"It is not truth that matters, but victory."
-Adolf Hitler
In the year 1938, Neville Chamberlain, Edouard Daladier, and Adolf Hitler came together to sign the Munich Agreement. This agreement gave Sudetenland to Hitler, and therefore, Germany. This action was in contrary to the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. After this, Hitler was more powerful and confident than ever. Thereafter, on the first of September of 1939, Germany took charge of Poland. In an effort to stop Germany from taking over the world, France and Britain were the first to declare war on Germany. However, this did not stop Hitler from continuing his domination of power and land. He took charge of Scandinavia, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg in 1940. He also wanted to invade the UK, and ordered bombing raids upon it. Germany had allied with Japan and Italy to intimidate the USA into not joining the war and being on Britain’s side. Germany had also been friendly to the Soviet Union; however, on June 22 of the year 1941, he betrayed this pact and sent 3,000,000 troops there in order to invade it as well. The troops were eventually stopped in Moscow in December of 1941 however. Then, things escalated even more when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. Adolf Hitler was now in a powerful war with three of the world’s strongest countries: the United States of America, Britain, and the Soviet Union. Due to this fact, Hitler’s military decisions started becoming frantic and all over the place. His health as well as Germany’s economy and military began to weaken greatly. Germany and its allies were then not able to keep up with the rest of the world fighting against them and began losing the war slowly but surely. Germany began losing several battles and the lessened stamina was quite visible. The final straw was when several of the allied forces that were against Germany and the axis powers took charge of the northern part of France and this in part was the beginning of the inevitable loss of Germany, Hitler, and its loyal axis powers.