Transcript Chapter 25
CHAPTER 25
Americans and
a World in
Crisis
1933-1945
INTRODUCTION
1.) How did President Roosevelt’s Good Neighbor Policy
affect U.S.-Latin American relations?
2.) How did the American people and their govt. respond to
the international crises of the 1930 ’s?
3.) How did President Roosevelt and Congress mobilize the
country for war?
4.) What impact did the war have on the U.S. economy?
5.) How did the war change American society and affect
minorities and women?
6.) What were the different goals of the U.S.A., G.B. and the
U.S.S.R. and how did these goals affect their combat
strategies?
7.) Why did President Truman decide to drop atomic bombs
on Japan, and was he justified in doing so?
THE UNITED STATES IN A MENACING WORLD,
1933-1939
Introduction
During FDR’s fist 2 terms, he improved relations with
Latin America
Meanwhile, aggressive, militaristic fascist regimes came
to power in Italy, Germany, and Japan
The U.S.A. reacted to these developments abroad
ambivalently
Torn between dislike of fascism and even stronger desire for
peace
NATIONALISM AND THE GOOD NEIGHBOR
The Good Neighbor policy
Agreed that no state has the right to intervene in the
affairs of another
Applied in Latin America
Withdrew forces from Haiti and Dominican Republic
Ended the Platt Amendment
Refrained from using force against left-wing govts. in
Cuba and Mexico
FDR did apply economic pressure to influence events
FDR’s restraint in using military force improved
U.S.-Latin American relations
THE RISE OF AGGRESSIVE STATES IN
EUROPE AND ASIA
Italy
Benito Mussolini
Took control in 1922
1938--invaded
Ethiopia
THE RISE OF AGGRESSIVE STATES IN
EUROPE AND ASIA
Germany
1933
Adolf Hitler
Became chancellor of
Germany
Absolute dictatorship
Preached racism,
aggressive nationalism,
and anti-Semitism
THE RISE OF AGGRESSIVE STATES IN
EUROPE AND ASIA
Hitler
Persecuted the Jews
Military buildup
Conquest of other countries
1936--Rhineland
1938--Austria
1938--Sudetenland
Munich Conference--appeasement by France and Great Britain
1931--Japanese imperialists seized Manchuria from
China
1937--began a war of conquest to take over all of China
THE AMERICAN MOOD: NO MORE WAR
Americans disliked these actions in Europe and
Asia but were determined not to be pulled into
another war
U.S.A. participation in WWI as a mistake
Nye Committee
Reveled the roles played by bankers and weapons
suppliers in WWI
In the 1930’s, novelists and playwrights
condemned war
THE AMERICAN MOOD: NO MORE WAR
Neutrality Acts
1935
Prohibited the U.S. from making loans or selling arms to
“belligerent nations”
Banned Americans from traveling on the ships of
nations at war
U.S. Dept. of State link
THE GATHERING STORM, 1938-1939
Hitler seized the remainder of Czechoslovakia
Threatened to attack Poland
Signed the German-Soviet Non-Aggression pact
Ensured Russian neutrality during the planned German
invasion of Poland
Mussolini took over Albania
THE GATHERING STORM, 1938-1939
Many Americans grew alarmed and started to
feel that the U.S.A. should take a more active
role
FDR sent messages to Hitler and Mussolini
asking them to pledge not to invade any other
nation
They were responded with ridicule
Roosevelt asked Congress to appropriate much
more $$$$ to build up U.S. defenses
AMERICA AND THE JEWISH REFUGEES
Throughout the 30’s, German persecution of the
Jews intensified
1935--Nuremberg Laws
Stripped German Jews of citizenship and rights
1938--Kristallnacht
A wave of Nazi violence against Jews
Attacked their homes, synagogues, and businesses
AMERICA AND THE JEWISH REFUGEES
Tens of thousands of European Jews fled and
seek countries that would admit them
Among the refugees were:
Distinguished musicians
Architects
Writers
Scholars
Many would enriched the cultural life of their
adopted nation
Physicists Leo Szilard and Enrico Fermi would play key
roles in developing the atomic bomb for the U.S.
AMERICA AND THE JEWISH REFUGEES
Congress would not amend discriminatory laws to
offer a haven to hundreds of thousands of
additional Jews needing a safe home
FDR did not exert pressure on Congress to do so
either
The majority of Americans opposed letting in more
Jews
Isolationist
Anti-immigrant
Anti-Semitic attitudes
1939--the U.S. stopped a ship carrying Jewish
refugees and forced it to return to Europe
There the country-less refugees were soon
murdered by the Nazis
INTO THE STORM, 1939-1941
The European War
Sept. 1, 1939
WWII began
Hitler attacked Poland
GB and France declared war on Germany
They were committed by a treaty to defend Poland
THE EUROPEAN WAR
The U.S.A. revised the Neutrality Acts
Now permitted was the sale of weapons to
“belligerents” on a cash-and-carry basis
Many saw this as a way to help Britain and
France without having to fight
April 1940--German armies turned on Denmark
and Norway
May 1940--they conquered Netherlands and
Belgium
mid-June 1940--they captured France
THE EUROPEAN WAR
The Battle of Britain
July 10 to Oct. 31, 1940
German bombing raids over cities in England
Prime Minister Winston Churchill appealed to
FDR for help
The majority of Americans favored a stepped-up
weapons shipments to GB
An articulate minority feared that such aid would
weaken U.S. defenses and needlessly pull the U.S.A. into
war
FROM ISOLATION TO INTERVENTION
In 1940, FDR decided to run for a 3rd term
because of the situation in Europe
Republican opponent was Wendell Willkie
During the campaign, Roosevelt continued his
interventionist position
Signed an executive agreement with Churchill
Gave Britain 50 overage U.S. destroyers in exchange for leases
on air and naval bases in British possession in the Western
Hemisphere
FROM ISOLATION TO INTERVENTION
America First Committee
Organized by isolationists
Preached that we must not give any aid to
“belligerents” or become involved in the struggle
against Hitler
Roosevelt was elected to an unprecedented 3rd
term
FROM ISOLATION TO INTERVENTION
Lend-Lease Act
Passed Congress in March 1941
Permitted the president to lend or lease military
equipment to any country whose defense he thought
vital to American security
June 1941--Hitler attacked U.S.S.R.
Roosevelt gave lend-lease aid to the Soviets and
British
FROM ISOLATION TO INTERVENTION
Constant sinking by German U-boats sent most
of the supplies to the bottom of the Atlantic
To prevent such losses, the U.S.A.:
Began to convoy British ships as far as Iceland
tracked German submarines
Notifying the British of the location of Germany
submarines
FROM ISOLATION TO INTERVENTION
By the fall of 1941, the U.S. and Germany were
engaged in an undeclared naval war
Atlantic Charter
Summer of 1941
Meet off the coast of Newfoundland
Moved Roosevelt and Churchill closer to an alliance
A joint proclamation declaring that they were fighting
the Axis powers to “ensure life, liberty, independence
and religious freedom and to preserve the rights of man
and justice."
PEARL HARBOR AND THE COMING OF WAR
Japan expanded its aggression from China
to the resource-rich British, Dutch, and
French colonies in Southeast Asia
Japan wanted to dominate all of Asia
This clashed with the Open Door policy
Roosevelt applied economic pressure on
Japan
PEARL HARBOR AND THE COMING OF WAR
By 1940, Washington prohibited the sale of
aviation gasoline to Japan
Tokyo occupied northern Indochina and signed
the Tripartite Pact with Germany and
Italy=Roosevelt placed an embargo on all items
Japan needed
July 1941--Japan seized the rest of
Indochina=U.S. froze Japanese assets in the
U.S.=ended all trade
PEARL HARBOR AND THE COMING OF WAR
Japan made a last-ditch effort to persuade
Washington to reopen trade and recognize
Japan’s conquests
If that failed, Japan would attempt to destroy
the U.S. Pacific fleet with a surprise attack on
Pearl Harbor
Washington knew its refusal would provoke an
attack somewhere in the Pacific
Roosevelt would not yield
He sent warnings to all base commanders
PEARL HARBOR AND THE COMING OF WAR
Dec. 7, 1941
Japan struck Pearl Harbor
History Channel video
Dec. 8
Congress recognized that a state of war existed with
Japan
Roosevelt speech
Dec. 11
Japan’s 2 allies (Germany and Italy) declared war on U.S.
and the U.S reciprocated
PEARL HARBOR AND THE COMING OF WAR
In the months after Pearl Harbor, the United
States faced a bleak situation
Nazi submarines prowled off the east coast and took a
heavy toll on Allied ships
Hitler’s armies had pushed to the outskirts of Leningrad
and Moscow
Germany was launching new offensives in the Crimea,
Caucasus, and North Africa
AMERICA MOBILIZES FOR WAR
Organizing for Victory
To plan the military effort FDR created:
the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Office of Strategic Services
(would later become the CIA)
To mobilize the economy Roosevelt:
Established hundreds of special wartime agencies
War Production Board
Allocated scarce materials, limited manufacture of civilian goods,
and awarded military production contracts
Japan took over:
Philippines, Malaya, Thailand, Hong Kong, Guam, Wake, Singapore,
Dutch East Indies, and most of the island chains in the Western Pacific
ORGANIZING FOR VICTORY
The U.S. produced more armaments than
Germany, Italy, and Japan combined
Govt. contracts guaranteed handsome profits to
the giant corporations that received most of the
defense contracts
Federal authority and the federal budget grew
rapidly
The influence of the military and big corporation
on American life grew also
THE WAR ECONOMY
Between 1941 and 1945, the U.S. govt. spent
nearly twice as much as it did from 1789 to 1940
Fueled by this expenditure, the economy
boomed
During the war:
Purchasing power of industrial workers went up 50%
Corporate profits climbed by 70%
Unemployment vanished as 17 million new jobs were
created
THE WAR ECONOMY
Many of the poor moved into the middle class
Most labor leaders gave no-strike pledges
John L. Lewis led his miners on repeated work stoppages
An increasingly conservative Congress retaliated with
the antilabor Smith-Connally Act
Office of Price Administration imposed price
controls and rationing
Done to curb inflation
As a result, the cost of living only rose by 8% during the
last 2 years of the war
THE WAR ECONOMY
The govt. raised the huge sums needed to
fight the war with:
the sale of bonds
Provided half the money
Steeply increased federal taxes
Provided the rest of the $$$
“A Wizard War”
The govt. also employed thousands of scientists
Manhattan Project
A secret project
Designed to beat the Germans in the race to develop
nuclear weapons
Led by physicist Robert Oppenheimer
Spent about $2 billion
July 16, 1945--tested the first nuclear bomb
PROPAGANDA AND POLITICS
Office of War Information and the Office of
Censorship
Jobs were to unify Americans and prevent
dangerous security leaks
PROPAGANDA AND POLITICS
Full employment and prosperity led to a politically
conservative trend
In 1942--more Republicans and conservative
Democrats were elected to Congress
Cut welfare programs
Abolished New Deal agencies
Halted any further reforms
The role of the federal govt. in people ’s lives grew
larger
Supervised the economy
Funded research
Molded public opinion
CHOOSING SIDES
Allies
France
Britain
US
USSR
Axis
Germany
Italy
Japan
STRATEGIES
Allies
Followed a “Defeat Hitler
First” strategy. Most
American military resources
were targeted for Europe.
In the Pacific, American
military strategy called for
an “island hopping ”
campaign, seizing islands
closer and closer to Japan
and using them as bases for
air attacks on Japan, and for
cutting off Japanese
supplies through submarine
warfare against Japanese
shipping.
Axis
Germany hoped to defeat the
Soviet Union, gain control of their
oil fields, and force Britain out of
the war with a bombing campaign
and submarine warfare before
America’s could join the war.
Following Pearl Harbor, Japan
invaded the Philippines and
Indonesia and planned to invade
both Australia and Hawaii. They
hoped America would accept
Japanese dominance in the Pacific,
rather than conduct a bloody and
costly war to stop Japan
MAJOR BATTLES
North Africa
El Alamein: German forces threatened to
seize Egypt and the Suez Canal.
Defeated by the British.
Prevented Hitler from gaining access to
Middle Eastern oil supplies and attacking
the Soviet Union from the south.
THE BATTLEFRONT, 1942-1944
Liberating Europe- “Beat Hitler First”
The British and Americans concentrated on beating
Hitler first, then Japan
Stalin pressed his 2 allies to launch an invasion of
Europe as quickly as possible
Churchill convinced Roosevelt that they should land in
North Africa first
By May 1943--they had defeated German and Italian armies
Soviets turned the tide of the war in the east
Won at Stalingrad
Held out at Leningrad
Attacked the German invaders along a thousand-mile front
MAJOR BATTLES
Europe
Stalingrad: Hundreds of thousands of German soldiers
were killed or captured in a months-long siege of
Stalingrad.
defeat prevented Germany from seizing the Soviet oil
fields and turned the tide against Germany in the east.
Normandy landings (D-Day): American and Allied
troops under Eisenhower landed in German -occupied
France on June 6, 1944.
Lots of casualties.
The landings succeeded, and the liberation of western
Europe from Hitler began.
LIBERATING EUROPE
The British and Americans then captured Sicily
and started a slow march up the Italian
peninsula
Mussolini was deposed in July 1943
The new Italian govt. surrendered
Allies encountered stiff opposition from
Germany troops
LIBERATING EUROPE
1944-1945--the Soviets cleared the Germans out
of the U.S.S.R.
The Soviets continued to pursue them across
eastern Europe
June 1944--British and Americans landed on the
beaches of Normandy
Battle of the Bulge
Dec. 1944-Jan. 1945
Nazis temporarily stopped the Allied drive
By early 1945, the Americans and British
reached the Rhine
WAR IN THE PACIFIC
The Japanese advances in the Pacific were first
halted in the spring and summer of 1942
Battle of Coral Sea and Battle of Midway
U.S.A. Navy and Army assaulted Japanese
strongholds in:
Solomon Islands
Gilbert Islands
Marshall Island
Mariana Island
The U.S. Navy largely destroyed what was left of the
Japanese fleet at the Battles of the Philippine Sea
and Leyte Gulf
MAJOR BATTLES
Pacific
Midway: American naval forces defeated a much
larger Japanese force as it prepared to take
Midway Island
A Japanese victory at Midway would have
enabled Japan to invade Hawaii.
The American victory ended the Japanese threat
to Hawaii and began a series of American
victories in the “island hopping” campaign,
carrying the war closer and closer to Japan.
MAJOR BATTLES
Pacific
Iwo Jima and Okinawa:
Brought American forces closer than ever to
Japan, but cost thousands of American lives
and even more Japanese lives
Japanese soldiers and civilians committed
suicide rather than surrender.
THE GRAND ALLIANCE
Great Britain, Soviet Union, and the U.S.A.
Created out of military necessity
All 3 had different goals for the postwar
period
Roosevelt wanted to:
defeat fascism
Establish a new world order strong enough to keep
the peace
Open trade
Protect national self-determination
THE GRAND ALLIANCE
Churchill hoped to:
Keep the British colonial empire
Maintain a balance of power in Europe against the
Soviets
Stalin hoped to:
Weaken Germany permanently
To protect his country against any future attack from
the west
Impose Soviet domination over eastern Europe
THE GRAND ALLIANCE
FDR attempted to reconcile these
differences with personal diplomacy
He held top-level wartime conferences
with the Allied leaders at:
Casablanca
Cairo
Tehran
The first meeting between the Allied leaders
concerned the details of the Normandy invasion and
other military and political problems were discussed
THE GRAND ALLIANCE
Roosevelt was reelected to a 4th term in
1944
Harry S Truman was his VP
Republicans nominated Thomas E. Dewey
FDR won by the smallest margin of his
career
WAR AND AMERICAN SOCIETY
Introduction
About 15 million Americans served in the armed
forces
Another 15 million moved from one place to
another
More women than ever before entered the paid
labor force
The GI’s War
GIs saw death and brutality all around them
Some troops in all of the armies committed
atrocities
Some suffered lasting psychological damage
Others became hardened and cynical
For many their war service opened new vistas
They experienced foreign cities and countries
Learned to be more tolerant of other Americans
Different religions, classes, ethnicity, regions, etc.
About 1 million of them married women they met
overseas
THE HOME FRONT
15 million Americans moved from one location
to another for family and economic reasons
People left rural areas to seek jobs in warproduction centers
Terrible shortages of housing and other facilities
developed
Urban blight and many social problems
The West grew in population
THE HOME FRONT
High school enrollment dropped
More teenagers took full-time jobs
The armed forces sent nearly a million people to
college campuses for special training
Americans went to the movies to watch films
that entertained them
The public received war news from periodicals
and the radio
THE HOME FRONT
Millions of women
went to work in
defense plants
High wages
Patriotism
Govt. encouragement
THE HOME FRONT
By 1945--women constituted over 1/3 of the
labor force
Took on formerly male-dominated work:
Welding
Riveting
Operating cranes
Running lathes
They only earned about 65% of what men
received for the the jobs
THE HOME FRONT
More than 1/3 of the women had children under 14
There were few day-care centers
Children were often left on their own
Juvenile delinquency increased alarmingly
Marriage, birth, and divorce rates soared
About 300,000 women joined the armed forces
After 1945, most women left their wartime
occupations
Women gained a new sense of their own
capabilities
RACISM AND NEW OPPORTUNITIES
During WWII, African-Americans demanded that
the nation fight racism at home as well as
abroad
NAACP and CORE led the struggle for civil rights
1941--A. Philip Randolph planned a massive
march on Washington
FDR signed an executive order prohibiting racial
discrimination in hiring and promotion by govt. agencies
and defense contractors
RACISM AND NEW OPPORTUNITIES
The Fair Employment Practices Commission
Created by FDR
Actually had very little power
Wartime labor shortages opened many new jobs
for African-Americans
About 1 million African-Americans served in the
armed forces
Generally in segregated units commanded by white
officers
RACISM AND NEW OPPORTUNITIES
In civilian life, tensions developed between
African-Americans demanding equality and
resistant whites
Race riots erupted in dozens of cities
More than 700,000 African-Americans left the
South to settle in cities of the North and West
The move opened up greater opportunities and
potential political power
WAR AND DIVERSITY
25,000 Native Americans served in the armed
forces
Another 50,000 left reservations to work in
defense industries
Many returned to the reservations after the war
Conditions on reservations had deteriorated
badly because Congress had slashed
appropriations for Indian programs
CONTRIBUTIONS OF MINORITIES
African Americans served in segregated units and
were assigned to noncombat roles
demanded the right to serve in combat
Tuskegee Airmen (African American) served in Europe
with distinction.
Communication codes of the Navajo were used
(oral, not written language; impossible for the Japanese to
break).
Mexican Americans also fought, but in nonsegregated units.
Suffered high casualties and won numerous unit and
individual medals for bravery in action.
WAR AND DIVERSITY
Hundreds of thousands of Mexicans entered the
United States during WWII
Some legally, some illegally
Worked on the big farms in the western states
Mexican-Americans left migratory farm labor to
seek better jobs in cities
WAR AND DIVERSITY
Zoot-suit riots
During WWII
In LA
Between sailors and
soldiers and
Hispanic youth
WAR AND DIVERSITY
About 350,000 Mexican-Americans served in the
armed forces
Emerged from the War with a heightened
consciousness and demands for equality
THE INTERMENT OF JAPANESE-AMERICANS
The govt.’s treatment of Japanese-Americans
during WWII was one of the worst violations of
civil liberties in U.S. history
The govt. uprooted 112,000 Japanese-Americans
living on the West Coast and placed them in
internment camps in remote interior regions
Atmosphere of hysteria over Pearl Harbor
Fear of Japanese invasion of the mainland
Traditional prejudice against Asian-Americans
THE INTERMENT OF JAPANESE-AMERICANS
Korematsu v. United States
1944
Supreme Court case
Upheld the constitutionality of evacuation
Korematsu decision
THE INTERMENT OF JAPANESE-AMERICANS
In the 1980’s, the govt. finally admitted that its
actions had been unjustified
The govt. apologized to Japanese-Americans
The govt. agreed to pay compensation to them
for property losses they suffered when they
were detained
TRIUMPH AND TRAGEDY, 1945
The Yalta Conference
Feb. 1945
The Big Three all meet
Roosevelt and Churchill had to make concessions to
Stalin
Stalin promised to declare war on Japan shortly after
Germany’s surrender
Western leaders agreed to the Soviets regaining the territory
Japan had taken from them in 1905
THE YALTA CONFERENCE
Roosevelt and Churchill settled for Stalin’s vague
promise to allow free election in Eastern Europe
He never allowed them
Stalin agreed to the formation of the United
Nations in April 1945
History Channel video--Yalta Conference
VICTORY IN EUROPE
April 1945--American and Soviet troops met at
the Elbe River
History Channel audio--Elbe River report
April 12--FDR died
History Channel speech--Truman on FDR's death
April 30--Hitler committed suicide
May 2--Berlin fell to the Soviet
May 8--Germany unconditionally surrendered
V-E Day
VICTORY IN EUROPE
Harry S Truman
became the new
president
Truman distrusted
the Soviets
He accused them of
breaking their Yalta
promise to allow
free elections in
Eastern Europe
VICTORY IN EUROPE
Stalin responded angrily and tightened his hold
on eastern Europe
April to June 1945--San Francisco conference
Framed the United Nations Charter
History Channel speech--United Nations formed
High tensions between Big Three
July 1945--meeting at Potsdam
The Big Three agreed on very little at the meeting
THE HOLOCAUST
Nazi genocide of Jews during WWII
Extermination camps
Mass murders and torture
Roosevelt administration was more concerned
with winning the War as quickly as possible
rather than destroying the camps
Very little attempts to rescue European Jews
Congress and the public did not want to admit
large #s of Jewish refugees to the U.S.A.
THE HOLOCAUST
By 1945--Nazis murdered:
6 million Jews
About 3 million gypsies, communists, homosexuals, etc.
Allies liberated the death camps in the last
months of the War
Took pictures of the horror they saw
THE ATOMIC BOMB
The fighting in the Pacific continued in 1945
U.S. captured Iwo Jima and Okinawa
U.S. suffered heavy causalities at both battles
THE ATOMIC BOMB
July 1945--U.S. successfully tested an atomic
bomb
History Channel video--atomic bomb tested
Truman issued the Potsdam Declaration
Called on Japan to surrender unconditionally or face
“prompt and utter destruction”
Japan rejected the warning
Truman ordered the use of nuclear bombs
THE ATOMIC BOMB
Aug. 6--Hiroshima
History Channel video--Hiroshima
Aug. 9--Nagasaki
Japan then surrendered
Many historians have debated if the U.S.A.
needed to use the atomic bombs
Was it justified?
Motives?
THE ATOMIC BOMB
Fifty million people died in WWII
More than 1/2 were civilians
Soviet Union lost 20 million
About 400,000 U.S. servicemen died
Much of Europe and Asia was ruined
U.S. was physically undamaged
There were profound changes had occurred in
American life
CONCLUSION
The U.S. used isolationism in the the 1930’s as a
response to the aggressions of Germany, Italy,
and Japan
After Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Congress
voted for war on Japan
Hitler and Mussolini then declared war on the
U.S.A.
CONCLUSION
Once in the War, the country engaged in total
war
The powers of the federal govt. (especially the
president) expanded mightily to mobilize the
American economy fully
U.S. became more productive and prosperous
than ever before
The Depression ended
Fully employment returned
The majority of people earned good $$$$
CONCLUSION
Allied armies defeated the enemy
Americans’ faith in “capitalism and democratic
institutions” rebounded
Confidence and optimism about our future and
national strength grew
America then locked horns with its former ally
the Soviet Union in a Cold War