Stick Agreement Deutsch

The Munich Agreement (Czech: Mnichovska dohoda); in Slovak: Mnechovska dohoda; in German: Munchner Abkommen) or Munchner Verrat (Czech: Mnichovska zrada; The Slovak: Mnechovska zrada) was an agreement reached on 30 September 1938 in Munich by Nazi Germany, the United Kingdom, the Third French Republic and the Kingdom of Italy. It granted Germany the “transfer of the German territory of the Sudetenland” from Czechoslovakia. [1] Most of Europe celebrated the agreement because it prevented the war threatened by Adolf Hitler by allowing the annexation of the Sudetenland by Nazi Germany, a region of Western Czechoslovakia inhabited by more than 3 million people, mainly German-speaking. Hitler declared that this was his last territorial claim in Europe, and the choice seemed to lie between war and appeasement. “The overall theme was to find some kind of reconciliation between the United States and Iran,” Kaim said. “If the United States withdraws from the agreement, I think the Iranian regime will no longer abide by existing rules.” Daladier believed that Hitler`s ultimate goals were a threat. At a meeting in late April 1938, he told the British that Hitler`s real long-term goal was “a domination of the continent against which Napoleon`s ambitions were weak.” He continued: “Today it is Czechoslovakia`s turn. Tomorrow it will be the turn of Poland and Romania. If Germany has received the oil and wheat it needs, it will light up the West.

Certainly, we must step up our efforts to avoid wars. But this will not be done if Britain and France do not stick together, intervene in Prague for further concessions, while declaring that they will retain the independence of Czechoslovakia. On the contrary, if Western forces return to capitulating, they will only break out the war they want to avoid. [65] Perhaps discouraged by the arguments of military and civilian members of the French government about their fragile military and financial situation and traumatized by the bloodbath of France during the First World War, which he had personally witnessed, Daladier Chamberlain finally made his way. [Citation required] On his return to Paris, Daladier, who was expecting a hostile crowd, was cheered. [Citation required] No one in Germany believes that the agreement is perfect, but the consensus is that the agreement is better than nothing, as the most prominent Iranian-German politician in the country points out. There are few issues on which there is more consensus in German policy than the nuclear agreement with Iran. From the right-wing populist alternative for Germany (AfD) to the left-wing party, no one in the country shares the US president`s skepticism about the 2015 agreement, at least not until dismantling.