Chapter 21 pt. 1 wwii short

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Chapter 21 The Second World War 1939-1945

Transcript of Chapter 21 pt. 1 wwii short

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Chapter 21The SecondWorld War

1939-1945

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1936 Italy and

Germany form Axis Powers

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Britain and France follow a policy of Appeasement

Britain's Neville Chamberlain

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Lebensraum = Living Space

1936 Occupied Rhineland

1935 Anglo-German Naval Agreement 1938 Munich

Agreement(Czech Sudetenland)

1938 Annexed Austria

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“Many people, no doubt, honestly believe that they are

only giving away the interests of Czechoslovakia, whereas I fear

we shall find that we have deeply compromised, and perhaps

fatally endangered, the safety and even the independence of

Great Britain and France … There can never be friendship

between the British democracy and the Nazi …”

Winston Churchill on the Munich Pact

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Long-Term Causes of WWII

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French Marshal Ferdinand Foch

"This is not peace. It is an armistice for

20 years."

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“Naturally the common people don't want war; neither in Russia, nor in England, nor in America, nor in Germany. That

is understood. But after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine policy, and it is always a simple matter to drag

the people along, whether it is a democracy, or a fascist dictatorship, or a parliament, or a communist

dictatorship. ...Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you

have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the

country to danger. It works the same in any country.”

-Hermann Goering

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Green = Allied PowersOrange = Axis Powers

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1939 Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact and the division of Poland

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“Poland will be depopulated and

settled with Germans. … After

Stalin’s death … we will break the Soviet Union. Then there will begin the dawn of the German rule

of the earth ...”1939 speech to German generals

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Sept. 1, 1939 German Blitzkrieg into Poland

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UK and France declared war on Germany

World War II 1939-1945

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1940Tripartite Pact

Axis Powers

Later Affiliations = Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Thailand

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April-May 1940 Blitzkrieg Denmark, Norway, Netherlands,

Belgium, and Luxembourg

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May, 1940 Failure of the French Maginot Line

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June, 1940 Italy Invaded France

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Battle of DunkirkUK and French retreated to England

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June 22, France surrendered rather than be destroyed

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Vichy France worked with the Germans

Philippe Pétain

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Reasons for German success1. Overwhelming speed of air and amour2. No two front war3. Enemies not fully prepared for war

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Charles de Gaulle

(1890-1970)

Leader ofFree France resistance

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Involved in battles in Europe, Russia, Africa, and Britain

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Guerilla war in France and colonies

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July-October 1940Battle of Britain

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Winston Churchill

(1874-1965)Prime Minister(1940-1945 and

1951-1955)

Conservative

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“Never give in--never, never, never,

never, in nothing great or small, large

or petty, never give in except to convictions of honour and good

sense. Never yield to force; never yield to

the apparently overwhelming might

of the enemy”

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June 1941 Hitler

attacked the Soviet Union

Operation Barbarossa

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Soviet General Georgy Zhukov

(1896-1974)

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1941-1944Siege of Leningrad500,000 starved to death

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“In the Soviet

Army, it takes more courage to retreat than advance”

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The Pacific FrontEmpire of JapanExpansion and Recourses

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Emperor Hirohito 1901-1989

General and PM Hideki Tojo

1884-1948

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1937 Brutal Japanese invasion into China

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December 7, 1941Pearl Harbor attacked

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The Grand AllianceUSA, Britain, USSR, and resistance

groups throughout Europe

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The Allies had 3 policies that led them to victory

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1. Europe First (then Japan)

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2. Military needs before political differences

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3. The principle of “Unconditional Surrender” (1943 Casablanca Conference)

Henri Giraud

Franklin Roosevelt

Charles de Gaulle

Winston Churchill

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Allied Advantages

PopulationProductive capacityResourcesControl of the seas

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North African Front

Morocco, Algeria,

Tunisia, etc.

1942 USA, British, and colonies battled the Nazis

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GermanGen. Erwin

Rommel(1891-1944)

“The Desert Fox”

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British Field Marshal

Bernard Montgomery

(1887-1976)

Led soldiers in North Africa, Italy, Normandy,

and Germany

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Montgomery with his

puppies Hitler and Rommel

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1942 Battle of El AlameinBritish defeated Rommel and Axis powers

pushed out of North Africa by 1943

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Eastern Front 1942-1943Battle of Stalingrad

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Stalin angered by lack of assistance80% of Axis military attacked USSR

1944 = 228 Axis divisions on E. Front, 61 on W. Front

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Bloodiest battle in historyCombined casualties above 1,500,000

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A Nazi defeat and a turning point

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1943 Soviets begin to

push toward

Germany

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1943 Italian Fascists defeatedGermany wont give up Italy

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1944 Allies took Rome1945 Mussolini Killed by communist partisans

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1946 Kingdom of Italy Ended

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1943 Tehran ConferenceUK and US will open a 2nd Front (D-Day)Stalin guaranteed Polish border adjustments

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1944 Percentages Agreement divided influence of Eastern Europe

Countries Soviet Union UK/USA

Bulgaria 75% 25%

Greece 10% 90%

Hungary 50% 50%

Romania 90% 10%

Yugoslavia 50% 50%

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Operation OverlordJune 6, 1944 “D-Day”

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Normandy coast

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Liberate France and push back Germans

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8-25-1944 Paris Liberated

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Gen. Jean de Lattre de Tassigny

(1889-1952)

Led French 1st Army in 1944 Operation

Dragoon liberation of S. France

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Allies pushed toward GermanyUS & UK from the west and

USSR from the east

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Battle of the BulgeDec 1944 - Jan 1945

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The Ardennes Forest,

Belgium

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Allied VictoryThe road to Germany is open

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1945 Firebombing of Dresden

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~40,000 Civilian Deaths

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90% Of The City

Destroyed

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Late April 1945 Berlin surrounded

April 30, 1945 Hitler

killed himself

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May 7 Germany SurrendersV-E Day May 8, 1945

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Montgomery, Eisenhower, Zhukov and de Tassigny

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Why did Germany lose?• Resources• Industrial

production• Multi-front war• Allied

leadership

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Pacific Front

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Naval Warfare and“Island Hopping”

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J. Robert Oppenheimer

(1904-1967)Physicist

The Manhattan

Project

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Trinity July 16, 1945

1st Atomic Bomb

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Should the USA use the atom bomb?

Pro and Con?

?

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Curtis LeMay(1906-1990)

US Air Force General

“There are no innocent civilians.” New York Times, August 1945

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Curtis LeMay(1906-1990)

US Air Force General

“Killing Japanese didn't bother me very

much at that time... I suppose if I had lost the

war, I would have been tried as a war criminal”

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August 6, 1945The Enola Gay

dropped “Little Boy” on Hiroshima

70,000+ killed instantly100,000+ died later

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August 9, 1945 “Fat Man” was dropped on Nagasaki

40,000+ killed, 25,000+ wounded

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http://nuclearsecrecy.com/nukemap/classic/

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“The atomic bomb was more than a weapon

of terrible destruction; it

was a psychological

weapon”

Secretary of War Henry Stimson

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Japanese Surrender on the USS Missouri

Aug 14 Japan surrendered

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V-J Day Aug 15

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• USA: 295,000• UK: 388,000 (62,000 civilian)

• Italy: 410,000 (80,000 civilian)

• France: 810,000 (470,000 civilian)

• Japan: 1,806,000 (300,000 civilian)

• Germany: 7,060,000 (3,810,000 civilian)

• Poland: 6,850,000 (6,000,000 civilian)

• China: 11,324,000 (10,000,000 civilian)

• USSR: 25,568,000 (16,900,000 civilian)

Total Deaths

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Peace Conference and SettlementsUnconditional Surrender

Germany• Divided and

destroyed

Japan• Empire ended – Korea

and China evacuated• 1947 democratic

constitution • 1952 occupation ended• 1960 USA Alliance treaty

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• Agreed to divide Germany• Russia occupied Poland, Bulgaria,

Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Czechoslovakia

• Pro-Russian govts installed in E. Europe–Tension grew and US/UK pushed for free

elections in occupied territories

Feb. 1945 Yalta Conference

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“I consider it completely

unimportant who in the party will

vote, or how; but what is

extraordinarily important is this—who will count the votes, and how.”

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The Eastern

Bloc

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• Truman more aggressive–Demanded free elections in the east–Recent Trinity test

• Stalin refused free elections–Wanted security against Germany

• Germany Divided• US wanted to avoid war with USSR

1945 Potsdam Conference

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Truman cut off aid to Russia when Stalin’s insisted on communist govts in E. Europe