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Retreat from Democracy: Dictatorial Regimes. The Birth of Fascism Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)Fascio di Combattimento (League of Combat), 1919Support from middle class industrialists and large landownersMussolini appointed prime minister, October 29,1922Mussolini's powersFascist governmentFascist organizationsImportance of the familyRole of women in the Fascist society.
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1. The Crisis Deepens: World War II
2. Retreat from Democracy: Dictatorial Regimes The Birth of Fascism
Benito Mussolini (1883-1945)
Fascio di Combattimento (League of Combat), 1919
Support from middle class industrialists and large landowners
Mussolini appointed prime minister, October 29,1922
Mussolini’s powers
Fascist government
Fascist organizations
Importance of the family
Role of women in the Fascist society
3. Mussolini, The Iron Duce
4. Hitler and Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)
Hitler’s Rise Power, 1919-1933
Munich
German Workers’ Party
National Socialist German Workers’ Party , 1921
Sturmabteilung (SA), Storm Troops
Munich Beer Hall Putsch, November 1923
Mein Kampf (My Struggle)
Lebensraum and authoritarian leadership
By 1932, Nazi party had 800,000 members
Great Depression and unemployment
Becomes chancellor, January 30, 1933
Enabling Act, March 23, 1933
President Paul von Hindenburg dies, August 2, 1934
5. The Nazi State, 1933-1939 Hitler’s goal
Mass demonstrations and spectacles to create collective fellowship
Internal problems: personal and institutional conflict
Economics
Heinrich Himmler and the SS (Schutzstaffel)
Impact on women
Aryan racial state
Nuremberg racial laws , September 1935
Kristallnacht, November 9-10, 1938
Restrictions on Jews
6. Stalinist Era in the Soviet Union First Five Year Plan, 1928
To create an industrial country
Emphasized production of capital goods and armaments
Rapid collectivization of agriculture
Famine of 1932-1933; 10 million peasants died
Political control
Stalin dictatorship established, 1929
Political purge, 1936-1938; 8 million arrested
Women and the family
7. Rise of Militarism in Japan Militant elements brought about Japanese militarism
Disastrous effect of the Depression
Government could not cope
Growth of national extremists
Assassinations
“Asia is for Asians”
Failed coup in 1936 by junior officers
8. The Path to War The Path to War in Europe
Hitler’s view for civilization was creation of a new air force and expanding the army by conscription to 550,000, 1935
Repudiated of the Versailles Treaty
Occupation of the demilitarized Rhineland, March 1936
Rome-Berlin Axis, October 1936
Annexation of Austria, March 13, 1938
Demand the cession of the Sudetenland, September 1938
Munich Conference, September 29, 1938
German dismemberment of Czechoslovakia
Britain and France react to demands for Danzig
Nonaggression pact with the Soviet Union
Invasion of Poland began September 1, 1939
9. World War II in Europe and North Africa
10. The Path to War in Asia Seizure of Manchuria, September 1931
League of Nations condemns the move
Japan withdraws from the League of Nations
Chiang Kai-shek granted Japan authority in North China
Protests against the Japanese
Chiang turns his attention to the Japanese
Clash at Marco Polo Bridge, July, 1937
A Monroe Doctrine for Asia
Japan had not planned war against China
Chiang Kai-shek refused to give in to the Japanese
Japan’s real target was Soviet Siberia
Japan begins to cooperate with Nazi Germany
Warnings from the United States
Japanese concerns over threat to their long-term goals
11. World War II Europe at War
Germany invades Poland, September 1, 1939
September 28, 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union divide Poland
Blitzkrieg against Denmark and Norway, April 9, 1940
Attack on Netherlands, Belgium, and France, May 10, 1940
Evacuation of Dunkirk
Surrender of France, June 22, 1940
Battle Britain, Fall, 1940
Retaliation for bombing Berlin
Germany invaded the Soviet Union, June 22, 1941
Problems in the Balkans
German experience in the Soviet Union
Ukraine, Leningrad, Moscow
12. World War II in Asia and the Pacific
13. Japan at War Attack on Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, December 7, 1941
Germany declared war in the U.S., December 11, 1941
Great East-Asia Co-prosperity Sphere
Japanese hoped the United States would accept Japanese domination in the Pacific
14. Turning Point of the War, 1942-1943 Agreement to fight until unconditional surrender of the Axis
German success in early 1942 in Africa and Soviet Union
Allies invade French North Africa, victory in May 1943
Battle of Stalingrad, November 1942-February 1943
Battle of the Coral Sea, May 7-8, 1942
Battle of Midway, June 4, 1942
“Island hopping”
Solomon Islands, November 1942
15. Last Years of the War Invasion of Italy, September 1943
D-Day invasion of France, June 6, 1944
Soviet March westward
Battle of Kursk, July 5 – 12, 1943
Reoccupied Soviet Territory
Russians enter Berlin, April 1945
Hitler’s suicide, April 30, 1945
Surrender of Germany, May 7, 1945
War in the Pacific
Advance was slow
Difficulty of invading the Japanese homeland
Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
Nagasaki, August 14, 1945
Human losses in the war: 17 million military dead,
18 million civilians dead
16. The New Order The New Order in Europe
German racial considerations
Resettlement plans of the East
Slave labor
“Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere”
Japanese promised independent governments
Some were, but under Japanese control
Resources exploited by the Japanese
Power of military authorities in occupied territories
Use of subject peoples and prisoners of war
18. The Holocaust Extermination of the Jews of Europe
Hitler’s ideology – racial struggle
Aryans – creators of human cultural development
Jews – parasites trying to destroy Aryans
Himmler and SS organization
Final Solution to “Jewish problem”
Einsatzgruppen
round up of Polish and Russian Jews, execute and bury them in mass graves
More systematic annihilation – death camps
Six extermination centers in Poland
Zyklon B – gas
30% sent to labor camp, remainder to gas chambers
Victims’ goods and bodies used for economic gain
5-6 million Jews killed, 3 million died in death camps
90% of Jewish population of Poland, Baltic countries, and Germany exterminated
19. Another Holocaust 9-10 million other people died from being shot, starvation, or overwork
Gypsies also rounded up and exterminated
40% of one million Gypsies killed in death camps
“subhuman” Slavic peoples: clergy, intelligentsia, civil leaders, judges, and lawyers were deliberately killed
4 million Poles, Ukrainians, Byelorussians lost their lives as slave laborers
3 million soviet prisoners of war were killed in captivity
20. The New Order in Asia Japan’s takeover of Asia to meet its needs for raw materials: tin, oil, rubber, and outlet for its exports
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
Southeast Asia – “Asia for Asians”
Independent governments under Japanese tutelage in Burma, Dutch East Indies, Vietnam, and Philippines
Natives conscripted to serve in military unities or conscripted to work in public works projects
Vietnam: starvation of over a million due to forced requisition of rice for Japanese
Japanese arrogant, had contempt for local customs, little respect for subjects, and ignored Geneva Convention
21. The New Order in Asia, cont’d China
Used poison gas and biological weapons to kill millions of Chinese
“Nanjing Incident”
killed, raped and looted local population
Korea
800,000 Koreans sent overseas as forced laborers to Japan
Tens of thousands of women from Korea and Philippines forced to be “comfort women” (prostitutes) for Japanese troops
12,000 Allied prisoners of war died and 90,000 native workers who worked on railroad
22. The Home Front Mobilizing the People: Three Examples
Soviet Union:
Military and industrial mobilization –
“battle of machines”
Soviet workers made 78,000 tanks, 98,000 artillery pieces
55% of national income went for war material
Soviet women and girls
60% worked in industries, mines, and railroads
Dug antitank ditches, air raid wardens, combatants, snipers, crews in bomber squadrons
23. The Home Front, cont’d Germany:
Hitler tripled the production of armaments but did not cut production of consumer goods
Nazi resistance to female employment
Japan
Wartime Japan was highly mobilized society
Government controlled prices, wages, use of labor, allocation of resources
Traditional habits of obedience, and hierarchy encouraged people to sacrifice resources and lives for national cause
Volunteer pilots for suicide missions - kamikaze, divine wind
Women exhorted to bear more children
Reluctance to mobilize women for employment because “the weakening of the family system would be the weakening of the nation”
Used Korean and Chinese laborers
24. The Frontline Civilians: The Bombing of Cities Bombing of civilians as means to coerce governments
Lufwaffe raids on Britain
Raids on German cities
Failed to break civilian morale
Failed to destroy Germany’s industrial capacity
Japanese cities bombed
Japan’s industries destroyed by the summer of 1945
People’s Volunteer Corps
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, August, 1945
25. Aftermath: Toward The Cold War Conferences at Tehran Yalta, and Potsdam
Future course of the war, invasion of the continent for 1944
Agreement for the partition of postwar Germany
Declaration on Liberated Europe
Conference at Yalta, February, 1945
Soviet military assistance for the war against Japan
Creation of a United Nations
German unconditional surrender
Free elections in Eastern Europe
26. Toward The Cold War, cont’d Conference at Potsdam, July, 1945
Truman replaces Roosevelt
Stalin refuses to allow free elections in Eastern Europe
The “Iron Curtain”
27. Territorial Changes in Europe After World War II
28. Discussion Questions What are the characteristics of totalitarian states, and to what degree were these characteristics present in Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, and Stalinist Russia?
What were the underlying causes of WWII and what specific steps taken by Nazi Germany and Japan led to war?
What was the relationship between WW I and WW II and what were the differences in the ways the wars are fought?