Transcript File
EQ: Elaborate on the Conditions of WWII in Europe,
including major battles, events and the scope of the
Holocaust.
Content Standard 4: The student will analyze the United States role in international affairs by
examining the major causes, events, and effects of the nation’s involvement in World War II, 1933 to
1946.
1. Cite specific textual and visual evidence to examine the transformations in American society and
government policy as the nation mobilized for entry into World War II.
A.Examine the roles of appeasement and isolationism in the United States’ reluctance to respond to
Fascist military aggression in Europe and Asia including the Neutrality Actsand the Lend-Lease
program.
B. Evaluate the mobilization for war as stated in President Roosevelt’s Day Which Will Live in
Infamy speech including the role of women and minorities in the war effort, rationing, the
internment of Japanese-Americans and the Korematsu v. United States decision, and the internment
of Americans of German and Italian descent.
2. Cite specific textual and visual evidence to analyze the series of events affecting the outcome of
World War II including major battles, military turning points, and key strategic decisions in both the
European and Pacific Theaters of operation including Pearl Harbor, the D-Day Invasion,
development and use of the atomic bomb, the island-hopping strategy, the Allied conference at
Yalta, and the contributions of Generals MacArthur and Eisenhower.
3. Summarize American reactions to the events of the Holocaust resulting in United States
participation in the Nuremburg Trials, which held Nazi leaders accountable for war crimes
The European Theater
1.
Aggression in Europe
a.
b.
c.
Italy invaded Ethiopia and took control in 1935
Spain’s Civil War was won by the fascists in 1936
Germany
i.
1936: Hitler had rearmed and sent troops to the Rhineland
ii.
1938: Hitler annexed Austria & demanded the Sudetenland (W.
Czech)
The European Theater
iii.
1938: Munich Conference (Germany, Italy, Britain, & France)
1.
Goal: To stop further German aggression in Europe
2.
Policy: “Appeasement”- Giving in to Germany’s demands for territory
in Europe in exchange for a promise that Germany would not attack
any other nations.
March 1939: Germany took rest of Czechoslovakia (appeasement failed)
France & Britain pledged war if aggression continued
1939: Hitler & Stalin signed a “Non-Aggression Pact”
3.
iv.
v.
vi.
Result: The Munich Pact gave Hitler the Sudetenland if he promised to end
territorial demands
The Sudetenland
Neville Chamberlain
Prime Minister of Great Britain – signed Munich Pact of appeasement of Germany
The European Theater
d.
United States’ reaction to foreign aggression
i.
1935: passed Neutrality Act – no arms to warring nations
ii. 1939: “Cash-n-Carry” policy (purpose to aid the Allies)
The European Theater
2.
War in Europe (Early Period)
a.
Sept. 1, 1939: Germany invaded Poland with blitzkrieg attack (WWII begins)
i.
ii.
France & Great Britain declare war the next day
The Holocaust intensifies
The European Theater
b. “Phony War” Period (“Sitzkrieg”) ---> Sept 1939-April 1940
c. April, 1940: Germany resumed “Blitzkrieg” attacks
i.
Neutral nations fell quickly ---> Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, Norway
ii.
France fell to Hitler in late June 1940
The European Theater
d.
Summer/Fall, 1940: Battle of Britain (German Luftwaffe vs. Royal Air Force RAF)
e.
June, 1941: Hitler double crossed Stalin and invaded Russia through Poland
i.
Big Mistake! Stalin used Scorched Earth military tactic
ii.
Harsh winter and lack of useable supplies resulted in over 1 million Nazi loses
The European Theater
3.
Diplomacy was Failing
a.
Appeasement was ineffective when dealing with Hitler
b.
Sept 1940: Germany, Italy, and Japan signed the Tripartite Pact (Axis Powers)
c.
U.S. Neutrality? Biased?
i.
1940: WWI destroyers given for bases deal with Great Britain
ii.
1941: Lend-Lease Act --> U.S. became the “Arsenal of Democracy”
iii. 1941: FDR and W. Churchill (Britain) agreed to the Atlantic Charter
The European Theater
4. Last Events to U.S. Entry
a.
1941: U.S. attempted to stop Japan’s invasion of China (in Civil War)
i.
Sent ultimatum (warning)
ii.
Issued a scrap metal and oil embargo
The European Theater
b. By Aug. 1941: Indo-China fell to Japan
i. U.S. began a full trade embargo against Japan
ii. Japan responded by:
1. Sending a negotiator to Washington D.C.
2. Preparing for an attack on the U.S. (decoded message)
Japanese Attack Pearl Harbor
The European Theater
5. December 7th, 1941: Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor
a.
U.S. Pacific Fleet was based at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii
b.
Attack was meant to cripple U.S. fleet so couldn’t interfere with Japan
c.
Six aircraft carriers and 353 Japanese planes attacked in two waves
d.
e.
2,403 died (1,177 killed on the U.S.S. Arizona)
U.S. declared war on Japan the next day “…Date that will live in Infamy…”
f.
Germany & Italy declared war on the U.S. on Dec 8, 1941 (Tripartite Pact)
g.
The U.S. was officially in the war! (Isolationism was over)
U.S.S. Arizona
U.S.S. Arizona Today
The European Theater
6. Key Nations at War
1.
2.
Allies: Great Britain, France, Soviet Union, United States
Axis: Germany, Italy, Japan
The European Theater
7. European Theater
a. Name given to the fighting that took place in Europe
b. 1942: Britain stood alone against Axis
c.
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower = Supreme Allied Commander of the European Theater
d. Allies first invaded through Sicily and up into Italy
e. Mussolini was overthrown and killed
The European Theater
f.
Eastern Front: Stalingrad
i.
The Nazis were fighting the Russians in Stalingrad (Aug 1942-Feb 1943)
ii.
One of the bloodiest battles in the history of warfare
iii. Nazis are defeated; turning point of the war for the Allies
D-Day
The European Theater
g. Western Front: D-Day
i.
General Eisenhower planned D-Day for June 6, 1944
ii.
Allied invasion across English Channel into Normandy, France
iii. Largest military invasion in history
iv. Allies success allowed them to push further into France
D-Day Map
The European Theater
h. Battle of the Bulge
i. Hitler’s last major offensive
ii. Allies were pushing from the West (from France), South through
Italy, and from the East (Soviets)
iii. Germany was surrounded
The European Theater
8. German Surrender
a.
Hitler committed suicide before he could be captured
b.
Germany officially surrendered on May 7, 1945; following day is known as VE Day
c.
Now the Allies had to figure out how to defeat Japan