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CH. 32: WWII
Sec. 1: Hitler’s Lightening War
BACKGROUND
 - Hitler repeatedly violated the Treat of Versailles through the 1930’s but in
the hope of peace, Great Britain and France did nothing. He now turned to
Poland. Both Great Britain and France vowed war if Hitler were to invade
Poland
NON-AGGRESSION
 Non-Aggression Pact – A promise
between Germany and the Soviet
Union not to invade each other
 - A secret part of the pact was that
Germany and the USSR would
divide Poland between them.
 - This cleared the way for
Germany to invade Poland
WAR
 September 1, 1939 – Germany
invades Poland
 September 3, 1939 – Great Britain
and France declare war on
Germany
 - This declaration came too late to
help Poland
BLITZKRIEG
 Blitzkrieg – “lightening war.” New
German war tactic that involved
fast moving tanks and planes
followed by massive military
forces.
 - It was designed to surprise and
quickly overwhelm enemy
defenders. In the case of Poland, it
worked.
DIVIDED POLAND
 - Germany gained control of western
Poland
 - The USSR invaded and occupied
eastern Poland
 - Germany also occupied Denmark
and Norway
 - This gave them a strategic point to
launch attacks on Great Britain
FRANCE
 May 1940 – Hitler took Belgium,
Netherlands, and Luxembourg.
This was designed to get to France
 June 22, 1940 – France falls after
only six weeks of battle
FRANCE
FRANCE
 Charles de Gaulle – The leader of
the French government in exile in
London
 - He urged the French citizens to
continue to fight against Germany
 - The fall of France meant that
Great Britain was now alone
against Germany
CHURCHILL
 Winston Churchill – Was the British
leader. He vowed that Great
Britain would never surrender
 - Hitler planned to knock out the
British air force and then put
250,000 soldiers on the ground
 Summer, 1940 – The German
Luftwaffe began bombing Great
Britain
LUFTWAFFE
 Luftwaffe – German air force
 September 7, 1940 – Germany
began to bomb London. This was
designed to break the British
morale but that did not happen
 - The British weathered the
German attacks and began to hot
back
BATTLE OF BRITAIN
 Battle of Britain – The name of this
air war campaign
 May 10, 1941 – Hitler could not
penetrate British forces so he
called of the attack and focused on
eastern Europe and the
Mediterranean. He would deal
with Great Britain later
- It showed that Hitler’s attacks
could be stopped
BATTLE OF BRITAIN
 - Although Hitler couldn’t see it,
the Battle of Britain was a huge
loss for Germany. Many planes
were destroyed and many of
Germany’s top pilots were killed
EGYPT
 September, 1940 – Italy invaded Egypt. Mussolini wanted to push the
British out and control the oil fields of the Middle East
 - The British stopped Mussolini but Hitler sent in help and pushed the
British back
ROMMEL
 Erwin Rommel – The German
commander in Africa
 - His success in Africa earned him
the nickname “The Desert Fox.”
BARBAROSSA
 June 22, 1941 – Hitler ignores the nonaggression pact and invades the USSR
 Operation Barbarossa – The code
name of the attack
 - The USSR had a large army but they
were poorly trained and caught off
guard by the attack
 - At first, the Germans moved very
quickly into the Soviet Union
 - As the Soviets retreated , they used
the same scorched earth policy they
used against Napoleon
LENINGRAD
 Leningrad – The Germans
launched a fierce battle to take the
city
 - The Germans had the city
surrounded and cut off all supplies.
Still, the citizens did not give in,
even though they were starving
 - Eventually Hitler gave up and
moved on to Moscow, but the
result was the same
LENINGRAD
RUSSIAN WINTER
 - The German military was caught
out in the Soviet winter with only
summer uniforms.
 - It was a stalemate until march,
1943
 - About 500,000 Germans died in
that time
BRRRRR….
US
 - At this point in the war, the US was still claiming to be neutral, but was
selling weapons to the allies. The US was also attacking German U Boats
when they were encountered.
 - But it wouldn’t be Germany that drew the US into WWII
SEC. 2: JAPAN’S PACIFIC
CAMPAIGN
BACKGROUND
 - Japan began its invasion of China in 1931 and launched a full invasion in
1937. The Japanese expected a quick victory but it didn’t work out that way.
In need of resources for the war, Japan looked to the European colonies of
Southeast Asia
 - As Japan overran French Indochina, the US became worried about its
colonies in the Philippines and Guam
 - The US sent aid to China to help fight the Japanese and cut off oil
shipments to Japan.
 - Japan responded by attacking the US
PEARL HARBOR
 December 7, 1941 – Japan
attacked the US naval base at
Pearl Harbor in Hawaii
 - 19 ships were sunk or damaged.
2,300 Americans were killed and
1,800 were wounded
 - The US declared war on Japan
the next day
PEARL HARBOR
STUFF
 - Japan took several lightly defended islands in the Pacific such as Guam
and wake Is. But they also took the Philippines, Hong Kong, Indonesia,
Singapore, and Burma
 - Japanese treatment od citizens of the conquered areas was brutal. The
treatment od captured soldiers was worse
 Read Primary Source – p. 932
 - At first the Japanese made gains and seemed unstoppable, but much of
that was due to the element of surprise
JAPANESE AGGRESSION
BATTLES
 April, 1942 – The US bombed
Tokyo under the leadership of
James Doolittle
 - The raid itself did little damage
but made an important
psychological point to both sides:
Japan was vulnerable to attack
MIDWAY
 Battle of Midway – (June 1942) –
The US scored a huge victory over
Japan at Midway Is. This was an
early turning point in the war with
Japan
 - After Midway, the US went on
the offensive
 - The war in the Pacific covered
vast distances and the Japanese
were dug in to several islands
MACARTHUR
 Douglas MacArthur – Was the
allied forces commander in the
Pacific
 - MacArthur decided not to attack
heavily defended islands but to
take smaller less defended islands
closer to Japan first
GUADALCANAL
 Battle of Guadalcanal – A deadly
six month battle to take the island
of Guadalcanal. Japan lost 24,000
of 36,000 soldiers on the island
 - It was an important American
victory, but other islands would
prove to be very costly
 - read Primary Source – p. 935
SEC. 3: THE HOLOCAUST
HOLOCAUST
 - The Nazis proposed a new world
order as part of their vision for
Europe
 Aryan – Germanic people were the
“master race.”
 - The Nazis claimed that all nonAryan people, especially the Jews,
were inferior
HOLOCAUST
 Holocaust – The attempted
extermination of Europe’s Jews
 - To gain support for racist ideas,
Hitler knowingly tapped into a
hatred of the Jews that had deep
roots in European history
 - Jews had been targeted for years
in Europe
NUREMBERG LAWS
 - Hitler made the targeting of Jews government policy by passage of the
Nuremberg Laws. These laws deprived Jews of their right to German
citizenship, forbade marriage between Jews and non-Jews, and eventually
limited the type of work they could do
KRISTALLNACHT
 - To avenge his uncle’s deportation to Poland, a Jewish youth shot a
German diplomat in Paris.
 - This set off a night of destroying Jewish property and burning
synagogues in Germany.
 Kristallnacht – “Night of Broken Glass”
 Read Primary Source – p. 937
 - Many Jews tried to flee Germany after kristallnacht but most stayed in
Germany thinking Hitler would be gone soon
 - Germany occupied several countries with large Jewish populations so he
decided to isolate them
GHETTO
 Ghetto – Segregated Jewish areas.
Most were overcrowded and filthy.
Many Jews died in the ghetto of
starvation and disease
 Final Solution – This was Hitler’s
answer to the Jewish question. All
of the Jews in Germany and the
occupied territories would be killed
 Genocide – The killing of a race of
people
GHETTO
MURDER
 - Hitler actually did not do the planning for the Final Solution, he just gave
the order
 - Hitler also ordered the deaths of the Roma (Gypsies), Poles Russians,
homosexuals, and the mentally and physically disabled
 - He felt those groups were inferior and would ruin racial purity
MURDER
 - In the beginning, the Nazis used
“killing squads” to go from village
to village to round up Jews and
shoot them.
MURDER
 - This was a slow and
pshychologically difficult process
for the killers
MURDER
 - Eventually extermination camps
were built that used gas to kill
thousands a Jews a day
HOLOCAUST
HOLOCAUST
 Mr. Hager will explain the Holocaust in greater depth in class
 Read – Primary Source – p. 939
SEC. 4: THE ALLIED VICTORY
BACKGROUND
 - The USSR was fighting the Germans in the east, but Stalin was desperate
for the US to attack from the west and force Germany to fight on two
fronts. He felt this would split the German military and weaken them.
 - Stalin wanted the second front to be in France, but the US and Great
Britain decided to attack in Africa instead.
 - The British were able to push Rommel’s forces back with a huge attack
force
 - The US attacked from the west and had Rommel’s troops pinned in
between the US and the British
 May, 1943 – Rommel’s troops were defeated
STALINGRAD
 Battle of Stalingrad – Was a fierce
battle fought between the USSR
and Germany beginning on August
23, 1942
 - Stalingrad was an industrial
center and it was the last defense
between the German army and the
oil fields in the east
 - It also had psychological
importance as Stalin’s namesake
city
STALINGRAD
 - The Germans held 90% of the
city but could not control it all
 - On February 2, 1943, against
Hitler’s orders, 90,000 German
troops surrendered. That is all that
was left of the 330,000 that
invaded
 - Stalingrad was 99% destroyed
STALINGRAD
 - After this battle the USSR began
to push the Germans back and
turned the tide of the war against
Germany
ITALY
 July 10, 1943 – The allies landed on
the island of Sicily and began the
takeover of Italy
 September 3, 1943 – Italy
surrendered and declared
neutrality, but Germany still
controlled northern Italy and
continued fighting
 June 4, 1944 – The allies took
Rome, but Germany continued to
fight in Italy until the war ended in
May, 1945
MUSSOLINI HANGING OUT
 April 27, 1945 – Mussolini was
arrested then shot.
 Read – The allied home fronts – p.
941-943
D DAY
 June 6, 1944 – A huge allied force
landed at Normandy in
northwestern France and began
the push to Berlin. This finally
opened the second battle front
that Stalin wanted
 Operation Overlord – The code
name for the Normandy invasion
 D Day – More common name for
the attack
D DAY
 - The allies suffered heavy
casualties but they gained a
foothold in France
 - Mr. Hager will explain this more
in class
D DAY
NEARING THE END
August, 1944 – Paris is liberated
September, 1944 – France, Belgium,
and Luxembourg were liberated
Battle of the Bulge – (December 16)
– The last German offensive of
WWII. The Germans surprised the
allies with a counterattack, but the
allies recovered and held the
Germans off
THE END FOR GERMANY
 April, 1945 – The allies were
approaching Berlin from the west
and the Soviets were approaching
from the east
 April 30, 1945 – Hitler commits
suicide
 May 7, 1945 – Dwight Eisenhower
accepted Germany’s unconditional
surrender
IKE
 Dwight Eisenhower – Was the
supreme commander allied forces
in Europe
 - The war in Europe was over but
the US was still fighting the
Japanese in the Pacific
PACIFIC BATTLES
 Fall 1944 – The US retakes the
Philippines
 March 1945 – The US takes the
strategic island of Iwo Jima
 April, 1945 – The US takes another
strategic island, Okinawa
DEATH TOLL
 - The Japanese were ordered to
fight to the death. On Iwo Jima,
out of 22,000 soldiers, only 216
surrendered. The rest were killed.
Out of 70,000 Americans, 6,821
were killed and 19,217 were
wounded
 - Okinawa – Japan suffered
100,000 killed; the US had 12,000
killed
THE MAINLAND
 - The next target for the US was the Japanese mainland, but after
witnessing the Japanese fighting attitude on Iwo Jima and Okinawa,
President Truman knew that a land invasion of Japan would be a bloodbath
THE BOMB
 Manhattan Project – The top
secret development of a nuclear
bomb
 - Japan refused to surrender
despite a warning of a new US
weapon
 August 6, 1945 – The US drops an
atomic bomb on Hiroshima
(population 350,000)
 - Truman’s advisors felt this would
be the quickest way to end the war
with the fewest American casulties
DEATH TOLL
 - The bomb killed 70,000 – 80,000
people
 - Japan did not reply to a
surrender request
NAGASAKI
 August 9, 1945 – The US dropped
an atomic bomb on Nagasaki
(population 270,000)
 - The bomb killed 70,000 people
 - Many more would die of
radiation poisoning in the future
SURRENDER
 September 2, 1945 – Japan
officially surrenders and WWII was
over
SEC. 5: EUROPE AND JAPAN IN
RUINS
FACTS
 - After six years of war, the allies finally were victorious. The cost was
nearly 60 million killed world-wide (22 million in the Soviet Union) and
billions of dollars
 - Another 50 million had been uprooted from their homes and had
nowhere to live
 Read – Devastation in Europe – p. 948-948
 Read – Post-war Governments and politics – p. 949
NUREMBERG TRIALS
 Nuremberg Trials – Putting Nazi
criminals on trial in Germany
 - 22 Nazi leaders were charged
with waging a war of aggression
 - Several Nazi leaders committed
suicide before the trials could
begin (Hitler, Himmler, Goebbels,
Goering)
NAZI LEADERS
 - 10 Nazi leaders were executed.
The rest received various prison
sentences
JAPAN
 - The US would occupy Japan until 1952. Douglas MacArthur was in charge
 - He was determined to be fair and not plant the seeds of another war
 Demilitarization – Disbanding of the Japanese military
 - 25 Japanese leaders were brought to trial. 7 were condemned to death
 Democratization – The process of bringing democracy to Japan
 - MacArthur drew up a new constitution for Japan and helped revive the
economy
POST-WAR
 - Emperor Hirohito would not
stand trial as a war criminal but he
would be stripped of his power
 - He also had to admit to his
people that he was not a divine
ruler as they had believed
 - He would become a symbolic
figure

POST-WAR
 - The Japanese government would
be set up much like the
government of Great Britain where
the king/queen is largely symbolic
with no real power
 - The power rests with the people
 - The US and Japan became allies.
The US still has a presence in
Japan today
 - The US and the Soviet Union
would become enemies
THE END!