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Of the many speeches made by Adolf Hitler during his lifetime, certainly one of the most important was his address of April 28, 1939. It was also very probably the most eagerly anticipated and closely followed speech of the time, with many millions of people around the world listening to it on radio or reading of it the next day in newspapers. It's also been regarded, even by some of his fiercest critics, as perhaps his most impressive address ever. It was a response to a much-publicized message from American President Franklin Roosevelt, who had called on the German Chancellor to promise not to attack 31 countries. The historic exchange between Roosevelt and Hitler is still important in helping to better understand the foreign policy outlook and goals of those two influential twentieth-century leaders, and how very differently each viewed recent history and his own country's role in the world. Here is the full text of Roosevelt's April 1939 message to Hitler, followed by a specially prepared translation of the complete text of the address by the German leader in response. A foreword by American historian Mark Weber puts the exchange in contemporary and historical perspective. Endnotes have been added to provide context and to help clarify unfamiliar references, along with a list of books and articles for suggested further reading.
A gripping first-person memoir of soldierly sacrifice, heroism and fierce combat against numerically superior Soviet forces during World War II, by a charismatic Belgian writer and politician turned Waffen SS front-line infantryman. In a laudatory review appearing in an official US Army Department magazine, US Army Brigadier General John C. Bahnsen wrote: "The pace of the writing is fast; the action is graphic, and a warrior can learn things from reading this book. I recommend its reading by students of the art of war. It is well worth the price." Here is the epic story of the Walloon Legion, a volunteer Belgian unit of the World War II pan-European SS force, as told by the legendary figure whose unmatched frontline combat experience and literary talent made him the premier spokesman for his fallen comrades. Captures the grit, the terror and the glory of Europe's crusade against Communism in absorbing prose. Includes fascinating first-person descriptions of Hitler, Himmler and other Third Reich personalities. Degrelle vividly describes how he and his comrades endured danger, privation and torrents of shot and shell -- on the sun-baked steppes of Ukraine, at the foothills of the Caucasus, in the depths of bone-chilling winter, through the stinking mud and the flaming hell of Cherkassy, and across the rolling plains of Estonia and the Pomeranian lake country. You'll learn what moved the 35-year-old Degrelle -- a brilliant intellectual and his country's most colorful political leader -- to enlist as a private in the volun¬teer legion he himself organized to join with Third Reich Germany and its allies in their titanic fight against the Bolshevik enemy.
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