1 / 12

American Neutrality, 1920-1941

American Neutrality, 1920-1941. Roots of Neutrality: Isolationism. Disillusionment w/ WWI Disillusionment w/ League of Nations Disclosure of War Profiteering Nye Committee, 1933 US entry blamed on munitions industry! Influenced Neutrality Acts Belief in geographic protection

allayna
Download Presentation

American Neutrality, 1920-1941

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. American Neutrality, 1920-1941

  2. Roots of Neutrality: Isolationism • Disillusionment w/ WWI • Disillusionment w/ League of Nations • Disclosure of War Profiteering • Nye Committee, 1933 • US entry blamed on munitions industry! • Influenced Neutrality Acts • Belief in geographic protection • Primary concern was economics

  3. American Isolation, Post WW I • Belief that US involvement in WWI was a horrible mistake • Efforts by US to avoid future involvement • Peace societies (conservative and radical) • Washington Naval Conference, 1922 • Kellogg-Briand Pact, 1928 (outlawed war!) • Recognition of USSR, 1933 • Good Neighbor Policy (shift away from direct intervention in Latin America), 1933

  4. American Isolation, Post WWI • Events of early 1930s showed America the agreements wouldn’t work • Japanese invade Manchuria, 1931 • Hitler announced Germany’s rearmament, 1935 • Italian invasion of Ethiopia, 1935 • Spanish Civil War, 1936 • Rhineland militarized, 1936 • Axis military Pact, 1936 • Japan-China clash, 1937 (WWII began in Asia)

  5. Totalitarianism v. Democracy Totalitarianism’s basic ideals Democracy’s basic ideals State serves the individual People are supreme People have rights Emphasis on debate Major Democratic leaders FDR (USA) Neville Chamberlain (UK) Eduard Daladier (France) • Individual serves the state • State is supreme • State grants rights • Militarism, force rule Major totalitarian rulers • Adolf Hitler (Germany) • Benito Mussolini (Italy) • Josef Stalin (USSR) • Francisco Franco (Spain) • Hideki Tojo (Japan)

  6. American Isolation in Action, Post WWI • American reaction • Johnson Debt Default Act (no loans to WWI defaulters) • Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, 1937: Together, provided that if President said a foreign war was taking place, no sailing, sales, transportation of goods, or loans to any belligerent (would have kept US out of WWI) • FDR: “Quarantine” speech, 1937 (called for economic quarantine of aggressors v isolationism)

  7. Appeasement • Policy of European countries, towards threats to peace, despite strength of allied armies – why??? • Anschluss (Austria) 1938 • Hitler demanded Sudentenland (Czechoslovakia), 1938 • Munich Pact, Sept. 1938 • Neville Chamberlain (UK) • Eduard Daladier (France) • Hitler (Germany) • Mussolini (Italy) • “Peace in our time!”

  8. US Response to Appeasement • Buenos Aires Conference, 1936 (threat to one country in Western Hemisphere a threat to all) • Canada was brought under Monroe Doctrine, 1938 • Declaration of Lima, 1938: American nations agreed on common action, in crisis

  9. European War, 1939 • Hitler took rest of Czech, March 1939 • Italy attacked Albania, April 1939 • Germany & USSR sign Non-Aggression Pact, Aug. 1939 • Poland attacked by Germans, Soviets Sept. 1, 1939

  10. American Response • Neutrality Act of 1939 • “Cash & carry” on munitions, for Allies (FDR influenced) • Germany designated as the aggressor • Declaration of Panama, Oct. 1939 • 300 mile “safety zone” declared around Western Hemisphere nations • Smith Act, 1940 • Illegal to advocate overthrow of US government • Draft reinstated, Sept. 1940

  11. Lend-Lease • US program to supply allies with war supplies, from March 1941 to 1945 • US shipped a total of $50.1 billion (almost $700 billion, in 2007 dollars) to Britain, USSR, France, China • In return, US received about $7.8 billion (about $100 billion in 2007 dollars) worth of military bases in Newfoundland, Caribbean • US received no other repayment - & did not seek any repayment

  12. America’s Entry into the War • July 1941: Japan seized Indo-China • July 1941: America froze Japanese assets, established embargo on oil, gas, etc. • Nov. 1941: Japanese peace mission • Dec. 7, 1941: Pearl Harbor attacked (2,896 casualties, over 2100 deaths; 8 BB sunk or heavily damaged) • War declared on Dec. 8, retroactive to Dec. 7

More Related