Publisher's Synopsis
Within nations occupied by the Axis powers in World War II, some citizens and organizations, prompted by nationalism, ethnic hatred, anti-communism, antisemitism, opportunism, self-defense, or often a combination, knowingly collaborated with the Axis Powers.CollaborationWith theAxis PowersIndexChapter 1: Story of Axis Power1.1 AustraliaChapter 2: German occupation of Belgium during World War II2.1 Administration and governance2.2 Leopold III2.3 Rationing2.4 Allied bombingChapter 3: Economic situation3.1 Galopin Doctrine3.2 Deportation and forced labour3.3 Belgian prisoners of war3.4 Repression3.5 Persecution of Jews and the Holocaust3.6 Political dissent3.7 In Flanders3.8 In WalloniaChapter 4: Resistance4.1 LiberationChapter 5: Burma Independence Army5.1 Hsaya Rebellion5.2 Aung San and Japan5.3 Formation and action of the Burma Independence Army5.4 Battle of Shwedaung5.5 Tension between the Japanese and BIAChapter 6: Transition into the Burma National ArmyChapter 7: Change of sides7.1 Aftermath7.2 Significance of the Burma Independence Army today7.3 ChinaChapter 8: German occupation of Czechoslovakia8.1 Munich AgreementChapter 9: First Vienna Award9.1 Second Republic (October 1938 to March 1939)9.2 Second World War9.3 Czechoslovak resistance9.4 German policy9.5 Slovak National Uprising9.6 Czechoslovak government-in-exileChapter 10: End of the war10.1 Annexation of Subcarpathian Ruthenia by the Soviet Union10.2 Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia10.3 DenmarkChapter 11: Foreign volunteersChapter 12: Jewish collaboration