Ideologies and Causes of the Cold War Directions
... a. A U.S. policy giving money and food aid to countries to ensure that they are loyal allies. b. A U.S. policy of preventing the spread of Communism to new countries, while not interfering in already-Communist countries. c. A Soviet policy of building an “iron curtain” in Europe to prevent the spre ...
... a. A U.S. policy giving money and food aid to countries to ensure that they are loyal allies. b. A U.S. policy of preventing the spread of Communism to new countries, while not interfering in already-Communist countries. c. A Soviet policy of building an “iron curtain” in Europe to prevent the spre ...
Impact Casualties and war crimes
... • The alliance between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union had begun to deteriorate even before the war was over. • Germany had been de facto divided, and two independent states, Federal Republic of Germany and German Democratic Republic were created within the borders of Allied and Soviet occup ...
... • The alliance between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union had begun to deteriorate even before the war was over. • Germany had been de facto divided, and two independent states, Federal Republic of Germany and German Democratic Republic were created within the borders of Allied and Soviet occup ...
Battles of WWII 1. Annexation of Austria 1938 (Anchluss) Hitler sent
... - The Japanese attempt to control the Pacific by cutting off the American port in Hawaii, allowing them to take a foothold in the Pacific. This action stirs the US lion into action (finally). 13. Battle of the Atlantic - Fight for control of the shipping lanes and ensuring allied war supplies - The ...
... - The Japanese attempt to control the Pacific by cutting off the American port in Hawaii, allowing them to take a foothold in the Pacific. This action stirs the US lion into action (finally). 13. Battle of the Atlantic - Fight for control of the shipping lanes and ensuring allied war supplies - The ...
WWII Review
... Germany moves into Paris (June 14, ’40) German bombers attack Britain (Aug. – Dec., ’40) Germany invades Soviet Union (June 22, ’41) Japan attacks P H (Dec. 7, 1941) ...
... Germany moves into Paris (June 14, ’40) German bombers attack Britain (Aug. – Dec., ’40) Germany invades Soviet Union (June 22, ’41) Japan attacks P H (Dec. 7, 1941) ...
World War Two
... Stalin wants help U.S. wants to beat Japan Britain wants back its influence in the Mediterranean ...
... Stalin wants help U.S. wants to beat Japan Britain wants back its influence in the Mediterranean ...
Unit 7 World War II Review Sheet
... 4. Between 1941 and 1945 the government ordered the internment of Japanese Americans due to the food and gasoline, and planting ...
... 4. Between 1941 and 1945 the government ordered the internment of Japanese Americans due to the food and gasoline, and planting ...
The Cold War
... • Had powerful military support from NATO, the largest navy in the world, bases all over the world, the CIA, and a large reserve of nuclear ...
... • Had powerful military support from NATO, the largest navy in the world, bases all over the world, the CIA, and a large reserve of nuclear ...
Results and Consequences of WWII
... In 1945, nations were in ruins. World War II was over, and the world wanted peace 51 countries gathered in San Francisco that year to sign a Charter creating a new organization called the United Nations 70 years later, the United Nations is still working to maintain international peace and s ...
... In 1945, nations were in ruins. World War II was over, and the world wanted peace 51 countries gathered in San Francisco that year to sign a Charter creating a new organization called the United Nations 70 years later, the United Nations is still working to maintain international peace and s ...
World War II
... expected an invasion to come from farther north, near Calais, at the narrowest part of the English ...
... expected an invasion to come from farther north, near Calais, at the narrowest part of the English ...
4th Six Weeks
... a. African Americans to serve in combat positions. b. soldiers to take short leaves from fighting. c. veterans to attend college for free. d. enlisted men to receive officer training. ____ 33. Roosevelt's decision to remove people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps was a response to a. strong ...
... a. African Americans to serve in combat positions. b. soldiers to take short leaves from fighting. c. veterans to attend college for free. d. enlisted men to receive officer training. ____ 33. Roosevelt's decision to remove people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps was a response to a. strong ...
World War II Section 1
... – Axis Powers united against Soviet Union – Soviet leader Joseph Stalin threatened by German expansion • France and Britain discuss possible alliance with Soviet Union – Stalin did not trust British or French – In secret negotiations with Germans • German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact – Each side agreed ...
... – Axis Powers united against Soviet Union – Soviet leader Joseph Stalin threatened by German expansion • France and Britain discuss possible alliance with Soviet Union – Stalin did not trust British or French – In secret negotiations with Germans • German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact – Each side agreed ...
WORLD WAR II ALLIED INVASIONS
... food, and medicine, but Hitler tells them that surrender is forbidden • 90,000 Germans that are left surrender shortly after, making Hitler mad • Most of them will die in Soviet camps • This was the first major defeat of Hitler’s armies • Turning point for the war on the Eastern Front • June 1944 – ...
... food, and medicine, but Hitler tells them that surrender is forbidden • 90,000 Germans that are left surrender shortly after, making Hitler mad • Most of them will die in Soviet camps • This was the first major defeat of Hitler’s armies • Turning point for the war on the Eastern Front • June 1944 – ...
sample
... September 1939. Once the Soviet Union invaded from the east, the Poles had no chance. Germany and the Soviet Union had secretly agreed to partition Poland between themselves before the war began. Chamberlain and other “appeasers” believed that if Hitler was allowed to overturn the Versailles Treaty, ...
... September 1939. Once the Soviet Union invaded from the east, the Poles had no chance. Germany and the Soviet Union had secretly agreed to partition Poland between themselves before the war began. Chamberlain and other “appeasers” believed that if Hitler was allowed to overturn the Versailles Treaty, ...
World War II
... WWII brought new job opportunities for women and other minorities, such as African and Hispanic Americans Many women fill factory positions and built war materials People bought war bonds and rationed gasoline, rubber, shoes, food Tuskegee Airmen – black pilots who trained in Alabama and flew thousa ...
... WWII brought new job opportunities for women and other minorities, such as African and Hispanic Americans Many women fill factory positions and built war materials People bought war bonds and rationed gasoline, rubber, shoes, food Tuskegee Airmen – black pilots who trained in Alabama and flew thousa ...
Assess the impact of the early crises on US and USSR relations
... 3. NATO and the Warsaw Pact Berlin blockade convinced the West of the need for military protection (also because of the Czech coup) April 1949, the western allies established NATO, North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. The western bloc “now had a formalised military-political existence.” (Geoffrey ...
... 3. NATO and the Warsaw Pact Berlin blockade convinced the West of the need for military protection (also because of the Czech coup) April 1949, the western allies established NATO, North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. The western bloc “now had a formalised military-political existence.” (Geoffrey ...
Causes - Glen Innes High School
... were falling under Soviet control. This meant that the 'Big Three' found it difficult to get agreement at the Conferences (Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam) which outlined the principles of the post-war peace. And it proved impossible to get agreement on the details at the Conference of Ministers - set up aft ...
... were falling under Soviet control. This meant that the 'Big Three' found it difficult to get agreement at the Conferences (Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam) which outlined the principles of the post-war peace. And it proved impossible to get agreement on the details at the Conference of Ministers - set up aft ...
WORLD WAR TWO
... 4. 1938 Hitler’s army annexed ________________ and was after Czechoslovakia a) Great Britain and France meet with Hitler over the issue of Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia in ________________, Germany i. Hitler promised he would not take more land ii. Great Britain and France gave him Sudetenland in a ...
... 4. 1938 Hitler’s army annexed ________________ and was after Czechoslovakia a) Great Britain and France meet with Hitler over the issue of Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia in ________________, Germany i. Hitler promised he would not take more land ii. Great Britain and France gave him Sudetenland in a ...
V - Quia
... a. President Roosevelt suspected that if an attack came, it would be in Malaya or the Philippines. b. there was no way of knowing that the Japanese had been provoked to the point of starting a war with the United States. c. Japanese communications were in a secret code unknown to the United States. ...
... a. President Roosevelt suspected that if an attack came, it would be in Malaya or the Philippines. b. there was no way of knowing that the Japanese had been provoked to the point of starting a war with the United States. c. Japanese communications were in a secret code unknown to the United States. ...
WWII European Theater Lecture
... and B to sweep east to Stalingrad, Soviet forces would be completely cut off from their own oil supply. Operation Uranus: Russian Attack Plan The Red Army secretly began to mobilize one million troops, 14,000 heavy guns, 979 tanks, and 1,350 aircraft to attack German flanks ...
... and B to sweep east to Stalingrad, Soviet forces would be completely cut off from their own oil supply. Operation Uranus: Russian Attack Plan The Red Army secretly began to mobilize one million troops, 14,000 heavy guns, 979 tanks, and 1,350 aircraft to attack German flanks ...
World War 2 The World at war Again
... Hitler’s Defeated in Europe: 1. Hitler invades Soviet Union * What about agreement? a. Soviets are being killed b. Germany strong at first, then Winter comes: Not prepared c. U.S. gives supplies and Stalin is able to push Hitler back (lost huge amounts of men) d. Hitler has to fight on both sides (S ...
... Hitler’s Defeated in Europe: 1. Hitler invades Soviet Union * What about agreement? a. Soviets are being killed b. Germany strong at first, then Winter comes: Not prepared c. U.S. gives supplies and Stalin is able to push Hitler back (lost huge amounts of men) d. Hitler has to fight on both sides (S ...
World War II Test
... Multiple Choice- Write the letter of the answer which is most correct in the blank beside each question. 1. In 1935 Ethiopia was invaded and conquered by a. Germany b. Japan c. France d. Italy 2. American tank general who was instrumental in winning the war. a. Hickman c. Patton e. Eisenhower b. Mon ...
... Multiple Choice- Write the letter of the answer which is most correct in the blank beside each question. 1. In 1935 Ethiopia was invaded and conquered by a. Germany b. Japan c. France d. Italy 2. American tank general who was instrumental in winning the war. a. Hickman c. Patton e. Eisenhower b. Mon ...
World War II in Europe
... > Russians fought desperately for each street and building > Germans would gain ground in day, then be pushed out at night > Film "Enemy at the Gates“ - Soviet General Zhukov launched offensive with two pincer attacks from north and south of city. Paulus's army of 250 000 men surrounded and cut off ...
... > Russians fought desperately for each street and building > Germans would gain ground in day, then be pushed out at night > Film "Enemy at the Gates“ - Soviet General Zhukov launched offensive with two pincer attacks from north and south of city. Paulus's army of 250 000 men surrounded and cut off ...
16.5 Europe & Japan in Ruins Main Idea: Why it Matters Now:
... into a Constitutional Monarchy like that of Britain. ...
... into a Constitutional Monarchy like that of Britain. ...
Study Guide for a World at War Don`t forget to know your vocabulary
... Who was the British Prime Minister from 1940-1945 and 1951-1955 that led Britain through the Battle of Britain and World War Two? When the Battle of Britain was not going his way Adolf Hitler decided to turn his attention in the direction of what other country that had been partnered with him? Japan ...
... Who was the British Prime Minister from 1940-1945 and 1951-1955 that led Britain through the Battle of Britain and World War Two? When the Battle of Britain was not going his way Adolf Hitler decided to turn his attention in the direction of what other country that had been partnered with him? Japan ...
Western betrayal
The concept of Western betrayal refers to the view that the United Kingdom and France failed to meet their legal, diplomatic, military and moral obligations with respect to the Czech and Polish nations of Central and Eastern Europe in the prelude to and aftermath of the Second World War.In particular, it refers to Czechoslovakia's treatment during the Munich Agreement and subsequent occupation and partition by Nazi Germany, Hungary (The First Vienna Award) and Poland (Invasion of Zaolzie), as well as the failure of the Western allies to aid Poland upon its invasion by Germany and the USSR in 1939. The same concept also refers to the concessions made by the United States and the United Kingdom to the USSR during the Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam conferences, to their stance during the Warsaw Uprising, and some other events, which allocated the region to the Soviet sphere of influence and created the Eastern Bloc.Historically, such views were intertwined with some of the most significant geopolitical events of the 20th century, including the rise and empowerment of the Third Reich (Nazi Germany), the rise of the Soviet Union (USSR) as a dominant superpower with control of large parts of Europe, and various treaties, alliances, and positions taken during and after World War II, and so on into the Cold War.