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WWII 1941-1945 I. American Responses to the Growing Threat of War A. The Stimson Doctrine, 1932 1. Created in response to the Japanese invading and conquering the Chinese province of Manchuria. 2. This program stated that the U.S. would not recognize any territorial acquisitions gained by force. B. The Neutrality Acts 1. The Neutrality Acts of the 1930s were expressions of a commitment to isolationism. 2. During the 1930s, isolationists drew support for their position from Washington’s Farewell Address. C. The Lend-Lease Program 1. Under the Lend-Lease program, President Roosevelt authorized the sale of surplus military equipment to the Allies 2. The Lend-Lease program was used primarily to help Great Britain and the Soviet Union resist Nazi Germany. II. The Attack on Pearl Harbor and the Germany First Strategy A. Pearl Harbor 1. The FDR administration imposed the first of a series of embargoes on Japan-bound supplies. 2. The U.S. actions left Japanese leaders with two alternatives: Give in to American demands and withdraw troops from Manchuria They could end the embargo by attack Pearl Harbor naval base B. Germany First 1. The Japanese attack unified America. 2. After the attack, the United States announced a strategy of first defeating Germany. 3. Most Americans wanted to attack Japan first 4. Once Hitler was defeated the United States launched a full scale attack on Japanese forces. • http://www.history.com/topics/world-warii/world-war-ii-history/videos/attack-pearlharbor III. Diplomacy and the Big Three A. Latin America 1. FDR administration formally renounced the right to intervene in Latin America 2. The United States sought greater cooperation with the nations of Latin America, primarily to develop a hemispheric common front against fascism B. The Philippine Islands 1. In response to widespread anti-imperialist sentiments, the United States pledged to grant independence to the Philippine Islands. 2. The Philippines gained independence in 1946 C. The Big Three 1. The Big Three were Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin 2. They demanded the unconditional surrender of Germany and Japan 3. They held their final meeting at Yalta in February of 1945 IV. Wartime Mobilization of the Economy A. Impact of Military Spending 1. Military spending revived the U.S. economy. 2. As American industry prepared for war, unemployment plummeted. 3. The dramatic increase in military spending enabled the United States to finally emerge from the Great Depression. B. Price Controls 1. The government instituted direct price controls to halt inflation. 2. The Office of Price Administration (OPA) established a nationwide rationing system for consumer goods such as coffee and gasoline V. African Americans and Women 1. Approximately, 1. 6 million African Americans left the South. 2. FDR issued an executive order forbidding discrimination in defense industries. B. Women and the Workplace 1. “Rosie the Riveter” was a nickname given during World War II to American women who did industrial work in the 1940s 2. The war mobilization caused a significant movement of married women into the workforce. VI. Civil Liberties and Civil Rights during wartime A. The internment of Japanese Americans 1. March 1942, FDR ordered all Japanese Americans living on the West Coast be removed to “relocation centers” for the duration of the war. B. Korematsu v. United States 1. The relocation of Japanese Americans during WWII raised the constitutionality of the internment of Japanese Americans as a wartime necessity. 2. The Supreme Court ruling upheld the constitutionality of the internment of Japanese Americans as a wartime necessity. Korematsu v. United States • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfxaSrM QtME VII. The United States and the Atomic Bomb A. The Manhattan Project 1. President Roosevelt authorized the Manhattan Project. 2. President Truman authorized the use of the atomic bomb on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 3. The United States was the only country possessing atomic bombs in 1945. Two Walls discussion If you were President of the United States in 1945 would you have authorized the use of the Atomic bomb on Japan? Why or why not? B. Truman’s Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb 1. Continuing to use conventional weapons would result in loss of thousands of American lives 2. Using the atomic bomb would persuade the Japanese to surrender. 3. Ending the war against Japan as quickly as possible would prevent Soviet intervention. 4. Using the atomic bomb would convince the Soviet Union of the need to be more cooperative