16-1 Notes - TeacherWeb
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Transcript 16-1 Notes - TeacherWeb
Chapter 16:
World War Looms
Section 1:
Dictators Threaten World
Peace
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).
Objectives
Following lecture and reading of this section,
students will be able to:
1. Characterize
the government that took power
in Russia, Italy, Germany, and Japan after
World War I
2. Describe
America’s return to isolationism in
the 1930s
Nationalism Grips Europe and Asia
Failures of the World War I Peace Settlement
Treaty
of Versailles caused anger & resentment
in Europe
Germany
upset about:
Being
blame for war (war guilt clause)
Losing colonies & border territories
Russia
upset about:
Losing
lands that were used to create other nations
European Democracies Fail
Newly established democracies failed in post WWI
Europe
Social & economic problems
Social- no democratic tradition; the people did not understand
how to create effective change
Economic- much of Europe especially Germany, and Russia
experienced depression following WWI
Dictators rose to power
driven
by nationalism & a desire for more territory
Joseph
Stalin (Soviet Union)
Benito Mussolini (Italy)
Adolf Hitler (Germany)
Stalin Transforms the Soviet Union
1922;
Lenin established the Soviet Union
after civil war (Russian Revolution)
1924
Joseph Stalin took over:
Replaced
private farms with collectives
Soviet Union became second largest industrial
power (U.S. was 1st)
Famines
killed millions
Purges
anyone who threatens his power; 8–13
million killed
Establishes a totalitarian government
A
gov’t which exerts complete control over people
The Rise of Fascism in Italy
Unemployment & inflation lead to bitter
strikes in Italy; some communist-led
Middle,
Benito
upper classes want stronger leadership
Mussolini
Fascist
dictator that played on people’s fears of
economic collapse & communist revolution
Fascism-
stresses nationalism & needs of the state
above individual
Supported
1922;
by government officials, police, army
appointed head of government & established
totalitarian state
Nazis Take Over Germany
Adolf Hitler
Leader
of National Socialist German Workers’
Party (NAZI)
Mein Kampf “my stuggle”- (written in jail)
Basic
beliefs of Nazism; extreme nationalism
Goals:
Unite
German-speaking people
Enforce racial “purification”
Hitler Takes Control
1932, 6 million unemployed
Many
men joined Hitler’s private army
Nazis
become strongest political party in
Germany
Hitler
Hitler
named chancellor
dismantles the government
democratic
Establishes
1,000
Weimar Republic
Third Reich
year Reich
Militarists Gain Control in Japan
1931; Japanese Nationalist military leaders
seize Manchuria, China
League
of Nations condemns action
Japan quits League
The
Japanese Nationalist military leaders seize
control of the Japanese government
Aggression in Europe and Africa
Hitler
then sends
troops into Rhineland
Germany
1933; Hitler quits League
of Nations
Following the Japanese
example
Hitler saw the League of
Nations do nothing to
Japan for its violations
1935; Hitler begins
military buildup of
Germany
Violation of the Treaty of
Versailles
League
of Nation does
nothing to stop Hitler
Italy
1935;
League fails to
stop Mussolini’s
invasion of Ethiopia
Ethiopian
emperor,
“It is us today, it will
be you tomorrow.”
Civil War Breaks Out in Spain
1936; General Francisco Franco rebels against
the Spanish republic (established government)
Spanish
Civil War begins
Hitler
(Germany) & Mussolini (Italy) support Franco
Stalin (USSR) aided Spanish Republic
Western democracies (U.S., France, UK = neutral)
SC
Abraham Lincoln Brigade- 3,000 U.S. go & fight!
War leads to Rome-Berlin Axis
Alliance
between Italy and Germany
1939; Franco wins Spanish Civil War
Franco
becomes fascist dictator of Spain
Americans Cling to Isolationism
Reports surface about profits of banks, arms
dealers during WW I
Known
U.S.
as the “merchants of death”
Public was outraged
Anti-war
sentiment; big time isolationism
FDR
forced to back off of open foreign policy
because of possible entanglements
1935; Neutrality Acts
Outlawed
loaning money & selling weapons to nations
at war, or involved in civil war
Idea
was to keep U.S. out of future wars
Neutrality Breaks Down
1937; Japan launched a new attack on China
FDR
sent U.S. aid to China
Violation
FDR
found a loop hole
Japan
had not formally declared war on China
No
FDR
on Neutrality Acts?
need to enforce Neutrality Acts
was against isolationism
FDR
wanted to isolate the aggressor nations and
confront them early to stop the spread of war
FDR
was criticized by isolationist newspapers
Accused
of leading the nation into war.