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World War II: Continuation of the Trend toward Total or Pure War

World War II: Continuation of the Trend toward Total or Pure War. Background: US enters the war to end all wars and to make the world safe for democracies: Revolutionary aims vs. European imperial system for global order and legitimacy

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World War II: Continuation of the Trend toward Total or Pure War

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  1. World War II: Continuation of the Trend toward Total or Pure War • Background: • US enters the war to end all wars and to make the world safe for democracies: Revolutionary aims vs. European imperial system for global order and legitimacy • Versailles Treaty to end the war with Germany establishes the Wilsonian principle of collective security: end the balance of power

  2. Flaws of the Versailles Treaty and the Principle of Collective Security • The U.S. returns to a traditional isolationist position in European security and politics • President Wilson’s ideas of collective security, end of empires and self-determination, and democratic rule are rejected • United States refuses to join the League of Nations • Germany is not re-integrated into the community of states as Napoleonic France was in 1815 • Germany is accused of starting the war and must pay burdensome reparations • Germany’s military forces are limited and under the control of the liberal democratic states -- but without the US

  3. Failures of the League of Nations and Collective Security • Japanese invasion of Manchuria (1931) and war with China (1937-45) • Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 • German reoccupation of the Rheinland in 1935 • Russian invasion of Finland in 1939-40 • German attack on Poland in September 1939 • World War II begins

  4. German Empire, 1941-42

  5. United States Enters the War • Japanese Pearl Harbor attack, December 7, 1941 • Japanese War Aims: Protect Japanese Empire against U.S. • Eliminate the threat to Japan from U.S. naval forces • Seek a sphere of influence understanding with the United States • Similar to German-Soviet agreement in August, 1939 • US sphere of influence extends to Hawaii; Japan’s sphere in the western Pacific, China and Southeast Asia: Dutch Indonesia and French Indo-China; and British Hong Kong and Singapore

  6. United States War Aims: Total Political and Military Victory • Return to Wilsonian revolutionary aims of a new global order: • Victory of Liberal democratic coalition • Destruction of the German and Japanese empires and political regimes • End of Europe’s empires and the global institutional principle of self-determination • Creation of a postwar liberal, global trading system • The democratic rule of a system of nation-states under United Nations auspices dedicated to a peaceful world order

  7. American and Allied Strategic Military Aims • Destruction of the military forces of German and Japan and their allies • Complete political submission of the German and Japanese states, regimes, and peoples to allied rule

  8. Japanese Empire: 1942

  9. Total Warfare in Europe and Pacific • Germany defeated in May 1945 • Japanese surrenders in August, 1945 in the wake of atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

  10. Atomic Bomb over Hiroshima, 1945

  11. Destruction of Hiroshima, 1945

  12. World War II as Total War: Hobbes and Clausewitz Return • 72 million civilian and military deaths • Civilian: 47 million • Military: 25 million

  13. Total Casualties in Percentages of Allied and Axis Deaths

  14. Flaws of the Allied Coalition and the Cold War” 1945-1991 • Liberal Democracies vs. Soviet Union • United States vs. European Empires • France • United Kingdom • Netherlands • Portugal • Belgium

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