Chapter 124: The Munich Conspiracy

After being hung aside by Reinhardt and anxiously waiting for 2 hours, Chamberlain finally met Reinhardt, who claimed to have diarrhea, at lunchtime.

Quietly had lunch in advance, Reinhardt gave full play to the excellent qualities of an actor as soon as he met Chamberlain. Talking about life and ideals, several times Chamberlain tried to bring the topic back to the topic, but he quickly pulled on all kinds of bizarre topics, what admiration for Chamberlain, concern for the gay Mr. Churchill, deep thinking about the transmission of human genes.........

After more than an hour of digressions, Reinhardt let the hungry honest man go. Talking about the topic that Chamberlain was most concerned about: "As for the question of Czechoslovakia.......

Seeing that the other party mentioned the topic, Chamberlain immediately cheered up, and the hunger in his stomach was also reduced a lot.

Come to the spirit, this is worth it?!

Reinhardt didn't want to play against a politician in good shape. His strength is shamelessness and shamelessness, not bargaining with a seasoned politician.

"That's the question....... We'll talk about that later. By the way, I heard that there used to be a gay man named Turing in England who played a love triangle with Mr. Churchill and was later executed. Does Mr. Chamberlain know the details? Tell me about it. Reinhardt, who was full of wine and food, said shamelessly: "Take your time, we have time." ”

Even the German translator on the side thought with some disdain: Of course you have time to eat and drink well. It's 2 o'clock, and others have come all the way to have lunch yet, and it is estimated that you are the only one in Germany who is embarrassed to pull others to talk nonsense for so long.

It wasn't until he heard Chamberlain's stomach gaffe protest loudly that Reinhardt "suddenly realized" and hurriedly invited the British Prime Minister from afar to eat some pastries, and then blamed himself for not thinking enough.

As a result, Reinhardt in front of Chamberlain looked very embarrassed. At least, on the surface, it looks very embarrassing.

As if to compensate Chamberlain, Reinhardt, who had been very tough in recent days, generously made a "guarantee" to Chamberlain, that is, Germany would not take any military action until the two met again in a few days. In the past few days, the British government has stepped up pressure on Czechoslovakia to stop challenging Germany's bottom line.

What a shameless act! Obviously, he was not sure to defeat the other side, and he needed to use the power of Britain to put pressure on Czechoslovakia. In Reinhardt's mouth, it turned out that Germany was willing to wait a few more days for Britain's face, and give Britain the opportunity to pressure Czechoslovakia for a peaceful settlement.

The reason why Reinhardt dared to speak such nonsense was precisely because he seized Chamberlain's desire not to want war to break out in Central Europe and to strive for peace within Europe to resist the Soviet Union.

When Chamberlain showed his eagerness too much, Reinhardt used his own "hunger negotiation method" to make the eager Chamberlain further lose his judgment and go to the trap he had designed.

Psychologically speaking, when a person is mentally restless and physically suffering, it is the time when the person's judgment is the weakest and the most easily swayed.

As a half-monk politician, Reinhardt knew that he was inferior to the other party in normal political negotiation methods, so he could only use this kind of psychological crookedness to add to it. Luckily, he succeeded.

Psychology is something that works for everyone. Chamberlain, who had unwittingly fallen into the trap, rushed back to London overnight, as Reinhardt had predicted, and together with France, pressured the Czechoslovak government to resolve the Sudetenland issue in accordance with the principle of "national self-determination".

Four days later, Reinhardt did it again. When Chamberlain flew to Germany again for talks with him, Reinhardt urged Chamberlain, who had just finished diarrhea and was in weak health, to start talks by giving Chamberlain in advance a laxative for lunch, and proposed that all other German-speaking areas in Czechoslovakia be transferred to Germany and that the annexed territories be occupied militarily.

Chamberlain, who was once again calculated by Reinhardt with crooked ways, inadvertently ran back home as if making a wedding dress for Germany, and pulled France to continue to put pressure on Czechoslovakia.

In order to "cooperate with the British" pressure, Reinhardt ordered five German divisions to enter the forward positions on the German-Czech border, creating the feeling that war was on the verge of breaking out.

Unexpectedly, however, Czechoslovak President Eduard Benes was quite adamant and declared a general mobilization to protest against the German military threat.

Regarding Czechoslovakia's reaction, Reinhardt simply admired the five-body head. He seemed to see a junior high school student, self-righteously flexing his muscles to a freshman in high school. As everyone knows, he is just a student who has never been in a fight, and the other party is a master who has only experienced many fights and won.

Recently, the combat effectiveness of the German army in Spain was shocked even by Britain and France, and the president of Czechoslovakia didn't feel it!

However, Reinhardt also made a gesture in return, and soon organized an upgraded version of the Munich conference.

On July 11, 1937, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, French Prime Minister Daladier, German Führer Reinhardt, Italian leader Mussolini, plus Franco, who had just unified Spain, five European leaders gathered in Munich, Germany for a five-nation summit, and signed the "Munich Agreement" at 1 a.m. on the 12th (this has nothing to do with Reinhardt's fatigue tactics, it is true that the meeting had to be extended because there were too many discussions of interests).

On the same day, the Czechoslovak government accepted the agreement under strong pressure from the European military powers: Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. During this period, Reinhardt did not even invite representatives of the government of Czechoslovakia. It was a conspiracy to force the Czechoslovak government to accept the demands of the great powers and to preserve the aspirations of the Germans for unity.

Britain, Germany, Germany and France immediately signed a joint declaration, determined to deal with all problems by means of consultation, and to "never again engage in war between them."

And Spain and Italy, which have long been in the same pants as Germany, are not as eager to sign a joint declaration as Britain and France. It was only in private that part of the exchange of interests was carried out, and the determination of cooperation projects was carried out.

Germany, the biggest beneficiary of the agreement, was the return of 11,000 square miles of territory, 3.6 million inhabitants and a large number of fully equipped factories. At the same time, it also undermined France's alliance system in Central and Eastern Europe, while strengthening Germany's economic and military power.

Reinhardt, who was in high spirits, also signed the manifesto held by Daladier and Chamberlain respectively with his crooked name - Reinhardt. Heydrich.

Ironically, when Chamberlain returned to London, he was still obsessed with waving the slip of manifesto with Reinhardt's signature, showing off the crooked and ugly signature to many government dignitaries and celebrities.