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Transcript
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American Foreign Diplomacy
Isolationism v. Internationalism
U.S. wanted to remain isolated during
1920s & 1930s
U.S. found it difficult not to be involved in
world affairs
• Tried to use diplomacy to promote world
peace
• Encouraged world leaders to seek
disarmament: reducing the amount of
weapons, soldiers, munitions in ones army
Attempts to Maintain Peace
Washington Naval Conference, 1921
 Included U.S., G.B., France, Japan, Italy
 Limited tonnage of ships
 Agreed to respect territorial rights
 Acceptance of Open Door Policy in China
Kellogg-Briand Pact
 Outlawed war except in cases of selfdefense
 Signed by 62 nations
 Proved unsuccessful when Japan invaded
Manchuria in (1931)
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Dawes Plan
Designed to stabilize the German
economy
U.S. bankers would lend $ to Germany
Germany could then make its reparation
payments to Britain, France, Italy
Those countries could then repay their
debts to U.S.
The Great Depression stopped this plan &
canceled reparations
Isolationist Impulses

Many Americans believed U.S. had been
tricked into getting involved in WWI
• Congress takes action to prevent
involvement in overseas conflicts
• Resulted in passage of 3 Neutrality
Acts, 1935-1937
 U.S. wouldn’t sell arms to warring
nations
 U.S. wouldn’t loan $ to warring
nations
 U.S. wouldn’t ship non-military
goods to warring nations
The Rise of Totalitarian Dictatorships
Many nations turned to dictators to solve
their problems after World War I & some
after the G.D.
Characteristics of totalitarian dictatorships
 Govt. controls every aspect of a person’s
life
 One party controls the govt.
 The state is supreme
 Individuals have few, if any, rights
 Political opposition is forbidden

4 Dominant Totalitarian
dictatorships of the 1920s/1930s
1.
2.
3.
4.
Mussolini in Italy, 1922
Hitler in Germany, 1933
Military dictatorship in Japan, 1931
Stalin in the Soviet Union, recognized
by U.S. in 1933
The Shadow of War
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Japan aggressive in China (Manchuria, 1932)
Mussolini aggressive in Africa
Hitler aggressive in the Rhineland (1936) &
in Austria (March 1938)
• Created the Third Reich
• Demanded Sudetenland (Sept. 1938)
Resulted in Munich Conference, Sept. 1938
 Hitler, Mussolini, Chamberlain, & Daladier met
 Chamberlain used appeasement
• Returned home claiming “peace in our time”
• Hitler got Sudetenland; agreed not to seize
the rest of Czechoslovakia
• March 1939, Hitler annexed all of
Czechoslovakia
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Foreign Policy EQ’s
Describe the Dawes Plan.
Describe the Kellogg-Briand Pact. Why
did it fail?
Explain the events of the Washington
Naval Conference.
Define Disarmament. Why can this
policy be viewed in a negative way?
Explain the Neutrality Acts.
Describe 5 characteristics of Totalitarian
Governments.
List the 4 totalitarian dictatorships of
the 1920’s-1930’s.
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The War Begins
Nazi-Soviet Pact (Aug. 1939)--Stalin
(Soviet Union) & Hitler (Germany)
Non-aggression Pact- agreed to divide
Poland and prevented Germany from
fighting two-front war
Sept. 1, 1939 Germany invaded Poland
using blitzkrieg (Lightning War)
Britain & France declared war on
Germany
Spring 1940—Denmark, Norway, the
Netherlands, Belgium, & Luxembourg fell
to German blitzkrieg

Establishing a Puppet Government
Germany defeated France (1940)-bypassed the Maginot Line
• 300,000 soldiers rescued at Dunkirk
• Germany est. a puppet govt. in Vichy,
France
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French General Charles de Gaulle
headed the Free France movement in
London
Secret organization, the Resistance,
worked in France
From Neutrality to War
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U.S. proclaimed neutrality in 1939--couldn’t
refrain from helping the Allies
Sent 50 old destroyers to Britain (Churchill)
for 99 year lease on naval & air bases in the
Atlantic
U.S. passed a Cash-and-Carry law--allowed
U.S. to sell arms to the Allies
Nations must pay cash & carry goods away
themselves
FDR elected to unprecedented 3rd term in 1940
U.S. passed Lend-Lease Act in 1941
Allowed the President to sell, exchange, lend,
or lease war materials to any country whose
security he considered vital to the defense of
the U.S.----Used w/ Britain & later Russia
Atlantic Charter (1941)
 U.S. & Britain agreed to seek no territorial gain
 Agreed to: “the right of all peoples to choose
the form of govt. under which they will live”
 U.S. placed an embargo on Japan
 Japan continued to be aggressive in Asia
• Sank some American ships in 1937 (Panay)
 U.S. stop shipment of metal, oil, fuel to Japan
 Japan signed agreement w/ Germany & Italy
(1941)
Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis
 Japan demanded U.S. drop the embargo
 U.S. only end it if Japan withdrew from China
 Negotiations continued in Nov. 1941 w/o
agreement
Pearl Harbor
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Sunday, December 7, 1941, at 7:55 a.m.
Japan attacked the U.S. fleet stationed at Pearl
Harbor, HI
U.S. expected the attack in the Philippines
U.S. lost over 19 ships, including all 8
battleships, & 150+ aircraft
2,400+ Americans died
FDR said it was “a date which will live in
infamy”
U.S. declared war on Japan the next day
Germany & Italy declared war on U.S. within 3
days--- We promptly returned the gesture
WORLD WAR II (1939-1945)
The Allies Versus the Axis
Allied Powers: U.S., Britain, USSR (50 total)
 Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan (9 total)
 WWII was really two separate theaters:
 Pacific War: U.S. Britain, Australia, New
Zealand v. Japan
European & African War: had 3 fronts:
Eastern, Southern, Western
 Eastern Front: USSR v. Germany
 Southern Front: U.S., Britain, Australia v.
Germany & Italy
 Western Front (D-Day): U.S., Britain, France
v. Germany & Italy
 1942---- Axis Powers were ahead
 “Dark days” for the Allies

Planning Strategy
Next Allied strategy was debated
 Decided to make defeating Hitler top priority
• Operation Torch: invasion of N. Africa to
attack the Germans & Italians from behind
• Followed by attacks in the Mediterranean Sea
(Italy)
• Carried out in late 1942 & early 1943
• Successful strategy & a major victory for the
Allies
• Gave Allies control of the Mediterranean
• Made shipping supplies to Europe possible
• Made an invasion of southern Europe possible
**The Tide of the War Turns in the Pacific &
Europe**
Holding Action in the Pacific
Japanese successfully captured many islands following
the Pearl Harbor attack
 Two significant battles (fought in the air)
Battle of the Coral Sea, 1942
 Prevented Japan from seizing Australia
Battle of Midway, 1942
 Turning point in the Pacific
 Gave Japan a decisive defeat by sinking 4 of their
aircraft carriers
The Invasion of Italy – The Southern Front
 Italy was considered the weak point of the Axis Powers
 1943, the Allies invaded Sicily & Italy
 Italians overthrew Mussolini & Italy surrendered
 Hitler sent German troops to resist Allies & rescue
Mussolini---unsuccessful
 Allies pushed on until they liberated Rome (1944)

The Eastern Front
Stalin had asked for 3 things for 3 years
1. Massive supplies
2. Territorial concessions in Eastern Europe
3. Second front in Western Europe
Soviets resisted the Germans in the east
 1943, the Battle of Stalingrad was the
turning point
 Red Army went on the offensive
1943, Axis advances had been stopped in
Europe & the Pacific
 Allies launched land, air, and sea
offensives on all fronts
The War at Home
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“Remember Pearl Harbor”: rallying cry
“V for Victory”: a familiar symbol
6 million men & women volunteered
10 million men were drafted
Melting pot of men
• Discrimination still occurred in the army (1
million blacks)
The Economy recovers
 U.S. economy fully recovered during
WWII
 Unemployment dropped sharply
***Ended the Great Depression***
Organizing for War Production
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Federal agencies created to coordinate
everything (WWI)
Office of War Mobilization (OWM): oversaw
all areas of production
War Production Board: Americans made the
shift from peacetime to wartime production
• Helped Americans exceed tough production demands

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Office of Price Administration (OPA):
controlled inflation by creating item price
ceilings---included rents, gasoline, tires, coffee,
canned food, meat, etc.
War Manpower Commission (WMC):
decided which industries needed workers most
National War Labor Board: helped to settle
labor disputes to prevent production from being
interrupted---encouraged workers to join
unions
American Foreign Policy Assignment
Complete the following:

Explain 5 specific ways that the U.S.
mobilized for war.

Discuss 3 things that Stalin wanted from the
Allies. Explain the role of the Soviets in the
Eastern Front.

Explain key events related to the invasion of
Italy.

Identify the Allied and Axis Powers.

Describe Operation Torch. Explain its
significance.

Discuss 2 significant battles in the Pacific.
Who wins? Why is this important?
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Changes on the Home Front
War demanded sacrifices from Americans
People planted victory gardens to stretch
the food supply
Americans used ration coupons
Scrap-rubber and scrap-iron collections
People stood in long lines to buy scarce
items
Businesses encouraged support
“Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or
do without”
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Women met the demand for workers
By end of war, 1 out of 3 workers was a woman
“Rosie the Riveter” became a national symbol
Women gained confidence they could have both
a family & a job or career
African Americans gained more acceptance
FDR banned discrimination in all govt.
agencies, in job training programs, & in all
companies doing business w/ the federal govt.
Fair Employment Practices Committee:
created to ensure equal treatment for
minorities in war industries
Rosie the Riveter
D-Day in France – The Western Front
Allies planned a cross-channel invasion
across the English Channel for 2 yrs.

Directed by Supreme Allied Commander
of Europe, General Dwight D.
Eisenhower
Called Operation Overlord

Success depended on 3 things
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1. Adequate landing vessels, troops, &
supplies
2. Secrecy of the mission
3. Clear weather
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D- Day Continued…………….
June 6, 1944, the most famous &
largest amphibious landing in history
began
176,000 troops were ferried across the
channel
Landed on the beaches of Normandy
U.S. landed on beaches of Utah &
Omaha
Germany fiercely resisted the invasion
Allies finally liberated Paris in Aug. 1944
Allies began pushing the Germans back
toward Berlin and liberating the rest of
Western Europe
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Japanese Americans
Pearl Harbor created anger against
Japanese
Japanese-Americans were held
responsible for the attack
Became easy targets for discrimination
• Seen as a menace

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Defense officials warned of possible
sabotage
FDR gave the War Dept. authority to
remove thousands
110,000 were taken from homes & jobs
along the west coast
Japanese Americans continued……….
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They were relocated
to 10 internment
camps out west
Still loyal to U.S.
Some served in the
military
2/3 were Americanborn citizens
U.S. govt. apologized
in 1988; gave
$20,000 to each
surviving internee
On the Attack in the Pacific
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U.S. had expected the initial Japanese attack in
the Philippines
Japan had seized the Philippines shortly after
the Pearl Harbor invasion
Gen. Douglas MacArthur stationed there &
vowed he would return to recapture the island
U.S. leaders decided to use a leapfrog or
island hopping campaign against Japan
1944, the U.S. sank much of the Japanese fleet
in a battle off the coast of the Philippines
MacArthur returned to the Philippines fulfilling
his promise
Late 1944, U.S. beginning to bomb Japan
Ending the War in Europe
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1944, the Germans launched a last counteroffensive in the Ardennes Forest
Resulted in the Battle of the Bulge
Temporarily slowed the Allied advance
In the east, the Soviets had finally pushed into
Germany
American & Russian troops met at the Elbe
River, 100 miles west of Berlin
On April 30, 1945, Hitler committed suicide
Third Reich was defeated & surrendered one
week later
Next day, May 8, 1945, was declared VE-Day,
Victory in Europe Day
Election of 1944
FDR ran & won an unprecedented 4th term:
did not want to run but thought it would be a
mistake to change leadership during the war
 Democratic party chose a new V.P. (Harry S
Truman)
 FDR was easily re-elected
President Truman Takes Office
 FDR died in April 1945
 Truman knew very little about the war
strategy

• Immediate task was finishing the war w/ Japan
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1945 America captured Iwo Jima & Okinawa
Strikes on Japan were next
During battles-- Japanese pilots had begun
using kamikaze tactics
Bitter struggle to end war w/ Japan
A New Weapon
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July 16, 1945, the first successful atomic bomb
was tested in--- Alamogordo, NM
Mission to build--- called the Manhattan Project
$2 billion & employed over 100,000 people
Involved many scientists who had fled from Nazis
Bomb parts were made in 3 locations (TN, NM, WA)
When 2 bombs were ready, Japan warned to
surrender or face complete destruction—ignored
Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on
Hiroshima on August 6, 1945
Another dropped on Nagasaki- August 9, 1945
2 more bombs were scheduled for Aug. 13 & 16 if
Japan did not surrender
Japan surrender on August 14, 1945 (V-J Day)
World War II was completely over!
The Holocaust
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Full horror of the concentration camps was
realized after the war was over
Allied troops liberated the people in the camps
Worst camps were Auschwitz & Treblinka in
Poland and Buchenwald & Dachau in Germany
6 million Jews, 1/3 of Europe’s Jews were killed
This systematic killing of the Jewish people is
called the HOLOCAUST
Another 6 million people also died in the camps
(Catholics, labor leaders, gypsies, political
opponents, mentally & physically handicapped,
Slavic people)
Aftermath of World War II
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55 million civilians & soldiers died
Changed the map of the world
Empires of France, the Netherlands, Germany,
Italy, Japan, & Britain were in ruins
U.S. & the Soviet Union emerged as
superpowers
People in Africa & Asia sought freedom
At home, minorities found new opportunities
Our economy completely recovered
Potential of science was revealed
• Could either advance or destroy civilization

Atomic/nuclear age was born
***Cold War would soon begin***
Allied Diplomacy and Peace Talks
Wartime Summit
Meetings
 Fall 1943, Allied
leaders began
planning for what
would happen after
the war
 Were confident they
would win
 Big Three (Stalin,
FDR, Churchill)
2 Major Summits
1. Teheran Conference (1943)

Discussed strategy for defeating the
Axis
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Committed to the cross-channel
invasion
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Stalin promised to enter the Pacific war
once Germany surrendered

Discussed an international organization
to replace the failed League of Nations

Discussed what to do w/ Germany when
it surrendered
2. Yalta Conference (1945)

Mostly discussed Germany

Agreed it would be divided into 4
occupation zones

Discussed plans for the United Nations

Committed to allowing free elections
in countries the Axis had controlled
during the war