Quote:
|
National Socialism laid the foundations for the deconstruction of the German nation.
|
Only insofar, as Germany lost a war under a Ns. regime I'd say.
Don't forget, many of the enemies Germany had as a Ns. state, it already had before and they wouldnt have accepted a German dominance in Europe whether the regime was Ns. or not, whether it was this or that sort of dominance independent from the Western powers and plutocracy.
Quote:
|
But it did happen. Only that you apparently don't know it. Spanish Irredentism has in fact different slopes. One is that of the Basque, Navarran and Catalan territories and peoples occupied by France.
|
I knew that this had an impact, considering where the anarcho-socialist-communist resistence was centered in Spain, but what didnt happen was the foreign anti-Fascist occupation and what followed, with the consequence of a real partition.
I forgot to mention that an independent Austrian "nation" and identity was one of the preconditions for the political autonomy and integrity of the Austrian state by allies. Austria was partitioned among the allied forces and administrations for quite some time and there was a fear of Eastern Austria and Vienna ending like Germany and Berlin.
Allied-administered Austria - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Austrian State Treaty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An Austrian independence was already decided by the allies during the wartime.
Moscow Declaration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia