Secret Diplomatic History of WW II

British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain fatefully declares war on Germany on September 3, 1939, signaling the commencement of a Second World War which cost the lives of an estimated 70 million people
There are many military historians who are familiar with the battlefield history of World War Two but the vast majority know little to nothing about the diplomatic history of the war when it comes to peace initiatives, long suppressed by liberal establishment historians, to terminate the war, in many cases years before it ended in actual history, or even prevent it from happening at all. Americans have been indoctrinated to believe since grade school that the war could not have been averted and that our only mistake was not invading and crushing Nazi Germany in its cradle when it was still military inferior and in the process of rebuilding its armed forces following the crushing disarmament constraints of the Treaty of Versailles.
According to the dominant historical narrative, Hitler could not be trusted to keep any of his agreements so any negotiated peace settlement would only delay the inevitable. The only problem with this accepted historical narrative of the war is that none of it is true. These peace offers, particularly the ones from Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler have been largely covered up and/or erased from the annals of history because they serve to convincingly rebut the myth that Hitler, even though he was an evil dictator who mass murdered five to six million Jews, was undeterrable and unappeasable. They offer convincing evidence that World War Two was, in fact, not a necessary and inevitable war to stop a dictator who was bent on nothing less than world conquest as Americans have been taught to believe.
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