He probably had a plan B. I don't think he would build a basic strategy on the belief of 'they won't see my bluff for sure' at that level. Not because he is Hitler, because he is a soldier, more than that a militarist. He probably had already prepared for a war, but played the bluff -if it was a bluff- to get stronger under a set of circumstances noone wanted a war. It's win/win. But may be looking back, he looks unprepared at that moment in that time compared to what was to come, because looking back, we know the story today from the other end. It's been digged deep, written and written on it and that makes the general look more myopic in a sense.
Disagree with you. He had been a corporal not a trained officer, although he was not as crazy and stupid as the German generals would have us believe as they tried to justify their actions in WW2, but I really think he
didn't have a plan B. Or, to put it another way, if the allies had responded with declarations of war, I'm sure he'd have (been forced to) accept it and WW2 would have began. (Although I guess the war would have
probably been more-or-less the same, UK blockading, French and BEF waiting on the border for German attack. Hitler making a pact with the USSR, dissemble Poland etc.) It was the politician Hitler that was running the show. He'd 'bluffed' a lot earlier and got what he wanted and his hubris was growing and would build to a crescendo in years to come. That was a huge factor in his decisions.
The German military was clear it was
not ready for war against France and the UK, hence the muscial chairs with OKW / OKH in 1938 when they criticised his political approach.
This was a political calculation not a military decision. There was feeling from a substantial quarter of the allies that Versaille had been far too harsh and that it should be dialled down - especially with the UK, see the Navy treaties and response to Rhineland and Austria. Also there was little appetite for another war, the Munich agreement was celebrated at the time amongst many. He was banking on that, he liked the odds and made the bet. You do make this point, however as there was no plan B, an aggressive France and UK could have made WW2 play out very differently.
Fundamentally he was an opportunist who always preferred the radical solution. He made the same bet the year afterwards when the next 'opportunity' came up with Danzig and Poland. He lost it.
But generally, the idea that an enormous event like WWII would have turned a different way or that may be wouldn't even have happened if one or two people acted differently at some point -inlcuding Adolf Hitler- sounds pretty naive to me.
I see you ascribe to the Tolstoyian 'calculus of history' school!
I think in some(most? nearly all??) senses you are correct, but I do think on occassion individuals do have an enormous impact on how events unfurl. So yes, changing a few decisions in 1938 would likely have done little to change the course of events...but Hitler being killed on the Western Front in 1918, would have surely led to a different Germany in 1934. Or would 'history' have churned out a cookie-cutter, mesmeric, 'let's expand East, boo to world Jewry' dictator? There might be an argument that there would always have still been conflict in Europe
at some point - after all Germany was still rife with Prussian militarism and the German Army was a huge part of German society at the time - but who knows how radically different such conflicts might have been.
there is this huge culture built on it as if it is something different over all in the end.
This is probably a whole discussion, but in simplistic terms I think you can argue it was a major 'Good War' for the allies and that is different from many other conflicts in the past. Not all, but many. If you delve deeper into what happened on both sides this moral question becomes murkier and less black and white, but I still think it necessary that the allies won.
The way people talk about it, sometimes it feels like most people believe that it wouldn't have happened, if Adolf Hitler hadn't been born. That's ridiculous.
This is a good point - very reminiscent of Von Manstein or Guderian writing after the war that he and his men were fine, it was Hitler and the evil SS that did everything bad. However I'd contend that if Hitler hadn't been around, the conflict or whatever happened in it's place could have been profoundly different.
National languages, national armies, national histories...they don't exist until 200 years ago.
Okay, big topic. Don't really agree with you - there are plenty of nations that are thousands of years old that have all of the above. Yes many of them are different from the modern definition of national states, but they are definitely there. I'm sure the Chinese would vigoursly argue against you!
Unfortunately, the human culture we produced depends on wars to get ahead in every period. The techonological and scientific acheivements depend on wars. With stones or nukes or cyber weapons.
This is interesting. Unfortunately we are a warlike, aggressive species more-or-less, so it is impossible for us to know if science and technology would have fared better in a world dominated by peace. Also it seems to be an argument perfectly made for the military industrial complex! My first guess is actually no, (purely to start a discussion
), we'd have done just as well in a peaceful world - maybe even better, but would have focussed on different areas of science and tech.
But the WWII being treated as some extraordinary event happened because nobody stopped a group of 'evil' people is doing a disservice to human history in my opinion.
Not quite sure what you're trying to say here. But I'll say WW2 is extraordinary in the following senses: The greatest loss of human life due to one conflict, the amount of destruction and the geographical extent of it. We've not had a war like it in the past at all - it's unique and hopefully it stays that way. That's what makes it extraordinary. That the bad guys were beaten is a huge plus (I don't see how you can put the word evil in quotation marks when talking about Nazis or the Japanese military circa 1930/40)