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Sara Jackson MacManus UNIT 14 NOTES Pages 482-483: FOREIGN POLICY: THE FICTION OF ISOLATION (pg. 483-484) ● Postwar US foreign policy was not actually isolationist ○ Disillusionment w/ WWI, Eur’s problems, communism made Ams fearful of another war ■ Still were not isolationist like in the Gilded Age ■ Pursued arrangements that advanced Am interests while keeping peace Disarmament and Peace (482): ● Rep pres of 1920s promoted peace/reduced spending on defense through disarmament ○ Washington Confer 1921 naval disarmament,stabilize navy power,solve pacific conflicts ■ Belgium, China, Fr, GBr, Ita, Jap, Netherlands, Portugal ■ Five-Power Treaty Est ratio b/w five largest navies ● US 5, GBr 5, Jap 3, Fr 1.67, Ita 1.67 ● GBr and US agreed to not fortify Pacific possessions (Jap did not agree) ■ Four-Power Treaty US, Fr, GBr, Jap respect one another’s Pacific territory ■ Nine-Power Treaty All agreed to respect Open Door Policy ○ Kellogg-Briand Pact renounced use of agressive force to achieve nat ends ■ Permitted defensive wars, failed to provide for actions against violators Business and Diplomacy (483): ● Rep supported pro-biz policy to bring prosperity, strengthened US dealing w/ other nations ○ Advanced Am biz interests in other regions ○ In Latin America Mexico, Nicaragua... ■ 1927 agreement w/ Mex to protect US investors’ oil from govt ownership ■ US troops withdrawn from DR, stayed in Haiti, Nicaragua ■ Am investments in LA doubled 1919-29 ○ Middle East’s oil source of wealth, won oil drilling rights for US companies ○ 1922 Fordney-McCumber Tariff +25% tariff on foreign manuf goods, bad in long run ■ Eur nations slower to recov from WWI, could not pay war debts to US ● Responded w/ tariffs on Am goods ● Weakened world trade/econ, helped cause Gr Dep War Debts and Reparations (483-484): ● WWI made US creditor nation, lent $ to Eur, insisted they pay debts back ○ Eur nations objected, had suffered huge losses, US tariffs made diff to pay back $ ■ Could not collect debt from Ger (bankrupt, inflation…) ○ Dawes Plan 1924 compromise on the issue, est payments from US to Ger to Allies ■ US lends $ to Ger to rebuild econ/pay $ to Allies, Allies pay war debts to US ● Helped stop financial problems ● Ended when Gr Dep started ○ Finland only country to pay back $ ■ Left resentments on both sides, increased US isolationism Chapter 25 ● FDR wanted peace ○ US responsible for Kellogg-Briand Pact 1920 ■ countries promised to not use military aggressively ○ LoN at Geneva helped maintain this peace ○ Most Ams did not want to send troops despite concerns about second world war ● Us foreign policy switched from disengagement to neutrality to total involvement HERBERT HOOVER’S FOREIGN POLICY (pg. 518-520) ● Believed US should not enter commitments to preserve security of other nations ○ Known as isolationism ■ Peace conference/treaties seem as moral efforts ■ opposed econ sanction on aggressors bc thought it would lead to mil involvement Japanese Aggression in Manchuria (519-520): ● Early 1930s Japan biggest threat to world peace ○ Defied Open Door and LoN by taking over Manchuria Sept 1931 ■ Est puppet govt, called region Manchukuo ○ LoN simply passed resolution condemning Jap ■ Jap walked out of the League ■ Shows inability of LoN to keep peace, warnings not taken seriously ● US responded w/ the Stimson Doctrine, stronger but not effective than the LoN’s ○ 1932 US would honor obligations under 9-power treaty, refused to recognize Manchukuo ■ LoN endorsed, issued similar dec Latin America (520): ● Hoover pursued good relations w/ L Am ○ 1929 tour of goodwill through L Am ○ Ended interventionist policies of Taft and Wilson ■ 1933 removed troops from Nicaragua, 1934 from Haiti FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT’S POLICIES 1933-1938 (pg. 520-525) Good Neighbour Policy (520-521): ● 1933 started non-interventionist policy w/ L Am countries, called good neighbor policy ○ Interventionism did not support $ in Gr Dep, not enough foreign investment ○ Rise of Ger/It militarist regimes, US wanted help in defending from potential danger ○ Acted on this policy through Pan-Am Conferences ■ 1933 pledged to not interfere in internal affairs of L Am ● Repudiated Roosevelt Corollary ■ 1936 pledged to submit disputes to arbitration ● If Ger acted aggressively, West Hem would join together ○ 1934 nullified Cuba’s Platt Amendment (had made foreign pol subject to US approval) ■ US could keep Guantanamo Bay naval base ○ 1938 Mexico seized US corps’oil ■ FDR did not intervene, encouraged Am comps to negotiate instead Economic Diplomacy (521): ● FDR’s goal in foreign pol was help econ ○ London Econ Conf 1933 org by LoN, Hoover accepted to go, as well as FDR ■ Withdrew after proposals to stabilize currencies, would hurt US recov ○ Recognition of Soviet Union 1933 to increase US trade and boost econ ○ Tydings-McDuffie Act 1934 granted Philippines indep 1946 bc v expensive to govern ■ 1935 Philipp elected pres under new const ○ Reciprocal Trade Agreements 1934 l owered taxes to increase trade (Dem view) ■ Would reduce tariffs 50% if country reciprocated w/ reductions for US imports Events Abroad: Fascism and Aggressive Militarism (521-522): ● Nationalist resentment after WWI w/ econ dep created mil dictators in It, Ger, Jap. ○ 1944, signed alliance treaty forming the Axis Powers ○ Italy fascist regime 1922 under Mussolini (It’s Fascist party) ■ Attracted war vets, nationalists, people afraid of communism ■ Fascism, glorifying nation/race through force, became dom in Eur dictatorships ○ Germany’s Nazi Party rose in 1920s due to bad econ after war and resentment over ToV ■ Hitler used tactics against Jews and Fascism to gain pop w/ Ger (unemp) workers ■ Anti-Semitism/depression allowed him to gain control of Ger legislature 1933 ○ Japan’s nationalists/militarists gained power 1920-30s during bad econ conditions ■ Persuaded emperor to invade China/SE Asia to gain access to raw materials ● Gained control of so-called Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere American Isolationists (522-523): ● US nationalistic, but isolationist, wanted to avoid war (pop in Midwest and republicans) ○ Increased by Jap aggression and Ger/It fascism ○ 1930s belief that US in WWI was mistake ■ Nye Committee in Congress upheld this belief w/ revisionist history of WWI ● US part in WWI was to serve greed of bankers/arms manuf ● Influenced isolationist legislation ○ Isol held major in Congress 1938, adopted neutrality acts to ensue neutral if war in Eur ■ Neutrality Act 1935 pres could prohibit arms shipments ● Also forbid US travel on ships of warring nations ■ Neutrality Act 1936 no loans/credit to warring nations ■ Neutrality Act 1937 no arms shipments to opposing sides in Spanish Civil War ○ Spanish Civil War 1936 seen as struggle b/w Fascism (Franco)/republicanism (loyalists) ■ Most Ams supported Loyalists, neutrality acts stopped support ● 1939 Franco’s fascist regime est mil dictatorship ○ Am First Committee to mobilize Am opinion against WWII in 1940 ■ Bc isolationists alarmed by FDR’s pro-British policies ■ Engaged speakers to warn against war Prelude to War (523-525): ● 1935-38 aggressive actions by fascists ○ Hitler creating strong air force, dem powers could not compete ○ Adopted policy of appeasement ■ Hitler got away w/ small acts of aggression and expansion ■ ■ Shows dems were unprepared for fascist challenge Ethiopia 1935 Mussolini invaded to demonstrate military power ● LoN and US objected, did nothing to stop it ● Italy conquered Ethiopia after a year ■ Rhineland 1936 ToV says area must be demilitarized ● Hitler openly defied, marches troops into Rhineland ■ China 1937 J ap invaded China, started full-scale war ● US boat bombed by Jap, Jap apology quickly accepted ■ Sudetenland 1938 Hitler claimed Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia ● FDR told Chamberlain/Daladier (Fr) to meet Hitler/Mussolini in Munich ● Sept 1938 leaders allowed Hitler to take Sudetenland ○ US response FDR recognized fascist aggression, limited by isolationism ■ 1937 gave speech when Jap invaded China, negative public rxn ■ Still increased preparedness for war ● 1938 Congress agreed to increase military/naval budgets ● Some isolationists accepted this, thought it would be used for defense FROM NEUTRALITY TO WAR 1939-1941 (pg. 525-529) ● Mar 1939 Hitler broke Munich agreement by occupying Czechoslovakia ○ War was unavoidable Outbreak of War in Europe (525): ● GBr and Fr pledged to fight if Poland was attacked ○ Assumed Stalin opposed Ger, Aug 1939 Stalin and Hitler signed nonaggression pact ■ Agreed to divide Poland b/w them ● Sept 1 1939 Poland invaded b y Ger, beginning WWII ○ GBr/Fr declared war against Ger, soon also w/ the Axis allies ○ Ger conquered Pol using blitzkrieg warfare w/ airpower and fast tanks ○ Spring 1940 Ger attacked Denmark/Norway and France, surrendered in only a week ■ June 1940 only GBr free from Ger troops Changing US Policy (525-526): ● Ams alarmed by Nazi invasions, opposed Hitler but did not want war ○ FDR believed US security was based on GBr’ survival ■ Weakened neutrality laws, so he could give mass aid to GBr ■ 1940 most Ams supported strengthening US defense, aid to GBr more debated ○ “Cash and carry” 1939 belligerent could buy US arms if used own ships and paid cash ■ Technically neutral, favored GBr bc GBr navy still controlled seas ● Ending arms embargo meant US would only be able to sell to GBr ○ Selective Service Act 1940 all men 21-35 had to register for compulsory military service ■ 1.2 million troops trained each year ■ Isolationists opposed peacetime draft ● Outnumbered as public opinion shifted away from neutrality ■ Destroyers-for-bases deal 1940 GBr assaulted by bombing raids and submarines ● FDR gave GBr 50 older destroyers in return for right to build militarly bases in Caribbean ○ He could not directly sell them US destroyers bc isolationists The Election of 1940 (526-527): ● Uncertainty over FDR running for pres or not, at last said he would run again ○ Rep nominee was Wendell Willkie, never before run for office, lawyer/utility executive ■ Agreed w/ FDR on preparedness/aiding GBr, criticized New Deal/ 2+ terms ○ FDR won election thanks to several factors ■ Strong econ recov based on purchases ■ Fear of war, so voters stayed w/ more experienced leader Arsenal of Democracy (527-528): ● FDR saw Nazi Eur and threat to US security and democracy ○ After reelection in strong position to end US neutrality/aid GBr ○ Fireside chat said US must be “great arsenal of democracy” ○ Four Freedoms 1941 speech proposed lending $ to GBr for war to defend four freedoms ■ Speech, religion, freedom from want and fear ○ Lend-Lease Act 1941 ended cash-and-carry, allowed GBr to but arms on credit ■ Isolationists campaigned against it, but public had shifted towards aiding GBr ○ Atlantic Charter document declaring US and GBr’s peace objectives once war ended ■ FDR believed US would be drawn into war ■ Secret meeting w/ Churchill to confirm peace objectives once war ended ● Self-determination for all people, no territorial expansion, free trade ○ Shoot-on-sight 1941 US protection for GBR ships from submarines ■ US navy would escort GBr lend-lease materials ships to Iceland ■ Sept 4 Am destroyer Greer attacked by Ger subm ● FDR ordered navy to attack all Ger ships on sight ● Fighting undeclared naval war against Ger Disputes with Japan (528): ● 1940-41 relations w/ Jap strained bc China invasion and attempts to conquer SE Asia ○ 1940 became Axis power, Hitler’s success gave Jap opp to invade colonies of Eur nations ○ US econ action in response to Jap’s actions ■ 1940 prohibited export steel/iron to all countries except GBr/West hemisphere ● After Jap became Axis, aimed at Jap ■ 1941 froze Jap credits in US, cut off access to materials such as US oil ● After Jap invaded French Indochina ○ Negotiations bc Jap needed oil for army, would have to take oil in Dutch East Indies ■ Jap in china violate Open Door, FDR insisted they remove troops, Jap refused ● Agreement on oil and china was impossible ■ Jap saw that quick military action was necessary bc of limited oil supplies ● US hoped to delay confrontation Pearl Harbor (528-529): ● Dec 7 1941 Jap bombed US fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii ○ 2k dead, 20 warships, 150 planes ○ Am people stunned, only partial surprise for high govt officials bc had broken Jap codes ■ Did not know date or where Dec 8 Congress issued declaration of war on Jap ■ Ger and Ita declared war on US bc treaty w/ Jap WORLD WAR II: THE HOME FRONT (pg. 529-532): ● Dec 1941 battlefront in eur shifted to east when Ger invaded Soviet Union ○ 1942-45 GBr, US and Sov Union were principal Allies fighting ■ Concentrated on Eur before fighting Jap Industrial Production (529-530): ● Agencies mobilizing econ/mil resources for war ○ 1942 War Production Board e st, managed war industries ○ Office of War mobilization set prod priorities, controlled raw materials ■ Used cost-plus system, paid war contractors prod costs plus % for profit ○ US ind boomed, stimulated by wartime demand/govt contracts ■ Ended depression and unemployment, high prod and profits ■ War-related ind output was huge, double that of all Axis powers combined ○ Office of Price Admin regulated civilians’ lives ■ Froze prices, wages, rents, rationing meat/sugar/gas/tires ○ Unions and corps suspended strikes durkng war ■ Workers mad bc wages frozen while corps made big $ ● John Lewis called strikes in coal unions ■ Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act 1943, passed FDR’s veto ● Govt could take over biz threatened by strikes ○ 1944 govt took over RR for a brief period ○ Govt financing the war through increase in income tax and selling war bonds ■ 1944 began deducting tax automatically from paychecks, 315 bill $ in war bonds ● Also few consumer goods meant people could easily save The War’s Impact on Society (530-531): ● Every group adjusted diff to wartime conditions ○ Increase in factory jobs caused migration from rural areas to Midwest/Pacific for ind jobs ■ New communities around factories and mil bases ○ New defense installations in South ○ Af-Ams left South for jobs in North/West or to serve in the army ■ Continued discrim and segregation ● Race riots 1943 in NY and Detroit ● “Double V” slogan adopt, victory over fascism/victory for equality ■ NAACP membership increased ■ Congress of Racial Equality formed 1942 ● Smith v Allwright unconst to deny participation in pol parties to Af-Ams ○ Mex-Ams worked in defense ind or served in army ■ 1942 Mex braceros could enter US during harvest season w/o imm procedures ● Influx in Mex imm, led to zoot suit riots summer 1943 ○ NA also served in mil or worked in defense ind ■ Many let reservations and did not return ○ Jap-Ams suffered during wartime ○ ■ ■ Some served in military for US Suspected of spy/sabotage, Jap invasion of West coast feared ● 1942 US govt made Japs on West Coast reside in internment camps ○ Korematsu v US ruled const during wartime ○ Women’s lives changed by war ■ served in military non combat roles ■ Labor shortage meant women took jobs vacated by men ● Many in ind jobs in shipyards/defense plants ○ Still received lower pay than male factory workers ○ Govt propaganda w as everywhere ■ Keep public morale, encourage sacrifice to conserve resources, increase war prod ■ Office of War Info c ontrolled news about troops/battles ● Movies, radio, music supported cheerful/patriotic view of war The Election of 1944 (531-532): ● War consuming attention, election not that interesting ○ FDR nominated by Dems again ■ Vice-pres changed to Harry S. Truman ■ FDR’s health uncertain ○ Thomas Dewey was Rep nominee ■ Unable to offer alternative to FDR’s leadership/generate enthusiasm for change ○ FDR easily won, serving unprecedented 4th term ■ Died 3 months after inauguration, Truman served most of term WORLD WAR II: THE BATTLEFRONTS (pg. 532-534): ● Waged on two fronts: ○ Pacific w/ Jap 1942 occupied Phil, Dutch East Indies, S Pac islands… ○ East Eur b/w Ger and Sov Union Fighting Germany (532-533): ● Ger advance ended 1942 bc US entered war and Soviet victory at Stalingrad ○ GBr/Am strategy was defense at sea, attacking by air ■ Overcoming Ger submarines, known as Battle of Atlantic ● Contained sub menace w/ radar, sonar, bombing Ger naval bases ■ Started bombing raids on Ger cities ○ Allies had to drive Ger forces out of North Africa and Mediterranean ■ N-Af campaign Operation Torch started Nov 1942, drove Ger forces out 1943 ■ Occupied Sicily 1943, prepared invasion of Italy ● Mussolini fell from power, Hitler have him nominal control over N Ita ● Ger controlled much of Ita, resisted until surrender 1945 ○ Allies started to liberate Fr June 1944, D Day i nvasion on Normandy beaches successful ■ By Aug Paris liberated, Sept Allies crossed Ger border towards Berlin ● Ger last attack Dec 1944 In Belgium, Battle of the Bulge ● Am resumed their advance after this ○ Since 1942 Am bombing reduced Ger’s ind and ability to fight ■ Hitler killed himself April 1945, surrender of Nazi armies may 7 1945 US troops on Ger discovered the Holocaust ● 6 million Jews systematically murdered by Nazis, concentration camps... Fighting Japan (533-534): ● Mainly US forces fighting Jap, dom by naval battling ○ 1942 Jap had E/SE Asia: Korea, E Chi, Phil, Burma/Malaya, Fr Ind, Indies, Pac Islands… ○ 1942 turning point two naval battles 1942 halted Jap advance ■ May Battle of Coral Sea stopped invasion of Aus ■ June Battle of Midway destroyed Jap planes/carriers after decoding messages ○ Am forces used “island-hopping” to get close to Jap ■ Isolated Jap strongholds w/ naval/air power ■ Allied forces moved rapidly toward Jap ○ Battle of leyte Gulf Oct 1944 reoccupied Philippines ■ Destr Jap navy, used kamikaze pilots for the first time ○ Battle of Okinawa Apr-Jun 1945, took island near japan ■ Huge casualties, mainly due to kamikaze pilots again ■ Now ready to invade Japan, feared heavy casualties ○ Manhattan Project 1942 developed the atomic bombs ■ Told Jap unconditional surrender or utter destruction, no response ■ Aug 6 a-bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Aug 9 second on Nagasaki ● Killed 250k Japanese ○ Sept 2 1945 Japan surrenders WARTIME CONFERENCES (pg. 534-535) ● During war, Big Three (US, Sov Union, GBr leaders) secret confers for mil strategies/peace terms ○ Casablanca jan 1943 only FDR/Churchill ■ Agreed to invade Sicily, demand surrender from Axis Powers ○ Teheran nov 1943 first Big 3 meeting ■ GBr/Am would drive to free Fr 1944, Sov would invade Ger,join war against Jap ○ Yalta Feb 1945, long-term significance, agreed peace terms for after victory in Eur ■ Ger would be divided into occupation zones ■ Free elections in freed E Eur countries (under Sov control) ■ Sov enter war against Jap (entered Aug 8 1945) ■ Sov would control Sakhalin/Kurile Pac islands, special concessions in Manchuria ■ New world peace org (future United Nations) ○ After Yalta Confer, Apr 1945 death of FDR ■ Truman assumed presidency in unfinished war ○ Potsdam after Ger surrender, only Stalin remained of Big 3 ■ Issued unconditional surrender warning to Jap ■ Hold war-crime trials for Nazi leaders THE WAR’S LEGACY (pg. 535-536) Costs (536): ● 300k Ams died, 800k wounded ● Cost $320 billion, 10x more than WWI, huge deficit spending ○ Fed spending increased 1000% 1939-45 ■ ○ Nat debt was $250 bill The United Nations (536): ● Congress readily accepted and put it in place ○ 1944 Allied reps proposed internat org called United Nations ○ UN drafted in San Fran 1945 w/ delegates from 50 nations ■ Oct 1945 UN ratified by majority of member nations Expectations (536): ● Hopes about better/more prosperous life after war ○ US cities not damaged by war, became most prosperous/powerful nation in the world ■ Looked forward to more peaceful and democratic world ■