Prof. Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Confrontation of forces in Europe
in 1939
Confrontation of forces in Europe on
January 1, 1939 looked favorable for Adolf Hitler who signed earlier on
November 25 1936 an anti-soviet Anti-Komintern Pact
with Japan, which promptly
started military actions against the Soviet Union.
For the first time in world’s history in 1938-1939 air battles of up to 400
planes were fought between Soviet and Japanese pilots. Hitler at the beginning
of 1939 believed that he had aligned some 600 divisions against the USSR.
Hitler was led to believe that his
coalition included 200 divisions of the Kantung Army
were ready to attack from the east and ready while on the western Soviet
borders were 220 German divisions, about 100 Polish divisions and about 80
divisions of other German allies. Thus Hitler hoped to defeat quickly Soviet
forces of 170 divisions in 1939. The Soviets increased their forces to 225
divisions in 1931.
Hitler admired Polish victory over Lenin’s
army in 1920 and hoped to use Poles as his cannon-fodder. Hitler hoped to
mobilize in Poland
some three million soldiers (less than 10% of population) besides regular
Polish Army. Thus, Nazis were sure that they had enough soldiers to defeat the Soviet Union.
Polish Foreign Minister Józef
Beck was convinced that after victory over the USSR,
Hitler was ready to follow his “Eastern Plan” and exterminate 51 million Slavs
in order to create for the next 1000 years a “racially pure” “Great Germany”
from the Rhine River
to the Dnepr and have a German colonial empire from the Rhine to Vladivostok. In 1945
Nazis had enough gas to kill tens of millions of Poles and Ukrainians living
west of the Dnepr
River. The main goal of Berlin government was to
gain control over Soviet and Arab oil and gas fields. Similar ideas caused Berlin in 1914 to declare war on Russia.
Territory of Russia included “World’s Heartland” as defined by
general major Karl Haushofer also professor of geopolitics, who believed in
coming geopolitical catastrophe because of excessive size of human population.
Haushofer’s student and Hitler’s secretary was Rudolf Hess who was together
with Hitler in prison in Landsberg in Bavaria after the coup in Munich in 1923.
Professor Haushofer visited Hitler in
prison and gave to Hitler and to Hess some six hours of lectures at the moment
when Hitler needed help in writing his political program “Mein Kampf.” Houshofer realized that
Hitler lacked of knowledge and gave him such books as the “Political Geography”
by Friedrich Ratzel. After the defeat of Germany
at the beginning of the nuclear age, Karl Ernest Haushofer, general, geographer
and geo-politician committed suicide on 27 of August of 1946, probably feeling guilty of having helped Hitler’s folly.
On January 26, 1939 Hitler’s plans of
conquest suffered a major blow in form of a decisive refusal by Poland to join
the Anti-Komintern Pact in fact an anti-Soviet pact.
The rejection was given personally by the Polish Foreign Minister Beck to the
German Foreign Minister Ribbentrop in Warsaw.
The two main protagonists in Europe were Hitler and Stalin. Each tried to place the
other in a two-front war. Stalin started to exploit Poland’s
refusal of January 26 and on March 10, 1939 in a speech broadcast by radio Moscow during the 18th
convention of Soviet Communist Party, Stalin invited Hitler to cooperate with
him. At first the Nazis were flabbergasted. However, Hitler was advised that he
could not attack the Soviets directly following German invasion of Poland because
of heavy battles expected with the Polish Army.
Hitler accepted the invitation. Thus,
Stalin’s government knew when the Pact Ribbentrop-Mołotov
will be signed and accordingly planed an attack against the Japanese in Manchuria at Khakkhim-Gol. In
the middle of a military disaster in which some 20,000 Japanese were killed,
the government in Tokyo leaned about Hitler’s
betrayal of his pact with Japan,
signed in 1936.
Japanese negotiations with the Soviets
ended with Japan’s exit from
the war against the USSR
on September 16, 1939. The next day, on September 17, 1939 the Red Army invaded
Poland two weeks after
German Army attacked Poland
on September 1, 1939 and started the Second World in Europe.
1 maj 2011 r. prof. Iwo Cyprian Pogonowski
Blacksburg, US
www.pogonowski.com