Road to WWII
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Transcript Road to WWII
Commodore Perry, Treaty, 1853
• End Japanese Isolation by
demonstrating superior naval force
• introduced interchangeable weapon
parts
• Japan begins rapid industrialization &
modernization
Root-Takahira Agreement, 1908
• U.S. interpretation =
honor status quo in
Pacific
• Japanese
interpretation = U.S. T.R
sanctioning
Japanese “sphere
of influence in Far
East” except for
Philippines
T. R. mediated Peace
Russo-Japanese War
Lansing-Ishii Agreement, 1917
• Recognize Japan’s special
interests in Manchuria
• Admonish Japan to honor
Open Door Policy in China
Summary of Diplomatic
Problems with Japan
• Language Barrier
• Discrimination of
Japanese
Immigrants
• Cultural Arrogance
The Versailles Treaty
A Weak League of Nations
The Ineffectiveness of the
League of Nations
No control of major conflicts.
No progress in disarmament.
No effective military force.
The “Stab-In-The-Back” Theory
German soldiers are dissatisfied.
Decadence of the Weimar Republic
France – False Sense of Security?
The Maginot
Line
Italy, 1922
• Mussolini & his
“Black Shirts”
march on Rome
• Beginning of
Fascist
Dictatorship
Washington Conference, 1922
• U.S.:Britain:Japan scrap warships
5:5:3
International Agreements
Locarno Pact – 1925
France, Germany, Great Britain,
Italy
Guarantee existing frontiers
Establish DMZ 30 miles deep on East
bank of Rhine River
Refrain from aggression against each
other
Kellog-Briand Pact – 1928
Makes war illegal as a tool of
diplomacy
No enforcement provisions
The Great Depression
The Manchurian Crisis, 1931
Japan Invades Manchuria, 1931
Japan Invades Manchuria, 1931
• Creates “puppet state” Manchukuo
• China asked League & U.S. to intervene
• Stimson Doctrine = U.S. not recognize
territory seized by force
Japan attacks Shanghai,
1932
• U.S. embargo on munitions sales to belligerents
1933
• Hitler Seizes Power in
Germany
• F.D. R. elected President
T.R
Tydings-McDuffie Act, 1934
• Grants Philippine Independence in 10 yrs
• Japanese Interpretation = U.S. no longer
interested in Pacific Basin
• Japan terminates Washington Treaty, 1934
Italy Attacks Ethiopia, 1935
Emperor
Haile
Selassie
Germany Invades the
Rhineland
March 7, 1936
U. S. Neutrality Acts:
1934, 1935, 1937, 1939
America-First Committee
Charles Lindbergh
The Austrian Anschluss, 1936
The Spanish Civil War:
1936 - 1939
The
National
Front
The
Popular
Front
[Nationalists]
[Republicans]
Carlists [ultra-Catholic
monarchists].
Catholic Church.
Falange [fascist] Party.
Monarchists.
Anarcho-Syndicalists.
Basques.
Catalans.
Communists.
Marxists.
Republicans.
Socialists.
The Spanish Civil War:
1936 - 1939
The Spanish Civil War
The Spanish Civil War: 1936 - 1939
The American “Lincoln Brigade”
The Spanish Civil War: 1936 - 1939
Francisco Franco
The Spanish Civil War:
A Dress Rehearsal for WW II?
Italian troops in
Madrid
“Guernica”
by Pablo Picasso
The Japanese Invasion
of China, 1937
Japanese Invasion of China,
July 1937
• No formal declaration of war
• FDR allows munitions sales to continue
China--7 million, Japan—2 million
Panay Incident, 1937
• Japan mistakenly bombs American gunboat on
Yangtze River = issues formal apology
• U.S. aid to China increases—Volunteer Air
Force
• U.S. manufacturers boycott Japan
The “Problem” of the
Sudetenland
Appeasement: The Munich
Agreement, 1938
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain
Now we have “peace in our time!” Herr
Hitler is a man we can do business with.
Czechoslovakia Becomes Part of
the Third Reich: 1939
Rome-Berlin Axis, 1939
The “Pact of Steel”
The Nazi-Soviet
Non-Aggression Pact, 1939
Foreign Ministers
von Ribbentrop & Molotov
Poland Attacked: Sept. 1, 1939
Blitzkrieg [“Lightening War”]
German Troops March into Warsaw
European Theater of Operations
The “Phoney War” Ends:
Spring, 1940
Dunkirk Evacuated
June 4, 1940
France Surrenders
June, 1940
A Divided France
Henri Petain
The French Resistance
The Free French
The Maquis
General Charles
DeGaulle
Fall of 1940
• Rapid fall of Belgium, Holland, France,
Denmark, Norway to Blitzkrieg
• Battle of Britain
• sinking of Robin Moor & Reuben James
Japan invades Indochina, 1940
• Congressional Ban on selling gasoline
& scrap iron to Japan
Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis:
The Tripartite Pact
September, 1940
Now Britain Is All Alone!
Winston Churchill
• Led lone battle
against
appeasement
T.R• Prime Minister at
moment Britain
plunges into War
U. S. Lend-Lease Act,
1941
Great Britain.........................$31 billion
Soviet Union...........................$11 billion
France......................................$ 3 billion
China.......................................$1.5 billion
Other European.................$500 million
South America...................$400 million
Totaled: $48,601,365,000
Lend-Lease
Battle of Britain:
The “Blitz”
Battle of Britain:
The “Blitz”
The London “Tube”:
Air Raid Shelters during the Blitz
The Royal Air Force
British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill
The Atlantic Charter
Roosevelt and
Churchill sign
treaty of
friendship in
August 1941.
Solidifies alliance.
Fashioned after
Wilson’s 14 points.
Calls for League of
Nations type
organization.
Operation Barbarossa:
Hitler’s Biggest Mistake
Japanese American Talks,
Spring 1941
• Cordell Hull & Ambassador Nomura
• U.S. demands Japanese withdrawal in
exchange for removal of trade restrictions
Japan resumes take-over of
Indochina
• FDR freezes Japanese assets
March, 1941
• Hideki Tojo & War Party
Control Japanese
Government
Operation Barbarossa:
June 22, 1941
3,000,000 German soldiers.
3,400 tanks.
Hull & Nomura Talks
Continue, June 1941
• Nomura:
– Japan stops further expansion
– U.S & Britain stop aid to China
– U.S. lifts embargo
– Japan pulls out of Indochina after
“just peace” with China
• Hull (Nov. 26, 1941)
– Japan must “withdraw all military,
naval, air, and police forces” from
China & Indochina
Ultra Secret: Enigma Machine
• U.S. breaks
Japanese Code
(Col. W.
Friedman)
• Knows war is
eminent
• Expects attack
on Malaysia &
Philippines
Pearl Harbor
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto
Pearl Harbor from the Cockpit
of a Japanese Pilot
Pearl Harbor - Dec. 7, 1941
A date which will live in infamy!
President Roosevelt Signs the
US Declaration of War
Pearl Harbor: Dec. 7, 1941
• Yamamoto plan of attack
• Also invade Philippines & Malaysia
• U. S. Losses:
–
–
–
–
–
–
2 battleships destroyed
6
“
near destruction
12 “
out of action
150 planes destroyed
2,300 killed
1,100 wounded
• Not present during attack: U.S. aircraft
carriers
USS Arizona, Pearl Harbor
Pearl Harbor Memorial
Germany
& Italy
Declare
War on
United
States