The German Plans for Britain (23 February 2017, 27 Shevet, 5777)
Duration 19.15 minutes
[Adapted from "The Tribes"
http://hebrewnations.com/publications/books/the-tribes.html
Contents:
1. Attempts to Partially Whitewash German Intentions.
2. World War -2 in Summary
3. German Plans to Conquer Britain
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1. Attempts to Partially Whitewash German Intentions.
Recently certain historical commentators have claimed that the Germans had a soft spot for the British.
They claim that Hitler saw the British as fellow Aryans, wished to make allies of them, and would have treated them reasonably.
This is not true.
Just the opposite.
The Germans saw the British as their traditional opponents.
The British in German eyes were a menace that would have to be removed.
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2. World War -2 in Summary
Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party took power in Germany in 1933. Preparations for war began immediately. Austria was annexed in 1938. Czechoslovakia was dismembered in stages ending in 1939. This was in contradiction to an understanding with Britain and France that had been reached the year beforehand. On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. Consequently Britain and France declared war followed by Australia (3 September), Canada (10 September), New Zealand (3 September), and South Africa (6 September). Germany and Russia divided Poland between them. Russia attempted to invade Finland. The USSR at that time was a virtual ally of Germany supplying her with vital war materiel. In April 1940 Germany conquered Norway and Denmark.
In May 1940 Germany invaded the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium, and France. France was conquered and divided into an occupied area in the north and a form of protectorate (Vichy) in the south. Italy entered the war on the side of Germany.
Overtures for peace were made to Britain but the British rejected them. Germany intended to invade Britain. The Battle of Britain was fought between the Air forces and Air defences of Britain and the Luftwaffe of Germany. The German aim was to destroy British air power and thus enable an easier transport by sea of German forces in an invasion. German submarines (U-boats) were engaged in the sinking of ships bringing needed supplies to Britain. Apart from the submarines German ships were to be soon driven off the seas. The Royal Air Force of Britain (RAF) after almost losing the battle managed to defeat the German planes. The Germans then attempted to terrorize Britain into submission through bombing. This too had failed by May 1941.
Germany in some respects had better and more thoroughly trained ground troops. Their armored Corps was better. So was their artillery.
On the other hand,
The British had superior Intelligence Agencies. They knew more about what the Germans were doing and also how to mislead the Germans as to their own intentions. The British also had a more successful scientific community.  British sceintists met the needs of the British at War, e.g. Radar and the ability to detect the approach of enemy aircraft/ The British were able to place their economy and social orientation on a war footing whereas the Germans did not. British war production overtook that of the Germans. They also had access to more raw resources apart from the almost inexhaustible supply provided by the USA. The Germans used horses whereas the British had trucks.
The British Navy and Merchant Marine were better. So was their Air force. British Commando raids were to have an important psychological effect.
From 1940 the USA had begun to expand its Navy and to provide supplies and war material to Britain. This was supplied virtually for free. The USA became a vast hinterland producing the where-with-all for war to Britain and later also to Russia.
Eventually Britain with help from America overcame the submarine menace.
Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania joined the German alliance (Axis).
In October 1940, Italy invaded Greece but was defeated. German force were then sent to take their place. German forces were also faced with armed resistance from Yugoslavia which originally had taken a pro-German stance. The same happened in North Africa where British Forces defeated the Italians and so the Germans came to reinforce them.  At one stage it seemed that the Allies would be defeated in North Africa but they managed to hold the Axis back.
Germany in effect had nowhere to go. It could not leave things as they were. More was needed. The German economy and social contract was based on Organized Rapacity:
It went through several phases:
Encourage the German people and soldiers in robbing, dispossessing, tormenting, and killing Jews.
Take the gold reserves, raw materials, and forced labor of conquered peoples while tormenting and oppressing them often in the most bestial manner.
Keep killing no matter the cost.
Take what you need by killing and robbing rather than any other way. Russia presented itself as the only major victim still available.
On 22 June 1941, Germany, supported by Italy and Romania, invaded the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa. After initial successes the Germans were defeated and driven back.
The German war aims were:
a. To exterminate as many Jews as possible.
b. To obtain lebensraum ("Living Space") for an enlarged Germany.
c. Kill as many others as may even look like not meeting the Germanic standard.
Of these three main aims no. (a) had priority. All other aims were subservient to this. More than 6 million Jews were to be killed by the Germans and their cohorts.
Meanwhile Japan had control of parts of China. Fiction between Japan and the USA and Britain had existed for some while. Sanctions against Japan were imposed. In 1939 the Japanese attempted to invade an area of Russian Siberia and were defeated. In 1941 Japan and Russia signed a Neutrality pact. On 7 December 1941, Japan attacked US ships stationed at Pearl Harbor in Hawai. Simultaneous attacks were made against the British colonies of Hong Kong and Malaya. The Philippines (then a US colony) was also attacked. Â Subsequently, in alliance with Japan, Germany and the Axis declared war on the USA.
Japanese forces conquered much of Asia. They reached New Guinea where Australian forces as well as the Americans held them back.
Eventually the US Navy destroyed the Japanese one. The British pushed the Japanese out of Burma. The Chinese with US and Britain help drive the Japanese out of China. Two atom bombs dropped on Japanese cities persuaded the Japanese to agree to an almost unconditional surrender.Â
The British and British Dominions defeated the Germans in North Africa. The British and Americans drove the Germans out of North Africa. Italy was invaded via Sicily. Allied forces landed in France on 6 June 1944 a date henceforth known as "D-Day". They proceeded into Germany. Meanwhile the Russians were advancing from the east. American and Soviet forces met at the Elbe river on 25 April, 1945. In Berlin, capital of Germany, Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945.Â
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3. German Plans to Conquer Britain
The Germans had designs to conquer Britain.
They had plans to deport all of the male population as slave labor to the Continent: Females (if they survived) would be fertilized by SS men.
Professor Dr. Franz Six was to be in charge of Britain. Professor Six later indoctrinated the Killing Squads (Einsatzgruppen SS) in Russia.
Hitler may have admired Britain to some degree BUT he also considered it a danger to German ambitions.
This meant he felt a need to eliminate the British people as we know it.
# ....his great respect for the Anglo-Saxon race had made it all the harder for him to enter this life-or-death struggle which must end with the destruction of one of them.#
Peter Townsend, ''Duel of Eagles', 1971, p.45.
Compare Robert Payne, "The Life & Death of Adolf Hitler" U.S.A. 1973, p.400:
 # Among the many plans submitted to Hitler and approved by him was a comprehensive plan for transporting the greater part of the male population to work in factories in Germany. Orders concerning the Organization and Function of the Military Government of England, a thick compendium of rules and regulations to be followed by the German administrators of the conquered territory, called for all able-bodied men between the ages of seventeen and forty-five to be sent to Germany as slave-laborers. The women of England, with the help of the SS, would produce a new race of Anglo-Germans. The entire intelligentsia and all the Jews would be liquidated. SS Colonel Professor Dr. Franz Six, a former dean of the faculty of political science at the University of Berlin, was placed in charge of the liquidation and deportation of Englishmen. SS offices would be established in London, Bristol, Birmingham, Liverpool, Manchester, and Edinburgh. Colonies of Englishmen would be established in the Baltic States. #
 The above documented plan only represents part of the actual eventuality. The plan was that set out for the best of circumstances from the German point of view. It reflects German susceptibilities prior to action. Hitler considered England "the enemy above all enemies" (Payne p.343).
 The fate of the English in practice was liable to have been even worse than the plan indicates.Â
Albert Speer, "Inside The Third Reich", New York, 1971, p.303:
# I am sure that Hitler would not have hesitated for a moment to employ atom bombs against England. I remember his reaction to the final scene of a newsreel on the bombing of Warsaw in the autumn of 1939 ...Hitler was fascinated. The film ended with a montage showing a plane diving toward the outlines of the British Isles. A burst of flames followed and the island flew into the air in tatters. Hitler's enthusiasm was unbounded. "This is what will happen to them!" he cried out, carried away. "That is how we will annihilate them!" #
By way of comparison consider the population of the Netherlands.
The Dutch were ethnically and culturally much closer to the Germans than the British were.
The Dutch overall had not vigorously opposed the Germans. Many Dutchmen fought in the German ranks.
Nevertheless, the Germans found the Dutch too pro-Jewish and not sufficiently "Aryan" in outlook.
The Germans intended to deport all of the Dutch people to Poland which would be depopulated of its Polish inhabitants.
Towards the end of the War the Dutch people were being starved by Germany. The Allies victory saved them from obliteration. What was intended for the Dutch indicates what the British could have looked forward to in the best-case scenario.
See Also:
What would England have been like under Nazi occupation?
https://www.quora.com/What-would-have-England-have-been-like-under-Nazi-occupation/answer/Yair-Davidiy-1?srid=hke6r&share=318cf878