PowerPoint 4-1 - Lincoln School

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EUROPE BETWEEN
THE WARS: 1920-1939
Chapter 24, Chapter 26 section 1
Problems After the War
• Reparations Crisis
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Germany had to pay reparations for WWI
Payments were too big, Germany couldn’t afford them
France occupied parts of Germany in retaliation
Germany still refused to pay, workers went on strike to protest French
action
• Hyper-inflation in Germany
• Weak League of Nations
• US never joined, League never worked like it was supposed to
Mid-1920’s Things Seem to Get Better
• Dawes Plan
• US plan to fix the reparations crisis in Germany
• US bankers lent Germans money, Germans used that money to pay UK and
France, UK and France used that money to pay back war loans to Americans
• Worked (at least for a while), economies of US, and Europe boomed
• US and Europe tied to each other economically through loans (would be a
problem in the future)
• International Agreements
• Locarno Pact 1925—Germany agreed not to attack its neighbors again
• Kellogg-Briand Pact 1928—63 nations signed a treaty to never go to war again
(unless in self defense)
• Washington Naval Treaty—major world powers agreed to limit the size of their
navies
• Germany joins League of Nations 1926
The Great Depression
• What was it?
• Massive worldwide economic downturn
• Why is it called the GREAT Depression?
• It was incredibly severe, economic production dropped dramatically
• It effected virtually every country in the world
• It lasted a long time (over 10 years in some places)
• When was it?
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Began and ended at different times in different places
1929 began in the US
1930 spread to rest of world
Most countries recovered by late 1930’s, US didn’t recover until 1940
• What caused it?
Causes of the Great Depression
• Long Term Causes
• International economic boom was dependent upon borrowed money
• Why is this a problem?
• Overproduction of goods
• Factories all over the world were producing more goods then people could or wanted to
buy
• Low wages
• Workers’ wages hadn’t gone up very much since the end of WWI, couldn’t afford to buy
the products they were making
• Trade barriers
• In an effort to protect their native businesses from foreign competition many countries
had laws and taxes that made international trade very expensive/impossible
• Short Term Cause
• Collapse of the US Stock Market in 1929 led to crisis
• Crisis spread to US banks then the US economy
• Crisis spread from US banks to European/world banks due to the Dawes Plan and its
system of international loans
• Crisis spread from European/world to the European/world economy
Responses to the Depression
• Growth of the power of the government
• USA: New Deal
• Scandinavia: Social Welfare State
• Italy, Germany, Soviet Union—dictatorial regimes and state control of the
economy
• Keynesian Economic Theory
• Use the spending power of the government to jump start the economy
• Popular in the US and Western Europe after the Great Depression until today
• Collapse of Democratic Governments, Rise of Dictators
• Depression caused democratic governments throughout Europe to collapse
• Germany, Poland, Romania, Baltic States, Bulgaria, Greece, Yugoslavia,
Hungary, Spain, Portugal, Albania
• Why do you think economic crisis would help lead to the rise of dictators?
The Rise of Dictatorships: Old and New
• Authoritarian Dictatorships (Old)
• One person in control, used military power to control the government of a
country, forced the people to follow his/her orders
• As long as you didn’t cause problems for the dictator/government you were
pretty much left alone
• Most European dictators were authoritarian dictators (Spain, Portugal, Greece,
etc.)
• Totalitarian Dictatorships (New)
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The state/government controlled every aspect of a person’s life totally
Economy, government, society, culture were all controlled by the state
Public, social, and private spheres all influenced/controlled by the state
People were willing participants in totalitarian governments
Individual rights, desires, identity came second behind the state
Usually there was one charismatic leader that the people entrusted with
control of the state
• Usually there was an enemy or a common goal created to motivate the people
• Examples=Nazi Germany, Communist Soviet Union, and Fascist Italy
Totalitarian States: Italy, Germany, USSR
• Italy (1922-1945)
• Charismatic leader: Mussolini
• Main ideology: Fascism (extreme nationalism, and militarism)
• Main enemy/fear: Communism, socialism, anarchy, anger over not getting
more land from the Versailles Peace Treaty
• Main Goal: Restoring Italy to the glory of ancient Roman Empire
• Germany (1933-1945)
• Charismatic leader: Hitler
• Main ideology: Nazism (German version of Fascism, nationalism, militarism)
• Main enemy/fear: Communism, Jewish Conspiracy, anger over WWI and the
Versailles Treaty
• Main Goal: Revenge for WWI, living space for the German nation
• USSR (1922-1991)
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Charismatic leader: Stalin (later others after 1952)
Main ideology: Communism
Main enemy/fear: Invasion by western capitalist countries
Main Goal: Modernization of Russia, eventual worldwide communist revolution
Mussolini’s Rise to Power
• Italian soldier during WWI
• Angered over the peace settlement (wanted Italy to gain more
land)
• Founded Fascist Party
• Glorification of the military
• Extreme nationalism
• Fascists gained in popularity during the economic and political
crises of the early 1920s
• 1922 March on Rome—Mussolini made Prime Minister
• Gradually Mussolini rolled back civil rights and freedoms and built a
totalitarian dictatorship
Hitler’s Rise to Power
• National Socialist German Workers (Nazi) Party
• Founded by former WWI soldiers in Germany (Hitler was a WWI veteran)
• Incredibly nationalistic, racist
• Hitler joined soon became leader of the Nazi Party
• Beer Hall Putsch 1923
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Hitler tried to recreate Mussolini’s march on Rome in Germany
Defeated by the police, arrested, sent to jail
In prison wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle) outlined goals of the Nazi party
1923-1930 Obscurity for the Nazi party
• 1930-1933 Rise to Power due to Great Depression
• 1933-Nazis won the most votes in parliamentary elections, Hitler becomes
Chancellor
• Reichstag Fire, Nazis blame communists, use the fire as an excuse to pass
laws (Enabling Acts) that give Hitler dictatorial powers, infringe upon
personal rights and freedoms of German citizens
Origins of World War II in Europe and Asia
• Big Questions:
• What were the chain of events that led to the outbreak of WWII?
• What could/should the democracies of the world (US, UK, France) have
done to prevent Nazi Germany and Japan’s rise to power and the outbreak
of WWII?
• Should democracies like the US be willing to get involved and even fight a
war to help protect other democracies around the world?
Spanish Civil War: One Less Democracy in Europe
• Spanish Civil War 1936-1939
• Spain was a democratic republic—very weak and unstable
• Spanish Republic was dominated by very radical groups (socialists,
communists, etc.)
• More conservative groups didn’t like this (Catholic Church, military, business
owners, etc.)
• 1936 war broke out, supporters of the Republic (Loyalists) vs. opponents of the
Republic (Nationalists or Fascists) led by General Francisco Franco
• Other fascist countries (Germany, Italy) sent soldiers, money, equipment to
help the Spanish fascists
• Soviet Union sent money and supplies to help the Loyalists
• Democratic countries (US, France, Britain) and the League of Nations did
nothing to support the Spanish Republican government
• 1939—Fascists won the war, Spanish Republic disbanded, Franco established a
dictatorship in Spain, friendly to Hitler and Mussolini
• Should the US, Britain, and France have done more to help out another
democracy?
For Whom The Bell Tolls
John Donne 1571-1632
No man is an island
Entire of itself.
Each is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thine own
Or of thine friend’s were.
Each man’s death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.
Therefore, send not to know
For whom the bell tolls,
It tolls for thee.
Origins of WWII in Europe: Nazi Aggression
• 1933-1935 – Hitler begins to rearm/rebuild the German military in violation
of the Versailles Treaty
• 1935 – Hitler sends his military into the Rhineland—violation of the
Versailles Treaty
• 1937 – Hitler takes over Austria, makes it part of Germany (Anschluss)—
violation of the Versailles Treaty
• 1938 – Hitler demands part of neighboring Czechoslovakia where lots of
Germans live (the Sudetenland) threatens to go to war
• Munich Conference, appeasement – France, Britain give in
• 1938 – Hitler occupies the Sudetenland
• 1938 – Hitler takes over the rest of Czechoslovakia (violates Munich
agreement)
• 1939 – Hitler demands part of Poland where lots of Germans live (Polish
Corridor) threatens war
• Britain and France don’t give in
• Hitler invades Poland, September 1939 – War World II begins
• Should the US, Britain, and France done something to help Austria,
Czechoslovakia?
Political Cartoon from the 1930’s
Origins of WWII: Japanese Expansion in Asia
• 1931-Mukden Incident—Japanese took control of Manchuria
• 1937-Japan declares war on China
• 1940-Japan begins to seize control of French Colonies in Indochina
(modern day Vietnam)
• US orders Japan to leave Indochina, places a trade embargo on Japan, no
oil no scrap iron
• Japan’s choices
• 1-leave Indochina
• 2-stay in Indochina but stop fighting in China and other places
• 3-stay in Indochina, keep fighting, find a new source for raw materials
(Indonesia, Malaysia, etc.)
• Japanese realized that invading Indonesia would inevitably lead the US to
declare war, wanted to get in the first strike, Pearl Harbor
• Dec 1941—Japan launches surprise attack on US Fleet in Pearl Harbor
• 1941—US enters WWII declares war on Japan, Germany and Italy declare
war on US