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Unit 9 - mrdwyer
Unit 9 - mrdwyer

...  Hitler’s next target was Poland and to achieve this goal he made an agreement with the Soviet Union known as the Nazi-Soviet Pact - What were the (2) parts of this agreement? ...
VIII. Results of the War
VIII. Results of the War

... 3. Germany invaded France through Belgium & the Netherlands. Nazi armies easily defeated the Allies and France surrendered. Germany set up a puppet government in the south at Vichy and occupied the north. ...
OMCH25
OMCH25

... Appeasement: The Munich Agreement, 1938 ...
Axis occupation of Greece
Axis occupation of Greece

... Axis occupation of Greece The occupation of Greece by the Axis Powers began in April 1941 after Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany invaded Greece, and lasted until Germany and its satellite Bulgaria withdrew from mainland Greece in October 1944. German garrisons remained in control of Crete and other Ae ...
00 Key Terms - 6-4
00 Key Terms - 6-4

... Allied mistrust – the Allies (US, UK, & USSR) shared more unified goals, although they did not completely trust one another; Roosevelt and Churchill feared that Stalin wanted to dominate Europe; Stalin believed that the West wanted to destroy communism “Europe First” – strategy by the Allies that fo ...
World War II Notes - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
World War II Notes - Fort Thomas Independent Schools

... • Britain helped to evacuate 300,000 soldiers from France escaping the German Army. • Their plan was to weaken the will of the British. Germany bombed London for over 50 days, slaughtering civilians, destroying ancient buildings. • After the use of Radar technology, German forces are unable to make ...
WWII in a nutshell
WWII in a nutshell

... 500 wounded, 290 killed, those captured put into POW camps (267 died there) Italian Campaign: Landing on Sicily, July 1943 designed to take pressure off Soviet Allies, divert Germans from N-W Europe where attack on Normandy was planned Allies land on Sicily, capture it in a month Canadian forces pus ...
Notes
Notes

... the 1930’s • Summarize the actions taken by aggressive regimes in Europe and Asia • Analyze the responses of Britain, France, and the United States to the aggressive regimes ...
The Failure of Appeasement
The Failure of Appeasement

... • France and Britain declared War, but took no direct action. The “Phony War” began. • In August 1939 the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact with Germany (pledging not to attack each other in the case of war). So… the Soviet Union also invaded Poland, as well as Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, an ...
Notes: World War II Begins
Notes: World War II Begins

... What was the reaction of Britain and France to Hitler’s invasion of Poland?  What did allied troops do when Belgium fell to the Germans?  How did Hitler plan to destroy Britain?  Why did Hitler decide to attack the Soviet Union? Activity suggestions: illustrate blitzkrieg; illustrate the event th ...
chapter27 ppt
chapter27 ppt

... D-Day invasion of France, June 6, 1944 Five assault divisions landed on Normandy beaches Within three months, two million men landed ...
8.6 World War II - JonesHistory.net
8.6 World War II - JonesHistory.net

... Airmen; Captain William A. Campbell was awarded two. • 14 Bronze Stars • 744 Air Medals • 8 Purple Hearts ...
World War II
World War II

... Rommel (“Desert Fox”) was sent to help the Italians defeat the British in Africa. March 24th: He attacked the British at Agheila. The British retreated 500 miles east to Tobruk. Mid-January 1942: after fierce fighting for Tobruk, the British drove Rommel back to where he had started. June 1942: Romm ...
16 & 17 test prep
16 & 17 test prep

... planned extermination of the Jews, et. al. • Auschwitz= largest of Nazi death camps (killed the most) ...
WORLD WAR II TEST Please mark your answers on the scantron
WORLD WAR II TEST Please mark your answers on the scantron

... Which event caused the Emperor to announce that he was “only human after all”? a. his overthrow by communist forces c. signing of the Versailles Treaty b. defeat of the Japanese in World War II d. conclusion of the Russo-Japanese War 16. Which is one major reason the Holocaust is considered a unique ...
The Road to WWII American Isolationism
The Road to WWII American Isolationism

... forces seized control of most of the peninsula by late 1941, but still had to deal with partisan uprisings, especially in Greece & Yugoslavia, throughout the war In North Africa, Axis forces fought mostly British troops in back-andforth battles throughout most of 1940, 1941, & 1942; Germany’s inabil ...
America and the World 1921-1945 - kurtwessler
America and the World 1921-1945 - kurtwessler

... Fair Employment Practices Commission to insure equal opportunities in war-related industry Surging migration from the rural South Segregation and discrimination were still problems Wartime experience laid groundwork for postwar Civil ...
American History II: Note Set #25: The Road to WWII American
American History II: Note Set #25: The Road to WWII American

... • This isolationist ideal was the driving force behind the US not joining the League of Nations The Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928) • The pact was an international agreement, signed by nearly every free nation in the world, that essentially banned war • The signing nations agreed to limit the size of the ...
document
document

... FDR forbid them from entering the U.S. They were also turned away by Canada, before returning to England, France, the Netherlands, and Belgium Why did Hitler do it? ...
WWII - West Linn High School
WWII - West Linn High School

... The American Mood: No More War • Most Americans did not want to intervene in European affairs ...
Put the following events in chronological order
Put the following events in chronological order

... Italy-September 3, 1943 Italy surrendered to the Allies and 5 weeks later declared war on Germany ...
World War II
World War II

... the invasion fiercely, but by the end of the day, all five beaches were secured by the Allies. ...
war!
war!

... Allies. German forces in Italy continued to fight. Although Allies met fierce resistance in town of Monte Cassino and were pinned down on the beaches of Anzio by German forces for 4 months, they finally broke through German lines and advanced toward Rome. They liberated Rome in June 1944. ...
Chapter 11 - Cloudfront.net
Chapter 11 - Cloudfront.net

... The U.S. moved quickly to produce military supplies and send them to Europe. ...
Rise_of_Totalitarian_Dictators (1)
Rise_of_Totalitarian_Dictators (1)

... In  1935,  Hitler  began  a  series  of  anM-­‐SemiMc  laws   called  the  Nuremburg  Laws  that  deprived  German   Jews  of  the  rights  of  ciMzens,  forbade  mixed  Jewish   marriages,  &  required  Jews  to  wear  a  yellow  sta ...
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Foreign relations of the Axis powers



Foreign relations of the Axis powers includes states which were not officially members of the Axis but had relations with one or more Axis members.
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