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Germany and the Middle East - 1871-1945 (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Loot Price: R750
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Germany and the Middle East - 1871-1945 (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
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Before World War II, Germany intended to set up a greater Arabia
under the influence of the Axis powers of Germany, Italy, and
Japan. But the war changed everything. Now the Middle East became a
potential battlefield at the crossroads between Asia, Africa, and
Europe. For instance, Ankara sent Berlin essential raw materials
like chrome ore for its war industry, and it was where the Nazis
sold looted gold (mainly confiscated from Jews) for foreign
currency. As in World War I, the Germans tried to incite Arab
populations to jihad against the allied nations. As the war against
the USSR dragged on and the tactics of "Blitzkrieg" failed, the
Middle East became more and more important for the Nazis. After the
fall of Moscow they regarded this region as the next main
battleground for crushing the British Empire, as Adolf Hitler
revealed to the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in late 1941, adding that
after his victory against the Russians he would pursue the Jews in
the Middle East as he was doing already in occupied Europe. This
book includes new historical studies about Germany and Afghanistan,
the relations between Berlin and Riyad, German archaeological
research, Arab inmates in Nazi concentration camps, and prominent
Germans like Dr. Fritz Grobba, Franz von Papen, and Oskar Ritter
von Niedermayer, which combine to shed new light on a crucial
period and region of world history.
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