WORLD WAR II

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WORLD WAR II WORLD WAR II 1939-1945 1939-1945

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WORLD WAR II. 1939-1945. Axis Powers and Leaders. Germany. Adolph Hitler Leader of Nazi political party Blamed Jews for all of Germany’s economic problems. Italy. Benito Mussolini Promised a new Roman Empire. Japan. Emperor Hirohito Wanted full political and economic control of Pacific - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of WORLD WAR II

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WORLD WAR IIWORLD WAR II1939-19451939-1945

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Axis Powers and Axis Powers and LeadersLeaders

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Germany Germany

• Adolph Hitler

• Leader of Nazi political party

• Blamed Jews for all of Germany’s economic problems

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ItalyItaly

• Benito Mussolini

• Promised a new Roman Empire

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JapanJapan• Emperor Hirohito• Wanted full

political and economic control of Pacific

• Believed in militarism and military run society

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JapanJapan

• Prime Minister Hideki Tojo

–Responsible for all military operations during the war

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AlliedAllied LeadersLeaders

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Great BritainGreat Britain

• Winston Churchill

• Great orator and leader who kept British citizens from giving up

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FranceFrance

• Charles De Gaulle

• Led opposition against Germany after they took over France

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Soviet Union (Russia)Soviet Union (Russia)

• Joseph Stalin

• Great Purge – killed all people who opposed his rule or spoke against Soviet Union

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Soviet Union (Russia)Soviet Union (Russia)

• Did not join allies until Hitler double crossed him

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CAUSES OF WWIICAUSES OF WWII

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Axis AggressionAxis Aggression

• Axis Powers wanted to gain economic and political control of the World

• Japan invaded Manchuria and China to force US to recognize their dominance

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Axis AggressionAxis Aggression

• US refused to recognize Japan and placed embargos of oil and steel

• Germany wanted to gain all lands lost after the WWI in the treaty of Versailles

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Axis AggressionAxis Aggression

• Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1935 to show its dominance

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AppeasementAppeasement

• Policy of giving into political pressure to avoid war

• Allowed Germany to recapture some lands & rebuild their military

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War Breaks out in War Breaks out in EuropeEurope

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Munich PactMunich Pact

• Hitler and Stalin sign a non-aggression pact agreeing not to attack each other

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September 1, 1939September 1, 1939

• Germany and Soviet Union invade Poland after being warned not to invade by France and Great Britain

• Official start of World War II

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US IsolationismUS Isolationism

• US did not want to be involved in another European War

• US was still going through the Great Depression

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Lend-Lease Act Lend-Lease Act

• US gave military supplies to Great Britain in exchange for islands in the Caribbean

• FDR compared it to “lending a garden hose to a next-door neighbor whose house is on fire”.

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Lend-Lease Act Lend-Lease Act

• US used the war to end the Great Depression

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World War II World War II Battles and Battles and StrategiesStrategies

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Axis War StrategyAxis War Strategy

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Strategies - EuropeStrategies - Europe

• BlitzkriegBlitzkrieg – fast, lightning attacks on your enemy before they can recover

• Invade and conquer France

• Use German Air Force to bomb Great Britain until they surrender

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Strategies - EuropeStrategies - Europe

• Destroy Munich Pact and quickly defeat Soviet Union

• Take complete control of Europe before US got involved in the war

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Strategies - PacificStrategies - Pacific

• Japan wanted full military and economic control of Pacific

• Felt US needed to recognize their power in Pacific

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Strategies - PacificStrategies - Pacific

• Attack US Pacific Ocean military base and then invade Australia and Hawaii

• They thought US would rather respect them than fight a long, costly war

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Pearl HarborPearl Harbor

• Dec 7, 1941 Japan attacked the US military base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii

• Destroyed US Pacific fleet of warships

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Pearl HarborPearl Harbor

• Dec 8 – US declared war on Japan

• Dec 10 – Germany and Italy declared war on US

• US now fully involved in World War II

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Allied StrategyAllied Strategy

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Strategy - EuropeStrategy - Europe

• Defeat Hitler first

• Most US resources were sent to Europe and Africa to fight Germany and Italy

• Attack Hitler from all directions and push back toward Germany

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Battles – Europe Battles – Europe and Africaand Africa

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Battle of Britain (Aug 1940)Battle of Britain (Aug 1940)

• British cities were relentlessly bombed by German Air force

• Churchill refused to allow British citizens to give up

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El Alamein (Nov 1942)El Alamein (Nov 1942)• German forces threatening to seize Egypt

and the Suez Canal were defeated by the British.

• Importance– Prevented Hitler from gaining access to

Middle Eastern oil and attacking the Soviet Union from the south.

– Allies got access to Germany from the South

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Stalingrad (Sept 1942) Stalingrad (Sept 1942) • Hundreds of thousands of German

soldiers were killed or captured in the Russian city of Stalingrad.

• Importance

– This defeat prevented Germany from seizing the Soviet oil fields

– Allies got access to Germany from East

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Normandy (D-Day) June 6, 1944

• Allied troops under Gen. Dwight Eisenhower landed in German-occupied France

• Importance– Despite intense German opposition and

heavy American casualties, the Americans were able to liberate France.

– Allies were able to attack Germany from the west

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V-E Day (May 8, 1945)V-E Day (May 8, 1945)• US and Russian forces closed in

on Germany from all sides

• Adolph Hitler killed himself before he could be captured

• German forces surrendered, ending the war in Europe

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World War II Battles and Strategies Pt 2

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Strategy - PacificStrategy - Pacific

• Island Hopping–seizing islands closer and closer to

Japan and using them as bases for air attacks on Japan

–cutting off Japanese supplies through submarine warfare against Japanese shipping

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Battles – Pacific Battles – Pacific OceanOcean

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““Miracle of Midway”Miracle of Midway”

• American naval forces defeated a much larger Japanese force as it prepared to seize Midway Island

• Importance– The American victory ended the

Japanese threat to invade Hawaii.

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Iwo Jima and Okinawa Iwo Jima and Okinawa

• Islands were within a couple hundred miles of Japan

• Both invasions cost thousands of American lives and even more Japanese lives

• Heavy fighting by Japanese soldiers to protect these islands

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Kamikaze FightersKamikaze Fighters

• Japanese soldiers who would commit suicide rather than surrender

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Iwo Jima and Okinawa Iwo Jima and Okinawa

• Importance

–US could set up military air fields to easier bomb Japan

–Made an invasion of Japan possible

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Use of the atomic bombUse of the atomic bomb

• US did not want to invade Japan because they did not want heavy casualties

• President Truman ordered the use of a new weapon called an atomic bomb

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August 6, 1945August 6, 1945

• America dropped the atomic bomb on Japanese city, Hiroshima

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August 9, 1945August 9, 1945

• America dropped atomic bomb on Nagasaki

• Over 250,000 people instantly killed in both cities

• Thousands more died from radiation

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V-J DayV-J Day• September 2, 1945

• Japan formally surrendered to the United States

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Contributions of Contributions of Minorities to AlliesMinorities to Allies

Minority units suffered high casualties and won numerous medals for bravery in action.

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Tuskegee AirmenTuskegee Airmen

• Squad of black air fighter pilots who served with distinction in Europe

• No pilots were shot down during war

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Nisei RegimentsNisei Regiments

• Asian American groups who worked as spies and soldiers for United States

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CodetalkersCodetalkers• Navajo Indians

who used their language to code US messages in Pacific

• Japanese could not decode intercepted US messages

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Mexican AmericansMexican Americans

• Fought for US in non-segregated military units

• Other minorities were segregated from white units

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WWII – War WWII – War CrimesCrimes

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War CrimesWar Crimes

• During WWII, brutal crimes were committed against the innocent by all countries involved in war

• Millions of innocent people were killed by random bombing, genocide, and discrimination

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Bataan Death MarchBataan Death March• American POWs suffered brutal

treatment by the Japanese after the surrender of the Philippines in 1942.

• Forced to march through jungle without food or water

• The treatment of POW’s in the Pacific war reflected the savagery of the fighting

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HolocaustHolocaust

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HolocaustHolocaust

• Genocide: The systematic and purposeful destruction of a racial, political, religious, or cultural group

• Final solution: Hitler’s decision to exterminate all Jews

• Jews were rounded up and sent to concentration camps to be killed

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HolocaustHolocaust

• Holocaust victims: 11 million total–Jews (6 million)

–Poles

–Slavs

–Gypsies

–“Undesirables” (homosexuals, mentally ill, political dissidents)

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Nuremburg TrialsNuremburg Trials

• Nazi leaders and others were convicted of war crimes

• Emphasized individual responsibility for actions during a war, regardless of orders received

• Led to increased demand for a Jewish homeland

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Japanese Japanese InternmentInternment

Japanese Americans were sent to camps (prison) during

the war

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Reasons for InternmentReasons for Internment

• Strong anti-Japanese prejudice on the West Coast

• False belief that Japanese Americans were aiding the enemy

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InternmentInternment

• Japanese sued gov’t for violating their civil rights

• Supreme Court Case of Korematsu vs United States ruled US did not violate Japanese civil rights

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InternmentInternment

• A public apology was eventually issued by the U.S. government in 1980’s.

• Financial restitution was made to survivors

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Geneva ConventionGeneva Convention

• Meeting in Switzerland to ensure the humane treatment of prisoners of war by establishing rules to be followed by all nations

• “The conduct of war often reflects social and moral codes of a nation “

• Set up the rules of war for future wars

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World War II World War II On the HomefrontOn the Homefront

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On the HomefrontOn the Homefront

• United States success in World War II required the total commitment of the nation’s resources.

• Public education and the mass media promoted nationalism

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United States United States ResourcesResources

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US ResourcesUS Resources

• U.S. government and industry worked together to distribute resources

• Office of War Mobilization created to control resources

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Economic Economic ResourcesResources

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Economic ResourcesEconomic Resources

• Rationing maintained a steady supply of materials for war

• War bonds and income tax were used for financing the war

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Economic ResourcesEconomic Resources

• Business was retooled from peacetime to wartime production

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Human ResourcesHuman Resources

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Human ResourcesHuman Resources

• More women and minorities entered the labor force

• Citizens volunteered in support of the war effort

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WomenWomen

• Replaced men who went to serve in the military (e.g., Rosie the Riveter).

• They participated in non-combat military roles

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African-AmericansAfrican-Americans• Double V Campaign

–Victory in war and victory in equality at home

–Demanded an end to segregation in military

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Military ResourcesMilitary Resources

• The draft/selective service was used to provide personnel for the military

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Role of Media and Role of Media and Mass Mass

CommunicationsCommunications

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Role of the MediaRole of the Media• Media and communications

assisted the gov’t in supporting the war

• U.S. government maintained strict censorship of reporting of the war–Censorship: blocking certain

materials from being published

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Role of the MediaRole of the Media

• Hollywood produced movies, plays, and shows that boosted morale and patriotism

• Portrayed the enemy in stereotypical ways

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Political, economic Political, economic and social and social

consequences of the consequences of the warwar

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Legacy Of WWIILegacy Of WWII

1. Massive destruction and death

2. End of Allied cooperation and beginning of “Cold War” – political tensions

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Legacy Of WWIILegacy Of WWII

3. US and Soviet Unions are only superpower countries

4. Atomic fallout – all countries rushed to get atomic bomb

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Legacy Of WWIILegacy Of WWII

5. US troops permanently stationed around the world

6. US will maintain a standing army in peacetime

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Legacy Of WWIILegacy Of WWII

7. Germany (and Berlin) divided into 4 military zones

• each zone controlled by one of the 4 major Allied powers