Hitler’s and German popularity in Europe reached a pinnacle in the summer of 1941, when the German army invaded the Soviet Union. Since former East German army general Bernd Schwipper published his thoroughly documented monograph on Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion, there can be no doubt that by ordering it, Hitler beat Stalin to it. Interpreting a wealth of original sources from the perspective of military science, Schwipper proves beyond any doubt that Stalin was planning to invade Germany sometime in July, 1941. It would have meant a certain death for European culture if Stalin had been able to execute his plan. At the same time it explains why so many Europeans aligned with the Germans when they prevented this by invading first. They might have had second thoughts about National Socialism, but the last thing they wished for was to live under Communism.
Ever since the Bolsheviks staged their coup in 1917, in a first step towards the globalist plan for complete world domination, the Europeans were gripped with fear. In most historical treatises, this fear is said to emanate from petty bourgeois narrow-mindedness. The middle classes just rejected the legitimate demands of the working class. However, support in Europe for Germany after June 1941 was not limited to the middle class. In France, Belgium, the Netherlands, the Baltic republics, the Balkans and Scandinavia, young men from across the social spectrum hurried to report for duty in the German army, especially the SS. There were more Europeans enlisting in the SS and Wehrmacht than there were who enrolled in similar units that were part of, or fought along with the US and British armed forces. Indeed, voluntary military service being the ultimate proof of loyalty, until 1945 Europeans were more pro-German than pro-American or pro-English.
Support for Germany broadened and became more solid in 1943 and 1944, when the RAF and the USAAF began bombing European cities. Not only German cities were targeted, but also cities in the Netherlands, Belgium, France and Italy. It should not be forgotten that not only were millions of German civilians killed by allied aerial bombings, so were hundreds of thousands of French, Italian, Dutch and Belgian civilians. In other words, the allied air forces were waging war not just against the German people but against all Europeans within their radius of action....
....Standard postwar narratives generally misrepresent or distort some key historical facts, one of these being that Hitler was a warlike madman and that he was the one who started the Second World War. Hitler did not want war, least of all with England and hardly anybody today knows that after war had broken out, he reached some fifty times with offers for a peace settlement. Rather, Winston Churchill in London and FDR in Washington DC were hell-bent on having a war with Germany......
....With the globalist US government and big banks calling the shots in Europe after 1945, there was, of course no room whatsoever for the kind of economic policies first put in practice by Hitler. At the same time it meant that broadly beneficial social policies were anathema as well. However, during the so-called Cold War it was deemed necessary to throw some bones to the working class and set up what has come to be called a welfare state in the part of Europe under American occupation. If not, local workers might have become Communist and cause problems too complex and too expensive to solve. Not surprisingly, after the Iron Curtain finally came down in 1991, the European welfare state was dismantled piecemeal.
The economic, social and political situation in today’s Europe is diametrically opposite to what Adolf Hitler had in mind. He wanted a Europe consisting of autonomous, ethnically based political entities working together along parallel political lines and with common basic values, toward shared goals. Sort of what De Gaulle once called “L’Europe des patries,” stretching from the Atlantic to the Urals.