Document G: In this excerpt adapted from British historian A. J. P. Taylor’s The Origins of the Second World War (New York: Atheneum, 1965, p. 291), another point of view on appeasement is presented. Can any sane man suppose . . . that other countries could have intervened by armed force in 1933 to overthrow Hitler when he had come to power by constitutional means and was apparently supported by a large majority of the German people. The Germans put Hitler in power; they were the only ones who could turn him out. Also the “appeasers” feared that the defeat of Germany would be followed by a Russian domination over much of Europe. What were two reasons this author used to explain why appeasement was the logical policy at that time?