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Vital Crossroads - Mediterranean Origins of the Second World War, 1935-1940 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,021
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Vital Crossroads - Mediterranean Origins of the Second World War, 1935-1940 (Hardcover)
Series: Cornell Studies in Security Affairs
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Most international historians present the outbreak of World War II
as the result of an irreconcilable conflict between Great Britain
and Germany. This ubiquitous Anglo-German perspective fails to
recognize complex causes and repercussions of international events,
misappropriates historical responsibilities, and overlooks many
global and imperial factors of the war's origins. Reynolds M.
Salerno shows that the situation in the Mediterranean played a
decisive role in the European drama of the late 1930s and
profoundly influenced the manner in which the Second World War
unfolded. Vital Crossroads is the result of the author's remarkable
access to and extensive research in twenty-eight archives in five
different countries. Concentrating on the period from the
Mediterranean crisis of 1935 to Italy's declaration of war in June
1940, Salerno demonstrates that the international politics of
pre-World War II Europe particularly in the Mediterranean can only
be understood as the multilateral interaction of British, French,
German, and Italian foreign and defense policies. Control of the
Mediterranean, he asserts, was a central concern for the European
powers in 1935 40, and a fundamental reason why Europe went to war
and why the conflict unfolded as it did. As a result, France and
Italy influenced and often determined the nature and direction of
Allied and Axis policy to an extent disproportionate to their
nations' military and economic strength.Salerno contends that the
Allies' reluctance to take decisive action against Fascist Italy in
1939 40 contributed to the fall of France in 1940, Britain's
desperate situation in 1940 41, and the post-war collapse of
Britain as a world power. At a time when the Allied powers dreaded
the ability of the German military to march across the European
continent, they also feared that the Italian armed forces would
strive to fulfill Mussolini's grand imperial ambitions in the
Mediterranean."
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