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From Isolation to Global War

From Isolation to Global War. 1939-1945 US enters in 1941. Resistance to international commitments The League of Nations and the U.S. Attempts at Disarmament Believed the armaments race had caused WWI Washington Armaments Conference of 1921 Five-Power Naval Treaty (1922 )

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From Isolation to Global War

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  1. From Isolation to Global War 1939-1945 US enters in 1941

  2. Resistance to international commitments • The League of Nations and the U.S. • Attempts at Disarmament • Believed the armaments race had caused WWI • Washington Armaments Conference of 1921 • Five-Power Naval Treaty (1922) • Why have we chosen isolationism? Was this a wise choice? Postwar Isolationism

  3. The Kellogg-Briand Pact • 62 countries “condemn recourse to war . . . And renounce it as an instrument of national policy.” • Escape hatch – “self-defense” • What is the problem with the Kelog Briand Pact? • Becoming a Good Neighbor • The Good Neighbor Policy • U.S. would not intervene in Latin America • How is this totally different from America’s earlier attitudes? Postwar Isolationism

  4. Look at this map. How could what is happening in this map lead to the rise of dictators?

  5. Economic Problems in Europe-- As the U.S. struggled to recover during the Great Depression, so did all of Europe. • Benito Mussolini rose to power in the 1920s out of an appeal to Italian nationalism. He symbolized the rising force of fascism. • Adolph Hitler gained control of Germany in 1933 with calls of anticommunism, anti-Semitism, and the promise to unite all Germans. • Japan withdrew from the League of Nations in 1933 in order to create its own empire. • The rise of fascism and militarism in Europe and Asia brought the world to war. • How is fascism different than Communism? New Problemsin the 1930s

  6. Italy invaded North Africa in 1935. • The world did nothing. • Germany occupied the Rhineland in 1936. • The world did nothing. • A Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936. • Hitler and Mussolini supplied Francisco Franco’s rebels with supplies, weapons, and troops. • Other than the Soviet Union, the world did nothing. • Japan invaded China in 1937. • The world did nothing. Appeasement

  7. The U.S. followed a policy of cash-and-carry so that they would not get involved. • In 1937, Germany, Japan, and Italy signed the Anti-Comintern (Tripartite) Pact and became known as the Axis powers. • In 1938, Germany took over Austria, and threatened to annex the Sudetenland (full of ethnic Germans). • Munich Conference (1938) • British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain flew to meet with Germany and agreed if that was his last territorial gain. • Six months later Hitler took the rest of Czechoslovakia. • Is appeasement good foreign policy? Why or why not? Appeasement

  8. By 1939 Hitler made little secret that he intended to recapture territory Germany lost to Poland after World War I. • Germany and the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression pact in 1939 that would allow Hitler to invade western Poland and Stalin would annex eastern Poland, the Baltic states, and parts of Romania and Finland. • Hitler invaded Poland on September 1, 1939 and began an expansion that would eventually lead to all of continental Europe falling into his hands(blitzkreig) • However, after Hitler invaded Poland, very little happened. Many began referring to WWII as the “phoney war”, the Bore War or the Sitzkreig. Hitler’s Invasion

  9. Now, only Great Britain stood between Hitler and the United States. • (Battle of Britain- use of the luftwaffe) • U.S.: Isolationists versus Internationalists • Nye Committee – lead to Neutrality Acts • U.S. involvement in WWI caused by bankers and munitions makers - “merchants of death” • Imagine you were alive during this time. Would you have been an isolationist or an interventionist. Why? The Diplomacy of Isolationism

  10. Support for the Allies grows because if they supply them they will not have to send troops. • Cash-and-Carry • Lend-Lease aid (ships in exchange for military bases in Bermuda, etc.) • U.S. gives away supplies and delivers them • Atlantic Charter (August 1941) • Secret meeting between FDR and Churchill • A joint declaration of war aims • U.S. began arming merchant ships and ordered Navy to “shoot on sight” any German or Italian submarines that entered U.S. waters • The Soviet Union later endorsed the statement The Diplomacy of Isolationism

  11. Japan is expanding in the Pacific in search of raw materials. • Problems • U.S. insisted of Japan’s withdrawal from China • Japan’s alliance with Germany and Italy • Negotiations over commercial treaty • U.S. had broken Japanese diplomatic codes • U.S. freezes Japanese assets and starts embargo • U.S. cuts off sale of airplane fuel to Japan and cuts back on other natural resources. • Japanese Navy’s oil reserves (2 years) • Planned for war after August 1, 1941 Japan

  12. “Hull Note” delivered on Nov. 26, 1941 • Basically restated U.S. demands • Prime Minister Tōjō sees note as ultimatum and and proof that further diplomacy was futile. • Japanese public opinion was firmly behind the decision for war. • Late Nov., 1941 – U.S. learns Japanese Armada leaves Japan / lost track of and thought they were headed to attack the Philippines • Dec. 6, Japan breaks off negotiations, refusing to leave China • America believes that the Japanese are not cunning enough to really attack. U.S. Enters War

  13. Japan attacks Pearl Harbor in Hawaii • U.S. fleet caught unprepared • 2400 sailors died, 1200 wounded,18 ships sunk, and 160 aircraft damaged and 200 destroyed. • Only the aircraft carriers, by chance on maneuvers, escaped the worst naval defeat in American history. • “A day which will live in infamy”- FDR • Declare war on Axis Powers but focus on Europe. December 7, 1941

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