Adolf Hitler's ambition was to establish a Greater Germanic Reich, extending across Europe and potentially beyond. This new order would have been characterized by extreme authoritarianism, racial hierarchy, and aggressive expansionism.
2. Europe Under the Third Reich
Europe would have been dramatically altered under Nazi control. Countries conquered by the Nazis would have been annexed or turned into puppet states, governed by regimes loyal to Berlin. The cultural and ethnic diversity of Europe would have been systematically eradicated through brutal policies of extermination, forced assimilation, and ethnic cleansing.
3. The Fate of Non-Aryans
The most horrific aspect of Nazi ideology was its genocidal racism. The Holocaust, which resulted in the murder of six million Jews, was just the beginning of the Nazis' plans for racial purification. In a world where the Nazis won, other groups deemed "inferior," such as Slavs, Roma, disabled individuals, and others, would have faced systematic extermination or enslavement. This would have resulted in the deaths of tens of millions more.
4. The United States and the Americas
The outcome of a Nazi victory would have had significant implications for the United States. Depending on the specifics of how the war ended, the U.S. could have faced invasion or been forced into a state of uneasy coexistence with the Axis powers. Nazi ideology might have influenced or even infiltrated American politics and society, leading to widespread human rights abuses and the potential for civil conflict.
5. Technological and Scientific Developments
Nazi Germany was already advanced in certain technological and scientific fields, including rocket technology and early computer science. However, these advancements were driven by a war-focused, unethical, and often inhumane research agenda. In a Nazi-dominated world, scientific progress might have continued, but at the cost of human dignity and ethical considerations. Technologies developed for control and warfare would likely have taken precedence over those for human betterment.
