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Winston Churchill was frequently criticized during World War II for displaying insufficient interest in Britain's postwar reconstruction. He was obsessively preoccupied with the defeat of the Axis powers. South Africa's prime minister, Jan Smuts, said, 'Winston's mind has a stop in it at the end of the war.' In this, as in so much else, there was a striking contrast with the attitude of Hitler. While the titanic conflict was still unresolved, Germany's leader committed enormous economic, political, and military effort to the fulfillment of his social and racial ambitions for a Greater Germany.
Review, 4424 words
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