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Chapter 17Chapter 17Section 3Section 3The Rise of

Militarism

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Mussolini in Italy• Although on the winning side of WWI, thousands of Italian

veterans were unable to find jobs and many joined the Italian Communist Party

• To destroy the Communist Party and promote his own power, {Benito Mussolini founded the Fascist Party} in 1921

• {Fascists believed that a military dominated government should control all aspects of society.}

• Clashes between Communists and Fascists created a situation that bordered on civil war

• In October 1922 {Mussolini led an army called the Blackshirts} to march on Rome and occupied the city

• Mussolini was made prime minister of Italy and used his power to march on a weak Ethiopia.

• Because the U.S. did not want to get pulled into the conflict it refused aid to both sides. This hurt Ethiopia more than Italy

• It also portrayed to other fascist countries, like Germany, that aggression would go unpunished

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Mussolini's Blackshirts included men, women and children

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Stalin and the Soviet Union

• After the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924, a struggle broke out among the Communist Party leaders

• By using unethical means, such as the assassination of his competition and enemies, Joseph Stalin came to by the country’s leader

• Stalin turned the Soviet Union into a {totalitarian state- a country where the government has complete control.}

• He began taking private lands by force. When the farmers would fight back they would be sent to labor camps (along with about 15 million others by 1933)

• With no farmers, Stalin’s policy resulted in widespread famine • {Stalin enforced his rule through the Red Army.} • Stalin began a campaign to eliminate all perceived enemies

from the Communist Party with the Red Army

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Hitler in Germany

• In 1932 Hitler’s Nazi Party won nearly 40% of the vote in national elections

• Hitler wrote Mein Kampf while in prison. His book laid out his plans for Germany and blamed Jews, Communists and intellectuals for Germany’s decline

• {Hitler’s government was called the Third Reich.} It claimed dictatorial powers like prohibiting non-Nazis from holding governmental positions

• {Hitler’s Nazi soldiers became known known as Brownshirts}• Hitler rearmed Germany which was in violation of the Treaty of

Versailles. But Hitler said that the rearmament was to help the economy and reduce unemployment

• In March 1936, German troops moved into the Rhineland. Two years later they took Austria. He then turned to Czechoslovakia.

• Czech. refused to surrender

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Anti-Semitism

• Meanwhile Hitler’s {anti-Semitism, or hatred of Jews}, became official government policy.

• In 1935 Hitler instituted the Nuremberg Laws, which stated that Jews were no longer German citizens and endorsed the destruction of Jewish property.

• On November 9, 1938, Nazi’s burned down synagogues and destroyed Jewish businesses in a violent display that was just a glimpse of what was to come for the Jewish population in what was came to be known as Kristallnacht “the night of broken glass”

• Increased oppression led many Jews to flee the country, {but the vast majority had neither the money or the means to leave Germany}

• Hundreds came to the United States, but the U.S. had strict immigration laws. Despite such atrocities as the Kristallnacht, Americans were unwilling to encourage Jewish immigration

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Franco in Spain

• Fascism also spread to Spain• In 1931 a new constitution was put into effect that limited the

power of the military and the Catholic Church. • Feeling threatened, the military united under the leadership of

{General Francisco Franco• In July 1936 the Fascist army tried to overthrow the government,

starting the Spanish Civil War.}• After about three years of fighting, Franco took over the

government with German and Italian aid• But again fearing involvement in a war, Roosevelt kept the U.S.

from sending aid• A number of {Americans formed the Popular Front- an

international alliance that was united against fascism} • After the Spanish Civil War, many remained bitter about

America’s failure to support their cause

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Militarists in Japan

• As Germany was threatening Europe, Japan’s military forces were gaining power.

• The military forces sought to lessen Japans reliance on foreign imports, lessen the influence of western countries in Asia and expansion through East Asia and the Pacific

• The poor condition of the economy of Japan led to the appeal of the militarists’ position

• In violation of their Washington Conference promises, Japan invaded Manchuria and began to build up a large navy.

• On July 7, 1937, Japan and China battled near Beijing, leading to a full scale war.

• Japan launched bombing raids against Chinese cities and that December Japanese troops occupied the Chinese city of Nanjing

• Although the League of Nations and the U.S. condemned Japan’s actions, they failed to stop them

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The Japanese attack on the Chinese city of

Nanjing

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Art stature outside the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Museum

Nanjing, Jiangsu, China