world war ii chapter 16. world war ii paths to war: germany & japan section 1
TRANSCRIPT
World War II
World War II
Chapter 16
World War II
Paths to War: Germany & Japan
Section 1
German Path to War
• Hitler’s Idea: Aryan race & Germany would become a powerful country (large populations need more land, right?– How will Germany acquire more lebensraum?• Look to the EAST…
• First Steps by Germany:– 1. Revise Treaty of Versailles by “peaceful” means.– 2. Built Air Force & military– 3. Reoccupy the Rhineland (demilitarized area)– 4. Appeasement – keep things peaceful in Britiain
New Alliances
• Axis Powers– Italy– Japan – Germany
• Hitler wanted to unite with Austria– Convinced Austria to put Nazis in charge of
government & then Hitler annexed Austria as a part of Germany
Japanese Path to War
• War with China – Japan wanted to expand into Chinese lands
• New Asian Order– Japan wanted to help modernize the rest of Asia– Acquire Soviet Siberia (rich in resources)– Cooperated with Nazi Germany in plan to attack
Soviet Union
World War II
Course of War
Section 2
Germany Sparks a New War
• Stalin and Hitler make a deal to reclaim land taken by Allies (Nonaggression Pact)
• Germany invades Poland, France and Great Britain declare war on Germany September 1939. (Cannot mobilize troops)
• Blitzkrieg “Lightning War” – new German war tactic
• Stalin orders Russian troops to invade and occupy the western part of Poland
France Falls
• Hitler launches an attack through Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands (side tracks France)
• Germans made it through fortifications and into France, eventually took over Paris.
• France surrendered June 22, 1940.• French resistance to German occupation set
up a government in London to try to recapture France.
Battle of Britain
• Winston Churchill – new British Prime Minister• Bombing Raids by German Luftwaffe (air force)• Two Technologies Helped British:– Radar Detection (# of planes and direction)– Enigma German code-making machine (to break code)
• May 1941, Hitler called off attacks in Great Britain due to strong British resistance.
The Eastern Front• June 22, 1941 Hitler’s troops invade the Soviet
Union (Russia).– Soviets not prepared for attack, WHY?
• Soviets still used scorched earth policy (Who had this defeated before?)
• Germans siege Leningrad – 1 million people died in siege (Germans starved them to death and surrender)
• Hitler’s order for no retreat when trying to take Moscow cost them 500,000 lives when winter weather set in. (Sound familiar?)
Comprehension Check• 1. True or False: Hitler’s military tactic he used in
WWII was called the Schlieffen plan.• 2. True or False: After Hitler invaded Poland, the
United States declared war on Germany. • 3. True or False: At the beginning of the war, the
United States remained neutral and did not join the war.
• 4. True or False: Winston Churchill was the Prime Minister of France.
• 5. True or False: Hitler made a costly mistake of invading the Soviet Union in 1941.
World War II
Japan’s Pacific Campaign
Section 2
Pearl Harbor
• December 7, 1941 – Attack on Pearl Harbor– First attack on American soil = declaration of war
• Japanese Admiral, Isoroku Yamamoto said Pearl Harbor was a “dagger pointed at [Japan’s] throat” (a threat) & needs to be destroyed
• U.S. knew attack was eminent, but did not know where
• In 2 hours, Japanese had sunk 19 ships (8 battleships), 2,300 Americans kiled/1,100 wounded = SHOCK
Pearl Harbor
Allies Strike Back
• Battle of Midway: 1,500 miles west of Hawaii– Turning Point in War: Japan’s navy defeated
• Douglas McArthur – general of U.S. troops in the Pacific– “Island Hopping” – trying to capture Japanese-
held islands
War Limits Civil Rights
• Japanese Internment Camps– Japanese people were ‘relocated’ to internment camps
throughout the Midwest– Americans feared Japanese and considered them the
enemy after the attack at Pearl Harbor
Comprehension Check
• Write a journal entry in the perspective of anyone involved in the Pearl Harbor attacks.– Describe what you see, hear, smell, feel, touch.– Be creative!
World War II
The Allied Victory
Section 4
Two Front War
• Battle of Stalingrad: Very similar to the Battle of Leningrad (same outcome for Germans), it was VERY costly for Soviets (lost 1 million soldiers, and 99% of Stalingrad was destroyed)
• Invasion of Italy: Britain and U.S. invaded Italy to oust Mussolini– Mussolini arrested, but then placed back in power
by Germans– Shot and hung in Milan for all to see (humiliation)
Allied Home Fronts
• Americans (women) produced weapons used in the war; 17-18 million produced war goods
• Factories converted to wartime production (machine guns to boots)
• Rationing consumer goods (factories producing less consumer goods)
• Propaganda (to rally people to the war effort)
Victory in Europe• Dwight D. Eisenhower: general of the U.S. Army,
commander at D-Day invasion• D-Day: 6/6/1944: Storming the beaches at
Normandy, France; held the beach and marched into Paris (reclaimed France)
• Battle of the Bulge 12/16/1944: 2nd attempt to defeat Germans = successful
• 5/7/1945 Germany Surrenders!– Allies converge on Berlin & fire– Hitler commits suicide; Germany surrenders– V-E Day: Victory in Europe Day, end of WWII
Victory in the Pacific
• Atomic Bomb – Manhattan Project– Page 512 of textbook– Hiroshima – August 6, 1945 – Nagasaki – August 9, 1945
• Japanese surrendered on September 2, 1945.• The U.S. would occupy Japan and help rebuild
the war-torn country.• Peace was official negotiated in 1951.
Comprehension Check• 1. True or False: Japanese-Americans were
moved to internment camps during WWII.• 2. What does V-E Day stand for?• 3. True or False: Dwight D. Eisenhower was the
U.S. general for troops during D-Day. • 4. True or False: The Allied troops were
unsuccessful in reclaiming France from the Germans.
• 5. True or False: The United States dropped three atomic bombs on Japan in 1945.
World War II
Europe and Japan in Ruins
Section 5
Devastation in Europe
• 40 million Europeans died (2/3 civilians)• 100s of cities destroyed because of bombings• Famine because devastation to transportation
systems and cities = food could not reach the citizens
Postwar Governments & Politics
• Shift to Communism in countries like France and Italy.
• Nuremberg Trials: War Crimes Court– 22 Nazi leaders accused of waging a war or
aggression and committing crimes against humanity (murder of 11 million people)
Postwar Japan
• Occupied Japan: General MacArthur was in charged of the U.S. occupation of Japan.– Wanted to be fair, not cause resentment, and
cause no future wars with Japan– Demilitarization of Japanese armed forces– War criminals on trial (condemned to hang)– Created a new Japanese constitution that formed
a democratic government
Comprehension Check• 1. True or False: MacArthur was the U.S. general
who led the occupation of Japan.• 2. True or False: After WWII, governments did
NOT change from Fascism.• 3. True or False: The Nuremberg trials tried Nazi
war criminals for crimes against humanity. • 4. True or False: Peace was finally negotiated
with Japan in 1951.• 5. True or False: Japan became a democracy after
U.S. occupation.
World War II
The HolocaustSection 3
Holocaust Begins
• “Night of Broken Glass” – 17 y.o. Herschel Grynszpan, Jew from Germany
visiting uncle in Paris, shot a German diplomat in Paris over the deportation of his father
– After this incident, violent attacks on Jewish communities by Germans (Nazis attacked)
• Jewish refugees flood into other countries to protect themselves and families
• Ghettos – isolation of Jews in own communities
“Final Solution”
• Genocide• Concentration
Camps
Jews Killed Under Nazi Rule
Original Population
Jews Killed Percent Surviving
Poland 3,300,000 2,800,000 15%
Soviet Union
2,100,000 1,500,000 29%
Hungary 404,000 200,000 49%
Romania 850,000 425,000 50%
Germany/Austria
270,000 210,000 22%
Comprehension Check
• 1.• 2.• 3.• 4.• 5.