The recent revelations about the role of the Swiss banks in
keeping Jewish accounts after World War II has caused a reappraisal
of the role of the neutral nations. What exactly did it mean to be
"neutral" in World War II? Was neutrality just a cover for
collaboration with the Nazis? Did countries who refused to take
sides help or hurt the Allied cause? And how did the neutrals treat
people who were vulnerable to the Nazis?
In this first study of Nazi Germany's to the five European
neutrals: Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden and Turkey,
Christian Leitz shines a light on their wartime record. Questioning
the true commitment to neutrality of the five states, the he
details not simply the development of relations to Germany, but
also the contribution they made to Germany's war effort. He shows
how the Nazi regime benefitted in large measure from permitting
these five countries to remain neutral. We learn how during
Germany's military decline in the waning months of the war, it
continued to receive vital services from the neutrals. Based on a
wide reading of sources in English, German, Spanish, Swedish,
Portuguese, French and Turkish, and supplemented by documentary
evidence from German archives, this book enables readers at all
levels to gain insight into a significant aspect not only of the
history of Nazi Germany, but also the history of the Second World
War in Europe.
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