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InterWar Years

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Title: InterWar Years


1
InterWar Years
2
1.)
  • There had been a small group who had questioned
    society before the war. After the war, these
    voices became louder. They rejected the notions
    of "progress" and came to view society through a
    pessimistic lens. The destruction of the war had
    strengthened their opinions that humanity was
    savage.

3
2.)
  • Valery was a French writer who summed up the idea
    of an "age of anxiety". He and others believed
    that humanity had seen its' apex, and that the
    future held dark times.

4
3.)
  • Friedrich Nietzsche perhaps best symbolizes this
    ideology. He was a German philosopher whose name
    today summons the grim mindset of the time. He
    rejected Christianity and said that rationalism
    stifled human emotion and passion. Calling
    Christianity "slave morality" which glorified
    weakness, he called on societies to reject the
    staid values of the middle class on focus on
    animalistic competition, which gave life its true
    meaning. His influence on German is tremendous.

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4.)
  • Existentialism is the idea that there is no
    creator God. Human beings, instead, simply appear
    on the scene and seek to define themselves, since
    there's no God to help them. Without true
    meaning, then, existentialists were hounded by
    "despair and the meaninglessness of life".
  • Without God to give life meaning, these people
    believed in action. The actions a person
    undertook, it was thought, would give life its'
    meaning.

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5.)
  • The terrible ravages of WWII in France caused
    that country to become a center of existential
    thought during and after the war. People were
    forced to choice a "life of action" or to accept
    tyranny. Thus, the existential movement caused
    many to join the Resistance or otherwise oppose
    the Nazis. Their actions, thus, gave their lives
    meaning.

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6.)
  • Previous psychologists had assumed that the human
    consciousness was unified, and that it always
    processed the information in the same rational
    way.
  • Freud said that the human mind was in fact
    irrational. Furthermore, he claimed that the mind
    was actually composed of different parts

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  • the "id". This was the primitive, irrational
    unconscious. It focused on sexual, pleasure
    seeking desires. It is always competing with
    other parts of the mind.
  • the "ego". This is the rational part of the mind
    that determines what a person can do (what is
    possible).
  • the "superego". This is the highest part of the
    sub consciousness. It determines what a person
    should do.
  • Therefore, for Freud, human behavior was the
    result of these components constantly battling
    for control of our consciousness. He believed
    that the ego and superego could be too strong and
    repress our sexual desires, which in turn could
    lead to various psychological traumas.

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7.)
  • Many middle class people, especially women,
    interpreted Freud to mean that they should
    experiment sexually for a healthy mental state.
    For others, though, Freud reflected the anxiety
    of the time by supposing a dark, disturbed side
    to human nature.

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8.)
  • Germany was angered and humiliated by the
    Versailles Treaty. France, Britain, and the U.S.,
    meanwhile, were all becoming isolated. The newly
    formed U.S.S.R. was an unknown, and the eastern
    European countries were too unstable to be a
    force.

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9.)
  • The French countryside had been ravaged by the
    fighting, especially the wealthy parts of North
    France. The French believed that reparations from
    Germany were vital to the French economy. But
    moreover, they saw the heavy burden of
    reparations as the means to keep Germany down and
    out.

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10.)
  • The British soon changed the opinions they had
    held at the Versailles conference. They came to
    see a healthy Germany as vital to their own
    economic interests. Furthermore, they became
    guilty about the heavy punishments with which the
    Treaty had saddled Germany. Thus, reparations
    were unpopular in Britain.

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  • Their attitude about France also soon changed.
    They didn't trust French intentions in postwar
    Europe and feared the French might try to
    dominate the Continent. There was also
    disagreement over the administration of Germany's
    former overseas colonies. With Britain and France
    at odds and the U.S. turning its' back on Europe,
    there was no real control on the volatile
    situation.

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11.)
  • In 1921i t was announced that Germany would have
    to repay 33 billion dollars, 2.5 billion yearly.
    In 1922 the Weimar government responded by
    announcing a moratorium on the repayments. This
    was completely unacceptable to the French. To
    them it seemed as if the Versailles Treaty,
    especially the components that guaranteed French
    security, was being abandoned. In 1923, against
    the wishes of the British, the French and
    Belgians sent troops into the Ruhr, the German
    industrial heartland. The intention was to
    collect reparations "in kind"-steel, coal, and
    iron ore.

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12.)
  • This occupation stirred German anger and a wave
    of patriotism. The government ordered the people
    of the Ruhr to stay home. With the factories and
    mines silent, the French couldn't collect. But,
    German poverty increased.
  • The French responded by threatening to create a
    separate Rhineland state. The situation got worse
    when the Weimar government, to compensate for the
    lost production of the Ruhr, began to print more
    paper money to support the people. Inflation
    spiraled, and people's savings were wiped out.
    The little good will that the Western governments
    had with the Germans vanished. In its place were
    anger, humiliation, and acrimony. The Germans
    blamed the Jews, the communists, and the Weimar
    government.

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13.)
  • Such a situation was unpopular in Britain and the
    U.S., and was becoming increasingly unpopular
    with the French people. By 1923 the French and
    Germans were ready for compromise. The Dawes plan
    was meant to soften the blow of reparations. It
    placed the amount the Germans would pay on a
    sliding scale, and recommended large American
    loans to Germany, which could then meet its'
    payments.
  • The problem was that the money that the Germans
    were repaying to France and Britain was then
    being repaid to the U.S. for war loans. In
    effect, the U.S. was repaying itself. This was a
    risky strategy that worked in the short term but
    would ultimately lead to the collapse of 1929.

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14.)
  • By 1929 the German economy had picked up steam.
    Germany was 50 wealthier in 1929 than in 1913.
    For a time it seemed as if the crisis had passed.
    As unemployment and inflation dropped, the German
    people began to trust their young republican
    government.
  • This recovery was due mainly to the influx of
    foreign money, especially from the U.S.

32
15.)
  • Germany's political situation was improving in
    the 1920's. Early in the decade, as the Ruhr
    crisis crippled the economy, it seemed as if the
    infant Weimar government might collapse.
    Communists had won elections in several parts of
    Germany, and Adolph Hitler had attempted an
    ill-conceived "putsch" in Munich in 1923.
  • But by mid-decade things improved. Germany was
    admitted to the League of Nations in 1926, a new
    currency was established, and the re-opened Ruhr
    (along with American loans) had primed the
    booming German economy. People regained faith in
    the government. There was an undercurrent of
    radical political parties but for the time being,
    they were unable to gain any traction.

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16.)
  • The Great Depression was unlike any that had
    occurred before. It was more intense, it was
    worldwide, and it lasted longer than nearly any
    that had come before. During the 1920's the
    global economy had boomed (Roaring 20's). Because
    the European economy was devastated by war,
    American factories and farms boomed as their
    goods were shipped overseas.

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  • It began in the U.S. when the stock market
    collapsed. The stock market bubble had been built
    on borrowed money. Speculators had borrowed to
    buy stock, paying only a little down (buying on
    margin) in the hopes of making a quick profit.
    When a chain reaction of falling stock values
    began, the lenders began calling their loans.
    Most investors didn't have the cash on hand and
    were ruined.

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  • The panic spread quickly. With confidence down,
    consumers bought fewer goods. This caused the
    factories to close down, which raised
    unemployment. Furthermore, American factories had
    been producing too much for several years, which
    eventually led to a surplus. The whole process
    was a vicious cycle.

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17.)
  • In Europe, much of the money that America had
    lent was recalled. A panic began, which
    devastated European economies. The Depression
    became global. Worldwide output fell 38 from
    1929-33.

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18.)
  • Roosevelt's New Deal was a series of
    government-sponsored programs designed to revive
    the economy and provide employment and relief to
    the people. It rested on higher taxes, which in
    turn funded these vast new public programs.
    During this period Social Security was founded.
    Other new programs included

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  • Works Progress Administration
  • National Recovery Act
  • Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Tennessee Valley Authority
  • Agricultural Adjustment Administration
  • Rural Electric Administration
  • Home Owners Loan Corporation
  • Securities and Exchange Commission
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
  • Federal Housing Administration
  • National Labor relations Board
  • Social Security Board

40
The Rise of Totalitarianism
41
1.)
  • The traditional forms of government had been
    monarchies, usually absolutist, such as the
    Bourbons, Habsburgs, Hohenzollerns, or Romanovs.
    They were conservative authoritarian states that
    resisted any social change that might undermine
    their authority.

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2.)
  • This type of mindset was revived after WWI for
    several reasons
  • many of the newly formed states had no
    traditions of democratic government and thus
    couldn't sustain democracy.
  • dictatorship appealed to many segments of the
    population such as landowners, the Church, and
    middle classes. These people desired stability.
    This was especially true in Eastern Europe.

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3.)
  • The three brothers were Fascism, Nazism, and
    Communism, all totalitarian movements. Their
    "common father", or reason that they could
    thrive, was the nature of modern war where a
    small dedicated group could take over and control
    a large state. This was due mainly to technology.

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4.)
  • The typical totalitarian state had several common
    features
  • use of mass propaganda and modern communications
    spread it
  • state tried to control all aspects of life
    (Orwellian state)
  • they represented a radical revolt against
    liberalism
  • they were built on "mass' movements, the idea
    that whole peoples and societies were mobilized,
    seeking a never-ending change.

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5.)
  • Upon taking power, Lenin was faced with the truth
    that Russia was so underdeveloped economically
    and industrially that true communism could never
    emerge. He was forced to allow some limited
    economic freedom to the peasants, which raised
    enough in taxes to begin to build industry.

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6.)
  • Upon the death of Lenin in 1924 the Communist
    party was in flux. Lenin had named no successor,
    though the two main contenders were Trotsky and
    young Joseph Dzhugashvili (Stalin). Stalin was of
    a middle class origin. He had joined the
    Bolsheviks in 1903. He was a good organizer and
    quickly rose through the party ranks, catching
    the attention of Lenin.
  • Though never as brilliant as Trotsky, he gained
    influence in the party because he was better able
    to relate Marxist teachings to the realities of
    the Russian economy. When the time came, he had
    more party support than Trotsky.

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  • This was mainly because of Stalin's belief in
    "socialism in one country". Whereas Lenin and
    Trotsky had believed that Soviet communism could
    succeed only with a worldwide revolution, Stalin
    maintained that communism could steadily and
    successfully be achieved in Russia, and then
    exported. This made him popular among his fellow
    Russians. Once in power, he eliminated his party
    allies and became a true dictator.
  • Trotsky escaped Russia, but in 1940 he was hunted
    down by Russian agents in Mexico and murdered.

50
7.)
  • Stalin knew full well that the still
    underdeveloped Russian economy could never
    compete with the West. He ordered huge new
    programs aimed at raising industrial and
    agricultural output. He was trying to accomplish
    in Russia what had taken a century to do in the
    West.
  • The results were impressive. Hundreds of new
    factories were built. Steel production jumped
    500 from 1928-37. Coal mines, timber yards,
    railroads were all built. Cities boomed.

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  • This came at a heavy price. The government was
    investing 1/3 of its national income in this
    effort. As a result, the standard of living fell
    for the people in the name of this sacrifice.
    Furthermore, workers were forced to move to
    wherever they were needed.
  • The Five Year Plans would require the gradual
    elimination of the land owning peasantry.
    Communist writers called these people the "little
    capitalists", believing that as they acquired
    more property, they would eventually oppose the
    Soviet government. Furthermore, the agricultural
    goals of the Five Year Plans meant that small
    farms would have to be consolidated in to huge
    new "collective" farms.

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8.)
  • Collectivization, then, was the great tragedy of
    Stalinist Russia. Whole villages were forced to
    relocate to farm camps, where they provided
    labor. They were stripped of property. Some
    villages were simply destroyed. In retaliation,
    the peasantry destroyed crops and livestock. This
    simply created a vast famine. Combined with
    Soviet brutality, this famine wiped out ten
    million peasants in the 1930's

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9.)
  • The secret police were used to instill fear.
    Political assassination was common
  • Stalin was famously paranoid. He occasionally
    used systematic murder to eliminate people he
    considered threats, both real and imaginary. As a
    result, many innocents died. Around 6 million
    total.
  • Soviet era art and literature became propaganda
    pieces. Mass technology such as radio and film
    were used to indoctrinate and brainwash the
    people. Christianity was outlawed, and Marx and
    Lenin became the new icons, with Stalin as God.
  • Unemployment was wiped out. Free health care,
    education, and day care was provided
  • The roles of women were expanded as never
    before. They were a necessary part of the
    Communist revolution. Divorce and abortion became
    completely accessible. They were encouraged to
    become sexually liberated. They were encouraged
    as equals, and were mobilized to benefit the
    state.

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10.)
  • Italians had enthusiastically supported the
    government in WWI. But the government lost
    support in the war's aftermath for several
    reasons
  • the government promised reforms to the peasants
    and workers but didn't follow through.
  • the government failed to grab territory from
    Austria at Versailles.
  • the Catholic Church opposed the Italian
    government

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11.)
  • Benito Mussolini was from a humble background. He
    was a socialist newspaper editor and joined the
    army. He was wounded on the Austrian front in
    1917, and when he returned home he began
    organizing bitter war veterans like himself into
    a new party, the "fascists". There demands were
    nationalistic and socialist.
  • His band of thugs, the "Black shirts", began
    terrorizing other parties, especially communists.
    By 1922 their power was so great that they forced
    the king, Victor Emmanuel III to name Mussolini
    chief minister.

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The Fasces
65
12.)
  • The people generally accepted Mussolini's fascist
    government for several reasons. Chiefly, they
    were afraid of a Bolshevik uprising, yet didn't
    want a liberal, parliamentary government. As the
    saying went, Mussolini "made the trains run on
    time."

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13.)
  • Whether Mussolini's Italy was totalitarian is
    debatable
  • He did abolish a free press.
  • He fixed all elections
  • Arrested political opponents
  • Created fascist youth groups
  • He never became all-powerful, like Stalin or
    Hitler
  • He never tried to destroy the existing power
    structure (the Church, the big landowners). In
    fact, Vatican City was created on his watch.
  • He never socialized business
  • He never "liberated" women.

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14.)
  • Hitler was born in Austria in 1889.
  • In his youth he became an extreme German
    nationalist and came to believe in the
    superiority of German culture.
  • He was strongly influenced by the mayor of
    Vienna, Karl Leger, who used mass propaganda to
    gain the support of the people of Vienna.
  • In his youth he became deeply racist, both
    anti-Semitic and anti- Slavic
  • He fought in WWI and was angered by Germany's
    defeat.
  • By 1919 he had joined a tiny radical group in
    Munich called the German Worker's party. He
    emerged in control of it, giving speeches on
    street corners. He claimed Germany must be
    unified under "national socialism". The Nazi
    party members soon began wearing uniforms and
    badges, staging parades through the streets.
    Their rallies became larger and larger.

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15.)
  • By 1923 Hitler felt ready to attempt his
    revolution. He jumped on a table in a Munich beer
    garden and proclaimed revolution against the
    Weimar government, for which he was arrested and
    tossed in to jail for treason. While incarcerated
    he wrote Mein Kampf, his manifesto that spoke of
    three themes anti-Semitism, "lebensraum or
    living space, and a leader with unlimited power.

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16.)
  • Upon his release from prison in 1924, he
    concentrated on building up his party. He had
    learned a lesson from the failed beer hall
    putsch-the way to defeat democracy was to use
    democracy. He started entering Nazi candidates in
    to elections all over the country, and into
    contests for seats in the Reichstag.
  • The Depression was a blessing for him.
    Unemployment shot up over 30, inflation was out
    of control. The brief prosperity of the late 20's
    was over and again people started casting about
    for meaning. Hitler stepped in to provide answers.

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17.)
  • Hitler had a great deal of appeal to various
    groups
  • He promised the middle class economic reform,
    and played on their fear of Jews and socialists.
  • He promised Big Business that he would destroy
    organized labor.
  • He promised the army that he'd overturn the
    Versailles Treaty and re-arm.
  • Nazism was a young movement and Hitler himself
    was a young man. It promised recovery, change, an
    advancement, and appealed to young people. The
    "Hitler Youth" was the prime example.

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18.)
  • Nazism continued to gain ground. In 1930 they
    were the second biggest party in Germany. By 1932
    they were the largest.

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19.)
  • Communists never took Hitler seriously. They
    regarded him not as a threat but as a "symptom"
    of a society that was ripe for communist
    revolution. By the time they realized his power
    it was too late.

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20.)
  • Hitler was appointed Chancellor by President
    Hindenburg in 1933 under the mistaken belief that
    Hitler's Nazi followers could be used to
    stabilize power in Germany. Instead, Hitler
    quickly moved to consolidate power.

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21.)
  • In 1933 the Reichstag building burned. Hitler
    blamed the communists, though many thought the
    Nazis probably had the fire set. The Nazis
    smeared communist leaders until they were
    literally hounded out of Germany.

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22.)
  • Hitler passed laws abolishing labor unions, as
    too socialist. He then moved to control all print
    and media. The Nazis staged huge book-burning
    rallies, and outlawed all "subversive material.
    They outlawed modern art and architecture. Said
    Joseph Gobbles, "When I hear the word culture I
    reach for my gun."
  • Gaining the respect of the army was his biggest
    challenge. They would never accept his party
    hacks that had helped him come up from the
    streets, and Hitler knew this. So he purged them,
    leaving the business of the army in the hands of
    the professional soldiers. This earned their
    trust, and they soon became loyal to him. A
    smaller group of soldiers, the SS, became
    Hitler's elite units.

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23.)
  • Almost as soon as the Nazis took power they began
    persecution of the Jews. Many Jews, like
    Einstein, had foreseen the rise of Hitler and
    escaped Germany and Europe. But others became
    ensnared in the Nazi web. New laws were passed
    restricting movement and property rights.
    Businesses and bank accounts were stripped. The
    Nuremburg laws declared that Jews were to be
    stripped of citizenship rights. Later, open
    violence against the Jews occurred
    (Kristallnacht). But the worst was yet to come.

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24.)
  • His popularity rested on the simple fact that he
    had revived German greatness, rearmed the
    military, ended unemployment, and was moving to
    undo the Versailles Treaty. Many Germans were
    uncomfortable with the actions of the Nazis but
    most were afraid to act.

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25.)
  • Joseph Goebbels- Hitler's minister of propaganda
    who unashamedly bragged that Nazi power rested on
    the "big lie" that the bigger a lie was, and the
    louder it was repeated, that soon the majority of
    people would start to believe it.
  • Hitler Youth- paramilitary clubs for boys and
    girls that indoctrinated them and built future
    soldiers and mothers.
  • Paul Von Hindenburg- aging WWI hero, he was
    President of the Weimar Republic and appointed
    Hitler to the Chancellorship in 1933.
  • Brown shirts- Hitler's street thugs as the party
    grew also called the SA
  • SS- Hitler's elite troops and bodyguards.
  • Heinrich Himmler- leader of the SS and the
    Gestapo
  • Gestapo- Nazi police who used terror to repress
    the people.

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Nazi Expansion and WWII
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1.)
  • Hitler had made clear in Mein Kampf that the
    future of Nazism depended on expansion-"lebensraum
    as Hitler called it. Part of Germany's destiny
    according to him was the "drang nach osten"- the
    drive to the East.

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2.)
  • Hitler withdrew Germany from the League of
    Nations and laid bare his intentions to rearm
    Germany in clear violation of the Versailles
    Treaty

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3.)
  • Appeasement simply meant backing down and giving
    in, on the hopes of maintaining peace. The
    British were guilty about Germany because they
    realized that the Versailles treaty had done much
    to create Hitler. Also, they viewed Hitler as a
    long term buffer against Bolshevik expansion into
    Europe.

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4.)
  • In 1935 Hitler forced an agreement with Britain
    that enabled him to begin building up his navy.
    In 1936 he took another brazen step when he
    re-occupied the Rhineland. The French and British
    failed to act, reinforcing Hitler's view of their
    weakness.

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5.)
  • Mussolini sought territorial conquest to enhance
    Italy's prestige. From Italian Somaliland in 1935
    he launched an invasion of Ethiopia. Hitler
    supported this action, so that in the next year
    and agreement was signed between Rome and Berlin.
    The "Axis" had been born.

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6.)
  • Hitler had long desired a permanent union of all
    Germans (the Anschluss). The Nazis had murdered
    the Austrian Chancellor in 1934 by 1938 Hitler
    bullied the Austrians to hand over control to the
    Nazis. Austria had been brought under Nazi
    control.

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7.)
  • The Sudetenland was the western part of
    Czechoslovakia. It was a heavily German-speaking
    region, rich in industry. Hitler demanded loudly
    that it was only natural that it should be
    rejoined to Germany.

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8.)
  • The Czechs were ready to defend their young
    country along with French help. The crisis was
    defused when British PM Neville Chamberlain,
    along with the French, ceded the Sudetenland to
    Hitler in 1938. The Czechs had been sold out,
    while Chamberlain proclaimed "Peace in our time."
  • Hitler now realized that the Western democracies
    had no will, and forcefully took the rest of the
    Czech republic. The backlash against Chamberlain
    would eventually drive him from office.

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  • My good friends, for the second time in our
    history, a British Prime Minister has returned
    from Germany bringing peace with honour. I
    believe it is peace for our time.

111
9.)
  • Hitler next demanded that the Polish city of
    Danzig (formerly German) be ceded to the Reich.
    The West now realized their mistakes and
    threatened to fight, but Hitler believed they
    would continue to back down.

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10.)
  • Hitler and Stalin, mutually suspicious,
    nevertheless signed a pact in August 1939 in
    which they promised not to attack one another.
    The British and French were stunned, for it was
    never suspected that the Nazis and Communists
    could ever be on the same side.

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11.)
  • With the Soviets pacified, Hitler was now ready
    to commence his war. On Sept. 1, 1939, the Nazi
    blitzkrieg roared into Poland, while the red Army
    rolled in from the East. Britain and France
    declared war, and WWII had begun.

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Lightning War
116
12.)
  • Over the winter of 1939-40 there was little
    action. People dubbed it "Sitzkrieg" of the
    "Phony War". But in spring 1940 Hitler struck
    again Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium, and
    France in quick succession. Only a miraculous
    evacuation from Dunkirk saved the British Army
    from surrender.

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13.)
  • The French surrendered that spring. The Nazis
    installed a puppet government under old Marshall
    Pertain in the southern city of Vichy. French
    overseas possessions became the property of the
    Nazis. In the North African city of Oran, the
    British steamed in and destroyed the French
    fleet. Casablanca became the gateway to the Free
    West. In Britain, Charles de Gaulle became the
    leader of the Free French government-in-exile.

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14.)
  • Hitler's next logical step was to knock out
    Britain. Before he could risk a Channel crossing
    though he needed to eliminate their air cover.
    Beginning in summer 1940, wave after wave of
    attacks aimed at the British RAF commenced. In
    September of that year, Hitler changed his
    strategy and began bombing cities. Through it all
    the British were defiant. By October the Nazis
    had postponed their planned invasion of Britain.
    According to Churchill, never had "so many owed
    so much to so few".

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History will be kind to me, for I intend to
write it!
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their finest Hour
  • the Battle of France is over. I expect that the
    Battle of Britain is about to begin. Upon this
    battle depends the survival of Christian
    civilization. Upon it depends our own British
    life, and the long continuity of our institutions
    and our Empire. The whole fury and might of the
    enemy must very soon be turned on us. Hitler
    knows that he will have to break us in this
    island or lose the war. If we can stand up to
    him, all Europe may be free and the life of the
    world may move forward into broad, sunlit
    uplands. But if we fail, then the whole world,
    including the United States, including all that
    we have known and cared for, will sink into the
    abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and
    perhaps more protracted, by the lights of
    perverted science. Let us therefore brace
    ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves
    that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth
    last for a thousand years, men will still say,
    'This was their finest hour.'

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15.)
  • By April 1941 Hitler had conquered Greece and
    Yugoslavia, while forcing Hungary, Romania, and
    Bulgaria into alliance. The Nazis now threatened
    the oil fields of the Caucuses and the Suez Canal.

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16.)
  • Hitler had decided that the time had come to take
    the "living space" he'd dreamed of in Mein Kampf.
    In June 1941 over a million German troops crashed
    into the Soviet Union, catching the Russians
    unprepared. This would eventually be Hitler's
    downfall, though, because it was unnecessary. By
    invading the East he'd locked himself in a
    two-front war when he could have kept striking at
    Britain.

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17.)
  • After the Pearl Harbor raid, Hitler decided to
    honor his treaty with Japan and declare war on
    the United States. This was not really necessary
    but nevertheless it brought the U.S. into the
    European conflict.

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18.)
  • From 1940-42 the Nazis set about killing as many
    undesirables as possible.
  • The Nordic Peoples, or Aryans, received
    preferential treatment in all countries. The
    "Master Race" would govern the other groups.
  • the French and other occupied" Latin" peoples
    were the next group. They were considered
    inferior but could be made to be allies.
  • Last were the Jews, Slavs, and other "sub-human"
    groups. They were to be cleared out wherever
    possible to make way for the Aryan. They were
    also used as labor.

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The Holocaust
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19.)
  • Early in the war, the Nazis used death squads
    (the SS or einsatzgruppen) to eliminate
    undesirables. As the war went on it became clear
    that they couldn't kill as many as needed. The
    Final Solution to the "Jewish Questions" was then
    proposed industrial slaughter on a mass scale.
    The Holocaust began in earnest.

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Einsatzgruppen
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Ghettos
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The Final Solution
  • Aryans
  • Mediterranean Peoples
  • Slavs
  • Jews, colored people

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Concentration Camp
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Death Camp
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The Worst Camps
  • Auschwitz
  • Bergen-Belsen
  • Dachau
  • Sobibor
  • Treblinka
  • and over 300 more

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Who was targeted?
  • Jews
  • Retarded People
  • Gypsies
  • Homosexuals
  • Soviet POWs
  • Intellectuals
  • Communists

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20.)
  • Hitler was considered the immediate threat. If
    either the British or Soviets were ever knocked
    out of the war (or both) the U.S. would never be
    able to win alone. Concentrating on Hitler also
    would serve to keep the paranoid Stalin satisfied.

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21.)
  • The U.S. mainly provided Industry, technology,
    and aid.
  • The huge British Empire provided manpower,
    resources, and strategic locations from which to
    launch attacks against the Axis. Also the British
    Islands were a perfect location to launch an
    invasion against Hitler.
  • The Soviets provided endless cannon fodder.
    Their troops were extremely motivated through
    harsh communist ideology.
  • They undermined Nazi efforts everywhere, at
    great personal sacrifice.

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22.)
  • Stalingrad was strategically important. Situated
    on the Volga, it was a railroad junction and the
    gateway to the oilfields of South Russia. Being
    Stalin's name sake it also was a point of pride.
    Hitler was determined to take it.
  • It was a months long battle, the worst kind of
    urban warfare imaginable. House to house and room
    to room, it was extremely costly to both sides.
    The Germans eventually lost 1,000,000 casualties
    and thousands of tanks, while the Soviets may
    have lost millions. It was this defeat that broke
    Hitler's back, and changed the momentum on the
    Eastern Front. The Red Army would be on the
    offensive from this point onward.

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23.)
  • The attack at Pearl Harbor had crippled the U.S.
    Pacific Fleet. Luckily, the U.S. carriers were
    not at Pearl and escaped. The Japanese captured
    the Philippines and by May of 1942 were
    threatening Australia. They were stopped at the
    Coral Sea by a combined U.S.-Australian fleet.
  • The next month at Midway, the U.S. scored a huge
    victory by sinking 4 of the best Japanese
    carriers, losing only 1. With these two
    victories, the U.S. fleet regained the initiative
    in the Pacific and went on the offensive.
  • This led to the beginning of the "island hopping"
    campaign.

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  • Guadalcanal was the first island to be invaded.
    Conditions were brutal. Tropical heat, poisonous
    plants and animals, malaria and dysentery, jungle
    rot, constant rain were just some of the
    problems. The Japanese were fanatical opponents
    who would rather die than surrender. The American
    public realized that the Pacific campaign would
    be brutal. The Solomon, Marshall, Caroline, and
    Marianas would all be taken in succession. Names
    of islands like Guam, Tarawa, Iwo Jima, and
    Okinawa became common to Americans as the navy
    and Marines inched closer to Japan.

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24.)
  • In North Africa, the Afrika Korps under the
    command of Erwin Rommel sought to capture Egypt
    and the Suez Canal from the British. With the
    Suez, the way would be open to the oil of the
    Mid-east and an eventual link-up with the
    Japanese.
  • The war in Africa see-sawed back and forth until
    a British victory at El Alamein stopped the Nazi
    advance. By 1942 the U.S forces had landed in
    Morocco. The British and U.S. combined to force
    the Nazis out of Africa by 1943.

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25.)
  • The Allies launched an invasion of Sicily almost
    immediately to keep the momentum. Patton and
    Montgomery led the way. By 1944 the advance had
    stalled out at a place called Monte Cassino.
    Eventually the Allies captured Rome, and
    Mussolini was deposed, later killed by his own
    people. Italy was never a factor again.

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26.)
  • D-Day was an enormous gamble. From 1941-44, U.S.
    and British heavy bombers had carried on a
    massive air campaign against Germany. By 1944
    millions of men and billions of tons of material
    had been massed in the British Isles in
    preparation of an attack against Hitler's
    Atlantic Wall.
  • The question was where. The Germans expected it
    near Calais, the traditional cross-channel
    invasion point, and the Allies made every attempt
    to make them believe it. Instead Normandy was
    chosen, in the hopes of getting enough men and
    tanks ashore before the Germans could react. It
    was a gamble that would pay off.

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Dwight D. Eisenhower
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Eisenhowers Order of the Day
  • Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen of the Allied
    Expeditionary Force!
  • You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade,
    toward which we have striven these many months.
    The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and
    prayers of liberty-loving people everywhere march
    with you. In company with our brave Allies and
    brothers-in-arms on other Fronts, you will bring
    about the destruction of the German war machine,
    the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the
    oppressed peoples of Europe, and security for
    ourselves in a free world.
  • Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is
    well trained, well equipped and battle hardened.
    He will fight savagely.
  • But this is the year 1944 ! Much has happened
    since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-41. The United
    Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great
    defeats, in open battle, man-to-man. Our air
    offensive has seriously reduced their strength in
    the air and their capacity to wage war on the
    ground.
  • Our Home Fronts have given us an superiority in
    weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our
    disposal great reserves of trained fighting men.
    The tide has turned! The free men of the world
    marching together to Victory!
  • I have full confidence in your devotion to duty
    and skill in battle.We will accept nothing less
    than full Victory!
  • Good Luck! And let us all beseech blessing of
    Almighty God upon this great and noble
    undertaking.
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower

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27.)
  • By December of 1944 the Americans and British had
    liberated Paris and had pushed the Germans back
    into the Ardennes in Belgium. It was believed
    that Hitler was finished. But in one last gamble,
    the Nazis launched a desperate counter-attack in
    Dec. 1944. Taking advantage of bad weather and
    surprise, they drove 50 miles into the Allied
    lines, cutting off Bastogne. Patton's Third Army
    would eventually push them back. By late January
    1945 Hitler had lost his gamble.

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28.)
  • In April 1945 the Soviet and U.S. forces made
    contact near the Elbe River in Central Germany,
    setting off massive celebrations.
  • By May 7 (V -E day), Hitler had killed himself
    and the Nazis commanders were surrendering. The
    Americans and Soviets now eyed each other with
    suspicion.

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29.)
  • ln the Pacific the island hopping campaign had
    paid off. By 1945 the Philippines were back in
    U.S. hands. Attention was turned towards the
    Japanese home islands. After gaining bloody Iwo
    Jima and Okinawa, the way was cleared for a
    massive invasion that would dwarf D-Day. Instead,
    the decision was made by Harry Truman to use the
    atomic bomb. The Japanese surrendered on August
    14. (V -J day)

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Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  • When the bomb left the airplane, the plane jumped
    because you released 10,000 lbs. Immediately Paul
    took the airplane to a 180Â turn. We lost 2,000
    ft. on the turn and ran away as fast as we could.
    Then it exploded. All we saw in the airplane was
    a bright flash. Shortly after that, the first
    shock wave hit us, and the plane snapped all
    over. We looked to see what happened to the
    target, and we could make absolutely no visual
    observation because the entire city of Hiroshima
    was covered in black smoke and dust, debris that
    had been kicked up by the bomb and the blast, and
    a large white cloud that you've seen pictures of.

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