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Transcript
AH 2 Unit 7.3 The Beginnings of WWII Lecture Notes
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American Isolationism
• Following WWI, Americans began to _______________ support isolationism which is __________________
• This isolationist ideal was the driving force behind the US not _____________________________________
The Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)
• The pact was an international agreement, signed by nearly every free nation in the world, that ____________
• The signing nations agreed to limit the size of their navies & other offensive weapons
• There was, however, ________________________________
Europe Refuses to Pay
• In 1934, all European nations in Europe (except Finland) who had WWI-related war debts to the US announced
that _____________________ (due to the Great Depression) and would not repay what they owed
• This encouraged Americans to become even more isolationist
The Nye Committee
• Congress created a special committee in 1934 to investigate the role that weapons manufacturers had in involving
the US in WWI
• The Nye Committee’s report implied that certain businesses had profited from the war, leading many American’s
to believe that they had been ___________ into entering WWI
• Again, this encouraged American support of isolationism
The Neutrality Acts
• In 1935, Congress passed the first Neutrality Act, making it _________________________________________
• In 1937, Congress expanded the Neutrality Act to require any non-military supplies sold to nations at war to be
paid for in cash and transported on their own ships
• In 1939, after WWII had started, the Act was amended to allow arms sales to Britain, but __________________
Roosevelt’s Internationalism
• FDR _________ an isolationist
• He supported the idea that trade between nations __________ prosperity for all and __________ the chances of
war, an idea not supported by the American public
The Quarantine Speech (October 1937)
• FDR called for a “quarantine” (political and economic sanctions) against any “aggressor” nations who disregard
international law or attack their neighbors unprovoked
• The speech angered many American isolationists because it called for US involvement in the foreign affairs of
others
US and European Jews
• 1933 – 39: 350,000 Jews fled Germany, most seeking to flee Europe altogether
• Many applied for visas to emigrate to the US, but were __________ due to US immigration quotas and strong
American nativism
Germany Violates the Treaty of Versailles
• Under the Nazis, Germany began to rebuild its military, both by increasing its size and _________________
• In 1936, the German Wermacht (army) reoccupied the demilitarized zone along the Rhine River
• France & Britain, while disturbed by Hitler’s moves, took no action to stop them
Why No Action?
• France was politically ___________ and ____________________to face Germany alone
• France believed their Maginot Line could protect them from any German advances
• France & Britain both believed that ___________ was a greater threat than Hitler, so a strong Germany might be
useful as a shield against the Soviets
• Britain, protected by water, wanted to _________ a war at all costs
• Britain ______________ making the terms of the Treaty of Versailles so unfair
• American isolationism and passage of the Neutrality Acts led Britain to doubt that they would get any support from
the US if they went to war
The Spanish Civil War
• Political divisions in Spain led to a civil war from 1936 to 1939
• Hitler used the fighting as an opportunity to test German military weaponry and tactics by aiding Francisco
Franco’s fascist forces throughout the conflict
The Anschluss
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In 1938, Hitler, with the help of Austrian Nazis, annexed his native country of _____________ to Germany
Hitler’s new goals were to create a state that included all German speaking peoples and then to provide them with
“lebensraum” or _________________ by taking land from the “inferior” Slavs of Eastern Europe
Czechoslovakia
• Later in 1938, Hitler demanded that Czechoslovakia surrender the Sudetenland (German territory taken to help
create Czechoslovakia after WWI)
• The Czechs refused and called on Britain and France to back them up
The Munich Conference
• Britain and France, after receiving promises that Hitler would engage in no further aggression if the Sudetenland
was surrendered, decided on a policy of ______________ (letting an enemy have what they want in order to avoid
war) and agreed to support Germany’s claim
• The Czechs were left with little option but to give in
Peace for Our Time
• Britain and France agreed to allow Hitler to take the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia; Hitler, in turn, promised
that he would engage ___________________ aggression in Europe
• British Prime Minister _______________________returned home declaring to the British public that “I believe it is
peace for our time” (it wasn’t!)
• In March 1939, Hitler ______________ ____ and invaded Czechoslovakia, quickly conquering the nation
• Believing they were next, Poland panicked and sought guarantees of protection from England in France
The Nazi-Soviet Pact
• In August 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union stunned Europe by announcing they had signed the MolotovRibbentrop Pact, a non-aggression pact (not an alliance, just an agreement not to fight one another)
• The two countries had also secretly agreed to jointly invade _____________ and split the country between them
• This removed the Soviet Union as a potential _________ for Britain and France if a war with Germany broke out
The Invasion of Poland (September 1, 1939)
• German forces invaded from the west, while Soviets invaded from the east
• By the end of September, Poland had been conquered
• At the same time, the Soviets also moved against Finland and the Baltic States (Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia)
Blitzkrieg
• During the invasion of Poland, the Germans debuted a new military tactic which they had perfected in the Spanish
Civil War
• Blitzkrieg, or _______________,” German tactic of striking with tremendous speed and force, with the intention of
knocking out your enemy before they can react to your attack
Poland Falls
• After the attack, Britain and France, honoring their pledge to defend Poland, finally declared war against Germany
• From September 1939 to April 1940 (a period called the “Phony War”), no fighting took place as both sides
prepared for the war to come
Germany’s Next Moves
• To secure their northern border, Germany invaded both Norway and Denmark, winning easy victories in April of
1940
• By late spring, Germany was able to turn its attention west and invaded Belgium, Luxembourg, and the
Netherlands in preparation for an attack against _________________
The Miracle at Dunkirk
• Allied forces had moved into _______________ to meet the German advance, but quickly found themselves cutoff and surrounded
• Allied forces raced to reach the port of Dunkirk on the English Channel, their only means of escaping defeat &
capture
• The British were able to safely evacuate over 300,000 men to England by using every available ship in Great Britain,
but were forced to abandon all of their heavy equipment
The Fall of France
• The evacuation of Allied troops across the English Channel left France undefended
• Germany captured ____________ on June 13th and the French government formally surrendered on June 22nd,
1940
The Axis Powers
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In September 1940, a new mega-alliance was created with the signing of the Tripartite Pact
The pact formally joined _______________________ in a military alliance
Each power expected to control its own sphere of interest – _______________ would dominate Europe and
Russia, ________ would dominate the Mediterranean and Africa, while _________ would have sway in East Asia
and the Pacific
Destroyers for Bases Deal
• Spring 1940: FDR agreed to trade 50 surplus US Navy destroyers to Britain (who needed them to protect shipping)
in exchange for allowing the US to build naval bases in British-controlled territories
Isolationism Debate
• The Destroyers for Bases Deal opened a new debate over what role, if any, America should have in the war
• Some people wanted the US to take an active role in the war
• Some wanted the US to increase aid to the Allies but not get involved in the fighting
• Some opposed ANY involvement in the war
FDR’s “Four Freedoms” Speech (January 1941)
• Roosevelt argued that the US & Britain were natural allies because they both stood for:
• Freedom of __________, Freedom of __________, Freedom from _______, Freedom from ______
Lend-Lease Act (March 1941)
• US declared that it would lend or lease weapons (since it couldn’t sell them due to the Neutrality Acts) to nations
considered “____________to the defense of the US”
• US went on to send $40 billion in weapons to the Allies over the course of WWII
Hemispheric Defense Zone
• To help protect British shipping, FDR declared the entire Western Atlantic to be part of the Western Hemisphere
and thereby under the protection of the US per the Monroe Doctrine
• FDR then ordered the US Navy to patrol this part of the Atlantic, leading to several deadly encounters between US
destroyers and German U-boats
Winston Churchill (1874 – 1965),(British Prime Minister: 1940-45 & 1951-55)
• Although Britain now stood alone against __________, they remained defiant, with Churchill vowing “… we shall
defend our Island, whatever the cost may be, we shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds,
we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender”
The Battle of Britain
• To be able to invade Britain, Germany would first need to destroy the ______________ and soften beachhead
defenses through aerial bombing
• From June to October of 1940, an air battle was waged between the RAF and the ___________ (German Air Force)
• Despite being outnumbered, the British managed to ______ the air battle, forcing Hitler to abandon his plans to
invade Britain
• “Never in the field of human conflict have so many owed so much to so few.” - Churchill
“The Blitz” (Sept. 1940 – May 1941)
• Sustained bombing campaign by Germany against major British cities, targeting British civilians
• London was bombed 57 nights in a row
• 43,000 civilians killed
• German objective was to ___________ in the British people in hopes that they would __________; instead the
British grew more determined to win the war
• British retaliated with fire-bombing raids on German cities
The Atlantic Charter (August 1941)
• FDR met with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to lay out a post-war plan for economic prosperity
• Many question whether or not this is where FDR ___________ Churchill that he would find a way to get the
American people to support the US entering the war
The Axis in the Mediterranean
• In The Balkans, Italian and German 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-and-forth battles throughout most of 1940, 1941,
& 1942; Germany’s inability to decisively win on the “Southern Front” of the war would prove costly
Operation Barbarossa
• In June 1941, Germany broke the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and attacked the Soviet Union
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Stalin was not ___________ for the German attack and the Wehrmacht (German Army) had made deep advances
into Soviet territory by December
• Soviet forces resorted to a _______________campaign, burning everything of use to the Germans as they
retreated across the Ukraine
• Finally, the harsh Russian winter ____________the Germans, buying the Soviets time to regroup and stop the
German advances
Siege of Leningrad (Sept. 1941 – Jan. 1944)
• Hitler was obsessed with capturing the Soviet city of Leningrad due both to its symbolical importance as the “City
of _________ (Lenin had led the Bolshevik Revolution) and its military importance as a naval port on the North Sea
• 1.5 million Soviets died during the siege, mostly from starvation and disease; the population resorted to eating
sawdust, boiled leather, rats, pets, horses, and, eventually, each other!
Battle of Stalingrad (July 1942 – February 1943)
• _________________________________
• 1.5 million killed
• Vicious urban warfare as the Germans and Soviets fought street by street, building by building for control of the
city
• Soviets eventually encircled the German army, which was forced to surrender en masse
• 500,000 Germans captured, but few of them survived being imprisoned in the brutal Soviet gulags (prison camps)
Japan Takes Advantage
• 1940 - 41: As war raged in Europe, Japan occupied French Indochina (Vietnam, Laos, & Cambodia) and positioned
itself to threaten British colonies and the US-controlled _________________________
US Embargo of Japan
• In response, US cut off Japan’s access to critical war materials such as ______________(both of which Japan
bought almost entirely from America) to put pressure on Japan to make peace with China and Britain
• Japan considered this an act of war and began to plan an attack on US military facilities in Hawaii and the
Philippines
Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941)
• Japan launched a surprise attack against US naval base in Hawaii
• 4 battleships destroyed, 4 more seriously damaged, but Japan failed to destroy US aircraft carriers
• Support vessels and facilities suffered massive damage
• __________________ killed, 1178 wounded
• Japanese lost only 29 aircraft and 65 men
US Declares War
• Dec. 8, 1941: ___________________declared war against Japan
• Dec. 11, 1941: Germany and Italy declared war against the US, believing that by helping Japan against the US,
Japan would help them against the Soviets