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Chapter 17
Chapter 17

... ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS:  What were the key foreign policy decisions including international investment, peace treaties, and military intervention during the 1920s and early 1930s?  To what extent was the U.S. isolationist in the 1920s and 1930s?  Why did most Americans oppose military action in the ...
Canada in WW II - Salmon Arm Secondary
Canada in WW II - Salmon Arm Secondary

... The Sitzkrieg ["sitting war" -- the opposite of the Blitzkrieg] or in French drôle de guerre was a waiting period of neither war nor peace. The German Wehrmacht had concentrated the bulk of its forces in Poland, and the western border at the Rhine was completely unprotected throughout September 193 ...
US History Ch 16 and 17
US History Ch 16 and 17

... 1. Describe the US responses to the outbreak of the war in Europe in 1939. 2. explain how Roosevelt assisted the Allies without declaring war. 3. Summarize the events that brought the United States into armed conflict in Germany. 4. Describe the American responses to the Japanese attack on Pearl Har ...
Conflict in Europe 1935-1945 - Phil Sheppard Video Production
Conflict in Europe 1935-1945 - Phil Sheppard Video Production

... might lose control of the Suez Canal. To counter this threat, the British built up their forces in North Africa. In August 1942 the British Eighth Army was taken over by General Montgomery, while supreme command in the Middle East was given to General Alexander. The British forces were also far bett ...
Chapter 12 - World War II
Chapter 12 - World War II

...  Wages and prices began to rise as soon as the war began because of the high demand for labor and goods  Government created agencies to oversea the economy. They regulated wages and prices through out the war  OPACS (Office of Price Admin. And Civilian Supply)  OES (Office of Economic Stabilizat ...
Study Guide - 2017
Study Guide - 2017

... - Mein Kampf (1923) & its major ideas - Nazi Germany Territorial Expansion … - What was Hitler’s purpose in occupying the Rhineland? - The Anschluss - Appeasement and Munich Conference - The occupation of the Sudetenland and Czechoslovakia - Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact – What were these agreements? U.S. ...
World War II - Exam II Making Flashcards on this exam will boost
World War II - Exam II Making Flashcards on this exam will boost

... theater during World War II. The Allied Powers defeated Japan. It was the bloodiest battle in the Pacific Theater. D-Day – The time on June 6, 1944 when Allied powers opened up the Western front and attacked the Nazis (Germany). The attack took place on the beaches of Normandy, France. Western Front ...
32 World_War_II Student
32 World_War_II Student

... A. The U.S. declared war on Japan on December 8, 1941, a day after the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. B. On December 11, Germany and Italy declared war on the U.S. 1. The U.S. declared war on both countries on the same day. 2. Represented a fatal blunder by Hitler: Germany was not ...
4 War in Europe
4 War in Europe

... • The Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan, & other minor countries • The Allies: UK & Commonwealth Nations, France, USSR, Netherlands, Belgium, China, later U.S. , & over 30 minor countries ...
Chapter 25
Chapter 25

...  The OPA also set up a system of rationing (restricting the amount of food & goods people could buy during wartime). Families were issued coupons to be used for buying scarce items, such as meat & gasoline. ...
Specialized Crisis Committee
Specialized Crisis Committee

... The United States extends lend-lease aid to the Soviet Union. Jul 7, 1941 US Defends Iceland President Franklin D. Roosevelt announces that the United States will take over defense of Iceland for the duration of the war. Aug 9, 1941 Roosevelt and Churchill Draft Atlantic Charter On a British battles ...
The Allies Turn the Tide
The Allies Turn the Tide

... Germans Defeated at Stalingrad A major turning point occurred in the Soviet Union. After their lightning advance in 1941, the Germans were stalled outside Moscow and Leningrad. In 1942, Hitler launched a new offensive. This time, he aimed for the rich oil fields of the south. His troops, however, go ...
Chap 13 : WW2 in Europe
Chap 13 : WW2 in Europe

... Germany had shrunk Large parts of eastern Germany were handed over to Poland Germany divided into 4 “occupation zones” Controlled by Britain, France, USA and USSR In effect, the country was divided into two parts The eastern part was ruled by the Soviets; the western part by the British, French and ...
WHS WW2 Part 2 The Pacific 2014
WHS WW2 Part 2 The Pacific 2014

... appropriate theater of operations ...
Name: Date - melissalightwh1
Name: Date - melissalightwh1

... children evacuated to Britain through the Kindertransport program  Jews increasingly subject to legal repression, deprivation of property, violence, and other measure designed to force large-scale ...
world war ii
world war ii

... liberating the heavily-fortified ports of Boulogne and Calais. At the same time, the British captured the Belgian port of Antwerp, desperately requiring its docking facilities to bring in supplies. However, the Germans occupied both banks of the 70-kilometre long Scheldt River estuary linking Antwer ...
Ch 29 The Collapse of the Old Order
Ch 29 The Collapse of the Old Order

... – Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact = between Germany and the Soviet Union – Stalin first tried to make an alliance with the French and British, but they refused – Hitler made this agreement because he was trying to prevent a two front war – Had every intention of invading Russia, wanted the land for ...
UNIT 5, PART 3: WORLD WAR II, PART I AGGRESSION
UNIT 5, PART 3: WORLD WAR II, PART I AGGRESSION

... • June 22, 1940 - Hitler forced from to surrender - Germany occupied the north, southern France became Vichy France (a puppet state that collaborated with the Nazis) Africa and the Balkans - Sept. 1940 - Italy attempted, failed to invade Egypt (British colony) • Germans sent in General Erwin Rommel ...
Document
Document

... • August 1939 Germany and the Soviet Union sign nonagression pact • September 1939 Germany invades Poland; World War II begins •April-June 1940 Bliztkrieg (Germany conquers much of Western Europe) • September 1940 Germany, Italy, and Japan (the Axis powers) conclude a military alliance • September 1 ...
PPT
PPT

... – 1937 becomes “cash and carry” – Avoid subs dragging US into war ...
End of War-Triumph and Tragedy
End of War-Triumph and Tragedy

... After the war, the Soviets wanted to determine the fate of the Eastern European lands that it occupied. Stalin wanted communist governments installed in these countries as a protection against Germany. The U.S. and Britain were against the idea and wanted free elections in Eastern Europe. ...
The World at War (again)
The World at War (again)

... 1) In what ways does JAPAN’s role in ASIA parallel, or mirror, what Germany was doing in Europe? 2) What action(s) by the United States led to Japan planning an attack on Pearl Harbor? 3) What parts of the Pearl Harbor were a SUCCESS for Japan? What could be considered a failure? 4) What dominoes fe ...
Chapter 6 : Canada at War
Chapter 6 : Canada at War

... One of Hitler’s promises was to tear up the Versailles Treaty which made him enormously popular in Germany. Once he became leader, all other political parties were outlawed and he became dictator or sole ruler of Germany. ...
Unit 14
Unit 14

... ● The  O   ffice   of   Price   Administration   regulated   prices,   wages,   rents,   &  ra᠀�oned   commodi᠀�es   (pg.   530)  ● Unions   &  corpora᠀�ons   agreed   that   there   would   be   no   strikes   during   the   war  ○ The  S  mith‐Connally   Anti‐Strike   Act   of   1943   allowed   t ...
World War II
World War II

... Explain the domestic and international leadership during WWII for: Domestic Leadership ...
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Diplomatic history of World War II



The Diplomatic history of World War II includes the major foreign policies and interactions inside the opposing coalitions, the Allies and the Axis powers. The military history of the war is covered at World War II.
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