Transcript WHII ppt6
World History II
SOL Review
Great Depression – Cold War
Great Depression - Causes
German reparations
Buying on credit
Overproduction – high supply + low demand
= low prices for farm goods and manufactured
goods
Protective Tariffs – countries passed tariffs
(taxes on imports) to make people buy goods
produced and food grown in their country
(foreign goods were more expensive)
Stock Market Crash (October 1929)
Great Depression - Results
High unemployment
Bank failures + collapse of credit
Collapse of prices in world trade
Growth of Fascism (extreme
nationalism) in Italy and Germany
Nazi Party blamed Jews for the economic
collapse
Adolf Hitler
Germany
Came to power because of inflation and Great
Depression (legally came to power)
Anti-Semitism
Extreme nationalism (fascist)
Nazi Party
Challenge to world power – sent troops into
the Rhineland (demilitarized zone according
to Versailles treaty)
Benito Mussolini
Italy
Fascist (1st fascist leader)
Wanted to restore the glory of the
Roman Empire
Challenge to world power – invaded
Ethiopia
Tojo
Japan
Militarist
Japan’s industrialization – need for raw
materials and markets
Challenge to world power – invaded
Korea, Manchuria, and rest of China
World War II - Causes
Aggression by totalitarian power (Hitler,
Mussolini, and Tojo)
Nationalism (Fascism – extreme nationalism)
Failures of the Versailles Treaty
Weakness of the League of Nations
Appeasement – Munich Conference (gave Hitler
the Sudetenland to avoid war)
Isolationism/Pacifism in United States and
Europe
World War II – Major Events
Began – German invasion of Poland
France fell (Britain left alone to fight the Axis
Powers)
Battle of Britain – bombing of London
Operation Barbarossa – German invasion of
the Soviet Union
U.S. entered war after Japan attacked Pearl
Harbor
U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki to end war with Japan
World War II – Major Leaders
Franklin D. Roosevelt – President of the U.S.
Harry Truman – replaced Franklin Roosevelt as
president/dropped atomic bomb on Japan
Dwight D. Eisenhower – Allied commander in Europe
(D Day)
Douglas MacArthur – U.S. General in the Pacific
Winston Churchill – Prime Minister of England
Joseph Stalin – dictator of Soviet Union
Hirohito – Emperor of Japan
Outcomes of World War II
European powers loss of empires (ex. Japan lost
territory gained by the war)
Two super powers emerged – U.S. and Soviet
Union
Nuremberg Trial – tried Nazis for war crimes
Division of Europe – Iron Curtain
(capitalist/democratic vs.
communist/totalitarian)
United Nations
Outcomes of World War II
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty
Organization) – military alliance that
included U.S., Canada, and western
Europe
Warsaw Pact – Soviet Union and
Eastern Europe
Holocaust
Genocide – the systematic and
purposeful destruction of a racial, political,
religious, or cultural group
Elements leading to the Holocaust –
history of anti-Semitism, defeat in World
War I and Great Depression blamed on
the Jews, Hitler’s belief in a master race,
and Final Solution (death camps)
Examples of Other Genocides
Armenians by leaders of the Ottoman Empire
Peasants, government and military leaders, and
members of the elite in the Soviet Union by
Joseph Stalin (Great Purge)
The educated, artists, technicians, former
government officials, monks, and minorities by
Pol Pot in Cambodia
Tutsi minority by the Hutu in Rwanda
Muslims and Croats By Bosnian Serbs in
Yugoslavia
Post World War II - Japan
U.S. occupation of Japan led by
MacArthur
Improved economy
Brought democracy to Japan –
constitution/elections
Japan can only have a military for defense
Post World War II – Germany
Division of East (Soviet Union) and West
(U.S., France, and Great Britain)
Division of Berlin (East and West)
Democratic government in West
Germany
Early Cold War
Yalta Conference - meeting of three main
allied leaders (Roosevelt, Stalin, and Churchill) +
planned "the whole shape and structure of
post-war Europe“ + Stalin had the right to
control the governments of Eastern Europe
(Soviet troops were already stationed
throughout Eastern Europe as they pushed
toward Germany)
Democracy and Capitalism vs. Dictatorship and
Communism
Truman Doctrine – contain communism (not
let it spread)
Marshall Plan
Rebuild Western Europe (aid and
assistance) – prevent the spread of
communism
Berlin Wall
Surrounded city of West Berlin so that
people would not escape to West
Germany
Korean War
Cause – North Korea invaded South
Korea
Result – North Korea and South Korean
still divided along 38th parallel
China supported North Korea and U.S.
supported South Korea
Vietnam War
Cause - Ho Chi Minh encouraged communist rebels
to overthrow South Vietnamese government
Results - U.S. troops left Vietnam + unification of
Vietnam (communist country)
Vietnamization Nixon's administrations policy of
building up South Vietnamese forces while gradually
withdrawing American troops
Domino Theory If Vietnam became a communist
country, the countries adjacent to (surrounding)
Vietnam would also become communist countries
Cuban Missile Crisis
Cause – Soviet Union places nuclear
missiles in Cuba
Results – Soviet Union removed missiles
and U.S. promised not to invade Cuba
Collapse of Soviet Union
Communism failed!! - increasing Soviet military
expenses to compete with the United States +
economic inefficiency
Gorbachev and President Reagan – key leaders
Eastern European countries (communist block) wanted
independence U.S. encouraged dissidents (people
who wanted independence) in communist countries
(Poland)
Some Warsaw Pact countries joined NATO after
collapse of Soviet Union – expansion of NATO
Collapse of Soviet Union
Establishment of
independent states in
Eastern Europe and the
breakup of the Soviet
Union
Movement toward a
free market economy
Fall of Berlin wall and
reunification of
Germany