The Allied Powers wanted to make Germany responsible for the damage that they engendered in the international community (Biesinger). When Germany signed the Treaty of Versailles under protest, they agreed to pay numerous reparations to pay for the destruction that they made (Axelrod). The first reparation demanded 266 mounts of golds, which equaled around 63 billion dollars. The 63 billion dollar reparation was later reduced to about 33 billion dollars (Axelrod). As the reparations continued, Germany was simply at a loss of money. It became extremely difficult to pay all of these reparations (Boden). Hyperinflation arose which caused German civilians to go broke, leaving them homeless, hungry, and extremely desperate. Michael Boden, a writer for World History in Context describes the difficulty for the Germans to pay these fines as, “The Versailles treaty also drove Germany into the arms of Hitler and the Nazi Party through the stringent application of monetary reparation payments, as well as the arbitrary and high-handed way the Allies forced them upon Germany”(Boden). The economic problems rattled the Germans, making the Germans question their government and leadership. The German’s were finished listening to the Allied Powers, so they gravitated towards a leader that would fight for the end of these unfair reparations. The people of Germany decided to put their country's fate in the hands of Adolf Hitler. These civilians had no other choice because their lives became miserable pretty quickly. Adolf Hitler was extremely devoted to fight for his country, Germany. Germany would not have had to elect Hitler has its leader if the Treaty of Versailles did not place such harsh reparations on the Germans in the first place. The Treaty…