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Essential Questions

Essential Questions . What were the causes of WWII? Why do we describe World Wars I and II as total wars? What are the causes and consequences of genocide? How did the United Nations attempt to promote global interdependence in the face of global imperialism?

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Essential Questions

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  1. Essential Questions • What were the causes of WWII? • Why do we describe World Wars I and II as total wars? • What are the causes and consequences of genocide? • How did the United Nations attempt to promote global interdependence in the face of global imperialism? • What are the causes of the Cold War?

  2. Major Causes of WWII • Failure of the Treaty of Versailles • Global economic depression • Fascism, militarism and imperialism in Germany, Italy and Japan • Weakness of the League of Nations • British and French appeasement

  3. The Rise of Fascism in Italy • When Italy agreed to join the Allies in 1915, France and Britain secretly promised to give Italy certain Austro-Hungarian territories. • When the Allies won, Italy received some of the promised territories, but others became part of the new Yugoslavia. • The broken promises outraged Italian nationalists.

  4. Mussolini’s Rise to Power • Disorders within Italy multiplied. • Peasants seized land, and workers went on strike or seized factories. • Government split into feuding factions. • Into this turmoil stepped Benito Mussolini. • In 1919, organized veterans and other discontented Italians into the Fascist party. • He became leader of Italy and by 1925 Mussolini had assumed more power and took the title El Duce, “The Leader.”

  5. Benito Mussolini “El Duce”

  6. State Control of the Economy • To spur economic growth and end conflicts between owners and workers, Mussolini brought the economy under state control. • He preserved capitalism. • Under Mussolini’s corporate state, representatives of business, labor, government, and the Fascist party controlled industry, agriculture, and trade.

  7. Mussolini’s system favored the upper class and industrial leaders. • Although production increased, success came at the expense of workers. • They were forbidden to strike, and their wages were kept low.

  8. The Individual and the State • In Mussolini’s new system, loyalty to the state replaced conflicting individual goals. • To Fascists, the glorious state was all-important, and the individual was unimportant except as a member of the state. • Men, women, and children were bombarded with slogans glorifying the state and Mussolini.

  9. “Believe! Obey! Fight!” loud-speakers blared and posters proclaimed. • Men were urged to be ruthless, selfless warriors fighting for the glory of Italy. • Women were pushed out of paying jobs. • Mussolini called on women to “win the battle of motherhood.” • Those who bore more than 14 children were given a medal by Il Duce himself.

  10. The Nature of Fascism • Mussolini built the first totalitarian state. • In totalitarianism a one-party dictatorship attempts to regulate every aspect of the live of its citizens. • Other dictators, like Stalin and Hitler, followed Mussolini’s lead. • Mussolini’s rule was fascist in nature, as was Hitler’s, but totalitarian governments rise under other kinds of ideology as well, such as communism in Stalin’s Soviet Union.

  11. What is Fascism? • Historians still debate the real nature of Mussolini’s fascist ideology. • Mussolini coined the term, but fascists had no unifying theory as Marxists did. • Today, we generally use the term fascism to describe any centralized, authoritarian government that is not communist whose policies glorify the state over the individual and are destructive to basic human rights. • Fascism meant different things in different countries.

  12. All forms of fascism shared some basic features. • They were rooted in extreme nationalism. • Fascists glorified action, violence, discipline, and, above all, blind loyalty to the state. • Fascists also pursued aggressive foreign expansion. • Echoing the idea of “survival of the fittest,” Fascist leaders glorified warfare as a noble struggle for survival.

  13. Fascists were also antidemocratic. • They rejected faith in reason and the concepts of equality and liberty. • To them, democracy led to corruption and weakness and put individual or class interests above national goals. • Instead, fascists emphasized emotion and the supremacy of the state.

  14. Fascism Compared to Communism • Fascists were the enemies of socialists and communists. • While communists worked for international change, fascists pursued nationalist goals. • Fascists supported a society with defined classes. • They found allies among business leaders, wealthy landowners, and the lower middle class.

  15. Communists touted a classless society. • They won support among both urban and agricultural workers. • The products of these two ideologies had much in common. • Both drew their power by inspiring a blind devotion to the state, or a charismatic leader as the embodiment of the state.

  16. Both used terror to guard their power. • Both flourished during economic hard times by promoting extreme programs of social change. • In both a party elite, claimed to rule in the name of the national interest.

  17. Hitler and the Rise of Nazi Germany • In November 1923, a German army veteran and leader of an extremist party, Adolf Hitler, tried to follow Mussolini’s example by staging a small-scale coup in Munich. • The coup failed, and Hitler was soon behind bars. • But Hitler proved to be a force that could not be ignored. • Within a decade, he made a new bid for power. • This time, he succeeded by legal means.

  18. Adolph Hitler Rises to Power

  19. The Weimar Republic’s Rise and Fall • As World War I drew to a close, Germany tottered on the brink of chaos. • Under the threat of a socialist revolution, the Kaiser abdicated. • Moderate leaders signed the armistice and later, under protest, the Versailles Treaty. • In 1919, German leaders drafted a constitution in the city of Weimar.

  20. It created a democratic government known as the Weimar Republic. • The constitution set up a parliamentary system led by a chancellor, or prime minister. • It gave women the right to vote and included a bill of rights.

  21. Political Struggles • Germans of all classes blamed the Weimar Republic for the hatred Versailles treaty. • Bitter, they looked for scapegoats. • Many blamed German Jews for economic and political problems. • In 1923,Germany fell behind in reparations payments and France occupied the coal-rich Ruhr Valley. • Germans workers protested refusing to work.

  22. The government continued to pay the workers and printed huge quantities of paper money. • Inflation spiraled out of control, spreading misery and despair. • The German mark became pretty worthless. • Under the Dawes Plan, France withdrew its forces from the Ruhr, and American loans helped the German economy recover. • Then, the Great Depression

  23. Recovery and Collapse • Germans turned to Adolf Hitler. • He promised to solve the economic crisis and restore Germany’s former greatness. • Adolf Hitler was born in Austria in 1889. • While living in Vienna, Hitler developed the fanatical anti-Semitism, or prejudice against Jewish people. • This would later play a major role in his rise to power.

  24. The Nazi Party’s Rise to Power • He became leader of the National Socialist German Workers, or Nazi party. • Like Mussolini, Hitler organized his supporters into fighting squads. • Nazi “storm troopers” fought in the streets against their political enemies. • In 1923,Hitler made a failed attempt to seize power in Munich. • He was arrested and found guilty of treason.

  25. While in prison, Hitler wrote Mein Kampf (“My Struggle”). • It would later become the basic book of Nazi goals and ideology. • Mein Kampf reflected Hitler’s obsessions—extreme nationalism, racism, and anti-Semitism.   • He believed Germans belonged to a superior “master race” of Aryans, or light-skinned Europeans, whose greatest enemies were the Jews.

  26. Hitler blamed Germany’s defeat in World War I on a conspiracy of Marxists, Jews, corrupt politicians, and business leaders. • Slavs and other inferior races must bow to Aryan needs. • To achieve its greatness, Germany needed a strong leader, or Fuhrer. • Hitler was determined to become that leader. • Hitler was appointed chancellor in 1933 through legal means under the Weimar constitution.

  27. Hitler Comes to Power • Within a year, Hitler was dictator of Germany. • Once in power, Hitler and Nazis moved to build a new Germany. • Like Mussolini, Hitler appealed to nationalism by recalling past glories. • Germany’s First Reich, or empire, was the medieval Holy Roman Empire.

  28. The Second Reich was the empire forged by Bismarck in1871. • Under Hitler’s new Third Reich, he boasted, the German master race would dominate Europe for a thousand years. • To combat the Great Depression, Hitler launched large public works programs. • Tens of thousands of people were put to work building highways and housing or replanting forests. • He also began programs to rearm Germany and schemed to unite Germany and Austria.

  29. Germany Becomes a Totalitarian State • To achieve his goals, Hitler organized an efficient but brutal system of totalitarian rule. • Nazis controlled all areas of German life—from government to religion to education. • Elite, black-uniformed troops, called the SS, enforced the Fuhrer’s will. • His secret police, the Gestapo, rooted out opposition.

  30. The masses, relieved by belief in the Nazis’ promises, cheered Hitler’s accomplishments in ending unemployment and reviving German power. • Those who worried about Hitler’s terror quickly became its victims or were cowed into silence in fear for their own safety. • In his fanatical anti-Semitism, Hitler set out to drive Jews from Germany. • In 1935,Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws, depriving Jews of German citizenship and placed severe restrictions on them.

  31. Night of Broken Glass • November 7, 1938, a young Jew shot and wounded a German diplomat in Paris. • Hitler used the incident as an excuse to stage an attack on all Jews. • Kritallnacht, or the “Night of Broken Glass,” took place on November 9 and 10. • Nazi-led mobs attacked Jewish communities all over Germany, Austria, and annexed portions of Czechoslovakia. • Hitler and his henchmen were making even more sinister plans for what they called the “Final Solution”—the extermination of all Jews.

  32. Nazi Youth and Women • To build for the future, the Nazis indoctrinated young people with their ideology. • School courses and textbooks were rewritten to reflect Nazi racial views. • Women were dismissed from upper-level jobs and turned away from universities. • To raise the birthrate, Nazis offered “pure-blooded Aryan” women rewards for having more children.

  33. Purging German Culture • They denounced modern art, saying that it was corrupted by Jewish influences. • They condemned jazz because of its African roots. • Hitler despised Christianity as “weak” and “flabby”. • He sought to replace religion with his racial creed. • The Nazis combined all Protestant sects into a single state church.

  34. From Appeasement to War • After the horrors of World War I, Western democracies desperately tried to preserve peace during the 1930s. • They ignored signs rulers of Germany, Italy, and Japan were preparing to build new empires. • Neville Chamberlain and other Western leaders believed the world was headed to war again.

  35. Aggression Goes Unchecked • Throughout the 1930s, challenges to peace followed a pattern. • Dictators took aggressive action but met only verbal protests and pleas for peace from the democracies. • Mussolini, Hitler, and leaders of Japan viewed that desire for peace as weakness and responded with new acts of aggression.

  36. Agression Goes Unchecked • 1931, Japan overruns Manchuria and Eastern China. • Italy invades Ethiopia • Hitler Goes Against the Treaty of Versailles

  37. Hitler Goes Against the Treaty of Versailles • Hitler tested will of Western democracies and found it weak. • Built up German military in defiance of Treaty of Versailles. • In 1936, sent troops into the “demilitarized” Rhineland bordering France—another treaty violation. • Germans hated the Versailles treaty, and Hitler’s challenge made him more popular at home.

  38. Policy of Appeasement • Western democracies denounced his moves but took no real action. • They adopted a policy of appeasement, or giving in to the demands of an aggressor in order to keep the peace.

  39. The British had no desire to confront the German dictator. • Some thought Hitler’s actions constituted a justifiable response to the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. • Some believed treaty had been too harsh on Germany. • In both Britain and France, many saw Hitler and fascism as a defense against a worse evil—the spread of Soviet communism. • Great Depression and pacifism also factors.

  40. U.S. Neutrality Acts-Mid 1930s • United States Congress passed a series of Neutrality Acts. • One law forbade the sale of arms to any nation at war. • Others outlawed loans to warring nations and prohibited Americans from traveling on ships of warring powers. • The fundamental goal of American policy was to avoid involvement in a European war, not to prevent such a conflict.

  41. Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis I • Germany, Italy, and Japan formed what became known as the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis. • Known as the Axis powers, the three nations agreed to fight Soviet communism. • Agreed not to interfere with one another’s plans for territorial expansion. • Agreement cleared the way for these anti-democratic, aggressor powers to take even bolder steps.

  42. The Road to War • Spain Collapses into Civil War in 1936 • Francisco Franco rises as a Fascist dictator with support from Hitler and Mussolini • German raid on Guernica, Spain • 1938, the Anschluss, union of Austria and Germany. • Appeasement and surrender of the Sudetenland. • Hitler promises no more expansion.

  43. What were the causes of WWI? • Why do we describe World Wars I as total war? • How did the League of Nations attempt to promote global interdependence in the face of global imperialism?

  44. “Peace for Our Time” • British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain told cheering crowds that he had achieved “peace for our time.” • Winston Churchill warned of Nazi threat. • As Churchill predicted, Europe plunged rapidly toward war. • March 1939, Hitler broke promises and gobbled up the rest of Czechoslovakia. • Appeasement had failed. • Democracies promise to protect Poland.

  45. Europe Plunges toward War • Hitler signs non-aggression Pact with Stalin in 1939 • On September 1, 1939, a week after the Nazi-Soviet Pact, German forces invaded Poland. • Two days later, Britain and France declared war on Germany. • World War II had begun. • Destructive power of modern technology made the idea of more fighting unbearable.

  46. The Axis Attacks • Hitler’s blitzkrieg, or “lightning war”-Poland • Blitzkrieg utilized tank and airpower technology to strike devastating blow. • Germany attacked from west, Stalin invaded from east, grabbing lands promised under the Nazi-Soviet Pact. Poland falls in month. • Stalin’s armies forced Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania to agree to host bases for the Soviets. • Soviet forces also seized part of Finland

  47. The Miracle of Dunkirk • Norway and Denmark fall to Hitler’s blitzkrieg in April 1940. • Next, his forces slam the Netherlands and Belgium. • British forces defeat Germans off the beach of Dunkirk in May. • This heroic rescue raised British morale.

  48. France Falls • German forces headed south toward Paris. • Italy declared war on France and attacked from the south. • Overrun and demoralized, France surrendered. • Germany occupied northern France. • In the south, the Germans set up a “puppet state,” with capital at Vichy. • Some French officers escaped to England and set up a government-in-exile • Led by Charles de Gaulle worked to liberate their homeland.

  49. Operation Sea Lion • Hitler launches Operation Sea Lion—invasion launched by massive air strikes against Britain who now stood alone. • From August 1940, German bombers began a daily bombardment of England’s southern coast. • Britain’s Royal Air Force valiantly battled the Luftwaffe for a month. • Germans bomb London and other cities 

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