Germany might well have ended up as militarized and expansionist, at least to the extent of the Anschluss, obtaining the Sudetenland, and seizing the Danzig Corridor. The military leadership regarded the French Campaign as an insanely dangerous gamble, but it is not impossible that Battle of France might still have played out in a similar way if launched, given the shortcomings of the Allies at the time. Minus Hitler, though, it is entirely possible the pent-up hatred from the humiliation at Versailles and French occupation of the Saar and Rheinland would have been directed entirely at Communists and the French, rather than the German Jews. The Jewish Germans had fought with distinction equal to any in WW1, and made up a disproportionate percentage of Germany's scientific elite (Which was our equal if not better, prior to Nazification of the country), and with them on board instead of fleeing the country the entire affair could have ended with uneasy peace in the West and a crusade against Bolshevism in the East, possibly ending in either the Red Army fighting its way into Berlin or the last Soviet stronghold disappearing in the blast of an atomic bomb dropped by a Luftwaffe pilot named Goldstein or Rosenberg.