Transcript Document

Causes of World War II
CAUSES (Long Term)
Causes (Immediate)
•WWI (the harsh conditions of
the Treaty of Versailles)
•Germany invades
Poland.
•Dictators come to power in
Germany, Italy, Japan, and the
Soviet Union
•Severe economic problems exist
in Europe and Asia.
•Italy, Germany, and Japan
expand their territory.
•The policy of appeasement fails.
•Japanese attack the
U.S. naval base at Pearl
Harbor
WWI (the harsh conditions of the Treaty of Versailles)
After Germany lost World War I,
The winning nations drafted the
Treaty of Versailles. The treaty
forced Germany to
• Accept full guilt
• Pay millions in reparations to
Great Britain and France
• Reduce its military forces
• Give up colonies and
territories
(Left to right) The “Big Four”: David Lloyd George
of Britain, Vittorio Orlando of Italy, Georges
Clemenceau of France, and Woodrow Wilson of
the United States, the principal architects of the
Treaty of Versailles.
Rise of Dictators
Adolph Hitler
Der Fuhrer
Benito Mussolini
Il Duce
Joseph Stalin
“Man of Steel”
Hideki Tojo
“The Razor”
Germany
Italy
Soviet Union
Japan
Axis
Axis
Allies
Axis
Worldwide Economic Depression
• After WWI, many European
economies were unstable.
• The 1929 stock market crash
in the U.S. and the resulting
Great Depression spread
throughout the world. U.S.
restrictive tariff policies
worsened the depression.
• As economies plummeted and
unemployment rose, many
people turned to powerful
leaders and governments
who promised success through
military buildup and the
conquest of territory.
After the end of WWII the German Economy
was in shambles. The extreme shortage of food
lead to bread lines such as this.
Italy, Germany, and Japan expand their territory
Italian Expansion
Mussolini wanted to build a
New Roman Empire in Africa.
In 1935, the Italian Army
Invaded Ethiopia, then known
As Abyssinia.
German Expansion
In March of 1938, after the
annexation of Austria by Germany
(known as the Anschluss), German
officers marched into Austria. This
change, which was more of an
absorbing of Austria into Germany
than an equal unification, lasted
until the end of the war.
Japanese Expansion
In 1931, the Japanese army
invaded resource rich
Manchuria. When the
Japanese prime minister
protested, he was assassinated
by military officials. From
that point forward, the
military controlled the country.
The Policy of Appeasement Fails
• Appeasement is the act of
giving into an enemy’s demands
in hopes of avoiding further
conflict.
• In 1938, Hitler demanded
that Czechoslovakia cede the
Sudetenland to Germany. He
claimed that the German
population living there was
being mistreated.
• At the Munich Conference, Sep.
1938, Britain and France agreed
to Hitler’s demands, a policy that
came to be known as appeasement.
In other words, they made
concessions in exchange for peace.
Immediate Cause: Germany invades Poland
•
On September 1, 1939, Germany
invaded Poland. Poland bravely
resisted Germany’s onslaught,
but its army was outdated. The
Polish army rode horses and
carried lances against the
German tanks.
•
The Germans used a new type
of warfare called blitzkrieg or
“lightning war.” Blitzkrieg
combined several technologiesaircraft, tanks, parachutes, and
radios- to produce a highly
mobile, fast moving army that
could coordinate multiple
attacks, break through lines, and
rapidly encircle enemy positions.
•
Two days later, Britain and France
declared war on Germany. World
War II had officially begun!
The classic characteristic of what is commonly known
as "blitzkrieg" is a highly mobile form of infantry and
armor working in combined arms teams.
Immediate Cause: Japanese Attack Pearl Harbor
• On December 7, 1941,
Japan attacked the U.S.
Naval Base at Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii.
• The result was 8 battleships sunk or damaged,
188 aircraft destroyed,
and 2403 Americans
dead.
• The next day, President
Franklin Roosevelt
asked for and received
a declaration of war
from congress against
Japan.