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NotesHistoryTopic 3.2German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938)
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3.2.23 min read

German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938)

IB History • Unit 3

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Contents

  • The big idea: dismantling Versailles
  • The steps, 1933–1938
  • How Paper 1 tests this

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Versailles taken apart one slice at a time: Adolf Hitler tore up the Treaty of Versailles bit by bit, keeping each step small enough that Britain and France chose not to fight.

When Hitler came to power in 1933, the Treaty of Versailles still hung over Germany. It had shrunk the German army, banned Germany from joining with Austria, and forced German troops out of the Rhineland, the strip of German land next to France.

To most Germans the treaty felt like a national insult, and Hitler had promised for years to overturn it. So the big question of these years is simple: how did he break a treaty backed by the two strongest countries in Europe without starting a war?

His trick was patience. Instead of one bold move, he took thin slices, one at a time, so that no single act ever looked big enough to be worth fighting over.

Historians nickname this his salami tactics, or the step-by-step method.

Britain and France answered with a policy called appeasement. They believed some of Hitler's demands were partly fair, and above all they were desperate not to repeat the horror of the First World War.

By September 1938 this had let Hitler swallow Austria and part of Czechoslovakia without firing a shot.

Memory hook: DR RAM-S: Disarmament walkout (1933), Rearmament (1935), Rhineland (1936), Axis and Anti-Comintern (1936), Anschluss (1938), Munich and Sudetenland (1938). The letters spell out Hitler's slice-by-slice march across the decade.

Watch the same pattern repeat in every step below. Hitler pushes a little further, waits to see if Britain and France react, finds that they do not, and then reaches for a slightly bigger slice.

1

1933 — Walking out

Hitler pulled Germany out of the Disarmament Conference and the League of Nations. He claimed the other powers would never cut their arms down to Germany's level, which gave him an excuse to start building weapons again.

2

1935 — Rearming openly

Germany revealed it had built an air force and announced conscription, smashing the treaty's arms limits in full public view. Britain and France sent angry notes but did nothing real to stop him.

3

1935 — The naval deal

Britain then signed the Anglo-German Naval Agreement, letting Germany build a navy up to 35 per cent of Britain's. By making this deal alone, Britain broke the treaty itself and split the front against Hitler.

4

March 1936 — Into the Rhineland

German soldiers marched back into the demilitarised Rhineland. It was Hitler's biggest gamble yet, but France stayed still, and the gamble paid off.

5

1936 — Finding friends

Germany teamed up with Benito Mussolini's Italy in the Rome-Berlin Axis, then signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Japan. Germany was no longer alone in Europe.

6

March 1938 — Taking Austria

Hitler pressured Austria until its government collapsed, then sent in troops. This forced union of the two countries, called the Anschluss, was forbidden by Versailles, yet no country stepped in.

7

Sept 1938 — The Sudetenland

Hitler demanded the Sudetenland, the German-speaking edge of Czechoslovakia. At the Munich Agreement, Britain and France simply handed it over, and appeasement reached its peak.

Walk out, rearm, march in, make friends, take Austria, take the Sudetenland.

Mini-case: the Rhineland bluff: In March 1936 Hitler's own generals warned him the German army was still far too weak to fight France. The soldiers marched in carrying secret orders to turn around and retreat the moment France challenged them.

But France, unsure and unwilling to act alone, did nothing. Hitler's bluff worked, and he never forgot how easily the Allies backed down.

Why Hitler kept winning

  • His salami tactics kept every step small, so none on its own ever looked worth a war.
  • Many of his demands sounded fair, since he claimed only to be reuniting German-speaking people.
  • Britain and France were not ready to fight and dreaded another round of mass casualties.
  • Some leaders even welcomed a stronger Germany as a wall against the feared Soviet Union.

Why the Allies held back

  • The terrible losses of the First World War left both nations deeply afraid of fighting again.
  • The economic depression of the 1930s meant there was little money to spend on armies.
  • Many Britons quietly agreed that Versailles had treated Germany too harshly in the first place.
  • They kept hoping that giving Hitler what he asked for would finally satisfy him and secure peace.
DateStepWhat it broke or changed
1933Left Disarmament Conference and LeagueThe spirit of collective security
1935Rearmament and conscription announcedThe army and air-force limits
1935Anglo-German Naval AgreementThe naval limits
March 1936Rhineland remilitarisedThe demilitarised zone
1936Rome-Berlin Axis and Anti-Comintern PactGermany's diplomatic isolation
March 1938Anschluss with AustriaThe ban on union with Austria
Sept 1938Sudetenland taken via MunichCzechoslovakia's borders and defences

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How this is tested (Paper 1): Paper 1 gives you a set of sources plus a final longer question. You might face a shorter cross-reference question or a 9-mark judgement such as "To what extent did appeasement cause Hitler's successes?"

The classic trap is retelling the steps as a story without ever explaining WHY each one worked.
IB-style questionEvaluate[9 marks]

Evaluate the view that appeasement was the main reason Hitler dismantled Versailles between 1933 and 1938.

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Common mistakes: Do not simply narrate the timeline. Analyse WHY each step worked.

Do not muddle the dates: the Rhineland is March 1936, while the Anschluss and Munich are both 1938.

Do not forget that appeasement was a deliberate Allied choice, not just Hitler acting alone.

IB Exam Questions on German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938)

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How German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938) Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938).

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938).

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938).

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in German challenges to the postwar settlement (1933–1938).

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

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