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From the historical aspect Germany had existed as an empire five hundred years before
Columbus had discovered the western world. The German people had every right to demand that
their historical position of a thousand years should be restored to them; Germany had no ambition
and no aim other than the return by the German people to the territorial position which was
historically theirs.
Germany's political aims were coordinate. Germany could not tolerate the existence of a
State such as Czechoslovakia which constituted an enclave created by Versailles solely for
strategic reasons, and which formed an ever-present menace to the security of the German people;
nor could Germany tolerate the Separation from Greater Germany of German provinces by
corridors, under alien control, and again created solely for strategic reasons. No great power
could exist under such conditions. Germany, however, did not desire to dominate non-German
peoples, and if such peoples adjacent to German boundaries did not constitute a military or
political threat to the German people, Germany had no desire permanently to destroy, nor to
prejudice, the lndeoendent lives of such peoples.
From the economic standpoint, Germany must claim the right to profit to the fullest extent
through trade with the nations close to her in Central and Southeastern Europe. She would no
longer permit that the western powers of Europe infringe or impair Germany's preferential
situation in this regard.
In brief, the Geman people intended to maintain the unity which he had now achieved for
them; they intended to prevent any Btate on Germany's eastern frontier from constituting