Preventing a power to rise that could challenge the US is the strategic imperative of the US.
Just like the UK doesn't want a unified power on the continent.
That explains both the US and UK's actions in WW2 on a realpolitik level.
That is the only explanation for the US and UK's actions. The only role that Nazi politics played was that it was more expansionistic and thus triggered the balancing coalition that ultimately ended it.
That is pretty monstrous, though a gaffe in the Kinsey sense of accidentally telling the truth.
"kill as many as possible" seems to be the US regime line in many places, including Ukraine-Russia.
Preventing a power to rise that could challenge the US is the strategic imperative of the US. Just like the UK doesn't want a unified power on the continent.
That explains both the US and UK's actions in WW2 on a realpolitik level.
That is the only explanation for the US and UK's actions. The only role that Nazi politics played was that it was more expansionistic and thus triggered the balancing coalition that ultimately ended it.