Yes, the heavy burden of war reparations imposed upon Germany was a major factor in Hitler's rise to power. He promised the German people that he would free Germany from those shackles.I was only about 7 years old when my parents took me to see the movie Tora!Tora!Tora! when it first came out. My mom also took me to see that Steve McQueen movie LeMans. Then we drove up to Greenville to see the Midway movie in 1976. So I was hooked on cars and military aviation at a very young age.
I read from Pearl Harbor to Okinawa when I was in elementary school. They actually had a simpler version for young grade schoolers I believe and that was in the school library. I read 30 Seconds over Tokyo about the Doolittle Raid around the same time.
I have read that the utter financial ruin and poverty of post-WW1 Germany contributed greatly to Hitler's rise to power. That would seem to make the most sense to me.
If you want to read a good book check out "About Face" by David Hackworth. He talks about many of the same issues fighting those wars, especially Vietnam.My father fought in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. He did not hear about Pearl Harbor until Dec. 9th. News moved slower back then. As soon as he heard about it, he went to Augusta to the recruiter's office to sign up. After WWII he got out and came home to work on his father's dairy, but as soon as Korea started, he went back in and stayed until he was medically retired in 1972. He would talk some about WWII and Korea, but he did not like to talk about Korea or Vietnam. He said they would not let them fight those wars like they should. They would fight to take a hill, turn it over to the South Vietnamese or Koreans and they would just give it right back.
In Vietnam he said the officers they had knew nothing and were cowards. He was an E-9 and got busted back to E-8 for supposedly beating the snot out of a dumb Lt. that was about to get the troops killed. Then he got busted again when he decided to "fight the war" himself.
He just kept going on one mission when they wanted him to stop after one hill. His LT had got injured trying to take the hill and carried out on a helicopter. Instead of just one hill, he had his troops march about 15 miles north wiping out every Vietcong in the area. The Gen. did not like that because it was "bad politics." The South were supposed to be leading all of that. They busted him to E-6 and sent him to a supply battalion so he would not be near the fighting anymore. Then his Heart Condition and Diabetes caught up with him and they retired him.
He did not like to talk about either, but he said we could have easily won all of North Korea and North Vietnam all the way up to China, if they would have just let them fight. Supposedly the Generals were afraid China would have attached if they went that far. Both countries are attached to China.
My father fought in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. He did not hear about Pearl Harbor until Dec. 9th. News moved slower back then. As soon as he heard about it, he went to Augusta to the recruiter's office to sign up. After WWII he got out and came home to work on his father's dairy, but as soon as Korea started, he went back in and stayed until he was medically retired in 1972. He would talk some about WWII and Korea, but he did not like to talk about Korea or Vietnam. He said they would not let them fight those wars like they should. They would fight to take a hill, turn it over to the South Vietnamese or Koreans and they would just give it right back.
In Vietnam he said the officers they had knew nothing and were cowards. He was an E-9 and got busted back to E-8 for supposedly beating the snot out of a dumb Lt. that was about to get the troops killed. Then he got busted again when he decided to "fight the war" himself.
He just kept going on one mission when they wanted him to stop after one hill. His LT had got injured trying to take the hill and carried out on a helicopter. Instead of just one hill, he had his troops march about 15 miles north wiping out every Vietcong in the area. The Gen. did not like that because it was "bad politics." The South were supposed to be leading all of that. They busted him to E-6 and sent him to a supply battalion so he would not be near the fighting anymore. Then his Heart Condition and Diabetes caught up with him and they retired him.
He did not like to talk about either, but he said we could have easily won all of North Korea and North Vietnam all the way up to China, if they would have just let them fight. Supposedly the Generals were afraid China would have attached if they went that far. Both countries are attached to China.