The Bankers’ War
How Wall Street, Versailles, and Corporate Cartels Built the Road
The standard story is simple: a madman seized power in a humiliated nation and plunged the world into war. It’s emotionally satisfying. It’s also dangerously incomplete.
The Second World War didn’t begin in 1939 with the invasion of Poland. It didn’t even begin in 1933 with Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor. The war’s true origins lie decades earlier in the vengeful arithmetic of the Treaty of Versailles, in the Wall Street bond issues that financed German rearmament, in the boardroom cartels between American corporations and Nazi industry, and in the marble halls of a Swiss institution that kept doing business with the Reich until the final collapse.
This isn’t fringe speculation. It’s documented in government archives, Nuremberg trial records, and corporate filings. What follows is the economic history that most textbooks leave out.
The True Origin of WWII: What Historians Get Wrong!
No comments:
Post a Comment