After WW1, there were strict rules on how much Germany could build their military might.
Rhineland Czechoslovakia and Poland, new york(he was playa hatin on america)
France. Germany and France share a border.
Short answer: Not really anything significant to the war. Hitler's Germany began alienating the United States and other democratic nations several years before the war began in 1939. Hitler came to power in 1933.
Poland was invaded by Germany just before the war was declared.
it was called germania
Germany used the Deutsche Mark before it started using the Euro.
The US wanted these weapons to be used against Germany, before they could use them against the Allies. However Germany was defeated with conventional weapons before these weapons were ready. So the US decided to use them on Japan as soon as they were ready, to end the war without having to invade Japan.
Germany started expanding it's army before WWII even though it was a violation of the Treaty of Versailles. England and France were appeasing Germany because they didn't want to go to war again. So when they did declare war on Germany, Germany was ready for them. Additionally, there were already projects underway to develop new weapons, machining processes and the conversion of factories from civilian manufacture to military purposes.
England
Austria and the Sudetenland Austria wasn't given to Germany, Germany conquered it
Adolf Hitler was the ruler of Germany from 1933 until the beginning fo WW2.
No, but they had lost WW1 about twenty years before WW2 started
The prime minister of Britain declared war in Germany. The world war 2 started by Germany in a unprovoked attack on poland.
Wilhelm II was the Kaiser ("Emperor") of Germany before World War I started; he continued to rule until Germany collapsed at the end of the war.
Rhineland Czechoslovakia and Poland, new york(he was playa hatin on america)
The Atomic Bomb :D right answer by the editor.
Hitler invaded Poland before World War 2 started and it was the reason many countries declared war against Germany.