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Herbert Hoover’s Foreign Policy: ● ● Japanese Aggression in Manchuria ○ Early 1930s ● Japan was the greatest threat to world peace ○ September 1931 ● Japanese troops marched into Manchuria ○ League of Nations did nothing to stop this from happening ■ Japanese Delegation walked out to the League of Nations Stimson Doctrine ○ United States response to Japan's violation of the Open Door Policy: ■ Henry Stimson declared that the United States would honor its treaty obligations under the Nine-Power Treaty (1922) by refusing to recognize the legitimacy of any regime that had been established by force ● Latin America ○ Hoover arranged the U.S troops leave Nicaragua by 1933 ● Negotiated a treaty with Haiti to remove U.S troops by 1934 Franklin Roosevelt’s Policies, 1933-1938 ● Good-Neighbor Policy ○ Meant to improve relations with other nations by withdrawing troops from foreign nations to improve international relations and to nite the Western Hemisphere ○ Pan-American Conferences ■ Pledged to never intervene in the internal affairs of a Latin American country ■ Pledged to submit future disputes to arbitration ○ Cuba ■ Roosevelt persuaded Congress to nullify the Platt Amendment which made Cuba’s foreign policy subject to US approval ● Roosevelt also kept the Amendment to US rights only to keep a naval base ○ Mexico ■ Mexico tested the good-neighbor policy and seized oil properties owned by the US in which roosevelt encouraged American companies to negotiate a settlement ○ London Economic Conference (1933) ■ Hoover allowed US participation in the LON ● When plans were made to stabilize currencies, Roosevelt feared this would hurt his plans for recovery ○ Recognition of the Soviet Union ■ Roosevelt granted recognition towards the Soviet Union in 1933 ● He did this “to increase US trade and to boost the economy” ○ Philippines ■ Roosevelt persuaded Congress to pass the Tydings-McDuffie Act which provided for the independence of the Philippines by 1946 and the removal of US military presence from the islands ○ Reciprocal Trade Agreements ■ Roosevelt favored lower tariffs as a means of increasing international trade ■ In 1934, Congress enacted a plan which gave the president power to reduce US tariffs up to 50% ○ Events Abroad: Fascism and Aggressive Militarism ■ Japan, Italy, and Germany signed a treaty of alliance which formed the Axis Powers (1940) ● Events Abroad: Fascism and Aggressive Militarism ○ Italy ■ New regime seized power in 1922 ■ Benito Mussolini ○ leader of Italy’s Fascist party ■ Those afraid of rising communism were attracted to this party ■ Fascism ○ the idea that people should glorify their nation and their race through an aggressive show of force ■ Dominant ideology in European Dictatorship ○ Germany ■ Nazi party was equivalent to Italy’s Fascist Party ■ Nazy Leader was Adolf Hitler ■ Hitler used bullying and Fascist ideology to increase his popularity ■ Hitler gained control of the German legislature in early 1933 ○ Japan ■ Nationalists and Militarists in japan increased their power in the 1920s and 30s ■ N & M’s persuaded the emperor the best way to ensure access to raw materials was to invade China and Southeast Asia ■ Japan then gained control over the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere ● Prelude to war ○ 1935-1938 ● Increased violence by the Fascists ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ Ethiopia Italian troops were ordered to invade Ethiopia (1935) ■ The LON and US did nothing to stop this Rhineland ■ Region in Germany ■ Hitler defied the treaty of Versailles and didn’t demilitarize ■ Hitler ordered German troops to march into Rhineland China ■ War between China and Japan erupted in 1937 ■ U.S gunboat in China: Panay. Sunk by Japanese Planes ● Japan apologized for this Sudetenland ■ Hitler insisted that he had the right to take over Sudetenland ● Roosevelt advised the British Prime Minister and the French President met with Hitler ○ After this meeting, the leaders allowed Hitler to take over Sudetenland From Neutrality To War, 1939-1941 ● ● Outbreak of War in Europe ■ Britain and France pledged to fight if Poland was attacked ● In 1939, Hitler and Stalin signed a nonaggression pact ○ Secretly dividing Poland between them Changing U.S Policy ○ Roosevelt believed that British survival was crucial to U.S security ● provided massive aid to Britain ○ Many Americans believed in strengthening U.S defenses ● Roosevelt persuaded Congress in 1939 to make the Neutrality acts less restrictive that a belligerent nation can buy U.S arms if it used it’s own ships and paid in cash ● “Cash and Carry” t echnique which favored Britain strongly ○ Selective Service Act ● Provided for the registration of all Americans to be drafted into the war The Election of 1940 ● Election ○ ○ ● ● ● Roosevelt was the first to break the two-term tradition Wendell Willkie ● Lawyer and executive who ran for the Republicans ○ Willkie criticized the new deal ■ Agreed with giving aid to Britain ○ Roosevelt won the election for the third time Arsenal of Democracy ○ Roosevelt believed Germany was a direct threat to U.S Security ● January 1941 ○ He delivered a speech proposed lending money to Britain for the purchase of war materials ○ Roosevelt proposed ending the cash-and-carry requirement ○ Roosevelt met up w Winston Churchill to discuss their peace objectives ● Created the Atlantic Charter ○ July 1941 ● U.S supported Britain even more by protecting their ships from submarines ○ September 4 ● American destroyer was attacked by German Submarines ○ U.S was then fighting an undeclared naval war against Germany Disputes with Japan ○ Japan was allied with Germany and Italy ● Hitler’s success in Europe gave Japan a chance to expand ○ Japan joined Axis powers in September 1940 ● Roosevelt prohibited the export of steel and scrap iron to all countries except Britain and nations in Western Hemisphere ○ July 1941 ● Japanese Troops occupied French Indochina ○ Roosevelt then cut off vital materials to Japan, including oil ● Japan attempted to negotiate the embargo on oil, failed Pearl Harbor ○ December 7 1941 ● Japanese planes bombed every ship in sight ● Surprise attack lasted two hours ○ 2,400 Americans were killed ○ 1,200 Wounded ○ 20 warships were wounded ○ 150 Airplanes were destroyed ○ December 8 ● Congress declared war against Japan ● Germany and Italy also declared war on the United States due to a treaty with Japan World War II: The Home Front ● Industrial Production ○ US organized agencies to mobilize the economic and military resources for war ■ War Production Board established to manage war industries ■ Office of War Mobilization set production priorities and controlled raw materials ■ The depression soon ended and there was barely any unemployment ● The War’s Impact on Society ○ African Americans: ■ 1.5 million African Americans had left the south due to jobs in the N and W ■ Men were deployed into the army ■ NAACP membership increased ■ Congress of Racial Equality (CORE): 1942 ■ Smith v. Allwright ○ Ruled that it was unconstitutional to deny membership in political parties to African Americans as a way of excluding them from voting in primaries ○ Mexican Americans ■ Worked mostly in defense industries and in the army ■ 1942: allowed Mexican farm workers to enter the United States without going through formal immigration procedures ■ Summer of 1943: Whites and Mexican Americans battled on the streets due to large amounts of white resentment ○ Native Americans ■ 25,000 served in the military ■ Many more worked in defense industries ○ Japanese Americans ■ They served loyally in the military but due to Pearl Harbor they were suspected of being potential spies ■ Korematsu v. US (1944) the Supreme Court upheld the US government’s internment policy ○ Many of those who were treated badly were awarded financial compensation by the US ○ Women ■ ■ ■ ■ 200,000 served in military in noncombat roles Women took jobs vacated by men in uniform 5 million women entered the workforce Although, women earned much less pay than male factory workers ○ ● Propaganda ■ Maintain public morale ■ Encourage people to sacrifice and conserve resources ■ Increase war production The Election of 1944 ○ F.D.R ran once again ○ Henry Wallace ● Democratic choice at first ● Changed their choice because Wallace was “too radical and unmanageable” ○ Harry S. Truman was then chosen to be the vice presidential running mate ○ Thomas Dewey ● Republican nominee ○ F.D.R won for a fourth time but died 3 months after the inauguration ● Truman served most of his term World War II: The Battlefronts ● Fighting Germany ○ British and Americans concentrated on overcoming the German Submarines and begin bombings on German cities ○ Battle of Atlantic ● Protracted naval war to control the shipping lanes ● 500 Allied ships were sunk by German Submarines in 1942 ○ Operation Torch 1942 ● Led by U.S General Dwight Eisenhower and British General Bernard Montgomery ○ June 6, 1944: Allied Drive to liberate France ○ D day ● British, Canadian and U.S forces secured several beachheads ○ Battle of the Bulge ● December 1944 ○ Germans attempted a counterattack in Belgium ○ Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945 ● ● ● Nazi soldiers then surrendered a week later on May 7 6 million jews were murdered Fighting Japan ○ Japan succeeded in achieving control of much of East and Southeast Asia ○ Battle of Coral Sea ● U.S aircraft carriers stopped a Japanese invasion of Australia ○ Island Hopping ● bypassed strongly held Japanese Islands and isolated them with naval and air power ○ This allowed Allied forces to move rapidly toward Japan ○ October 1944 ● Japanese navy was destroyed ○ U.S suffered 50,000 casualties whereas Japan suffered 100,000 ● July 16, 1945 ○ First Atomic bomb tested in Alamogordo, New Mexico ● August 6 ○ A-bomb dropped in Hiroshima ● August 9 ○ A-bomb dropped in Nagasaki Wartime Conferences ● ● ● Casablanca ○ First conference involved 2 of the big 3 nations ○ January 1943, Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to invade the Mediterranean and demand “unconditional surrender” from the Axis Powers Teheran ○ Big three met in Iranian city in November 1943 ○ Agreed that the British and Americans would liberate France in spring of 1944 ○ Agreed that the Soviets would invade Germany and then join the war against Japan Yalta ○ Big three met in Yalta in February 1945 ○ After Victory was achieved in Europe, the three leaders agreed that ■ Germany would be divided into occupation zones ■ Free elections in liberated countries of Eastern Europe ■ Soviets would enter the war against Japan ■ Soviets would control Southern have of Sakhalin island and the Kurile Islands in and special “concessions” in Manchuria ■ ○ ○ ○ New world peace organization would be formed at a conference in San Fran April 12, 1945: Franklin Roosevelt died His death shocked the Nation just as much as Pearl Harbor Three Leaders (Stalin, Attlee, Truman) met in Potsdam Germany and agreed on ■ Issue a warning to Japan to Surrender ■ Hold war-crime trials of Nazi leaders War’s Legacy ● Costs ○ ○ ○ ● 300,000 Americans lost their lives 800,000 Americans were wounded $320 billion was spent on the war ● Federal spending increased 1,000 percent between 1939 and 1945 ○ National debt increased to 250 billion, five times more than it was in 1941 The United Nations ○ April 1945 ● Delegates from 50 nations sat together and drafted a charter for the United Nations ● Senate voted to accept U.S involvement in U.N ○ October 24, 1945 ● U.N came into existence when majority ratified the charter