost the subsequent battle. He did indeed say not
a good omet. It's not a good omet. On the other hand, it's kind of nice to think we
once had prime ministers would randomly randomly quote from Henry IV.
Yeah, I can't imagine Stammer doing that.
No, no, I can't see Stammer doing that.
So as soon as he lands in Munich, the conference opens straight away.
They're meeting in Hitler's Munich headquarters, the Führerbau, it's called,
which is this huge neoclassical building that was built especially for the Nazi party.
It's not a hotel, but it's basically got that vibe.
It's got that vibe. It's full of kind of marble and flowers and I'm sure
Ribbentrop has sprayed it with Eau de Calais.
Champagne.
So the delegates all go straight up to Hitler's private study and they're sitting around these
sort of little table beneath a portrait of Bismarck.
And presumably there's a famous conference isn't there where Disraeli goes?
Yeah, Berlin. And Disraeli is seen as the guy who has bearded Bismarck in his lair and sorted Europe out. And I get that must surely be on Chamberlain's mind that he's playing that role.
Because that's where the Peace with Honor, Peace in our Time line comes from. He's quoting Disraeli
after 1878 I think it was.
So they're around this table.
Hitler is there.
Mussolini is there.
Edward de Ladier, we haven't mentioned him. He had actually fought at the Battle of Verdun.
So he's a serious person, but he's very, very miserable.
Everyone said he looked like a snail, which I can kind of see actually.
I gather Hitler and Goebbels thought he was more impressive than Chamberlain though.
Did they?
May not be saying much, but they thought he was. Yeah. Well, I mean, who would, who would ever disagree with Hitler and Goebbels thought he was more impressive than Chamberlain though. Did they? May not be saying much, but they thought he was, yeah.
Well I mean, who would ever disagree with Hitler and Goebbels?
What tremendous judges of character they are.
But they'd have a sense of who they thought were.
I suppose they would, yeah, they would.
Now of course the people who aren't there, the Czechs.
No one's invited the Czechs.
Hitler has said, there's no way the Czechs are coming.
And the Czechs are outraged at this.
And Chamberlain said to Edvard Benes, the Czech president, well, I'll represent you.
I mean, that's like classic British arrogance. The conference actually, I didn't really know this about the Munich conference until
reading up on it.
It was a complete shambles.
It was like German efficiency.
It was not.
They didn't have enough pens and pencils.
They forgot to bring any paper. It was a complete mess. not. They didn't have enough pens and pencils. They forgot
to bring any paper. It was a complete mess and the phones didn't work properly. Ribbentrop
was going mad about the phones not working. He said it was a great embarrassment for Germany.
And the British had to go back and use the phones in their hotel because the phones didn't
work properly. Anyway, as we said, I think the weird thing about the Munich conference
is so well known, but it's such a non-event because it's basically just kind of nothing to decide really. They've decided,
they've already decided Hitler's going to take the Sudetenland, Britain and France are going to let
him do it and that's it. And it takes them 13 hours to go through all the technicalities.
Chamberlain and de Ladier are obviously a little bit downbeat. Hitler's just bored. He doesn't
speak any language but German, so he can't understand what's going on.
But I tell you who does speak a lot of languages, who is a real master of tongues, like you, very like me, very similar people, journalist, certain strut.
Thanks.
Yeah.
Physical resemblance.
I mean, come on, Mussolini speaks German, he speaks English and he's fluent in French.
So Mussolini is like doing a bit of translating.
He's having a great time.
Yeah.
Is that how he's doing it?
He's doing it like a guy from a restaurant in New Jersey.
Yeah.
Welcome.
Welkommen.
Bienvenue.
So at about two o'clock in the morning of the 30th of September, the deal is done.
The Czechs will have 10 days to get out to the Statenland.
10th of October, the Germans will march in.
And when you say the Czechs, I mean, you mean it's not just the Czech army.
It's literally the Czechs.
Well, this is unclear, right?
A lot of Czechs flee the Sudetenland.
It's not laid down that they have to.
And they're not being offered any compensation or anything.
No, no, I don't think so.
I mean, that seems a bad deal.
It's a terrible check.
It's not a good deal.
I see no positive there.
It's a very bad deal.
Anyway, the deal is done. There's no point in you complaining about it now. They bring
out, they say there has a big signing. Hitler dips his pen in the special inkwell that he
has to sign the deal. There's no ink in the inkwell. Ribbentrop's face furious. Another
fraud.
What would Freud make of that?
Yeah. Another disaster for Germany. And actually I watched the final scenes, the
Pathé newsreels on YouTube. Hitler looks exhausted. Mussolini is having a brilliant
time clearly. But actually the person who's also loving it is Goering. Goering is in this
unbelievably tight white suit and he's kind of cracking jokes and slapping people on the
back and stuff. Because of course this is, he regards this as a victory for himself.
Although his big mates with Sir Neville Henderson, the British ambassador.
So they've gone out shooting.
Exactly.
He's having a wonderful time.
Hitler though is very gloomy and despondent.
He's actually not got what he wanted, which was his war.
And the next day he has one last meeting with Chamberlain.
They're obviously very tired because they've been up until very late. Chamberlain goes in to see him and Chamberlain...
This is where he presents his piece of paper.
Piece of paper. Chamberlain surprises him.
We will be friends forever. Everyone will be happy and the flowers will come and everything.
We promise that we will never go to war. Britain and Germany will never go to war again with
each other again.
No fairy will ever die again.
Now in Robert Harris's novel about
Munich, which is brilliant, he presents this as quite a, Chamberlain isn't clearly emotionally
invested a lot in this piece of paper. If nothing else, it actually is actually a useful political
prop because I think it is important that piece of paper in the decline of appeasement.
Stiffening British. Stiffening British resolve. Hitler has made an explicit promise that he goes on to break.
And so I think it does, it is an important piece of paper.
Hitler at the time sees the piece of paper.
He's baffled by it.
He thinks it's complete waste of time.
He says, sure, I'll sign it.
I mean, I don't care.
He signs this piece of paper and Ribbentrop says to him afterwards, what was that
piece of paper?
And Hitler says it was of no significance whatsoever, which I think is wrong. I think it really mattered
in terms of British public opinion, because this is the piece of paper that Chamberlain
waves when he gets back to Heston Aerodrome, the paper that bears his name upon it as well
as mine, you know, the promise.
Peace with honour, peace for our time.
Which is of course what Chamberlain says when he comes back and he's greeted by great crowds
and he's invited onto the balcony of Buckingham Palace.
And he's the absolute hero of the hour in Britain and indeed in the English speaking
world.
More generally there are messages from America, from Australia, Canada, well done.
But presumably not from Prague.
But not from Prague at all.
The news of the deal reached Prague on that same morning, so the 30th of September.
President Benes was in having a bath when the news was brought to him.
And he said, very presciently, he said,
It's a betrayal which will be its own punishment.
They think they will save themselves from war and revolution at our expense and they are wrong. He did think about fighting anyway. So this is your answer to
your question. The Czechs did think about fighting anyway and they thought about asking
the Soviet Union for their help. And eventually they decided, look, we're bound to lose. We're
not going to condemn our people to so much suffering. And they said, Benes said, we've
been defeated not by Hitler, but by our
friends, our so-called friends. There are huge demonstrations in Prague, people saying don't do
it. But of course they do do it. The German army crosses the border, just as Hitler had planned,
huge crowds of Sudeten Germans throwing their flowers and giving Nazi salutes and all this
kind of thing. And here's the answer to your other question
about the Czechs. So there's a huge population flight from the Sudetenland. By the time the Germans crossed the border, about 25,000 Czechs had already fled. And in the next two months...
Leaving their possessions.
Leaving everything. You know, the classic thing of people with their thing on carts.
With wheelbarrows and things.
Yeah.
Exactly. And in the next two months, another 150,000 people, including obviously the Jewish population
of the city of Ateneb, who know exactly what Nazism will mean for them.
This was a catastrophe for Czechoslovakia.
They lost three million people.
They lost 11,000 square miles of territory.
They lost a fifth of their industrial production.
And crucially, they lost those frontier defenses that you've been talking about, which have now fallen to
the Germans without a single shot being fired.
So if the Germans do want to finish the job, if they want to go into the
deeper into Bohemia, nothing to stop them at all.
What is worse or as bad Hungary and Poland both nibbled at the borders
of Czechoslovakia and took more
bits as we'll talk about the Polish bit next week and Czechoslovakia, the whole
balance of it was kind of upset. So the Slovaks demanded more autonomy.
Basically they end up with a much weaker more federalized country. There's a
Czech bit, there's an autonomous Slovakia, and the Far East,
there's a bit called subcarpathian Ruthenia, which is now in Ukraine, which is going to
have a Ukrainian majority. And there the German consul is basically the big man. So in other
words, the process of dismemberment has begun, and Hitler can basically move in to claim
the rest whenever he fancies it.
And obviously, this is terrible news for the Czechs, but it's also, I mean, it's
not great news for the conspirators and the German high command, is it?
No.
So that plot, which we talked about last time, Ludwig Beck, Admiral Canaris,
Oster, these other characters who were thinking about moving against Hitler,
that's completely fizzled out.
Hitler's done it again.
Another foreign policy coup.
So, you know, there's no mileage for a conspiracy against him.
And they say Chamberlain saved Hitler.
You know, we would have moved against him,
whether that's the case and whether it would have worked, I don't know.
But they definitely think that Chamberlain saved Hitler.
And that is the last coordinated conspiracy against Hitler within Germany until 1944?
Until 1944. It's a kind of ancestor of the Stauffenberg plot, which is what slightly
leads me to think it probably wouldn't have worked because of course the Stauffenberg plot
fizzles out within a day.
I think it might have worked had the Czechs held out, had this resulted in kind of economic
meltdown, which was coming anyway. Obviously the absorption of Czechoslovakia means that
economic meltdown is staved off, but I think circumstances might have been different.
Well, we'll never know, will we?
I mean, that's the thing.
As it is, people across Eastern Europe in particular think, you know, Hitler,
Hitler wins, Hitler is the master now.
So two countries in particular, Hungary and Romania, from this point onwards, they
basically say, well, it's not much point in this, all the French trying to build all
these alliances, they're a complete waste of time.
They never fight for you.
Hit, you know, we want to be in with the Germans.
They're the big, they're the big men now.
But the person who isn't happy is Hitler.
He wanted his war and he's been, he's been betrayed as he sees it by
Mussolini and by Goering and by
Chamberlain.
But he has stared into the eyes of Chamberlain and de Ladié and he thinks that he sees weakness
and pusillanimity and cowardice.
Yes.
And that therefore he can take them on. I mean, he calls them worms, doesn't he? Little worms.
I've seen them. I've seen how contemptible they are. And of course, that is not actually
the right... So he is mistaken as well, because actually when Chamberlain gets back, I mean,
he does all his paper waving and going on the balcony of Buckingham Palace and things,
but he does also say, we've got to rearm, you know, we've got to press
the accelerator on this.
Yes, he does.
He absolutely does.
I think in the last episode, I quoted Ian Kershaw saying about how cunning Hitler's
foreign policy coups had been, how brilliantly planned, how ruthlessly the propaganda had
been cranked up.
What a great judge of timing Hitler had been.
This is really the first point at which I think you can say his instincts completely begin to
desert him. He believes his own publicity and he misreads the situation. I think you're dead right.
I think he completely misreads Britain and France after this. I mean, all the stuff like they will
never fight, they're weak, all that. He's dead wrong.
He's running out of time now before they do fight.
I think, and he, and he doesn't see that.
I think he doesn't see that at all.
One thing about Hitler though, he feels that the German people have let him down.
He's really discomforted that there was not more enthusiasm for war in the autumn of 1938.
He was shocked that people cheered Chamberlain as he drove through the streets.
So they've let Germany down, they've let Hitler down, but worst of all, they've let themselves down.
They've let themselves down, they've let the school down.
And he says, so I wonder whether the pogrom of Kristallnacht, the night of the broken
glass against the Jewish population of
Germany, which happens just a few weeks afterwards, November 1938. We did an episode on it in our
previous season. The violence of that, I think, and the violence for which Hitler, you know,
he personally was responsible, he ordered it. I wondered at some level whether his sense of
frustration that he hasn't got his war,
his obsession with-
He's like a kind of spoiled, very violent toddler.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the impression you get with this.
Lashing out, exactly.
On the second night of Kristallnacht, he summons a closed meeting of German newspaper editors
and he says to them, I'm sick of all this stuff about peace, world peace, peace propaganda, peace is the
most important thing.
And he said, it isn't the most important thing.
You know, we need war.
We should arrange things, he says.
So, quote, the inner voice of the people itself slowly begins to cry out for the use of force.
And from this point, he is already thinking about the next conquest.
This is the thing with Hitler.
He just cannot, he's addicted.
He's like a drug addict needing his next hit.
Yeah, he needs the next hit.
So the next thing he thinks, I'll get the rest of Czechoslovakia.
He wants a port called Memel, which was a Baltic German seaport that's now basically
been swallowed up by Lithuania.
But he's also now for the first time thinking about another target.
And this would be his biggest target yet.
And this would be Poland.
Right, Dominic, thank you.
Very somber, brilliant account.
And we will be telling the terrible story of the build up to Hitler's war on Poland,
its course and its aftermath next week. And members of the Rest is History Club will get
all three episodes of that story on Monday. And if you're not a member of that club, but
you would like to get those episodes on Monday, then you can sign up at therestishistory.com.
But either way, we will be back with the Nazi war on Poland on Monday. Bye-bye.
Bye-bye.
As promised, here's a clip from the Rest is Politics US mini series.
Trump is naturally a conspiracy theorist fueler.
He will fuel the fire of any conspiracy theory because he's always seen himself as an outsider
and he wants to foment the people from the outside to attack the
people from the inside.
So he's developing these ideas that he eventually uses in January, on the 6th of January.
And the ideas are there's misinformation out there, there's lies out there, let's use these
lies as fodder to attack the people on the inside.
He's doing it with COVID.
I think hydroxychloroquine works.
You may remember this.
I took hydroxychloroquine.
Mr. President, you took hydroxychloroquine?
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm on it.
I took it.
And this is the beginnings.
This is the kernels of what's about to come. And it all starts with COVID. And it
leads up to this insurrection, or as the president says, a very
peaceful group of tourists descending upon the Capitol
building.
If you want to hear the rest of the show, go and search the rest
is politics US, wherever you get your podcasts.