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WWII. The World Between the Wars. A Struggle for Change in Latin America. The Mexican Revolution Desires for land, better wages, and democratic reforms Result: a new constitution that set goals for future social and political changes Nationalism The Good Neighbor Policy.
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A Struggle for Change in Latin America • The Mexican Revolution • Desires for land, better wages, and democratic reforms • Result: a new constitution that set goals for future social and political changes • Nationalism • The Good Neighbor Policy
Nationalist Movements in Africa and the Middle East • Africa – opposition to imperialism spread as the Pan-African and negritude movements developed. • Modernization in Turkey and Iran • Pan-Arab movements sought Arab unity and freedom from foreign domination • Promises in Palestine
India Seeks Self-Rule • Moves toward independence – Amritsar massacre • Mohandas Gandhi and The Salt March • Muslims become fearful of then Hindu majority and began to call for a separate Muslim state
Upheavals in China • The Chinese Republic was crippled by feuding warlords, a collapsed economy, famine, and increasing foreign influence • May Fourth Movement • 1927 – Civil war erupts between the Guomindang and Communists. • Japanese invasion
Empire of the Rising Sun • 1920s- Japan’s political parties and democratic parliament grew stronger • Great Depression fueled dissatisfaction among militarists and extreme nationalists • 1930s- the Japanese military dominated a government that emphasized obedience to the emperor, service to the state, and a policy of imperial expansion
1920 Treaty of Versailles
Ineffectiveness of the League of Nations • No control over major conflicts • No progress in disarmament • No effective military force
France Pursues Security The Maginot Line
Locarno Pact: 1925 Stresemann (Ger.) Chamberlain (Br.) • Guaranteed the borders of France, Belgium, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Germany as specified in the Treaty of Versailles Briand (Fr.)
Kellogg-Briand Pact: 1928 • 15 nations committed to outlawing aggression and war for settling disputes • Problem – no way of enforcement
Fascism is the totalitarian philosophy of government that glorifies the state and nation and assigns to the state control over every aspect of national life.
Fascism • A form of extreme right-wing ideology. • It celebrates the nation or the race as an organic community transcending all other loyalties. • Powerful and continuing nationalism. • Constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, etc. • Flags are seen everywhere. • It uses organized violence to suppress opposition. • Glorification of force. • Accepts the tenets of Social Darwinism. • Is anti-democratic.
From the German Point of View Lost – but not forgotten country Into your heart you are to dig these words as into stone; Which we have lost may not truly be lost!
The “Stab-In-The-Back” Theory. German soldiers are dissatisfied
Adolf Hitler • Totalitarian Rule • SS troops and Gestapo helped Hitler control all aspects of German life • Economic Programs • Nazis indoctrinate young people with their ideologies (like Fascists and Communists) • Nazi’s sought to purify German culture • Campaign against the Jews • November 9 and 10, 1938 Kristallnacht • “ The Nazis came first for the Communists. But I wasn’t a Communist, so I didn’t speak up. Than they came for the Jews, but I wasn’t a Jew so I didn’t speak up…Then they came for the Catholics, but I was a Protestant so I didn’t speak up. Then they came for me. By that time, there was no one left to speak up.” • Martin Niemoller
Dictators Challenge World Peace • Japan seizes Manchuria in 1931 and withdrew from the League of Nations • 1936 Italy: Mussolini conquered Ethiopia (finally took revenge on them) • Germans: Hated the Versailles treaty. Hitler built up their military and sent troops into the demilitarized Rhineland bordering France.
Italy Invades Ethiopia, 1935 Emperor Haile Selassie
Dictators Challenge World Peace • Appeasement: giving in to the demands of an aggressor to keep peace. • Some westerners viewed Hitler as a defense against a worse evil- Soviet Communism • Pacifism • Neutrality Acts (U.S.A.): avoid involvement in European war. • Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis: Italy, Germany, and Japan
Spanish Civil War • Nationalists: • Fascists • Supported by Germany and Italy • German air raid on Guernica • Triumphant in 1939 and set up a fascist dictatorship like those of Hitler and Mussolini • Loyalists • Supported by U.S. and Great Britain (even though they remained neutral) • Republic • Communists • Socialists • Marxists
German Aggression Continues • Anschluss: Union of Germany and Austria • Hitler annexes the Sudetenland in 1938. • The Munich Pact
Anschluss Removal of the border
Appeasement: The Munich Agreement, 1938 • British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain • Now we have “peace for our time” Herr Hitler is a man we can do business with.
Axis Powers: Rome-Berlin-Tokyo • Non-Aggression Pact with Stalin • Germany “annexes” Austria then Czechoslovakia finally Poland • (Neville Chamberlain*) • Britain and France are unwilling to challenge either Italy or Germany (appeasement) • But then… With the invasion of POLAND, England & France declare WAR
Europe Plunges Into War • 1939 Appeasement failed: Germany took over all of Czechoslovakia. • Nazi-Soviet Pact • Stalin and Hitler agreed mot to fight if the other went to war • To divide up Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe • Invasion of Poland • September 1, 1939 • Britain and France declare war
Why War Came? • Axis aggression • Appeasement policy • Revision of 1919 Versailles treaty • Why did western democracies fail to respond forcefully to the Nazi threat? • Could WWII have been avoided?
Early Axis Gains • Blitzkrieg September 1, 1939 German troops march into Warsaw
Early Axis Gains • The “Phony War” • Miracle of Dunkirk • France Falls – June 22, 1940 Dunkirk evacuated June 4, 1940
The French Resistance The French Resistance Flag Charles de Gaulle
Africa and the Balkans • Axis powers have a string of success in 1941 and 1942 in Africa • Italy invades Greece and Yugoslavia • By 1914 the Axis powers or their allies controlled most of Western Europe • General Erwin Rommel – the Desert Fox
The Battle of Britain and the Blitz • Winston Churchill • Operation Sea Lion • The London Blitz • Failure of Operation Sea Lion
Early War Efforts • LONDON BLITZ- Germany wanted to break the spirit of the British by bombing the capital. • German planes bombed London for almost a year (1940-1941) • Operation Sea Lion was a failure. • British resolve stronger than ever. • Winston Churchill**
Operation Barbarossa: The Conquest of the Soviet Union – Hitler’s biggest mistake • 3,000,000 German troops caught Stalin unprepared.