No question the allies forced the Germans to take in millions of Non-Germans so that another Hitler would never rise again.
Sorry, but when did this take place? In the fifties, or later?
No slight intended, but other European nations also took in foreign workers, to compensate for labor shortages…thus, I don’t know whether there was any interconnection between the mass immigration into Germany and the end of Nazi rule. Shouldn’t former Axis powers have suffered the same fate?
For instance, Italy and Japan had very little immigration until the Eighties, Finland until even later, and Hungary and Romania don’t have much even today…
Some European nations, who began to accept immigrants on a significant scale in the Fifties and later, had even been on the victors‘ side, i.e. Britain, France, the Netherlands or Belgium - while others like Switzerland or Sweden had been neutral (thus, they had no demographic shortfalls to compensate for).
Yes, the intake of immigrants in postwar Europe was partially influenced by human losses in the War, but obviously not entirely so🙁