Early Signs of War in the 1930’s War between Japan and ChinaWar between Japan and China World wide depression caused by many factorsWorld wide depression.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WWII Part One: The Rise of Radicalism and American Response.
Advertisements

Early Signs of War in the 1930’s  War between Japan and China  World wide depression caused by many factors  European economic problems weakened the.
American Foreign Policy:
American Isolationism 5 Isolationists like Senator Lodge, refused to allow the US to sign the Versailles Treaty. 5 Security treaty with France also rejected.
The Coming of World War II The role of American public opinion in the shaping of American foreign policy.
Expansion Lebensraum Post World War I Rise of Totalitarianism  Europe’s infrastructure, economy and population had been devastated by the war.  People.
American Foreign Policy: Mr. Phipps Santa Teresa High School.
Remember WWI… 8 million people died ◦112,000 Americans Government increases in size and authority Did not make the world “safe for democracy” ◦Uprising.
American Foreign Policy: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY.
The Versailles Treaty A Weak League of Nations.
US Steps to World War II Road for the US… ► In the 1920s, US remained isolationist due to economic recovery and the fallout of Wilsonian ideology. ►
American Foreign Policy: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY.
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY.
The Global Crisis: U.S. Foreign Policy APUSH - Unit 7, Lecture 3 (covering Chapter 27) Ms. Kray.
American Foreign Policy
Chapter 34 Franklin Roosevelt and the Shadow of War (1933 – 1941)
American Foreign Policy: FDR Recognizes the Soviet Union (late 1933) 5 FDR - bolster the US against Japan. 5 Trade w/ USSR- help economy during.
American Foreign Policy: Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY.
UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION South Carolina Standard USHC-7.1 Mr. Hoover Abbeville High School.
American Foreign Policy:
THE SHADOW OF WAR International Affairs
American Foreign Policy: Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
American Foreign Policy: Between the Wars.
American Foreign Policy: Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
FDR and the Shadow of War. Totalitarianism A political system in which the government exercises complete control over its citizen ’ s lives A political.
American Foreign Policy: U.S. History Mrs. Janiak.
American Foreign Policy: Topic Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
World War II ( ) US Involvement ( )
American Foreign Policy: Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
American Foreign Policy: Mr. McLaughlin.
American Foreign Policy: Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
American Foreign Policy: Foreign Policy Tensions InterventionismDisarmament Collective security Collective security “Wilsonianism” “Wilsonianism”
Axis Aggression in Europe and Asia
World War II Begins Chapter 24
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
The Specter of War ( )
American Foreign Policy:
Aim – War comes to America
American Interwar Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
WWII Causes.
WWII: Background of the Conflict
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
World War II
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
The Rise of Dictators and the War Begins
American Foreign Policy:
From Isolationism to WWII: The Tug o’ War “The real story of history is about regular people trying to take care of their families and not die.” —  John.
The Rise of Dictators and the War Begins
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy: 1920s – early 1930s
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
American Foreign Policy:
Presentation transcript:

Early Signs of War in the 1930’s War between Japan and ChinaWar between Japan and China World wide depression caused by many factorsWorld wide depression caused by many factors European economic problems weakened the popularity of democratic governments in EuropeEuropean economic problems weakened the popularity of democratic governments in Europe Roosevelt ignores these developments at first-Why?Roosevelt ignores these developments at first-Why?

Japanese Attack Manchuria (1931)  League of Nations condemned the action.  Japan leaves the League.  Hoover wanted no part in an American military action in the Far East.

Stimson Doctrine (1932)  US would not recognize any territorial acquisitions that were achieved by force.  Japan was infuriated because the US had conquered new territories a few decades earlier.  Japan bombed Shanghai in 1932  massive casualties.

FDR’s “Good Neighbor” Policy  Important to have all nations in the Western Hemisphere united in lieu of foreign aggressions.  FDR  The good neighbor respects himself and the rights of others.  Policy of non-intervention and cooperation.

American Isolationism What are the examples of America’s isolation in the 1930’s? Senator Gerald P. Nye [R-ND]

The 1930’s: A Volatile World

FDR Recognizes the Soviet Union (late 1933)  FDR felt that recognizing Moscow might bolster the US against Japan.  Maybe trade with the USSR would help the US economy during the Depression.

The Early Aggression of Adolf Hitler Violation of the Treaty of Versailles— Rearmament Reoccupy and remilitarize the Rhineland (1936)

Spanish Civil War ( ) The American “Lincoln Brigade”

US Neutrality

Intensified American Isolationism (cont.) FDR’s “Quarantine Speech” (10/37) –After Japan’s invasion of China –Proposed that democracies should act together to “quarantine any aggressor” USS Panay Incident (12/37) Ludlow amendment proposed (1938)

Fascist Aggression  1935: Hitler denounced the Versailles Treaty & the League of Nations [re-arming!] Mussolini attacks Ethiopia.  1936: German troops sent into the Rhineland. Fascist forces sent to fight with Franco in Spain.  1938: Austrian Anschluss. Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Pact [AXIS] Munich Agreement  APPEASEMENT!  1939: German troops march into the rest of Czechoslovakia. Hitler-Stalin Non-Aggression Pact.  September 1, 1939: German troops march into Poland  blitzkrieg  WW II begins!!!

World War II Begins…

U.S. Reaction to the start of WW II Isolationism at its peak in the late 1930’s Neutrality in action but not thought –“Cash and Carry” –CDAAA organized (1940) Paris falls in June 1940

U.S. Reaction to WW II (cont.) “America First” movement (1940) “Destroyers for bases” deal (Sept., 1940) The Lend-Lease Act (March, 1941) Lend-Lease Aid to the Soviets (June, 1941)

U.S. Reaction to Hitler’s Aggression American “neutrality patrols” The Atlantic Charter (Aug. 1941) Undeclared naval war with the Germans in the Atlantic ocean –USS Greer (Sept. 1941) –USS Reuben James (Oct )

Japanese Aggression in the Far East Make a list of the sources of tension between the US and Japan from the 1880’s to 1940?

After Japan extended their control in China, the US placed restrictions on oil exports to Japan Japan began to look around southeast Asia for oil

The Road to Pearl Harbor Japan wanted to create the “Greater-East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.” That was code for a Japanese Empire. America contested that and hoped the Japanese would curtail their Pacific Expansion. Japan saw the Pacific Ocean as an “American Lake” and the American Navy as a threat to their ambitions.

Invades Northern Indochina (Summer of 1940) Tripartite Pact (Sept., 1940) Invades southern Indochina (July, 1941) The Japanese knew that this would threaten US interests in the Pacific

Japanese militarists including Prime Minister General Hideki Tojo wanted war with America and figured we had no stomach for a protracted Asian war

The task of dealing with the Americans fell to Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.

Yamamoto studied here in the United States (Naval War College and Harvard) and knew us well. Unlike other Japanese military, he respected us. Yamamoto planned the attack on Pearl Harbor. The idea was to crush the American Navy and then, hopefully, negotiate a settlement in place of a long, bloody war.—”Limited Goals” Yamamoto promised 6 months of success before American industrial might turned the tables

Yamamoto also knew that NOTHING would make the Americans angrier. After the raid at Pearl Harbor, Yamamoto said: “I am afraid all we have done is awaken a sleeping giant and filled him with a terrible resolve.”

The Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor A “Surprise” Attack The significance of the aircraft carrier “Day of Infamy” “Tora, Tora, Tora!” The problem created by the attack for the Japanese Conspiracy theory?