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World War II politics

Appeasement is a pejorative term for a strategic maneuver, based on either pragmatism, fear of war, or moral conviction, that leads to acceptance of imposed conditions in preference to defending against aggressors. Since World War II, the term has generally negative connotations of weakness and cowardice, and people rarely use it to describe policies they support and tend to use it to label policies that they oppose.

Because the term has highly negative connotations, it is difficult to cite many historical examples which are widely regarded as appeasement. The one historical situation in which the term is universally applied to is British policy toward Nazi Germany before World War II.

1 Appeasement of Hitler

By far the most well-known case of appeasement is one which ultimately failed - the appeasement of Adolf Hitler's Germany by United Kingdom Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain's government in the late 1930s. The Munich Agreement in particular stands as a major example of appeasement.

There is a massive historical debate about the foreign policy of the 1930s. The 1940 polemic Guilty Men has been highly influential here. See pages current Dispute:Adam von Trott zu Solz .See Pope Pius X11 ( Cardinal Pacelli }.

1.1 Reasons why the British government appeased Hitler



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