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America Moves Toward War. Big Questions. As we discuss the steps the United States took to help its allies before going to war, think about the following:
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Big Questions • As we discuss the steps the United States took to help its allies before going to war, think about the following: • Did the United States abandon its neutrality too late? Should the United States have done more to help its allies in the early stages of the war, or did FDR make the right decisions?
The United States Musters Its Forces • President Roosevelt thought that the United States would eventually be involved in World War II, and so he took measures to prepare the United States • His decisions were controversial, but they did prepare the US for what was to come
1939 Congress passes Neutrality Act. What did the Neutrality Act allow? Permitted nations to buy U.S. armaments as long as they paid cash and carried the goods away in their own ships Called cash and carry
Early Steps • Peacetime draft, 1940– Draft was used to enlarge the army, but these men could only serve in the western hemisphere • Third term, 1940 – Roosevelt was elected President to keep the same president through the crisis
The Axis Powers • Hitler, Mussolini, and Hideki Tojo formed a defensive alliance with each other • This alliance was formed to discourage the United States from entering the war; if US attacked any of them, the rest would come to help
“The Great Arsenal of Democracy” • President Roosevelt thought that if the Great Britain fell to the Axis, the United States would not be safe • Decided to help Britain by becoming the “great arsenal of democracy”
1941 – Congress passes Lend-Lease Act. What did the Lend-Lease Act do? (552) Allowed the president to lend or lease arms and supplies to “any country whose defense was vital to the U.S.” Section 4: America Moves Toward War- A Sequence of Events
Hitler Invades the Soviet Union • In June 1941, Hitler broke his non-aggression pact with Soviet Union and invaded it • Soon Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin will all be allies – Allied Powers
Japanese Ambitions in the Pacific Ocean • Japanese started by invading China (Manchuria) and then started going after European colonies in Asia – Europeans busy fighting Hitler • Only United States lay in the way of Japan’s ambitions • US protested Japanese invasions – US cut off trade with Japan, including oil • If Japan couldn’t re-establish the flow of oil to its country, then they would lose the war without ever being defeated in battle
1941 Japan takes over French military bases in Indochina.
What did the U.S. do to protest Japan’s action? (555) The U.S. punished Japan with a trade embargo. 1941 Congress extends the draft. Section 4: America Moves Toward War- A Sequence of Events
1941 Churchill and Roosevelt draft the Atlantic Charter (in secret) What pledges were contained in the Atlantic Charter? (554) Collective security Disarmament Self-determination Economic cooperation Freedom of the Jews Section 4: America Moves Toward War- A Sequence of Events
War Is Coming… • Hideki Tojo promised to Japanese emperor that Japan would avoid war with United States if possible • November 5, 1941 – Tojo orders Japanese navy to prepare for an attack on the United States • US broke Japanese codes and was reading their messages • December 6, 1941 – US intercepts message to Japanese peace envoy to reject all American peace proposals • FDR – “This means war.”
Japanese Attack Pearl Harbor • Pearl Harbor was largest US naval base in the Pacific Ocean • Early on December 7th, 1941, over 180 Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor • Pearl Harbor caught completely by surprise; not ready for the attack
The Damage • In less than 2 hours, Japanese killed 2,403 Americans and wounded 1,178 • Sunk or damaged 21 ships, including 8 battleships (considered the most important ships in the fleet) • 300 aircraft severely damaged or destroyed • Luckily, at the time of the attack, 3 aircraft carriers were not in Pearl Harbor; these would be important as the war with the Japanese went on
Reaction to Pearl Harbor • President Roosevelt hadn’t wanted to fight this war on two fronts; saw Germany as the greater threat, but now had to fight Japan, as well • Roosevelt, in a famous speech, asked Congress to declare war against Japan; Congress quickly did so • Three days later, Germany and Italy declared war on the United States • Very few people now saw isolationism as the answer; felt that the United States needed to go all-out to defeat the Japanese
Pearl Harbor: First 24 Hours Pearl Harbor movie attack scene part 1 (10 minutes) Roosevelt: A day which will live in Infamy (3 minutes) Attack scene part 2
Section 4: America Moves Toward War- A Sequence of Events World War II: Alliancehttp://lcweb.loc.gov/ exhibits/ archives/ worw.html Summary of the role of the Lend-Lease Act in the alliance between the United States and the Soviet Union. Part of a site devoted to the Library of Congress's Revelations from the Russian Archives exhibit. The U-Boat War, 1939–1945http://uboat.net/ Site providing a comprehensive look at the boats, the men, and the Atlantic and Mediterranean sea battles between the Germans and the Allies. Pearl Harbor Rememberedhttp://my.execpc.com/~dschaaf/index.html Comprehensive information about the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, including maps and survivors' accounts The Coast Guard and the North Atlantic Campaignhttp://www.uscg.mil/ hq/ g-cp/ history/ h_AtlWar.html Detailed story of the U.S. Coast Guard's role in the war in the Atlantic As found on classzone.com