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If Hitler had won, most of us wouldn't be here due to the chaos theory. And so the question is moot. But what were Hitler's plans for America? To answer that question, we begin with a brief historical context.
Context
Adolf Hitler's decision to declare war on the United States in late 1941 shifted the trajectory of World War II, transforming a regional conflict into a global struggle that ultimately doomed the National Socialist regime.
As German forces dominated much of Europe by September 1941, having subdued Poland, France, Greece and Yugoslavia, and advanced deep into the Soviet Union, Hitler appeared poised for total continental control. British resistance persisted amid relentless aerial bombings, but experts say the National Socialist leader anticipated a cross-channel assault to crush remaining opposition.
The turning point came on Dec. 7, 1941, when Japanese forces launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, killing more than 2,400 Americans and crippling the U.S. Pacific fleet. Though allied with Japan, Hitler had no prior knowledge of the operation and was not treaty-bound to join the fight against America, according to most historians. At his eastern headquarters, amid setbacks from harsh Russian winter conditions that inflicted heavy casualties on ill-equipped German troops, Hitler received news of the assault.
Public sentiment in the U.S. largely opposed war with Germany, with surveys showing three-quarters of Americans against involvement just weeks prior. President Franklin D. Roosevelt recognized the National Socialist threat but lacked domestic support for direct action. Historians argue Hitler could have remained neutral, allowing U.S. focus to stay on Japan.
Instead, on Dec. 11, 1941, Hitler addressed the Reichstag in a speech vilifying Roosevelt before formally declaring war. He believed the Pacific conflict would divert American resources from Europe, easing his path to victory. This miscalculation, experts say, galvanized Allied unity and accelerated Germany's defeat.
Hitler's affection for America
His admiration for Americans, some believe, traced back to the 1920s, when Hitler viewed America's Aryan lineage, by encounters with U.S. soldiers in World War I whom he idealized as tall, blond and blue-eyed.
Immigration restrictions like The Immigration Act of 1924 ( Johnson-Reed Act), limiting non-European entries, and state laws banning interracial marriages aligned with his racial purity ideals, historians note.
What's more, I have noted parallels between America's 19th-century ideology of Manifest Destiny—which justified westward expansion—and Germany's concept of Lebensraum ("living space"), which rationalized eastward conquest.
Then I discovered that Hitler himself cited U.S. expansion as a model for his vision of his Reich.
I've also noticed that Germany's economic policies in the 1930s incorporated elements of large-scale deficit spending and public works programs to combat unemployment and stimulate recovery, approaches that seem rooted in Keynesian ideas formalized by John Maynard Keynes and embraced by Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal.
Then, there is eugenics. Like Germany, Americans largely embraced the notion of maximizing desirable hereditary traits. The woke left, rife with anti-white sentiments, abhor the thought of enhancing the white race. They go to great lengths to vilify eugenics as unethical.
Plan Z
In hypothetical scenarios where Hitler secured Europe before targeting America, plans included reviving naval expansion under "Plan Z" to rival Britain's fleet, deploying submarines for Atlantic dominance and developing long-range bombers for strikes on U.S. cities. Upon conquest, he envisioned exploiting American resources for his regime while enforcing discriminatory policies, potentially extending campaigns to relocate Jewish populations and other non-Europeans to their respective homelands, as suggested by captured documents detailing North American demographics and The Transfer Agreement. Historians emphasize that U.S. industrial might and nuclear development would likely have thwarted any transatlantic invasion.
Another, more likely scenario, is Hitler would not have invaded America, but would have sought a peace agreement and established friendly diplomacy and trade.
But, alas, Hitler's ambitions crumbled as multi-front warfare strained resources, leading to his suicide in 1945 amid Allied advances.
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