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What were the reasons behind Germany’s foreign policy? Check all that apply.

Germany was determined to increase its influence.
Germany wanted to acquire more territory.
Germany hoped to sever its ties with Italy.
Germany opposed the rise of totalitarianism in Europe.
Germany did not like the terms of the Treaty of Versailles.

2 Answers

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Answer:

your answers are

Germany was determined to increase its influence.

Germany wanted to acquire more territory.

Germany did not like the terms of the Treaty of Versailles.

OR

A, B, E

Step-by-step explanation:

thanks to the answer above me :)

User Max Imax
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1 vote

Answer:

Germany was determined to increase its influence.

Germany wanted to acquire more territory.

Germany did not like the terms of the Treaty of Versailles.

Step-by-step explanation:

After the arrival of the Nazis to power, the government of Adolf Hitler conducted a foreign policy aimed at the incorporation into the Reich of people of German ethnicity (Volksdeutsche) who lived outside the borders of Germany, to the German domination of Europe Western and the acquisition of a vast and new empire of "space to live" (Lebensraum) in Eastern Europe. Hitler calculated that the realization of German hegemony in Europe would demand a war, especially in Eastern Europe. Slavs "of inferior race" should be expelled eastward from the Urals, or otherwise enslaved or exterminated. In addition to the acquisition of the Lebensraum, Hitler foresaw that "expulsion to the East" would destroy Bolshevism.

User Brian Ball
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