HIS 31 Chapter 24 Power Point (World War II)

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Transcript HIS 31 Chapter 24 Power Point (World War II)

HIS 31
CHAPTER 24 POWER POINT
World War II
KEY TERMS
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Popular Front – French alliance of communist, socialists, and moderates; goal was to
combat fascism; governed France from 1936 to 1938; they were unable to pull France out
of the Great Depression
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Axis Powers – in 1936, this alliance originally consisted of Germany and Italy (RomeBerlin Axis); in 1939, the alliance became known as the Pact of Steel; Japan also joined
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Appeasement – giving into an aggressor’s demands in order to avoid war
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Munich Conference – French and British leaders appeased Hitler and allowed him to
take the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia in order to prevent war; appeasement failed
because Hitler sent forces to overrun the remainder of Czechoslovakia; Germany invaded
Poland on September 1, 1939, which began WWII
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Blitzkrieg – German word for “lightning war”; these attacks consisted of highly
coordinated air strikes and rapid deployment of tanks
KEY TERMS
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The Holocaust – Jewish word for the Final Solution; this was the systematic
extermination of Jews, Slavs, and other peoples the Nazis deemed undesirable or
inferior; Nazis, led by Reinhard Heydrich and Heinrich Himmler, used gas chambers in
death camps to kill prisoners thousands at a time; the six largest death camps were
located in Poland
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D-Day – June 6, 1944; largest amphibious invasion in history; 176, 000 Allied troops as
well as thousands of destroyers, naval vessels and aircraft invaded France; Supreme
Allied Commander was General Dwight D. Eisenhower; American, British, and Canadian
troops landed on the beaches of northern France (Normandy) in order to push back the
German forces and end their occupation; Allies suffered huge losses, but we established
a northwestern front
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Kamikazes - Japanese pilots who purposely crashed planes into Allied ships; over 2,000
kamikazes dive-bombed into Allied ships during the Battle of Okinawa
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United Nations – this organization was founded in 1945 by fifty-one nations to promote
international peace and organization
ANALYZING QUESTION 1
Analyze some of the thinking behind Japanese aggression
during the 1930s and 1940s
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Japan wanted to create an empire known as the Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity
Sphere
They rejected the “Western” system; they wished to rid their culture of individualism,
liberalism, and materialism; they blamed Americans and Europeans for this influence
China was a long-time rival of Japan; Japanese viewed China as a threat to building their
empire
Japan wanted to acquire economic and political dominance in Asia due to belief in their
superiority among Asian peoples
Nationalistic militarism led Japan to invade Manchuria in 1931
Japan invaded China in 1937
“Rape of Nanking” – Japanese forces invaded the Chinese Nationalist government’s
capital; Japanese troops killed over 300,000 Chinese soldiers and civilians, including
women and children; they also brutally raped women
The United States stopped selling oil with the Japanese and froze their assets in our
banks
Japan attacked the American Pacific Fleet in Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 because
it was view as the last major threat to Japanese imperial expansion
ANALYZING QUESTION 2
How was the Holocaust connected to Hitler’s Nazi ideology
and the course of WWI?
 Hitler wanted to maintain a high standard of living for Germans without having
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to call upon them to make sacrifices
He implemented his “New Order”; program of economic exploitation and racial
imperialism
He create a racial hierarchy; Aryans, Anglo-Saxons, Scandinavians, Dutch,
Latin races, Slavs, Jews
He wanted to absorb those most related to Germans and eradicate those
judged inferior
Nazis formally adopted a policy of genocide, know as the Final Solution, in
1942, in which the SS was charged with the task of eliminating Jews, Slavs, the
mentally ill, the physically disabled, and other “inferior” people from Europe
ANALYZING QUESTION 3
How did the Allies turn the tide and defeat the Axis Powers
in WWII?
Battle of Stalingrad – longest battle of the war; Russians mounted a huge counterattack
against the German army; Russian winter took a huge toll on German forces and Hitler
refused to allow his armies to retreat or to reinforce them; Russian women served as
combat soldiers, tankers, and snipers; In January 1943, the German Sixth Army
surrendered to the Red Army and they Germans never recovered from this massive loss
of men and material
 D-Day Invasion – this invasion forced the Germans to fight a two-front war; Allies freed
Paris and pushed the Germans out of France after establishing a northwestern
beachhead at Normandy; Allied bombers destroyed German cities, manufacturing
facilities, and transportations networks; Germany was running out of men, oil, equipment,
and weapons; American and British forces invaded Germany in early 1945; Germany
surrendered to the U.S. and Britain on May 8, 1945 and the Soviet Union on May 9, 1945
 Victories in the Pacific – American forces destroyed four Japanese aircraft carriers
during the Battle of Midway in the spring of 1942 and this put the Japanese on the
defensive fir the rest of the war; the Battle of Guadalcanal saw the success of the
American island-hopping campaign in August 1942; in October 1944 during the Battle of
Leyte Gulf, Americans forces annihilated the Japanese fleet; on August 6 and 9, 1945, the
USAAF dropped atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, which
forced them to surrender
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ANALYZING QUESTION 4
What problems faced negotiators trying to design a
settlement at the end of WWII?
 The Allies (U.S., Great Britain, France, U.S.S.R.) disagreed over the
fate of Eastern European countries
 Stalin argued that the Soviet Union needed these countries as a buffer
zone due to Russia being invaded during WWI and WWII
 The U.S. and Great Britain demanded complete independence and
democracy for these countries
 Potsdam Conference (July 1945) – Stalin proclaimed that the Soviet
Union had to obtain complete security against Germany, so free
elections were not allowed in Eastern European countries that Soviet
troops occupied; Germany was divided into four occupation zones