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From Appeasement to War

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From Appeasement to War Chapter 14 Section 1 Aggressive Dictators Throughout the 1930s, dictators took aggressive action Yet, they met only verbal protests and pleas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: From Appeasement to War


1
From Appeasement to War
  • Chapter 14
  • Section 1

2
Aggressive Dictators
  • Throughout the 1930s, dictators took aggressive
    action
  • Yet, they met only verbal protests and pleas for
    peace from Western powers (e.g., slap on the
    wrist response)
  • Example When the League of Nations condemned
    Japans invasion of Manchuria in 1931, Japan
    simply withdrew from the League (What could the
    League do to Japan??)
  • A few years later, Japanese armies invaded China,
    starting the Second Sino-Japanese War
  • Mussolini invaded Ethiopia in 1935 to show the
    world its fascist supremacy and military strength
    against a weaker nation
  • Ethiopia was no match for Italys tanks, guns,
    airplanes, poison gas, etc.

3
Asia
4
Manchuria
5
Aggressive Dictators
  • The League of Nations voted sanctions (economic
    penalties) against Italy, but the League had no
    military power to enforce its punishment of
    Mussolini
  • Hitler, too, defied the Western democracies by
    building up the German military and sending
    troops into the de-militarized Rhineland
  • Marching troops into the Rhineland violated the
    terms of the Treaty of Versailles
  • The Western democracies denounced Hitler but
    adopted a policy of appeasement

6
Appeasement
  • A policy of giving in to the demands of an
    aggressor nation (e.g., Germany, Italy, Japan,
    etc.) in order to keep the peace and avoid war

7
German Soldiers Marching Into the Rhineland
8
Hitler and Mussolini
9
Rhineland (region between France and Germany)
Under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was
forbidden to have any troops in the Rhineland,
the area between Germany and France.
10
Appeasement
  • Definition to yield or concede to the
    belligerent demands of (a nation, group, person,
    etc.), such as Hitler
  • Appeasement developed for a number of reasons,
    including widespread pacifism (opposition to war
    or violence of any kind)
  • The United States did NOT want to get dragged
    into another European conflict like World War I
  • The USA responded with a series of Neutrality
    Acts whose goal was to avoid involvement in a
    war, rather than to prevent one
  • Neutrality Acts 1) prohibited sale of weapons
    to warring nations, 2) prohibited loans to
    warring countries, and 3) Americans could not
    travel on ships of warring nations (Remember the
    Lusitania in WWI??)

11
Leaders of the Axis Powers (Germany, Italy, Japan)
While the Western democracies sought to avoid
war, Germany, Italy, and Japan formed an alliance
called the Axis Powers.
12
Spain
  • In Spain, a new more liberal government came into
    power and passed reforms that upset conservatives
    and military leaders
  • General Francisco Franco, who was opposed to the
    new government, ignited a civil war (1936-1939)
  • Franco commanded the Nationalist (pro-Fascist)
    forces
  • Hitler and Mussolini supported Franco, their
    fellow fascist
  • The USSR sent troops to support the
    anti-fascists, or Loyalists

13
Spain
  • The British, American, and French governments
    remained neutral, although individuals from these
    countries fought alongside the Loyalists
  • By 1939, Franco had triumphed and defeated the
    loyalist forces
  • Spain became a fascist country like Italy and
    Germany
  • Hitler and Germany used the Spanish Civil War as
    a dress rehearsal for Germany and Italy who
    were preparing for World War II

14
Spain
15
General Francisco Franco
16
German Aggression
  • German aggression continued throughout Europe
  • In 1938, Hitler forced the Anschluss, or union
    with Austria because Austrians are
    German-speaking to become part of the Third Reich
  • Next, Hitler demanded the Sudetenland
  • The Sudetenland was a part of Czechoslovakia
    where three million ethnic Germans and
    German-speakers lived
  • At the Munich Conference (1938), which was held
    to discuss the tense situation, British and
    French leaders chose appeasement and allowed
    Hitler to annex the territory
  • In March 1939, Hitler broke his promise and took
    over the rest of Czechoslovakia

17
Sudetenland
18
Sudetenland
19
Germany Adds Territory (Anschluss)
20
Nazi-Soviet Pact
  • Months later, Hitler and Stalin signed the
    Nazi-Soviet Pact (non-aggression pact)
  • 1) They agreed not to fight if the other went to
    war
  • 2) Stalin and Hitler secretly agreed to carve up
    Poland after WWII began
  • This paved the way for Germanys invasion of
    Poland on September 1, 1939, which triggered the
    beginning of WWII

21
Nazi-Soviet Pact
  • The Nazi-Soviet Pact stunned the world because it
    was an agreement between arch enemies Fascist
    Germany and Communist Soviet Union
  • However, both sides were simply using each other
    to buy time
  • In June, 1941, Hitler, without advanced warning,
    broke the Nazi-Soviet Pact and invaded the Soviet
    Union

22
Signing of the Nazi-Soviet PactAugust 23, 1939
23
Powerpoint Questions (13 points)
  • 1. What country did Italy invade in 1935?
  • 2. What was the response of the League of Nations
    toward the aggressive countries in the 1930s?
  • 3. What area did Japan invade?
  • 4. What is appeasement?
  • 5. How did Hitler defy the Treaty of Versailles?
  • 6. What is pacificism?
  • 7. Why did the United States pass the Neutrality
    Acts?

24
Powerpoint Questions (13 points)
  • 8. Who was the fascist leader of Spain who
    ignited the Spanish Civil War?
  • 9. What is the term for the union of Austria and
    Germany?
  • 10. What part of Czechoslovakia did Hitler demand
    to annex?
  • 11. What were the key elements of the Nazi-Soviet
    Pact? (2 points)
  • 12. On what date did World War II begin?

25
The End
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