Remembers to add this to that Pit thread on commonly repeated historical inaccuracies
Hitler became Fuehrer not through a mass popular uprising of support or bossed his way into the position with brownshirts.
The short story: Paul von Hindeburg was elected President by a popular vote. The nazis held thirty percent of the vote. However, he saw that they were in fact the only party experiencing any growth (and growing fast), so he knew the Nazis were something to be reckoned with. Hitler was then made Chancellor. Suddenly Hindenburg dies. Hitler was able to combine President and Chancellor into one office. Using the burning reichstag building, Versailles, and other events the Nazi party was able to draft laws that added more support to Hitler.
Blackeyes, I did not write that Hitler became Chancellor by popular vote. I am quite aware that President Hindenburg appointed him to that position. And the Nazi Party won 230 out of the 608 seats in the Reichstag in the July 1932 elections — 38% of the seats, not 30%.
You may be thinking of the presidential election in February 1932, in which Hitler (not the Nazi Party) got 30.1% of the vote in the first round, and 36.8% in the secound round.
Thanks for the answers people. Sounds like the average soldier from all (allied) countries would have thought that they were fighting Germany and not Fascism.