There have been a lot of Hitler-Putin comparisons floated lately, so this is worth considering.
Despite what was said in Allied war propaganda at the time, Hitler's immediate war-aim was not world conquest. His aim was to create a Greater Germanic Reich. Poland and Russia would be conquered, and all surviving residents not of German blood would be driven east of the Urals, and their territory colonized by Germans. Then, Germany would be a continental power on par with the United States. Hitler envisioned a final struggle with the U.S. for world supremacy -- in the generation after his death. (This is based on Hitler's writings and speeches, including his "Second Book," unpublished in his lifetime; you can read all this in Modern Times, by Paul Johnson.)
The best literary SF/AH treatment I have seen of this scenario is not Philip K. Dicks' The Man in the High Castle, but Robert Harris' Fatherland. In the latter, the U.S. and the UK remain unoccupied and independent as of 1964, and are in a Cold War with the Third Reich.
Despite what was said in Allied war propaganda at the time, Hitler's immediate war-aim was not world conquest. His aim was to create a Greater Germanic Reich. Poland and Russia would be conquered, and all surviving residents not of German blood would be driven east of the Urals, and their territory colonized by Germans. Then, Germany would be a continental power on par with the United States. Hitler envisioned a final struggle with the U.S. for world supremacy -- in the generation after his death. (This is based on Hitler's writings and speeches, including his "Second Book," unpublished in his lifetime; you can read all this in Modern Times, by Paul Johnson.)
The best literary SF/AH treatment I have seen of this scenario is not Philip K. Dicks' The Man in the High Castle, but Robert Harris' Fatherland. In the latter, the U.S. and the UK remain unoccupied and independent as of 1964, and are in a Cold War with the Third Reich.