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World War II Chapter 17 Section 1 Where did we leave off?
World War II Chapter 17 Section 1 Where did we leave off?

... The Axis Powers Form an Alliance „ Germany, Italy, and Japan make an alliance called the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis. „ The three nations agree to fight Communism but more importantly they will not interfere if any of the other countries try to expand. „ This agreement made it easier for these countries ...
Chapter 17-2 Questions ppt
Chapter 17-2 Questions ppt

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... -Americans were determined to avoid war after having been in debt from World War 1 -Congress passed Neutrality Acts in 1935,1936, and 1937 -The laws barred the transportation or sale of arms to western nations and banned loans to nations at war outside the Western Hemisphere -October 5,1937 FDR warn ...
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Slide 1

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WWII Notes - Binghamton City School District
WWII Notes - Binghamton City School District

...  League of Nations was ineffective  without US & USSR, it didn't have the will or the support to maintain peace.  Locarno Pact, 1925: "Spirit of Locarno" no longer relevant once Hitler took power  Kellogg-Briand Pact, 1928: "war is illegal"; not enforceable  Economic Turmoil  Great Depression ...
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chapter outline

... valuable in the many war crimes trials of these criminals? Could a similar event take place in the future? (page 802) 6. “The Bombing of Civilians”: What common elements do you find in these different descriptions of bombing raids? What do the three accounts suggest about the progression of bombing ...
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WORLD WAR II - Cloudfront.net

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world war ii test

... WORLD WAR II TEST: CHAPTERS 19 AND 20 STUDY GUIDE 1. causes of rise in dictatorships after WWI 2. who did Hitler blame for Germany’s WWI defeat? 3. Nye committee decision 4. Axis Powers countries 5. appeasement/its failure 6. Nuremburg Laws 7. SS St. Louis 8. Nazis’ ‘final solution’ 9. ‘Four Freedom ...
World War II Teacher - New Smyrna Beach High School
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... - Benito Mussolini of Italy and Adolf Hitler of Germany both gained power during a time when people grew Disillusioned with their governments{Great Depression}. - They both increased their power with Propaganda and Fear. - In 1936, the Spanish republic fought against right-wing Spanish fascists led ...
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Fascism in Europe



Fascism in Europe was composed of numerous ideologies present during the 20th century which all developed their own differences from each other. Fascism was born in Italy and subsequently, across Europe several movements which took influence from it emerged. Purists assert that the term ""Fascism"" should only be used in relation to the National Fascist Party under Benito Mussolini in Italy.However, commonly the following European ideologies are also described as forms of, or strongly related to fascism. The Falange in Spain under Francisco Franco, the Austrofascism in Austria under Engelbert Dollfuß, the 4th of August Regime in Greece under Ioannis Metaxas, the Sanation in Poland under Józef Piłsudski, the National Legionary State in Romania under Ion Antonescu, the Ustaše in Croatia under Ante Pavelic during the Interwar period and World War II, the Estado Novo in Portugal under António de Oliveira Salazar, and the Nazi Party of Germany under Adolf Hitler.The most striking difference is the racialist and anti-Semitic ideology present in Nazism but not the other ideologies. Fascism was founded on the principle of nationalist unity, against the divisionist class war ideology of Socialism and Communism. Thus the majority of the regimes viewed racialism as counter productive to unity, with Mussolini asserting that ""National pride has no need of the delirium of race"".Italian Fascism was expansionist in its desires, looking to create a New Roman Empire. As was Nazi Germany, who looked to expand its borders. The same cannot be said for the other ideologies who focused almost exclusively on internal matters. This led to some countries, such as Spain or Portugal, remaining neutral in World War II, rather than being Axis powers, while Metaxas's Greece fought against the Axis, due to Italy's invasion. It is widely accepted that the Nazis murdered the Austrofascist dictator, causing an uneasy relationship between Fascism and Nazism at an early stage.The question of religion also poses considerable conflicting differences, some forms of fascism, particularly the Falange and Estado Novo were devoutly Christian. Thus the occultist and pagan elements of Nazism, were directly opposed to the Christian element found in the vast majority of fascism movements of the 20th century.
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