What were the factors that affected the war's outcome? Why did the Axis lose? And could they, with a different strategy, have won? Andrew Roberts's acclaimed new history has been hailed as the finest single-volume account of this epic conflict. The Second World War lasted for 2,174 days, cost $1.5 trillion, and claimed the lives of more than 50 million people. What were the factors that affected the war's outcome? Why did the Axis lose? And could they, w It had required a coalition of the whole world to destroy the power his political inspiration had contrived.From "Britain's finest military historian" ( The Economist) comes a magisterial new history of World War II and the flawed axis strategy that led to their defeat. The ruin in terms of human lives was forever incalculable. The bodies of his victims were heaped across Europe from Stalingrad to London. The suffering and desolation that he wrought was beyond human power or fortitude to compute. It was impossible to dismiss him as a mountebank, a paper hanger. Seldom in human history, never in modern times, had a man so insignificantly monstrous become the absolute head of a great nation. The historic crash of what had been Europe’s most formidable state was audible in the shrieks of dying men and the point-blank artillery fire against its buckling buildings.Īll that was certain to remain after 1,000 years was the all but incredible story of the demonic little man who rose through the grating of a gutter to make himself absolute master of most of Europe and to change the history of the world more decisively than any other 20th-century man but Lenin. Around him, the Third Reich, which was to last 1,000 years, sank to embers as the flames fused over its gutted cities. His total war against non-German mankind was ending in total defeat. For no death they could devise for him could be as cruel as must have been Hitler’s eleventh-hour thoughts on the completeness of his failure. If they had been as malign as he in their vengefulness, they might better have hoped that he would live on yet a little while. For seldom had so many millions of people hoped so implacably for the death of one man. If he were indeed dead, the hope of most of mankind had been realized. Whether or not he had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage (as reported from Stockholm), or had “fallen in his command post at the Reich chancellery” (as reported by the Hamburg radio, which said that he had been succeeded as Führer by Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz), or was a prisoner of Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler, Adolf Hitler as a political force had been expunged. …Adolf Hitler had been buried, dead or alive, in the rubble of his collapsing Third Reich. In honor of that end, that week was the occasion for TIME’s iconic crossed-out Hitler cover - the first instance of a motif that has been repeated for other historic villains, like Osama bin Laden - and a meditation on his life, how he came to power and what the world would be like now that he was out of it: Decades later, in 1968, a book published by a former Soviet intelligence officer attested that the Russians had found the body and done an autopsy, confirming his identity with dental records and showing that the real cause of death was cyanide.īut, back in 1945, as May began and the end of war in Europe was finally certain, as Allied troops liberated the suffering remnants of the people who had been the dictator’s targets, as his followers cast about for someone to blame - back then, in many ways, the details of what had happened didn’t really matter. However, the Russian authorities who were conducting the investigation insisted that there had still been no concrete evidence of his death, that Hitler might still be alive out there somewhere. By that July, TIME had an account, from his one-time chauffeur, of how the bodies had been removed from the underground bunker and burned the cause of death was a bullet to the head, the chauffeur said. One captured Nazi actually got it right, telling the world that Hitler, along with his wife, had committed suicide. Some said he had actually been killed the year before. The week after, TIME ran a list of his “many deaths,” the theories of his survival or defeat. This much the world knew: Adolf Hitler was gone, one way or another. It wasn’t immediately clear what had happened on April 30, 1945.