Especially now, 80 years after the War was successfully concluded for Britain.
Uncharacteristically, where Hitler usually did show great hostility toward the Allies, he inexplicably pulled his punches toward England at two key times: Dunkirk, and calling off Sea Lion, the invasion of England.
I believe Hitler saw the British as he saw the Scandinavians: common peoples with the Germans, physically, genetically, and historically. He spoke of making Oxford the seat of his empire, and perhaps did not want to pay the price of conquering England and gaining them as permanent adversaries.
Hard to say for sure, because he was nuts. And showed very bad judgment, from being on multiple drugs, from having some anger-management issues, and from being surrounded by nutty, superstitious, murderous cultists like himself, everywhere, everyone in a huge echo chamber, all agreeing with each other.
But if Britain had not so intelligently and seriously prepared to defend itself (and in the nick of time) against the Luftwaffe bombings and against Sea Lion, he might have been inclined to invade England instead of the Soviet Union.
And a different outcome to the War would have possibly been seen.
Churchill and his War Cabinet, and some key advisers, Beaverbrook and Lindemann, also Smuts, were friends and close advisors, who helped ramp up aircraft production AND develop a LOT of new technology, like defensive radar and countermeasures to German radar-guiding beams.
Churchill noodled all this out, over and over again, trying to push all these wimply British upper class noodles, to grow some pairs and prepare for war. And screaming at his worthless compatriots for about a decade until he was blue in the face, his take was: "We had better fight, with everything we've got, and now, because we may find ourselves in a situation in the near future, where we, in spite of our best efforts, fight total war in absolute desperation, and STILL lose and get destroyed."
An awful but necessary choice that would be, framed and thought out by Churchill, who knew a hundred times more than what this adviser-to-Farage knows.
Hitler listened too much to von Ribbentrop at the beginning of the war.
Von Ribbentrop was German ambassador to London in the 1930s, and committed so many faux pas and embarassed himself, and was constantly insulted by the Brits, he grew to despise them, and at the beginning of the war, Hitler listened to him. Eventually Hitler distanced himself from von Ribbentrop as the war dragged on.