Unit III: The Rise of Totalitarianism
This unit analyzes the collapse of democratic institutions in Europe and the rise of dictatorships that utilized total state control to achieve national goals, ultimately destabilizing global peace.
1. The Weimar Republic
After WWI, Germany became a republic. Despite its democratic constitution, it faced insurmountable challenges that paved the way for extremism.
Factors for Failure:
- Economic Collapse: Massive hyperinflation in 1923 and the Great Depression (1929) led to 6 million unemployed Germans.
- The "Stab in the Back" Myth: Right-wingers blamed politicians for "betraying" the army by signing the Treaty of Versailles.
- Political Instability: Constant changes in government made the Republic look weak and inefficient.
2. Fascism in Italy
Italy was the first nation to turn to Fascism under Benito Mussolini, who promised to restore the glory of the Roman Empire.
Key Characteristics:
- Ultra-Nationalism: Extreme pride and a desire for imperial expansion (invading Abyssinia).
- Anti-Communism: Fear of a Russian-style revolution gained Mussolini support from the wealthy and middle classes.
- Totalitarian Control: One-party rule, censorship, and the use of the "Blackshirts" to silence opposition.
3. Nazism in Germany
While similar to Fascism, Nazism added a deadly racial component to its ideology under Adolf Hitler.
Hitler's Foreign Policy (The Road to War):
- Lebensraum: The quest for "living space" in Eastern Europe for the "Aryan race."
- Rearmament: Defying the Treaty of Versailles by rebuilding the German Air Force and Army.
- Anti-Comintern Pact: An alliance with Italy and Japan aimed against international communism.
4. Soviet Foreign Policy under Lenin
Early Soviet foreign policy was a mix of revolutionary zeal and practical survival.
- Comintern (1919): An organization established to coordinate communist revolutions worldwide.
- New Economic Policy (NEP): Lenin introduced limited capitalism to stabilize the economy, which required normalized trade relations with the West.
- Treaty of Rapallo (1922): A surprising alliance with Germany, where both "outcast" nations agreed to economic and military cooperation.
5. Exam Corner
Comparison: Nazism vs. Fascism
| Feature |
Fascism (Italy) |
Nazism (Germany) |
| Leadership |
Benito Mussolini (Il Duce) |
Adolf Hitler (Der Führer) |
| Racial Ideology |
Less emphasized initially. |
Central: Belief in Aryan superiority. |
| State vs. Race |
The State is everything. |
The Race (Volk) is everything; the State is a tool. |