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THREE DESTABILIZING FACTORS

This article explores the three factors that undermined President Wilson's vision for a new and better post-WWI world: the communist takeover of Russia, the harsh terms of the Versailles Peace Treaty, and the increasing aggressiveness of Japan. These factors led to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the destabilization of global politics.

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THREE DESTABILIZING FACTORS

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  1. THREE DESTABILIZING FACTORS • RUINED PRESIDENT’S WILSON’S HOPE FOR A NEW AND BETTER WORLD • COMMUNIST TAKEOVER OF RUSSIA AND ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SOVIET UNION • HARSH AND VINDICTIVE TERMS OF VERSAILLES PEACE TREATY LED TO RISE OF ADOLF HITLER IN GERMANY • INCREASING AGGRESSIVENESS OF JAPAN AS IT TRIED TO CREATE AN EMPIRE IN ASIA

  2. RUSSIA BEFORE WORLD WAR ONE • RULED BY BRUTAL AND IGNORANT ROMANOV DYNASTY • Still justified rule with theory of divine right • 80% OF 120 MILLION SUBJECTS WERE SUBSISTENCE LEVEL PEASANTS • Uneducated, illiterate, and terribly poor • Exploited by an arrogant and privileged nobility • GOVERNMENT ATTEMPTED TO KEEP WESTERN IDEAS OUT OF COUNTRY

  3. PRELUDE TO REVOLUTION • REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT • Influenced by Western ideas • Mainly young nobles and middle class university students • Small – not a mass movement during the 19th century • 1905 • Provoked by Russia’s defeat and hardships of war • Tsar saves throne by offering concessions • Constitution • Civil liberties • Advisory assembly –Duma • Once throne is safe, tsar breaks promises VERA ZASULICH MARTOV BLOODY SUNDAY 1905

  4. MARCH REVOLUTON 1917 • World War I • Dismal performance by Russia army • Short of supplies • Corrupt and incompetent officer corps • Nicholas II massively incompetent wartime leader • Civilian population suffers from shortages • Spontaneous riots by angry women in Petrograd leads to full-scale uprising • March 1917 • Tsar forced to abdicate • Provisional Government installed – headed by Alexander Kerensky

  5. BOLSHEVIK TAKEOVER OF NOVEMBER 1917 • PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT LOSES SUPPORT DUE TO ITS EFFORT TO CONTINUE THE WAR • BOLSHEVIKS BENEFIT • Led by V.I. Lenin • Marxist • Promote immediate withdrawal from war • BOLSHEVIKS TAKE POWER • November 1917 • Engineered by Leon Trotsky • Seize all important buildings in Petrograd • Over in one night; minimal casualties TROTSKY LENIN BOLSHEVIK MEETING

  6. TREATY OF BREST-LITOVSK • 25% of Russia territory handed over to Germans • Seem as “peace at any price” agreement • Underground anti-Bolshevik movement forms • Lenin creates CHEKA (secret police) to counter underground movement

  7. CIVIL WAR • ALLIED INTERVENTION • Angered by Bolshevik repudiation of Russian debt • Included U.S., Great Britain, France, and Japan • CIVIL WAR (1918-1921) • Whites (anti-Bolsheviks and Allies) • Red Army (led by Leon Trotsky) • Bolsheviks win against all odds • PRICE OF VICTORY HIGH • Secret police reestablished • Suspected traitors executed without trials • Freedoms of press and speech curtailed • Strict controls placed on the economy

  8. STALIN • LENIN DIES IN 1924 • BEHIND-THE-SCENES POWER STRUGGLE FOR THREE YEARS • ULTIMATE VICTOR IS JOSEF STALIN • Ruthless and cunning • Extremely paranoid • Could only accept blind, unquestioning obedience

  9. STALIN’S RUSSIA • COLLECTIVE FARMS • Small farms consolidated into large state-owned estates • Former peasants become state employees • FIVE-YEAR PLANS • All production controlled by government • PURGES • Designed to rid party and country of anyone who questioned or might question Stalin’s authority • 20 million people disappear into prisons and prison camps and are never seen alive again

  10. VERSAILLES PEACE CONFERENCE 1919 • WILSON ARRIVES WITH HOPE TO ACHIEVE “PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY” • ALLIES HAVE OTHER IDEAS • PRODUCE HARSH AND VINDICTIVE TREATY

  11. PROVISIONS OF THE TREATY • Germany blamed for war and held responsible for all war-related damage • Germany forced to pay reparations ($33 billion) and hand over resources to Allies • Allies keep all German colonies • German military reduced to token force • New states created out of old Austrian and Ottoman empires • League of Nations created (but U.S. does not join)

  12. WEIMAR REPUBLIC • DEMOCRATIC REGIME WITH SERIOUS PROBLEMS • Resentment over treatment by Versailles Treaty • Political instability • Economic chaos • Loss of resources • Horrible inflation (400% a day in early 1920s • STABILITY RESTORED BY MID-1920S • Economic stability restored with help of American loans and renegotiation of reparations • Political stability restored

  13. THE GREAT DEPRESSION • Started in United States • American bankers forced to recall loans from Germany causing collapse of economy • World-wide catastrophe • Millions of people unemployed • Millions lose homes, businesses, and farms • Rates of suicide and mental illness skyrocket • Leaders appeared helpless to deal with crisis

  14. FASCISM • Demagogues blamed democracy for Europe’s problems • Right-wing demagogues more successful because they had a model to point to –BenitoMUSSOLINI • Took over Italy in 1922 • Fascism • Right-wing dictatorship • Disregards civil liberties • Enforces absolute obedience Destroys democratic institutions • Glorifies military conquest • Identifies scapegoat as cause of the nation’s problems

  15. SUCCESS OF FASCISM • TURN TO FASCISM WAS RESULT OF DISLOCATIONS OF WORLD WAR I, THE HARDSHIPS OF THE GREAT DEPRESSION, AND THE GENERAL FEELING THAT DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS WERE INCAPABLE OF DEALING WITH EUROPE’S PROBLEMS

  16. RISE OF HITLER • UNSUCCESSFUL ARTIST AND WORLD WAR ONE VETERAN • REALIZED GERMANS WANTED TO SEE GERMANY GREAT AGAIN AND AVENGE VERSAILLES TREATY • NATIONAL SOCIALISM • Name of party: National Socialist Party (Nazi Party) • Discredited Weimar Republic • Organized “Brown Shirts” to beat and intimidate opponents and critics • Created scapegoat for Germany’s problems: the Jews

  17. HITLER TAKES OVERJANUARY 1933 • Hitler increased his following in Germany by leaps and bounds • By 1932, Nazis held 230 seats in the Reichstag • More than any other party • Hitler named prime minister in January 1933 • Immediately transformed himself into all powerful dictator • “der Fuhrer”

  18. JAPAN • Japan transformed into modern constitutional monarchy and industrial nation after 1863 • Roots of democracy did not run deep; still had blind reference for the military • Had to import all vital industrial raw materials (oil, coal, iron) from abroad—especiallyfrom U.S.

  19. JAPAN GOES ON THE OFFENSIVE • Great Depression hits Japan hard • Many come to believe that military expansion is only answer • Military attacks and takes over Manchuria without civilian authorization in 1932 • Full-scale war erupts in China by 1937 • Civilian government falls in 1940 and control is taken by a military junta led by Tojo Hedeki • Japan now firmly set on a policy of conquest in Asia

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