During their meeting in Cannes in 1937, Poland's Foreign Minister Josef Beck and Winston Churchill discussed the growing threat posed by Nazi Germany and the need for European powers to unite against it. They emphasized the importance of maintaining Polish independence and security, as well as the potential for closer Anglo-Polish cooperation. The meeting highlighted concerns over the instability in Europe and the necessity of a collective response to aggression.
Colonel Josef Beck was Poland's foreign minister in 1934. He was in no way pro-German and did believe that Hitler's policies were designed for domestic purposes. He believed, however, that German speaking nations such as Austria and the Czech Sudetenland would be targets of Hitler's domestic plan to reunite Germans. Although Poland did have a German population, Beck's nonaggression pact with Hitler seemed to safeguard Poland.
Poland's Foreign Minister, Josef Beck, had established himself as a foe, unofficially, of Stalin. Beck had opposed the entry of the USSR into the League of Nations, regarded so-called collective security agreements as Communist devices and opposed Western European attempts to create any sort of alliances with Stalin. He came to believe that Stalin was more of a threat to Poland than Hitler.
Nazi leader Hermann Goring had approached the Polish foreign minister in 1934 concerning a joint anti-Bolshevik foreign policy. Foreign minister Beck of Poland turned that idea down. It was clear that with Stalin being Poland's eastern neighbor, such a policy would be dangerous for Poland.
Reportedly, Poland's foreign minister, Josef Beck, believed that a joint Polish-German anti-Stalinist foreign policy was dangerous in itself. Some historians believe that Beck, being a student of European history took the advice of Machiavelli in his book The Prince. In that renaissance era publication, Machiavelli warned that making an alliance with a more powerful nation against a third nation, if successful, would make the weaker nation a prime target of its ally.
The cast of Playgirls - 1995 includes: Josef Bradna Karel Brozek Miroslav Moravec as Dietrich Beck Vlastimil Zavrel
Poland's foreign minister Josef Beck met in London in early 1939 to discuss a mutual assistance agreement with Britain. He made it clear concerning having any sort of alliance with the USSR. He alliance. He contended that Poland had experience with both Tsarist and Communist imperialism, and that they each were the same thing with different leaders. With that said, Beck was pressed by the clear menace of a Hitler Germany. He was caught between a rock and a hard place and pressed for neutrality towards Stalin and he would not oppose an Anglo-French-Russian agreement. Beck did not want any extra obligations within such an alliance and in case of a war with Germany, he expected that arms could be sent to Poland via the USSR. Also, that the USSR would provide Poland with raw materials.
Johan Lindell has: Performed in "Andra dansen" in 1983. Played Hans in "VD" in 1988. Played Lundberg in "Sanna kvinnor" in 1991. Played Foreign Minister in "Beck" in 1997. Played Bernhard Lange, the secret police in "Sista kontraktet" in 1998.
The cast of In nomine patris - 2004 includes: Josef Beck Oldrich Hruza Bedrich Setena Miroslav Snajdr Miloslav Student
Josef Bilous has: Performed in "Tatort" in 1969. Played Nadvojvoda Karel in "Heretik" in 1986. Played Arbeitsloser in "Einstweilen wird es Mittag oder Die Arbeitslosen von Marienthal" in 1988. Played Sebastian Beck in "Freundschaft mit Herz" in 1995. Played Dr. Sebastian Beck in "Freundschaft mit Herz" in 1995. Played Mesrou in "Der Streit" in 1996. Played Fred in "Punta grande" in 1996. Played Jupp Mitterhammer in "Opernball" in 1998.
Robert Beck has written: 'Robert Beck'
Byron Beck's birth name is A. Byron Beck.