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Consequences of World War I

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Title: Consequences of World War I


1
Consequences of World War I
2
  • The Human Toll

3
  • More than 8.5 million men died in WWI

4
  • In France, of the 8.4 million men enlisted, 1.3
    million men were killed.
  • In Great Britain, of the 8.9 million men
    enlisted, 908,000 were killed.
  • In the United States, of the 4.3 million men
    enlisted, 126,000 were killed.
  • Russias overall casualty rate topped the Allies
    at 76.

5
  • In Germany, of the 11 million men enlisted during
    the war, 1.7 million men were killed.
  • In Austria-Hungary, of the 7.8 million men
    enlisted, 1.2 million men were killed. Of all
    countries who participated in WWI, AH had the
    highest casualty rate at 90.

6
  • More than 21 million men were wounded in WWI.
    The overall casualty rate was more than 57.

7
  • The Economic Hardships

8
  • WWI cost the fighting nations approx. 337
    billion dollars

9
  • Many small businesses of Europe closed due to a
    lack sales.

10
  • Debts due to the war were enormous.
  • Countries had borrowed from other countries and
    citizens to pay for the war. Many couldnt pay
    back the loans.

11
  • Depression in many countries was caused by
    inflation, severe losses of buyers, the closing
    of small businesses, and bankrupted governments

12
  • Political Confusion

13
  • Collapsing governments in Russia (Communist
    Revolution), in Germany and AH (both kings
    abandoned their thrones at the end of the war and
    went into hiding, leaving leaderless
    governments), and Turkey (the Sultan was
    overthrown in 1922)

14
Central Power Punishments
15
  • The Treaty of Versailles

16
  • The spoils of war (especially land) were given to
    the Allies France esp.

17
  • The new borders split ethnic groups up into
    different countries, and forced different
    ethnicities into the same new countries, causing
    a lot of tension

18
Europe 1914 and Europe 1919
  • http//www.learn.co.uk/versailles/1919/maps.htm

19
  • Europe Before and after World War I

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  • New lands created Czechoslovakia, Poland,
    Danzig, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia from Germany

25
  • New lands Iraq, Palestine, Syria free from the
    Ottoman Empire

26
  • Austria-Hungary split into two separate
    countries. Portions of Czechoslovakia, Romania,
    and Yugoslavia created.

27
  • Loss of all German overseas colonies

28
  • Reparation payments for the cost of the war were
    billed to Germany all government profits went to
    the Allies until the debt was paid approx. 33
    billion dollars

29
  • Military occupation of the German industrial
    Rhine Region by the Allies for approx. 15 years
    to make sure that no new weapons or navy were
    built

30
  • Reduction of German army to limited numbers
    (approx. 10,000 standing army), and the
    elimination of any new navy ships being built

31
The Road to WWII
32
  • Rise of Dictators
  • StalinSoviet Union
  • HitlerGermany
  • MussoliniItaly

33
Beloved Stalin Is The Peoples Happiness
34
Stalins Communism
  • Forced takeover of agricultural lands, to be run
    by the state.
  • Those that resisted were forced off of their land
    and either starved, executed, or sent to labor
    camps in Siberia.
  • The resulting loss of workforce and production
    caused food shortages and government rationing.

35
Stalins Communism
  • Re-focused Russia on industrial and military
    growth, at the expense of all other necessities.
    While the country got by on shortages (food,
    clothing, etc.), massive factories of steel,
    iron, and coal were built to compete with the
    West.

36
Day After Day, Life Becomes Even Happier
37
Stalins Communism
  • Political Purges Over 7 million people were
    arrested as suspected dissidents. About 1
    million were executed, and the rest assigned to
    labor camps. All of the power was concentrated
    to the state.
  • Purges Gulags

38
Labor Camps in Russia
39
Mussolinis Fascism
  • Out of the frustration of being passed over for
    spoils from WWI, Mussolini brought together
    masses of dissatisfied veterans, laborers, and
    others to unite Italy under the banner of The
    Country is Nothing Without Conquest

40
Mussolinis Fascism
  • Used the Blackshirts as enforcers to put down
    opponents to his plan for starting a new Roman
    Empire.
  • Eliminated elections and political parties, and
    established himself as a dictator. Consolidated
    all power within his party. II Duce.
  • Focused Italy on industrial and military growth.
  • Mussolini Into Power

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Hitlers Nazi Party
  • "War-Guilt Clause", Treaty of Versailles (June
    28, 1919)
  • Article 231. The Allied and Associated
    Governments affirm and Germany accepts the
    responsibility of Germany and her allies for
    causing all the loss and damage to which the
    Allied and Associated Governments and their
    nationals have been subjected as a consequence of
    the war imposed upon them by the aggression of
    Germany and her allies . . .
  • Article 232. . . . The Allied and Associated
    Governments, however, require, and Germany
    undertakes, that she will make compensation for
    all damage done to the civilian population of the
    Allied and Associated Powers . . .

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Hitlers Nazi Party
  • Germany was humiliated and bankrupted by the
    provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. Hitler
    tapped into that anger and frustration to rally
    the people of Germany.
  • In 1923, 3,000 Nazis attempted to overthrow the
    Allied-influenced government. Failed, and jailed
    for five years.

45
Hitlers Nazi Party
  • In prison, wrote Mein Kampf. He outlined his
    plan to re-build Germany (militarily and
    economically), strengthen the Germanic people (by
    racial purification), and then re-conquer lost
    lands.
  • Once out of prison, became chancellor , and after
    Hindenburg dies, head of the government. Der
    Fuhrer. Hitler's Takeover

46
  • With satanic joy in his face, the black-haired
    Jewish youth lurks in wait for the unsuspecting
    girl whom he defiles with his blood, thus
    stealing her from her people. With every means he
    tries to destroy the racial foundations of the
    people he has set out to subjugate. Just as he
    himself systematically ruins women and girls, he
    does not shrink back from pulling down the blood
    barriers for others, even on a large scale. It
    was and it is Jews who bring the Negroes into the
    Rhineland, always with the same secret thought
    and clear aim of ruining the hated white race by
    the necessarily resulting bastardization,
    throwing it down from its cultural and political
    height, and himself rising to be its master.

47
Hitlers Nazi Party
  • Suppresses opposition and employs the country to
    secretly rebuild Germanys military.
    Unemployment is down, wages are up, the country
    is rebuilding. The next move is to re-capture
    the glory of old Germany.
  • Hitler Youth Training

48
From To
49
Re-Capture the Glory of Germany
50
  • Nazi Film Propaganda
  • Joseph Goebbels Diaries
  • Nazi Book Burning
  • Total War Speech

51
  • The Moves Towards War

52
The Moves Towards War
  • In October, 1935, Italy begins its quest for a
    new Roman Empire by invading Ethiopia, an
    independent African kingdom
  • Conquered and acquired by Italy in May, 1936

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The Moves Towards War
  • In March, 1936, German troops enter the
    Rhineland, a restricted area that Germany had
    previously used to launch attacks on France and
    Belgium.
  • Even though forbidden to re-arm and mobilize by
    the TofVer., no Allied leaders stop Hitler

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The Moves Towards War
  • With common goals, Hitler and Mussolini create an
    alliance in 1936.
  • They are known as the Axis Powers

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The Moves Towards War
  • In March 1938, Hitler marches into Austria.
    Because there is no resistance, its not
    technically an invasion and the Allies can do
    nothing.

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The Moves Towards War
  • In an effort to recapture lost German lands,
    Hitler next moves to re-acquire the Sudetenland
    (northern Czechoslovakia).
  • Appeasement a policy adopted by Europe to
    allow this action without opposition in hopes
    that Hitler would be happy enough to stop
    advancing.

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The Moves Towards War
  • Spanish Civil War
  • Germany and Italy support the overthrow of the
    Spanish government by Francisco Franco, a
    military dictator
  • The rest of Europe and US indirectly support the
    Spanish government
  • Franco wins and rules until 1975
  • A set-up for World War II?

63
The Moves Towards War
  • In March, 1939, Hitler invades and occupies the
    rest of Czechoslovakia.
  • In April, 1939, Mussolini invades and occupies
    Albania
  • France and Great Britain prepare for war

64
To The EastAppeasement policy gives
Czechoslovakia to Germany
65
The Moves Towards War
  • In August, 1939, signs a non-aggression pact
    with Russia that divides eastern Europe between
    the two of them, which allows Hitler to
    concentrate on the rest of Europe without
    fighting a two-front war

66
The Non-Aggression Pact
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The Moves Towards War
  • September 1, 1939, Hitler invaded Poland.
  • September 3, 1939, France and Great Britain
    declared war on Germany.

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  • World War II

71
German Blitzkrieg
  • To sweep across Europe, Germany employed a
    six-stage battle tactic known as a Blitzkrieg
    (Lightening Warfare) to move quickly and
    efficiently through their enemies.

72
  • 1. Identify a weak spot in the enemys line
  • Create a smoke screen in order to prepare for the
    attack secretly

73
  • 2. Planes bomb military and civilian targets, as
    well as 3. drop paratroopers behind the enemys
    lines

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  • 4. Tanks break through the weak spot

75
  • 5. Motorized divisions follow, encircling the
    enemy and cutting off retreat

76
  • 6. Infantry troops arrive to take care of any
    remaining resistance

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  • As France and Great Britain mobilize, Germany
    invades and occupies Denmark and Norway, the
    Netherlands, and Luxembourg through early 1940.
  • By mid-May, Germany had moved into Belgium and
    prepared to invade France.

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  • Though France had fortified their German front
    (Maginot Line), Germany went north through
    Belgium and went straight to the English Channel.
  • Splits France into two halves. On June 14, Paris
    is captured. By treaty, northern France and the
    Atlantic coast become Nazi territory, while the
    south was supervised by the French.

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  • Italy declares war on the Allies in June, 1940.

83
  • From northern France, Germany began its air
    attack on Great Britain.
  • From August, 1940 thru May 1941, Germany
    (Luftwaffe) flew bombing missions over GB (RAF),
    including civilian cities such as London.
  • Despite over 20,000 killed and 70,000 wounded,
    Britain did not fall.

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  • Japan Enters WWII

88
  • Japan had emerged from WWI as the premier power
    in Asia.
  • Thriving economics through new exports to the
    West, new colonies from Germany in the Pacific.

89
  • By the 1930s, though, prosperity in Japan
    faltered.
  • Worldwide depression lessened exports. Recession
    began.
  • Population explosion needed more resources to
    support growth.

90
  • In September, 1931, Japan invaded Manchuria,
    China, and secured occupation by February, 1932.
  • Provided additional land, resources (like oil)
    for Japan.
  • Japan begins to eye the rest of China.
  • Decried by the League of Nations and the US, but
    nothing done to stop them.

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  • Japan continues to move through China during the
    1930s, eventually occupy Beijing by 1937.
  • When war started in Europe in 1940, Europe was
    distracted and Japan pushed beyond China and into
    French Indochina and the Dutch East Indies.

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  • In September, 1940, aligns with Germany and Italy
    based on common expansionist ideas
  • In April, 1941, signed a pact with Russia to
    avoid any war in the north.

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  • The US and World War II
  • From Neutrality to War

97
  • Based on a poor economy at home and a desire to
    stay out of international problems, the US
    remains neutral as the war in Europe begins

98
The Neutrality Acts
  • A series of Neutrality Acts in the mid-1930s
    stated that
  • The US could not provide weapons to warring
    nations
  • The US could not loan money to warring nations
  • The US could trade with any nation, so long as
    the goods were non-military and they transported
    it themselves (cash and carry)

99
All Aid Short of War
  • After Germany invaded Poland, quickly overran
    France and set its sights on Great Britain, the
    US began to soften its neutral stance.
  • Began sending weapons to France and Britain
  • Lend-Lease allowed a bankrupt Britain to borrow
    military goods and pay for them later

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  • With aid extended to countries vital to US
    security, America also began cutting trade and
    financial dealings with Japan, whos expansion in
    Asia threatened American markets there and in the
    Pacific.
  • Froze Japanese assets in the US and stopped all
    sales of raw materials in 1940

101
A Date Which Will Live in Infamy
  • December 7, 1941, Japan attacks the US Pacific
    fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. A quick victory
    there would allow Japan to conquer Asia and the
    Pacific before the US could defend it
  • 2,400 Americans killed 1,200 wounded 200
    warplanes and 18 warships damaged or destroyed

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The US Goes to War
  • On December 7, 1941, the US declares war on Japan
  • On December 11, 1941, Germany and Italy declare
    war on the United States

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