HIS 102 – Western
Civilization II
Lecture 10 -- World
War II
I. Causes of World
War II
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Many historians designate nationalism,
militarism, imperialism, and alliances as causes for World War I
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Unfortunately, all these causes
were only strengthened after the war
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Nationalism thrived as winners'
pride in their countries increased and losers sought to maintain their
country's autonomy.
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Militarism grew as winners planned
to maintain their military superiority; losers rebuilt their countries
so they could "do better next time"
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Imperialism continued to be
a powerful force as both winners and losers desperately needed the wealth
and resources of overseas territories to rebuild their economic systems
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Alliances were important as
winners and losers both sought enough strength through diplomatic ties
with other countries to avoid having to fight another war
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World War I had simply proved
how vital nationalim, militarism, imperialism and alliances were
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Throw into the mix national
leaders who, confident in their alliances, were willing to use their military
to gain more territory
to ensure not only the survival but dominance of their own country, and
you have aggression
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In other words, you have World
War II
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Prelude--Rise of the Axis Powers
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Japan
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Hirohito, the Emperor of Japan,
used his militaristic society to begin the aggression by invading Manchuria
in 1931 to gain land and resources
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The war expanded into China
in 1937 and into other parts of east Asia by 1941
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In order to take the territory
it coveted for its the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, Japan had
to strike a pre-emptive blow at the only force which could inhibit its
plan
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the United States Pacific Fleet
based at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
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at the same time, the Japanese
military attacked U.S. and British territories across the Pacific and Asia
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Italy
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Mussolini, the Fascist leader
("Il Duce") of Italy, built up the military, creating jobs for the unemployed
as well as weapons
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He attacked Ethiopia in northeast
Africa in 1935
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Italy had sought to control
this territory in the late nineteenth century but had been forestalled
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Mussolini's chief ally was Hitler
of Germany
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Germany
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Hitler was the most methodical
aggressor of all
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As head of the National Socialist
(Nazi) party, he was elected chancellor of Germany in 1933
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Under the guise of rebuilding
the country, he brought all areas of government under Nazi control, making
political opposition impossible-and dangerous
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Hitler was aggressive against
segments of his own people as well as against other nations
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Relying on the democracies'
(France, England, the United States) desire for peace, Hitler broke the
terms of the Treaty of Versailles by rearming his nation and refortifying
the buffer zone (the Rhineland) established between his country and France
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He sought to make all the territory
he controlled contiguous by seizing the Polish Corridor
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He also sought to gather all
peoples of Germanic descent under his control, including Austria and an
area in western Czechoslovakia called the Sudetenland
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Munich Accords of 1938
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Britain, France, and Germany
meet in Munich in 1938 to discuss German claims to the Sudetenland (part
of Czechoslovkia)
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The parties reached an agreement
whereby Germany would get the Sudetenland in return for its pledge to forego
any more agression
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British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain claimed that the treaty would guarantee "peace in our time"--one
of the most infamous statements in history
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After stating in the Munich
Accords in 1938 that he had no further territorial claims to make in Europe,
Hitler annexes Austria (most Austrians went willingly) and invaded
the remainder of Czechoslovakia in March of 1939
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His assumption that the democratic
countries would not oppose his territorial ambitions was valid
II. World War Begins
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Invasion of Poland
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Germany invaded Poland on September
1, 1939
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It launched a new form of warfare
called the "blitzkrieg" (or lightning war)
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This form combined air power
with tanks and mechanized troops to strike swiftly before defenders could
react
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within a few weeks, Germany
had taken control of the western half of Poland
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Hitler and Stalin sign a non-agression
pact which gives Germany western Poland and the Soviet Union receives the
eastern half of Poland
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However, when Germany invaded
Poland, France and England did declare war on Germany; however, little
fighting took place for six months (the Sitzkrieg)
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Germany attacks western Europe
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By the spring of 1940, Hitler
had established his preferred pattern for taking territory
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invade a country every six months
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March and September were the
optimum starting dates because of weather conditions
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In 1940 however, his spring
plans were delayed by heavy rains, which made moving heavy equipment over
dirt roads difficult
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To compensate for the delay,
Hitler invaded both Denmark and Norway in April
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he invaded Belgium, the Netherlands,
and Luxembourg in May
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in June, he took northern France;
the southern part of the country formed a collaborative government at Vichy
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The same month, he started air
strikes against England in preparation for taking that country (called
the Blitz)
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Choosing sides (or not)
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As Germany expanded its borders,
the world drew up sides
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The Axis
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Italy and Germany had become
allied through the Rome-Berlin Axis in 1935
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in 1937, Japan joined the Axis
Powers to form the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis
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The Allies
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France and England led the opposing
Allied Powers
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but the French were only involved
if they had left the country to join the British forces or if they worked
with the underground resistance movement
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the resistance created chaotic
conditions for the Germans occupying their country
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The United States
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United States President Franklin
D. Roosevelt had given British Prime Minister Winston Churchill a pledge
to support the English war efforts with materials and munitions
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However, the United States was
not an official participant in the conflict
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An unexpected power joined the
Allied camp when Hitler invaded Russia in 1941
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In 1939, the Hitler-Stalin Pact
had cleared the way for Germany to invade western Poland as Russia invaded
the same country from the east
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In spite of the diametrically
opposed ideologies of the Nazis and the Communists of Russia, the leaders
of the two countries agreed to partition Poland
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Later, when Hitler invaded Russia,
his former ally quickly joined the Allied forces
III. The War Spreads
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The Eastern Front
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In June, 1941, Hitler launched
operation Barbarossa--the invasion of the Soviet Union
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At first, the Germans made incredible
headway--by October, the Germans stood outside of the gates of Moscow and
had Leningrad nearly encircled
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Soviet Resistance
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Scorched earth
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removal of factories
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Stalingrad
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Hitler committed the bulk (over
80%) of the German military to defeating the Soviet Union
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North Africa
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The war being fought in Europe
spread to North Africa in 1941
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Hitler attempted to get his
Axis ally, Italy, to drive westward from Tripoli to seize the Suez Canal
(a vital transportation link) and the oil-rich fields of the Middle East
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When Italy could not do it alone,
German troops were added
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The British eventually blocked
the move
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The Pacific and the United States
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The war spread to the Pacific
Ocean when Japan, without a formal declaration of war, bombed the U.S.
Pacific Fleet home port of Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on 7 December 1941
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Japanese quickly captured much
of the Pacific and Asia
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American war effort at the beginning
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When the U.S. entered the war
in 1942, the situation for the Allies looked very grim
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Japanese advances in the Pacific
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German advances in Soviet Union
and Africa
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U.S. forced to split its forces
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The American forces, both naval
and land, were to fight a holding war against Japan
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other American forces joined
the English and Free French fighting in Europe and North Africa
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However, within six months of
the attack on Pearl Harbor, the American forces were beginning to push
the Japanese out of the territory they had conquered as the Greater East
Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
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Naval engagements and battles
and the struggles of the the U.S. Army and Marines against seemingly insurmountable
odds on Pacific islands gradually put the U.S. forces on Japan's doorstep
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The Tide turns in Europe
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In the Soviet Union, German
forces found themselves unable to push further
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However, Hitler ordered his
troops to hold on to every mile of territory they had taken
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The Soviet forces counterattacked
at Stalingrad and wiped out a huge German army
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by the end of 1943, the Soviets
had begun their drive to force Germany out of their country
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In North Africa, British forces
held the Italians and their German reinforcements back from the Suez Canal
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U.S. soldiers landed west of
the Axis forces, which were then squeezed into surrender
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In Western Europe, the war developed
many facets
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To relieve German pressure on
the Russians, the Allied forces (predominantly consisting if U.S. forces)
opened a second front in Italy
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About the time Rome was taken,
Allied forces established a beachhead at Normandy in northern France on
6 June 1944 (D-Day)
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Caught in the giant pincher
consisting of Allied forces pushing westward from France, northward from
Italy, and eastward from Russia, Germany was forced to surrender
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The war ended in Europe on May
8, 1945 (V-E Day)
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The end in the Pacific
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The war in the Pacific continued
until late summer of 1945
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The United States dropped an
atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th; a second bomb was dropped
on Nagasaki on August 9th
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Fearing further massive destruction,
Japan asked for terms of surrender--they surrendered on August 14th, 1945
(V-J Day).
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Japan signed the surrender on
September 2, 1945
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The destruction, while reminiscent
of World War I, was much worse. Over 50 million people had died as a direct
result of conflicts around the globe
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The war was finally over-or
was it?
IV. The Holocaust and
the Atomic Bomb
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The Holocaust
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Hitler's antisemitism was a
product of 19th century racial theories, rather than a result of Christian
antagonism to the Jews
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The deportation of Jews began
only in 1941, when the six killing camps were started, all of them in Poland
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Before that, many German Jews
had fled Germany, some 50,000 in 1935 alone
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By 1938, 1.3 million German
Jews had emigrated, most to neighboring countries, meaning that by the
start of the war, there were only 200,000 Jews left in Germany
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Of the six million Jews who
died in the Holocaust
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some 3.5 million were Russian
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1.5 million Polish
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200,000 were German
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the remaining 800,000 killed
were throughout Western Europe (many were Jews who had earlier fled Germany)
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Most camps in Germany were labor
camps, like Dachau, where conditions were so appalling that thousands died
of starvation and disease, but none of these concetration camps were designed
specifically to exterminate large numbers of people
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The death factories were all
in Poland, and even then, the largest number of Jews were killed by mobile
SS killing operations launched by Himmler in the Soviet Union
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In addition to the murder of
6 million Jews, the Germans also exterminated other undesirables--Gypsys,
Jehovah's Witnesses, Gays and Lesbians, and those deemed mentally unfit
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Who was responsible?
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Hitler and his henchmen
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the role of the German people
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the role of other Europeans
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The Atomic Bomb
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Initially created to defeat
Germany--but Germany surrendered before bomb was completed
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An invasion of Japan was expected
to cost the lives of millions, including an estimated 300-500,000 American
soldiers
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Soviet expansion in Asia
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The human costs of dropping
the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
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The moral issues