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World War II Neutrality Acts in 1935, 1936 and 1937 No sale of war goods, no loans, no Americans sailing on the fighting ships Freedom of the seas Japan invaded China in 1937 Sept 1, 1939 Germany, Italy, Japan – the Axis France, England, the Soviet Union, the U.S. – the Allied countries 1939 – buy war goods from the U.S. (pay cash and pick up the goods) 1940 – Americans began to favour intervention The Selective Service Act 1941 – England – lend-lease Shipments of war materials to Japan stopped Sunday, Dec 7, 1941 – Pearl Harbor The day “which will in infamy” Dec 8 – declared war on Japan A few days later – Germany and Italy declared war on the U.S. First focus on Germany, then Japan the Soviets - counteroffensive Sept 1943 – Italy surrendered unconditionally The Soviets asked for a second front June 1944 – D-Day invasion at Normandy, France General Dwight D. (Ike)Eisenhower May 1945 – Germany surrendered unconditionally Japan Less successful Japan – the Philippines, Malay States, Dutch East Indies May and June 1942 – Battles of the Coral Sea and Midway General Douglas A. MacArthur Harry S Truman August 6 1945 – Hiroshima – 70,000 August 9 – Nagasaki August 10 – Japan surrendered Effects of the war Industrial centres and military targets bombed Economies – provide goods to fight the war Gov – borrowed billions of $s Everyone went to work First steps in support of civil rights No discrimination on the basis of “race, creed, colour or national origin” 22 mil people died, 34 mil wounded After World War II Allied powers – UN Discuss and try to resolve world problems and to preserve peace Trade and tariff agreements Cold War The Soviet Union – influence Eastern Europe The United States –Western Europe Different political systems 1949 - NATO 1955 – the Warsaw Pact with Eastern Europe – promote peaceful coexistence of the 2 different systems and defend each other if attacked The Truman Doctrine – “it must be the policy of the United States to support free peoples” against direct and indirect Soviet influence The Cold War – economic The U.S. – high productivity/vast resources The Marshall Plan IMF/the World Bank – loan/grant money to developing countries to help their economies Korean War, 1950-1953 Korea – Soviet and U.S. troops The Soviets – north of the 38th parallel The U.S. – south of it North Korea – Communist South Korea – anti-Communist June 1950 – North Korean Communist forces attack South Korea The UN army – General Douglas MacArthur – smaller and less well-trained Reinforcements – helped to expel the North Koreans and Chinese Civil Rights Movement Discrimination of blacks: - restrictions on voting - segregated schools - limited access to jobs The Fair Employment Practices Committee - Roosevelt Discrimination against anyone because of “race, creed, color, or national origin” in the defence industries Committee on Civil Rights American ideal of democracy 1954 – Brown vs. the Board of Education of Topeka (Kansas) “seperate educational facilities are inherently unequal” 1955 – court order to desegregate public schools 1957 – Little Rock, Arkansas, Orval E. Faubus President Eisenhower Montgomery, Alabama – public buses were segregated Boycotts – 60’s – lunch counters, drinking fountains Martin Luther King, Jr. March on Washington in 1963 Non-violence Civil Rights Acts in 1957, 1960, 1964, 1968 The Voting Rights Act in 1970 King, Jr. Was shot and killed in 1968 Nobel Peace Prize Third Monday in January President John F. Kennedy Civil rights measures, housing, funding for education, measures to rid the country of poverty – the New Frontier programs “We stand today on the edge of a new frontier” The Peace Corps President Lyndon Johnson The Great Society Department of Housing,Urban Development, the Fair Labour Standards Act Vietnam War 1960’s – time of turmoil Vietnam – part of France’s Indochinese colony Issue of independence 2 parties Ho Chi Minh – northern part of Vietnam – communistic and nationalistic Ngo Dinh Diem – southern part – against communism, wanted to cooperate with the West 1964 – North Vietnamese torpedo boats were said to have attacked 2 American destroyers President Johnson – North Vietnamese naval bases The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution 1964 – 1973 Americans divided on the issue Help keep communism out vs. Immoral 1968 – Nixon – Republican Withdraw from Vietnam 1973 – Paris Peace Agreement Lasted until 1975 Vietnam was forcibly reunited The U.S. took no action