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Explore the various causes that led to World War II, including dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles, the effects of the Great Depression, the failure of the League of Nations, the rise of totalitarian states, and more.
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World War II Chapter 29-3
Causes of WWII • Dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles • Discontent due to the Depression • Failure of the League of Nations to keep the peace • Failure to Disarm • The Rise of totalitarian states • U.S. stock market crash, bank failures, isolationism, tariff policy
Causes • Treaty of Versailles: • Harsh reparations, conservative resentment over Diktat (article 231) • The League of Nations: • Little credibility without the U.S. and USSR • Was unable to maintain peace
Causes • Washington Naval Conference 1921: did not provide for enforcement • Four-Power Treaty • Five Power Treaty • Nine Power Treaty • Japan gave only verbal agreement • 5-Power Treaty only concerned 1st class ships
20’s Treaties had no enforcement • Locarno Pact: • offered a false sense of security for the future • was not relevant once Hitler took power • Same for Kellogg-Briand Pact signed by 62 nations
Economic factors • The depression caused wide-spread discontent and created the opportunity for the rise of fascism • The London Economic Conference = Failure • The above convinced Hitler that democracies lacked the will and organization necessary to address the international crisis • Hitler began to rearm Germany
1931 Japan invaded Manchuria • Violated the 9-Power Treaty, the Kellogg-Briand Pact and the Charter of the League of nations • The League of Nations protested • Japan withdrew from the League and treaty obligations
1935 The Stressa Front • The British, French and Italy, concerned about Hitler’s rearmament, agreed to use force to preserve the political status quo in Europe • Then, Italy invaded Ethiopia 1935 • Used modern weapons • 500,000 Ethiopians died, 5,000 Italians • The League protested & Italy dropped out
Italian Aggression • Sanctions imposed by the League but not oil • Brits and French did not stop Italy at the Suez Canal on the way to Ethiopia. • They needed Italy’s help to keep Hitler in check • By 1936 Hitler and Mussolini are working together in the Spanish Civil War • Sanctions were lifted by this time
The Spanish Civil War • Spain had a constitutional monarchy • Was challenged by Fascist, Francisco Franco • Wanted to eradicate socialism & communism • Wanted to restore the power of the Church • Civil War Between the Fascists (Falangists) and Royalists • Franco was aided by Mussolini and Hitler • Picasso’s Guernica
The Rome-Berlin Axis • Formed as a response to successful military cooperation in Spain • Italians still upset about lack of territory at post WWI Paris Peace Conference (Italia Irredenta) • 1936 Germany occupied the Rhineland…T of V had demilitarized this zone • German Generals were nervous. France too
The Rhineland • For the first time since WWI, Germany had troops on the Franco-German border • A major threat to French security • France was unwilling to enforce the T. of V. without England’s help • England was Pacifist: • Due to the memories of WWI • And the belief by many that the T. of V. was too harsh
Japan • Had control of the Northern and Central Chinese Plains • “The Rape of Shanghai” • The League was impotent
Anschluss March 1933 • Germany’s threat of military action = Austrian Chancellor resigned • Austrian Nazi Party assumed government control • Germany marched in and annexed Austria • Brits: Policy of Appeasement (Neville Chamberlain)
The Sudetenland • At the 1938 Munich Conference Brits, French, Italy allowed Hitler to take Sudetenland in exchange for guarantee: no more territorial aggression (appeasement) • The Czechs were told to comply…had no choice • Neville Chamberlain a hero at home
March 1939 • Hitler went back on his word and took the rest of Czechoslovakia • The end of Appeasement Policy
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact • Public: 10-Year pact • Surprised the world • Privately: Agreed to divide Poland between them • Also, Russia could snap up Baltic states: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania • Hitler: a one-front war against the West
The Blitzkrieg • One week after taking Czechoslovakia, Hitler demanded he be able to build a road across the Polish corridor…Poles refused • Hitler also demanded Danzig (port city on the Baltic run as a “Free City” by the League • Brits and French promised Poland aid • Poles expected help from General Mud
Poland • Hitler claimed Poles were committing atrocities against Germans in the corridor and attacked • Russia invaded on Poland’s Eastern Front • Refugees were bombed • Brits and French sent a naval blockade • Had no impact against land forces • Warsaw fell in 3 weeks
Sitzkrieg • Was Hitler done? Only until the spring • But Russia was busy: Attacked Finland • Fins held out for 3 months alone • Then Russia occupied Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia • Used as a buffer zone between Russia and Germany
More Aggression • 1939 Italy took Albania • Sitzkrieg (phony war) over after 7 months • April of 1940 Hitler invaded Norway and Denmark and Sweden
Hitler • May 1940 Hitler demanded occupation of Netherlands and Belgium • Dutch held out for 5 days; lost ¼ of army • Belgium held out for 18 days Miracle at Dunkirk
The Fall of France • In three weeks • Terms of Armistice: 1 million French POWs and occupation • Vichy France: Petain (hero of Verdun) now Nazi sympathizer ruled for Nazis (later executed for treason • De Gaulle and the Free French
1940 Tripartite Pact • Japan joined Rome-Berlin Axis • Battle of Britain: Hitler offered peace with Brits if Brits would accept German domination of continent • Churchill (had replaced Chamberlain) refused
Battle of Britain • Hitler planned “Operation Sealion”: a massive invasion of England across the channel • German aerial bombings of Britain to soften them up • Goring’s Luftwaffe vs Brits RAF • Brits had radar and defeated the Luftwaffe • Germany lost 2,433 planes, RAF lost 900
Germany invaded the Soviet Union • Violation of Non-Aggression agreement • Hitler’s biggest mistake • Invasion East for Lebensraum: living space • Soviets called it The Great Patriotic War of the Fatherland • Scorched Earth Policy
The United States • FDR meeting secretly with Churchill: • Atlantic Charter • Agreed: no territorial exchanges after the war contrary to the wishes of the inhabitants • A new world organization • Stalin endorsed above
U.S. Neutrality • Neutrality Acts prevented FDR from bringing U.S. into the conflict • Lend-Lease Act 1941 = help to Brits and eventually Soviets • Japan attacked Pear Harbor Dec. 7, 1941 • U.S. entered the war
Hitler declared war on U.S. Dec 11th • Another mistake • See Atlantic Charter • Solved a problem for FDR • The Grand Alliance formed in 1942 • Britain, USSR, the U.S. and 42 other nations • Spain neutral but allowed Nazis to use ports
The Nazi “New Order” • Nazis exploited Europe for economic value • Nordic Peoples were given preferential treatment: Dutch, Norwegians, Danes (were racially related to Germans) • French were taxed big time: were racially inferior Latin people …but to be tolerated • Poles, Ukrainians, Russians to be worked to death…Slavs considered subhuman • 80% Soviet POW’s did not survive the war
Genocide • Jews, Gypsies, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Homosexuals, captured Communists • Jews: Businesses and property confiscated • Had to register with government and wear Stars of David • Polish Jews forced into ghettos: Warsaw, Krakow…deprived of supplies & outside contact
Nuremburg Laws • To deprive Jews of civil rights • Racial Hygiene, marriage laws • Sterilization • Berlin Olympics…Master Race • Kristalknacht • Final Solution began in 1942 • Wannsee Conference outlined formal plan
Auschwitz • And 5 other Death Camps built in Poland • In addition to hundreds of concentration camps • 6-10 million Jews killed • 5-10 million others
Underground movements • Free French was the most famous • Supplied the allies with valuable info (troops movements, etc) and aid • Published secret newspapers, hid escaped allied prisoners • Sabotaged Nazi supply depots, derailed trains, blew up bridges
Turning points in the war • El Alamein Nov. 1942: British forces led by Montgomery drove the Germans (led by Rommel- the Desert Fox) out of Egypt • Operation Torch Nov. 1942: U.S. and Brits engaged retreating German forces on beaches of Morocco and Algeria • Allies surrounded Rommel’s Afrikakorps May, 1943
Stalingrad Nov. 1942- Feb. 1943 • Critical battle on Eastern front • First German land defeat in Europe • While attempting to take Stalingrad and control of Soviet oil fields in Caucasus Mountains, they were surrounded by Soviet troops • Hitler refused to allow German forces to surrender = lost 300,000 men
Back to Germany • After Stalingrad, Russians began the 2 & ½ year long march, pushing the Germans back to Berlin • July 1943 Battle of Kursk: the largest tank battle in human history…Russian victory • By Feb. 1945, Russians on the outskirts of Berlin
D-Day: Operation Overlord June 6, 1944 • 120,000 troops crossed the channel to beaches of Normandy in France...amphibious assult • Western Front established = beginning of the end for Germany • Hitler now fighting on 3 fronts...(By now, allies in Italy)
Battle of the Bulge Dec. 1944 • Hitler tried to break through the Allied lines • Huge casualties • Allies deep into Germany in 1945 • May 8, 1945 V-E Day • Hitler and his new wife had committed suicide some days earlier
Japan • U.S. and others island-hopping • Truman and Potsdam Conference • Atomic bomb Hiroshima Aug. 6, 1945 • Nagasaki Aug. 9th • Japan surrendered tho- Emperor (Hirohito) allowed to remain
War Diplomacy • Tehran Conference 1943…Big Three • Allies agreed to invasion of W. Europe (D-Day) • Stalin agreed to go against Japan after Hitler defeated • Stalin insisted on occupying E. Europe • Churchill fought this • Delayed to Yalta • Germany to be occupied after the war
Yalta “Sell-out” • Stalin promised free elections after brief occupation of E. Europe • Planned United Nations • Stalin agreed to enter war against Japan within 3 months after defeat of Germany • Zones for divided Germany decided on
Cairo (earlier) • FDR, Churchill and Chaing Kai-shek: agreed on independence of Korea
Potsdam Truman, Stalin, Atlee • Potsdam Declaration • Stalin reversed on free elections in Eastern Europe • Agreed on war crimes trials: Nuremburg Trials • Reparations from each zone of Germany
Results of the War • 55 million dead or missing (22 million Soviets) • Holocaust: 6-10 million Jews • Millions left homeless • Europe in ruins • Women in the factories • U.S. and Soviets poised for Cold War
Why did Germany Lose? • Blunders: Russia, Declaring war on U.S. • Germany too spread out, ran out of soldiers, began using old men and young boys • Industry not equal to the allies, especially the U.S. • Slave labor not overly effective • Too much time & energy spent on Final Solution • Alliances were liability: Japan, Italy