The Morning Call

A bad deal 80 years ago shaped WWII

- Victor Davis Hanson

Some 80 years ago, on Aug. 23, 1939, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, formally known as the “Treaty of nonaggress­ion between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.”

The world was shocked — and terrified — by the agreement. Western democracie­s of the 1930s had counted on the huge resources of Communist Russia, and its hostility to the Nazis, to serve as a brake on Adolf Hitler’s Western ambitions. Great Britain and the other Western European democracie­s had assumed that the Nazis would never invade them as long as a hostile Soviet Union threatened the German rear.

The incompatib­ility between communism and Nazism was considered by all to be existentia­l — and permanent. That mutual hatred explained why dictators Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin both despised and feared each other.

Yet all at once, such illusions vanished with the signing of the pact. Seven days later, on Sept. 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. World War II had begun.

After quickly absorbing most of Eastern Europe by either coercion or alliance, Hitler was convinced that he now had a safe rear. So he turned west in spring 1940 to overrun Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg, France and the Netherland­s.

Hitler accomplish­ed all that relatively easily, failing only to conquer Great Britain with an exhaustive bombing campaignin­g.

Stalin, of course, had no idea he had created a Nazi monster that would quickly devour all of Continenta­l Europe — and turn to its rear to eye a now-isolated Soviet Union. Much less did Stalin realize that the battle-hardened German war machine would soon overrun his country in a surprise attack beginning on June 22, 1941, a little less than two years after the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.

The nonaggress­ion pact in a way had also ensured that a European war would soon turn into a global massacre that left roughly 65 million dead. At the time of deal, imperial Japan was fighting the Soviet Union on the Manchurian-Mongolian border. The Japanese were de facto allies of Nazi Germany. They had assumed that Stalin’s fear of an aggressive Germany meant the Soviet Union would have to worry about a two-front war against both Germany and Japan.

But now, the surprise agreement stunned the Japanese, who saw it as a German betrayal. It left them alone against the superior forces of Russia’s eastern armies.

Japan quickly withdrew from its losing Russian war.

In time it signed its own nonaggress­ion pact with the Soviet Union, in April 1941 — ironically, just months before Hitler’s planned Operation Barbarossa, the massive invasion of Russia.

Japan correctly concluded by the betrayal that Hitler’s Germany could not be trusted and deserved tit-for-tat duplicity. So Japan never joined Hitler’s surprise invasion of Russia.

Instead, the Japanese turned their attention to the Pacific and especially the vulnerable British and American bases at Singapore, Burma, the Philippine­s — and Pearl Harbor.

In sum, the August 1939 nonaggress­ion pact ensured the German attack against Great Britain and Western Europe. It also convinced Hitler that Russia was vulnerable, gullible and appeasing, and could be overrun in weeks following an invasion.

When the pact destroyed fragile alliances and encouraged German adventuris­m, war was certain.

The final ironies? The Soviet double-cross of the Western democracie­s eventually ended up almost destroying Russia, which bore the brunt of an empowered Germany.

The redirectio­n of Japanese war strategy to target America finally brought the United States into World War II, which ensured the destructio­n of Japan and Germany.

Add this all up, and in some sense World War II really started on Aug. 23, 1939 — 80 years ago this summer.

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