Switzerland during WWII Home > Business Guide > Table of Contents > Socializing > WWII
No European country remained truly neutral
during WWII. Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland
all worked to some extent with the Axis. In
Switzerland, the people who lived through the war
wanted to believe that it was their army and fortifications
that kept the Nazis out. Historical research
and documents clearly show that if the Nazis
wanted to invade Switzerland, it would have been
quick and relatively easy. The reason Germany
spared its tiny neighbor to the south was because
Switzerland proved much more useful as an independent
state than as a satellite. The Swiss made
many useful weapon components (aluminium for
the Luftwaffe, spark plugs for jeeps taken from the
Russians, timing devices for bombs, among other
things), and thus their factories were not bombed
every night. The Swiss National bank bought gold
from the Reichsbank, the Reichsbank was given
Swiss francs in exchange, and used them to buy
cobalt, nickel and tungsten from the other “neutral”
countries. The Turks, Portuguese, Spanish and
Swedish, who were all under heavy pressure from
the Allies not to accept direct gold payment from the
Reichsbank, then exchanged the Swiss francs for
gold. The problem was that the German gold came
from the Belgian National bank reserves (not from
concentration camps as some sensationalists would
have it) and the neutrals knew it. Finally, the Swiss
allowed trains to carry food and non-weapon supplies
from Germany to Italy, with dozens of trains
every day on their way to Africa.
But did Switzerland have any other choice? Probably not. Totally surrounded by the Axis, most
of its coal supply came from Germany every week,
and all of its exports had to go through Axis controlled
territory. For a landlocked country with no
natural resources, this meant the Swiss had to work
out some form of accomodation with their neighbors.
The problem is that the postwar generations
have been raised to believe that it was the Swiss
army, and not the country’s usefulness to the Germans,
that protected it from the wrath of war. The
Swiss are now coming to terms with this part of
their history, as for example the people of France
and Japan have. As a foreigner, it is best to avoid
passing judgment on them and giving lessons, at
the risk of offending your hosts. |