Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

World War II Introduction. LONG TERM CAUSES LEADING UP TO WORLD WAR II (WWII) 1. Treaty of Versailles Germans were forced to: 0 pay reparations 0 Redraw.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "World War II Introduction. LONG TERM CAUSES LEADING UP TO WORLD WAR II (WWII) 1. Treaty of Versailles Germans were forced to: 0 pay reparations 0 Redraw."— Presentation transcript:

1 World War II Introduction

2 LONG TERM CAUSES LEADING UP TO WORLD WAR II (WWII) 1. Treaty of Versailles Germans were forced to: 0 pay reparations 0 Redraw boundaries and reduce territory 0 Reduce the size of their military The Germans were upset with this treaty and the Weimar Republic for signing it because it made them look WEAK

3 2. Economic and Political Factors 0 Great Depression hit Germany hard 0 High unemployment rates 0 High inflation making German money worthless 0 Germans were afraid communists would take over 0 Hitler was seen as a defense against this

4 3. Appeasement (giving in to someone’s demands) Americans passed Neutrality Acts to stay out of foreign affairs France and Britain appeased Hitler and his violation of the Treaty of Versailles Germany, Italy, and Japan united to form an alliance called the AXIS POWERS

5 0 Hitler invaded Austria, the Sudetenland and eventually all of Czechoslovakia 0 This territory was known as the “Third Reich” 0 Chamberlain appeased him to avoid another war, even though it violated the Treaty of Versailles

6 4. Hitler’s Leadership 0 Challenged the Treaty of Versailles 0 Rebuilt German military 0 Practiced territorial aggression to claim back land 0 Promoted extreme Nationalism 0 Encouraged Anti-Semitic Scapegoating

7 WWII Begins European Front

8 WORLD WAR II BEGINS 0 Hitler invaded Poland in 1939 0 France and Britain promised that they would defend Poland if this happened 0 As a result, WWII began in September of 1939

9 WAR BEGINS 0 Hitler invaded Poland on Sept. 1, 1939 using a tactic called “Blitzkrieg” meaning “lightning war” 0 It was a very fast, forceful fighting tactic and Poland surrendered after one month 0 After this, the war was called a “phony war” because there wasn’t much fighting until April 1940 0 Germany began invading Denmark, Norway, and other surrounding countries Before attacking France and Britain http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/media_nm.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005137&MediaId=3376

10 JAPANESE INVOLVEMENT 0 Japan wanted to expand their empire and become an imperialist power 0 Japan invaded Manchuria (part of China) because it had many natural resources 0 The League of Nations investigated this invasion, and Japan withdrew their membership from the League 0 Japan allied with Germany 0 Thought they would invade Soviet Union together 0 When Germany signed Nazi-Soviet Pact, Japan instead invaded the South Pacific 0 Led to the attack on Hawaii

11 ALLIANCES 0 AXIS POWERS  Germany, Italy, and Japan 0 ALLIED POWERS  France, Great Britain, Poland 0 The Soviet Union made a non-aggression pact with Germany called Nazi-Soviet Pact promising neutrality between the two countries

12 AXIS POWERS 0 Germany ~ Adolf Hitler 0 Italy~ Benito Mussolini 0 Japan~ Hideki Tojo

13 ALLIED POWERS 0 Great Britain 0 Neville Chamberlain until 1940 0 Winston Churchill took over in 1940 0 USA~ Franklin D. Roosevelt ~ until 1945 0 Harry S. Truman ~ End of the war Chamberlain Churchill FDR Truman

14 US INVOLVEMENT 0 USA passed the Neutrality Acts in 1935, stating that we would not supply weapons to belligerent countries (countries at war) taking a position of isolationism 0 In 1941, the US passed the Lend-Lease Acts which allowed us to supply weapons to the Allied Powers without going to war 0 Kept us directly out of the war, but showed that we supported Allies

15 US ROAD TO WAR 0 FDR and Churchill met in 1941 and wrote the Atlantic Charter 0 Document stated their democratic goals that both share 0 US also helped defend Britain against German submarines 0 US was showing support for Britain in the war

16 PEARL HARBOR 0 Dec. 7, 1941~ US naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, was attacked by Japan 0 Dec. 8, 1941~ Congress declared war on Japan 0 Event caused the US to enter WWII as an Allied Power

17 SIGNIFICANT BATTLES OF WWII 0 Invasion of Poland~ began WWII 0 Battle of Stalingrad~ allowed Soviets to hold Germans back turning the tide of the war 0 Battle of El Alamein~ North African battle that turned the tide of the war on the European Front in favor of the Allies by causing Italy to eventually surrender

18 0 Bataan Death March~ united Philippines and US against Japanese when 10,000 people were killed 0 Battle of Midway~ air battle that turned the tide of the war in favor of the Allies on the Pacific Front 0 D-Day~ June 6, 1944~ led to the eventual defeat of Nazi Germany

19 END OF WAR IN EUROPE 0 V-E Day~ May 8, 1945 0 Victory in Europe Day 0 Germany surrendered ending the war on the European Front

20 ATTACK ON JAPAN 0 Japan refused to surrender in the war 0 US dropped two atomic bombs in August of 1945 0 Hiroshima ~ 80,000 killed 0 Nagasaki~ 40,000 killed 0 Led to the surrender of Japan

21 WAR ENDS IN JAPAN 0 V-J Day~ September 2, 1945 0 Victory in Japan Day 0 Japan surrendered and World War II was over

22 EFFECTS OF THE WAR 0 Over 22 million military personnel died 0 34 million wounded 0 Holocaust resulted in over 12 million deaths, 6 million being Jews 0 Millions of dollars spent on the war 0 Territory destroyed


Download ppt "World War II Introduction. LONG TERM CAUSES LEADING UP TO WORLD WAR II (WWII) 1. Treaty of Versailles Germans were forced to: 0 pay reparations 0 Redraw."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google