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Nazi foreign policy, 1933-38Foreign reaction to the Austrian Anschluss

Nazi foreign policy aimed to revise the Treaty of Versailles, unite German-speaking people and expand German land. This led to the invasion of the Rhineland, the Austrian Anschluss and the crisis in Czechoslovakia. Britain and France's policy of appeasement led to the Munich Agreement.

Part of HistoryAppeasement and the Road to War

Foreign reaction to the Austrian Anschluss

France

French politics were in turmoil in March 1938. Two days before Germany invaded Austria the entire French government had resigned. France was not in a position to oppose the invasion.

Britain

In March 1938, Britain was having its own political problems.

Anthony Eden, the Foreign Secretary, had resigned over Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's decision to open negotiations with the Fascist dictator of Italy, Mussolini. With Chamberlain determined to appease Hitler, there was no political will to oppose Germany.

The British population were against the idea of another European war. The Anschluss (union) was not seen as a threat to Britain and, as both nations were German-speaking, there was a sense that there was no good reason why Austria and Germany shouldn't unify.

Anti-appeasers, such as Winston Churchill, were alarmed by Germany's annexation of Austria. They believed that if Hitler had a true claim to Austria, he should have used negotiation and diplomacy rather than force.

Results

  • Germany added seven million people and an army of 100,000 to its Reich
  • Germany gained useful resources such as steel, iron ore and Austria's foreign exchange reserves
  • the balance of power in South-Eastern Europe shifted in favour of Germany, increasing their influence in the Balkans
  • Czechoslovakia was now surrounded on three fronts by Germany

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