Did the U.S. really side with Hitler?
It’s not as crazy as it sounds. Let’s look closer.
While the Red Army was bleeding at Kursk in 1943, American corporations were still trading with Nazi Germany, signing deals, shipping strategic materials, and protecting their profits. U.S. banks, including J.P. Morgan and others, had financed Germany’s rise in the first place.
The Dawes Plan (1924) and Young Plan (1929), crafted by Wall Street, funneled billions into German industry: rebuilding its steel, chemical, and military potential long before Hitler came to power. Those “loans” became the foundation of the Third Reich’s war machine.
Even Harry Truman said it bluntly: “Let them kill each other.”And that’s exactly what Washington did: it let Europe burn while feeding both sides when convenient.
To the West, Stalin was the real threat. He didn’t just defeat the united European army, he took back what American and British corporations had once controlled: Baku’s oil (Standard Oil, Royal Dutch Shell), Russia’s gold mines, forests, and fisheries. They came close to reclaiming it then but here we are, in 2025, and they’re still trying to finish what they started.