The 105-day ‘Winter War’ started with Russia’s attack on Finland on 30 November 1939. Finland, however, resisted, preferring to fight than submit to Soviet demands.
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By June 1940, he had bullied Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania into co-operation, swiftly followed by full annexation. Stalin, knowing that his country’s pact with Germany would not last indefinitely, sought a buffer zone against any future German attack. With his first objective achieved, Hitler visited Warsaw on 5 October, and casting a satisfied eye over the devastated capital, declared: ‘this is how I deal with any European city’. Villages were razed, inhabitants massacred, the Polish identity eradicated and in towns, such as Lodz, Jews were herded into ghettos before eventual transportation to the death camps. Agreeing on the partition of Poland, the Germans and Russians then set about the total subjugation of the defeated population. Crushed between two totalitarian heavyweights, Poland crumbled, and on the twenty-seventh, Warsaw surrendered. On 17 September, as the German war machine advanced its way towards Warsaw, the Soviet Union as secretly agreed in the Non-Aggression Pact, attacked from the east. The British contribution to the Polish cause was not with arms, nor soldiers, nor aid, but with leaflets – by the million, dropped by plane over Germany, urging the population to stand up against Hitler and the war. Neville Chamberlain, who had been Britain’s Conservative prime minister since 1937, and who five months earlier had guaranteed the Poles assistance if attacked, dutifully declared war on Germany on 3 September followed, six hours later, by the French. Following up the rapid advances, German forces engaged in brutality, executions and merciless aggression against the civilian population. The Germans, not intending to be bogged down again in a war of trenches and stalemate, swept aside all resistance in a lightning war of blitzkrieg, using technological military advances, co-ordinated attacks and abrasive speed. Hitler inspects German troops invading Poland, September 1939 The attack on Poland began at 4.45 on the morning of Friday, 1 September 1939. The Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact, signed on 23 August 1939, allowed Hitler to pursue his ambitions in the east without fear of Russian interference ambitions that included the destruction of Poland and the subjugation of its people. With eighty-one of the world’s nations involved, compared to twenty-eight during the First World War, this was a world war in the truest sense. During the 2,194 days of the conflict, a thousand people died for each and every hour it lasted. Civilian deaths accounted for 5 per cent of those killed during the First World War but during the Second, of the 50 million-plus killed, they made up over 66 per cent. Lasting six years and a day (until the formal surrender of Japan), the Second World War saw the civilian, both young and old, fighting on the front line. The End of the War in Japan: ‘Complete and utter destruction’ The End of the War in Europe: The Death of a Corporal Italy Falls: ‘You are the most hated man in Italy’įrance Free: ‘Liberated by her own people’Īpproach from the East: ‘For the good have fallen’ The Battle of the Atlantic: ‘The U-boat peril’ The Holocaust: ‘The man with an iron heart’ The Battles of Stalingrad and Kursk: The new field marshal War in the Far East: ‘Your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign wars’ Germany’s Invasion of the Soviet Union: ‘The whole rotten structure will come crashing down’ The Mediterranean: ‘One moment on a battlefield is worth a thousand years of peace’ The Battle of Britain and the Blitz: ‘It can only end in annihilation for one of us’ The Fall of France: ‘France has lost a battle but France has not lost the war’ Germany Invades Poland: ‘This is how I deal with any European city’ To find out more visit or follow us on twitter: Give yourself sixty minutes and see what you can learn. Then, having absorbed the basics, you may feel inspired to explore further. Just straight in, to the point, sixty minutes, done. No embedded links to divert your attention, nor a daunting book of 600 pages with a 35-page introduction. Everything you need to know is presented in a straightforward narrative and in chronological order.
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History in an Hour is a series of ebooks to help the reader learn the basic facts of a given subject area.