There's some confusion here. Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles (1919) at the end of World War 1 Germany was not allowed to station troops in the Rhineland. However, in March 1936 Hitler remilitarized the area.
The Territory of the Saar Basin, 1920 to 1935
In Europe Portugal, Spain (had it's own fascist regime), Switzerland, Vatican, Sweden, Finland (allowed the German troops to go through its land in order to attack the USSR though) and Turkey were not occupied by the German military.
The German armies were pushed back into Germany as more and more Allied troops landed.
german's provisions and weapons were destroyed by soviets troops
Russia's withdrawal from the war allowed Germans to move thousands of troops from the Eastern Front to the Western Front in France.
No. Germany planned Operation Sealion, to invade England but the operation was never carried out. All attacks on England were air attacks. There may have been a few German reconnaissance troops who landed on English territory, but no major troops were ever in England. Germany occupied two small English Channel islands in 1940. These were technically part of England. Otherwise no German troops entered the main part of England during WWII except as POWs.
hitler was austrian
The total number of German military troops allowed by Article 160 of the Versailles Treaty is 100,000.
yes it t'was
The name of the troops who served in Africa for Germany were call the Afrika Corp.
Their army was reduced to 100,000 men, they could have only 6 battleships, no planes, no submarinesno tanks were allowed to build,Allied troops were stationed in the Rhineland -no German soldiers were allowed there,
On March 7, 1936 German troops entered the Rhineland and thereby violated the treaty.
The Germans were not allowed to station any troops in the Rhineland.
The Treaty of Versailles allowed Germany to have a maximum of 100,000 soldiers and 15,000 sailors however they were not allowed any submarines. And no aircraft.
Not sure of the question. German troops occupied Paris during the 2nd W.W. They were eventually driven out by the U.S. Army and Parisian partisans as the army advanced north and east into Germany.
Germany was allowed 3/5 of France, including the whole Atlantic coast, and France would keep the rest. France would have to pay for the expenses produced by the German troops stationed in France, and would also have to deport all of the Jews to Germany
German troops were unable to maintain sufficient supplies.
Germany paid reparations. Germany accepted sole responsibility for World War I. German territory was reduced in size.