16-4 Notes - TeacherWeb
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Chapter 16:
World War Looms
Section 4:
America Moves Toward
War
Standards
11.7
Students analyze America's
participation in World War II.
.1
Examine the origins of American involvement in
the war, with an emphasis on the events that
precipitated the attack on Pearl Harbor.
.4
Analyze Roosevelt's foreign policy during World
War II (e.g., Four Freedoms speech).
.6
Describe major developments in aviation,
weaponry, communication, and medicine and the
war's impact on the location of American industry
and use of resources.
Objectives
Following lecture and reading of this section,
students will be able to:
1.
Describe the response of the United States to the outbreak
of war in Europe in 1939
2.
Show how Roosevelt assisted the Allies without declaring
war
3.
Summarize the events that brought the United States into
armed conflict with Germany
4.
Characterize the American Response to the Japanese
Attack on Pearl Harbor
Moving Cautiously Away from Neutrality
1939, FDR persuaded Congress to pass
“cash-and-carry” provision to the
Neutrality Acts
U.S.
could sell arms to any nation willing to
pay cash and come to U.S. to get arms
This
prevented the U.S. from being :
owed
$ (like the British owed us after WWI)
Open to any countries thinking we are taking stuff to
enemies
FDR
argued that helping France & Britain defeat
Hitler was the best way to keep U.S. out of war
The Axis Threat
1940,
FDR tried to provide Britain “all aid
short of war”
France
U.S.
had already fallen and Britain was losing…
sent Britain 500,000 rifles & 80,000 machine guns
Germany,
Japan, Italy signed Tripartite
Pact, a mutual defense treaty, in 1940
Became
known as Axis Powers
The
pact aimed at keeping U.S. out of war by
forcing fight on two oceans
Germany
in the East (Atlantic)
Japan in the West (Pacific)
Building U.S. Defenses
Nazi
victories in 1940 lead to increased
U.S. defense spending
Congress passed the first ever peacetime
draft
Selective
Training and Service Act:
Draftees
to serve for 1 year in Western
Hemisphere only
16
million registered
1 million drafted
Roosevelt Runs for a Third Term
FDR
breaks two-term tradition, runs for
reelection
FDR’s
opponent, Republican Wendell Willkie, has
similar views on war
FDR
reelected with 55% of votes
FDR
& Willkie very similar
Americans went with the guy they already knew
The Lend-Lease Plan
FDR
explained to the nation that if Britain
falls, Axis powers would be free to conquer
world
U.S.
must become “arsenal of democracy”
By
late 1940, Britain has no more cash to
buy U.S. arms
If
Britain could not get arms they would be overtaken
1941
Lend-Lease Act
U.S.
to lend or lease supplies to any country
whose defense was vital to the U.S.
Supporting Stalin
1941,
Hitler breaks pact with Stalin and
invaded the Soviet Union
Roosevelt sent lend-lease supplies to Soviet
Union
“The
Many
enemy of my enemy, is my friend”
were unhappy with supporting Stalin and his
Communist government
German Wolf Packs
Hitler
deployed U-boats, in wolf packs, to
attack supply convoys and sink supply
ships
Wolf
packs-groups of up to 40 submarines patrol North
Atlantic
The
convoys were carrying lend-lease shipments to
Britain and the USSR
FDR
allowed the navy to attack German
U-boats in self-defense
Germans
winning at first but U.S. won in the end
The Atlantic Charter
FDR’s
support begins to drop to 50%
FDR & Churchill issue Atlantic Charter—
joint declaration of war aims
Why
they are fighting
What they want to accomplish
Charter
is basis of “A Declaration of the
United Nations” or Allies
Allies-nations
that fight Axis powers; 26 nations
sign Declaration [Visual]
Shoot on Sight
Germans
fired on U.S. ship
FDR ordered navy to shoot U-boats on
sight
Pink
Star (merchant) and the Kearny & Greer
(Navy) were fired upon and sunk by
America
U-boat
had been attacked by Germany
attacks lead Senate to repeal ban on arming
merchant ships
Japan’s Ambitions in the Pacific
Japan tried to take advantage of the fact that
Britain & France were involved in war with
Germany
Japan seized French bases in Indochina; U.S. cuts off trade
Hideki Tojo-chief of staff of army that invades China, prime
minister
The U.S. cutoff trade with Japan because of its
agression in SE Asia
Japan needed oil from the U.S. or must take Dutch East
Indies oil fields
This began the conflict between U.S. and Japan
Peace Talks are Questioned
1941
U.S. breaks Japanese codes
Learned
Peace
Japan planning to attack U.S.
talks with Japan last about 1 month
No
progress was ever made toward peace with
Japan
December
6, 1941 Japanese peace envoy
was instructed to reject all U.S. proposals
Message
was intercepted
U.S. new an attack would come, but did not know
where
The Attack on Pearl Harbor
December 7, 1941 Japanese attack Pearl Harbor
2,403
Americans killed; 1,178 wounded
Over
300 aircraft, 21 ships destroyed or damaged
3 carriers were at sea during the attack
Reaction to Pearl Harbor
Congress
approved FDR’s request for declaration
of war against Japan
Germany
& Italy declare war on U.S.
The U.S. is unprepared to fight in both Atlantic
& Pacific Oceans
FDR's Speech