* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download WWII ppt
German–Soviet Axis talks wikipedia , lookup
Aftermath of the Winter War wikipedia , lookup
British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup
German occupation of Czechoslovakia wikipedia , lookup
World War II casualties wikipedia , lookup
German military administration in occupied France during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allied Control Council wikipedia , lookup
Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup
Collaboration with the Axis Powers wikipedia , lookup
World War II by country wikipedia , lookup
German evacuation from Central and Eastern Europe wikipedia , lookup
Pursuit of Nazi collaborators wikipedia , lookup
Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
New Order (Nazism) wikipedia , lookup
Aftermath of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Western betrayal wikipedia , lookup
Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup
Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup
Economy of Nazi Germany wikipedia , lookup
Home front during World War II wikipedia , lookup
End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup
Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup
Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup
Appeasement wikipedia , lookup
War Front: Turning Point wikipedia , lookup
CHAPTER Twenty-six World War II Introduction • Threats to the balance of power • A conflict among nations, peoples, and ideals • The new methods of warfare • The Holocaust and the atomic bomb • The war of absolutes and the values of Western civilization The Causes of the War: Unsettled Quarrels, Economic Fallout, and Nationalism • The peace settlement • • • • Created more problems than it solved Eastern European satellite states Allied naval blockade of Germany German “war guilt” The Causes of the War: Unsettled Quarrels, Economic Fallout, and Nationalism • Peace and security • No binding standards created for peace and security • The League of Nations • Never a league of all nations • Germany and the Soviet Union were excluded • The United States never joined The Causes of the War: Unsettled Quarrels, Economic Fallout, and Nationalism • Economic conditions • Depression as last blow to Weimar Germany • Power passed to the Nazis (1933) • Germany ignored provisions of Versailles • Decline of Japanese exports played into the hand of Japan’s military • Invasion of Manchuria (1931) The Causes of the War: Unsettled Quarrels, Economic Fallout, and Nationalism • Ideologies • Violent nationalism • Glorifying the nation and national destiny • Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany formed the “Axis” (later joined by Japan) • Fascist regimes in Eastern Europe • Yugoslavia, Hungary, and Romania The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • An atmosphere of fear and apprehension • Aggression as a challenge to civilization • Avoiding another war • The 1930s as “a low, dishonest decade” (W. H. Auden, 1939) The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • Appeasement • Assumptions • The outbreak of another world war was unthinkable • British and American arguments that Germany had been mistreated at Versailles • Fascist states were a bulwark against Soviet communism The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • The League of Nations • Japanese invasion of China turned into an invasion of the whole country • The Rape of Nanking (1937) • The League expressed shock but did nothing • Mussolini invaded Ethiopia in 1935 • Avenging the defeat of 1896 • League imposed sanctions on Italy but without enforcement The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) • • • • A weak republican government could not overcome opposition Extreme right-wing military officers rebelled Francisco Franco (r. 1936–1975) Hitler and Mussolini sent in troops and tested new weapons; war was a dress rehearsal • The Soviets sided with the Republican government • Volunteers from England, France, and the United States • Saw the war as a test of the West’s determination to resist fascism • April 1937—the destruction of Guernica • Hitler’s lessons • Britain, France, and the Soviet Union would have a hard time containing fascism • Britain and France would do anything to avoid another war The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • German rearmament and the politics of appeasement • Hitler played on Germans’ sense of shame and betrayal • Reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936 • France and Britain did nothing • The annexation of Austria (1938) • Hitler declared his intention to occupy the Sudetenland (Czechoslovakia) • Neville Chamberlain • With the Sudetenland, Germany’s ambitions would be satisfied • Believed Germany could not commit to a sustained war • Eastern Europe ranked low in British priorities The 1930s: Challenges to the Peace, Appeasement, and the “Dishonest Decade” • German rearmament and the politics of appeasement • Munich—September 29, 1938 • Daladier (France), Chamberlain, Mussolini, and Hitler met • Chamberlain proclaimed “peace in our time” • March 1939—Germany invaded Czechoslovakia • Convinced public of the futility of appeasement • Stalin’s response • Feared the West might strike a deal with Hitler • August 1939—the Nazi-Soviet pact of nonaggression The Outbreak of Hostilities and the Fall of France • Poland • Hitler demanded the abolition of the Polish Corridor • Poland stood firm, but Hitler attacked on September 1, 1939 • Britain and France declared war on September 3, 1939 • The Blitzkrieg (lightning war) • Poland fell in four weeks The Outbreak of Hostilities and the Fall of France • The phony war • Scandinavia—Germans took Denmark in one day (spring 1940) • May 10, 1939—Germans moved through Belgium toward France The Outbreak of Hostilities and the Fall of France • The fall of France • French army overwhelmed by the German advance • French army poorly organized • Dunkirk—300,000 British and French troops evacuated to England • June 22, 1939—French surrendered • Germans occupied northern France • Southern France fell under the Vichy regime, headed by Marshal Pétain Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • The Battle of Britain (July 1940–June 1941) • Forty thousand civilians dead • Stalemate in the air • British resistance Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • Winston Churchill (1940–1945, 1951– 1955) • Language and personal diplomacy • Convinced FDR to break with American neutrality • Lend-Lease Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • A global war • The battle of the Atlantic • German submarines (“wolf packs”) sank millions of tons of merchant shipping Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • A global war • North Africa • British needed to protect the Suez • British humiliated Italian invasion force in Libya • Forced Germany to intervene • Afrika Korps and Erwin Rommel • Rommel’s army defeated at El Alamein in Egypt (1942) • United States landed in French territories of Algeria and Morocco Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • A global war • Japan • December 7, 1941—Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor • Set out to destroy U.S. fleet • Most American ships were out to sea • Japanese swept through British protectorate of Malaya • Singapore fell in December 1941 • The invasion of the Philippines Not Alone: The Battle of Britain and the Beginnings of a Global War • A global war • The American navy • Chester Nimitz and William Halsey • Coral Sea, Midway, and Guadalcanal • “Island hopping” The Rise and Ruin of Nations: Germany’s War in the East and the Occupation of Europe • German victories • 1941—Germany took Yugoslavia • Established a Croatian puppet state • Romania, Hungary, and Bulgaria sided with Germany • Greece ultimately fell to the Germans The Rise and Ruin of Nations: Germany’s War in the East and the Occupation of Europe • Hitler’s ultimate goal • Nazi-Soviet pact as a matter of convenience for Hitler • On June 22, 1941, Hitler authorized Operation Barbarossa—the invasion of the Soviet Union • Stalin’s purges had gotten rid of Russia’s most capable commanders • War against the Soviets pitted one ideology against another • Racial hatred • Cleansing occupied territories of “undesirable elements” • Hitler diverted his attack from Moscow to the industrial south The Rise and Ruin of Nations: Germany’s War in the East and the Occupation of Europe • The Nazi New Order • A patchwork affair • Occupied countries paid “occupation costs” in taxes, food, industrial production, and manpower • Puppet regimes • Norway and the Netherlands • Dedicated party of Nazis governed • At the same time, well-organized resistance movement The Rise and Ruin of Nations: Germany’s War in the East and the Occupation of Europe • The Nazi New Order • France • Collaboration ranged from simple survival tactics to active Nazi support • The isolation or deportation of French Jews • Communist activists • Had a long tradition of smuggling and resisting government • Became active guerillas and saboteurs • The Free French and Charles de Gaulle The Rise and Ruin of Nations: Germany’s War in the East and the Occupation of Europe • The Nazi New Order • Yugoslavia • Fascist Croats against most Serbs • Josip Broz (Tito) emerged as the leader of the Yugoslav resistance • Communist guerrilla army • Gained support of the Allies Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • World War II as a racial war • Fall 1939—Himmler directed massive population transfers • Ethnic Germans moved into the Reich • Poles and Jews were deported • A campaign of terror • Poles deported to forced-labor camps • Special death squads shot Jews in the streets Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • World War II as a racial war • Rassenkampf (racial struggle) • Radicalized by the war itself • June 1941 (Barbarossa) marked a turning point in the path to the Holocaust • A “war of extermination” Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • From systematic brutality to atrocities to murder • More than 5 million military prisoners marched to camps to work as slave labor • The Einsatzgruppen (death squads) • 1943—2.2 million Jews killed Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • The Holocaust • Nazis discussed plans for mass killings in death camps • Auschwitz-Birkenau • Systematic annihilation of Jews and Gypsies • 1942–1944: one million killed • Anonymous slaughter? • People were tortured, beaten, and executed publicly • Death marches Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • The Holocaust • Who knew? • Extermination involved the knowledge and cooperation of many not directly involved in killing • Most who suspected the worst were terrified and powerless • The Jewish “problem” • Many Europeans believed problem needed to be solved • Nazis tried to conceal the death camps • Little resistance was possible • Rebellions at Auschwitz and Treblinka • Warsaw ghetto uprising (1943) • Eighty percent of the residents had been deported • Small Jewish underground movement Racial War, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Holocaust • The Holocaust • Human costs • 4.1–5.7 million Jews killed • Some long-standing Jewish communities were annihilated • A new Europe? Total War: Home Fronts, the War of Production, Bombing and “the Bomb” • War demanded massive resources and a national commitment to industry • United States, Britain, and Soviet Union • Long work shifts • Effects on women and the family • Production • Propaganda campaigns encouraged the production of war equipment • Patriotism, communal interests, and a common stake in winning the war • Allies built tanks, ships, and airplanes by the tens of thousands • Germany was less efficient in the use of workers and resources Total War: Home Fronts, the War of Production, Bombing and “the Bomb” • New targets • Centers of industry as military targets • American and British strategic bombing • Dresden firebombed Total War: Home Fronts, the War of Production, Bombing and “the Bomb” • The race to build the bomb • Nuclear fission • German experiments • Best specialists were Jews or anti-Nazis now working for the Allies • Lacked crucial bits of technical information • The Manhattan Project • Managing the effort to build an American atomic bomb • Los Alamos, New Mexico (1943) • Laboratory that brought together most capable nuclear physicists • First atomic test on July 16, 1945, near Los Alamos The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The Nazi penetration of the Soviet Union • The siege of Leningrad The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The Eastern Front • Changes in the character of war • War to save the Russian motherland (rodina) • Victory during the “General Winter,” which took its toll on Nazi supplies • Astonishing recovery of Soviet army • Whole industries were rebuilt • Whole populations moved to work in new factories • Soviets found the Blitzkrieg predictable The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The Eastern Front • The turning point—1943 • Germans aimed an all-out assault on Stalingrad • January 1943—German surrender • Six thousand of 250,000 Germans survived • One million Soviet deaths • Soviet offensives • The leadership of Grigorii Zhukov • Ukraine back in Soviet hands, Romania knocked out of the war • Soviet victories in Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The Western Front • Stalin pressured the Allies to open a second front in the west • The Allied invasion of Sicily • Mussolini surrendered in summer 1943 • The Normandy invasion (June 6, 1944) • The liberation of Paris (August 14, 1944) • The Battle of the Bulge (December 1944) The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The Western Front • Allies crossed the Rhine in April 1945 • Germans preferred to surrender to the Americans or British rather than face the Russians • Soviets entered Berlin on April 21, 1945 • Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945 • Germany surrendered unconditionally on May 7 The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The war in the Pacific • Okinawa fell to the Americans (June 1945) • Chinese communists and nationalists pushed the Japanese back on Hong Kong • Soviet forces marched through Manchuria to Korea The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The war in the Pacific • United States, Britain, and China called on Japan to surrender or be destroyed on July 26 • B-29s began systematic bombing of Japanese cities • Japan refused to surrender • The decision to drop the bomb • Was it necessary? Japan had already been beaten • Harry Truman The Allied Counterattack and the Dropping of the Atomic Bomb • The war in the Pacific • August 6, 1945—Hiroshima, August 9— Nagasaki • Japan surrendered unconditionally on August 14, 1945 Conclusion • • • • A new world ravaged by war Western imperialism Mass killing Technology, genocide, and global war This concludes the Lecture PowerPoint for Chapter 26. http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/wciv_16e/brief