Munich Conference Did the Right Thing

Munich Agreement signed on September 30, 1938 by leaders of Germany, Italy, Great Britain and France became a major step on the Road to Holocaust and the heavy slab in the “stack of slabs” that ultimately killed four million Jews.

It became such a step because it paved the way to the Second Great War – and thus to the Holocaust. It paved the way because it convinced Adolf Hitler that by righting one territorial wrong, Great Britain and France would allow him to right ALL territorial wrongs committed against Germany and Austria.

In other words, to get back (by force, if necessary) ALL territories taken away from Germany and Austria by the Versailles Criminals (who committed the grand robbery of a millennium). It was not to be – and World War II was the result.

Still, the participants in the Munich Conference did the right thing… morally right, to be more precise. Which was not necessarily politically right at that time… although it most likely was.

It was politically right as well because the alternative would have been the Second European War… which would have inevitably led to the invasion, occupation and total destruction of continental Europe by Bolshevist hordes.

By forcing the government of Czechoslovakia to return the Sudetenland to its rightful owner, Great Britain and France allowed Germany to properly prepare for the inevitable war with the Bolshevist monster… and thus essentially saved Europe from genuine Hell. Saving Hitler’s life in the process (otherwise he would have been killed by Wehrmacht commandos during the Oster coup).

Sudetenland (inhabited mostly by Germans) was taken away from Austria in 1919 by the Treaty of Saint-Germain (the equivalent of the Treaty of Versailles – only with Austria). It was done against the will of the overwhelming majority of its population and thus was wrong indeed.

Immediately after the Anschluss of Austria into the German Reich in March 1938, Hitler made himself the advocate of ethnic Germans living in Czechoslovakia – which was right both morally and politically. For once, Great Britain and France did the right thing bowing to the will of the population of Sudetenland who wanted live in Germany. An agreement was quickly reached on Hitler’s terms, and signed by the leaders of Germany, France, Britain, and Italy.

On 30 September, Czechoslovakia submitted to the combined military and diplomatic pressure and agreed to surrender territory to Germany following the Munich terms.


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