It really hasn't but probably the answer you are looking for is with the destruction of the Berlin Wall
European nations staked claims on paper while tribes claimed the ground itself, but the border remained a work in progress, an imaginary line, until troops clashed and treaties settled the question.
In 1849, after the Mexican-American War, the United States sent teams of surveyors, soldiers and laborers to mark this new line in the desert, which sounded simple but proved difficult. The teams struggled as the Southwest seethed with conflict.
A line had been drawn, but the border was far from settled.
Germany had been blockaded during the war (the Allies didn't let food and fertilizer through), and many of its citizens were still starving afterward.
As a new democracy, German bureaucracy was rather inefficient.
These problems eventually led to Hitler becoming the leader of Germany (he promised to solve them, and he blamed the Jews for other problems), which led to World War 2.
Do you have a passage or something to answer it easier?
If this would have hapened america would still be part of great britain because they were colony...
They wouldnt get independent