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Download Entered the World War II, 1941–1945 The Coming of World War II
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Entered the World War II, 1941–1945 The Coming of World War II War broke out in Asia in early 1930s and later spread to Africa and Europe. Japan, Italy, and Germany were the aggressors. Following public opinion, the U.S. government pursued neutrality, but after the conflict expanded to include Russia, France, and Great Britain, Roosevelt launched a preparedness campaign. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the Second World War. Arsenal of Democracy The government comprehensively mobilized the nation for war. Propaganda fueled public support and the New Deal focus quickly switched to a win–the–war effect based on reorienting the economy to military production. The economic conversion ended the depression. Increased production fueled profits and job opportunities, especially for minorities and women. Growing labor unrest before the United States conflict ceased and unions began admitting African Americans. The Home Front The war drastically alerted life in the United States. Families faced new strains and pressures. Japanese Americans suffered the worst discrimination, but African Americans seeking a victory at war and for their rights also experienced mixed results, as did Mexican Americans. Popular culture promoted the “good war” to Americans of all ages. Men and Women in Uniform The military was unprepared for combat when the war broke out. The draft organized the male population for military service. The process of building the military transformed the officer corps and facilitated the forging of bonds among military personnel while “Americanizing” immigrant groups. Women joined the military and played important roles. Despite racism, the same was true of minorities. Great emphasis was placed on building a medical corps to handle casualties. A major problem was the deplorable conditions American POWs lived under, especially those captured by the Japanese. The World at War The war was fought on several fronts. Until 1942, the Allies were on the defensive. A variety of successes changed the tide of the conflict. In Europe, the war was fought in the air and on the ground, with the Soviets bearing most of the ground war burden. English and American forces approached Europe from two directions, first through North Africa and Italy and then across France. During this period, air strikes on Germany also occurred. The war in the Pacific involved naval battles and island – hopping invasions. When the war ended in Europe, all resources were trained on Japan. Air strikes took a heavy toll on the Japanese. The Stages of War By 1945, the war was coming to a close. Americans learned about the extent of the Holocaust, though not until the concentration camps were liberated was the full horror known. At the Yalta Conference, Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill negotiated terms to end the war and plan for peace. Roosevelt’s death thrust Harry Truman into the presidency. One of his first decisions was to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, ending World War II. Review American involvement in World War II and its effects on the United States was profound. At the height of the depression, America tried to legislate isolation from any future foreign conflicts by enacting a series of Neutrality Acts, but as wars broke out first in Asia and Africa and then in Europe, the United States gradually amended these laws or President Roosevelt managed to find ways to moderate their effects. Even before Pearl Harbor, the United States was involved in a naval conflict with Germany in the North Atlantic. American policy sought to deal with Hitler’s Germany as the most serious enemy, but the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor partly changed that. The United States and its Allies were on the defensive until mid–1942, when the North African counter – offensive the Battle of Stalingrad in Soviet Russia, and the Coral Sea–Midway victories in the Pacific marked the turning of the tide. The war became the battle of production, with the United States possessing enormous advantages. While the United States fought the war for democracy, some constituencies still had to fight for democracy, in the war changed the lives of many women and African Americans, who became essential to the wartime economy. Japanese Americans, mostly from the West Coast, experienced a humiliating and unjust detention even as many of their sons served with distinction in Europe. The United States became the world’s greatest single power and stood at the center of global policies. Roosevelt and his successor, Harry Truman, worked with a range of politicians and experts to develop a new foreign policy to face these changing conditions. . Manchuria Cordell Hull Good – neighbor policy Stimson Doctrine fascism Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) Benito Mussolini Francisco Franco Italian Fascist party appeasement German Nazi party Adolf Hitler Ethiopia America Committee First Pan–American Conferences Rhineland Soviet Union recognized London Economic Conference 1933 Axis Powers neutrality acts Tydings – McDuffie Act isolationism Nye Committee Czechoslovakia Sudetenland quarantine speech Office of Price Aministration Munich Battle of Midway Poland; blitzkrieg Atlantic Charter Smith v. Allwright Selective Training and Service Act Pearl Harbor cash and carry destroyers–for–bases deal Holocaust Korematsu v. U.S. General Douglas MacArthur Chester Nimitz Harry S. Truman Battle of the Atlantic Wendell Willkie atomic bomb J. Robert Oppenheimer D – Day Big Three Hiroshima; Nagasaki Yalta Dwight D. Eisenhower Four Freedoms Speech United Nations Battle of the Bulge Lend – Lease Act (1941) Terms: Fascist (Fascism): a political system or philosophy that advocates a mass – based party dictatorship, extreme nationalism, racism, and the glorification of war. pinko: disparaging term for someone who is not a “red,” or Communist, but is presumed to be sympathetic to communism. militarist: someone who glorifies military values or institutions and extends them into the political and social spheres. exchange rate: the monetary ratio according to which one currency is convertible into another, e.g., American dollars vis–à–vis German deutschmarks, which determines their value relative to one another. totalitarianism: a political system of absolute control, in which all social, moral, and religious values and institutions are put in direct service of the state. quarantine: in politics, isolating a nation by refusing to have economic or diplomatic dealings with it. division: the major unit of military organization, usually about 3,000 to 10,000 strong, into which most modern armies are organized. unilateral: in politics, concerning a policy or action undertaken by only one nation. multilateral: in politics, referring to a policy or action undertaken by more than one nation. steppes: the great plains of southeastern Europe and Asia convoy: to escort militarily, for purposes of protection war lord: a leader or ruler who maintains power by continually waging war, often against other similar rulers or local military leaders. hara–kiri: traditional Japanese suicide. concentration camps: a place of confinement for prisoners or others a government considers dangerous or undesirable bracero: a Mexican farm laborer temporarily brought into the United States U – boat: a German submarine (from German Unterseeboot) depose(d); deposition: forcibly remove from office of position beachhead: the first position on a beach secured by an invading force and used to land further troops and supplies underground: a secret of illegal movement organized in a country to resist or overthrow the government acclamation: a general and unanimous action or nomination by a large public body, without a vote bastion: a fortified stronghold, often including earthworks or stoneworks, that guards against enemy attacks. genocide: the systematic extermination or killing of an entire people bazooka: a metal–tubed weapon from which armor–piercing rockets are electronically fired. Essays 1. Discuss the view that a different American foreign policy could have prevented the outbreak of World War II. 2. Assess President Roosevelt’s efforts to deal with the dangers of fascism and lead the nation away from a policy of isolationism in the context of TWO of the following: Panay incident cash and carry quarantine speech destroyers–for–bases deal 3. Compare and contrast American reaction to war in Europe in 1914 with its reaction in 1939. 4. Analyze the discrimination TWO of the following groups faced during World War II, despite their patriotism: African Americans Japanese Americans Mexican Americans women 5. Argue either for or against this statement: “President Truman’s decision to use the atomic bomb was completely justified.”