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SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY 1918-1941 (PART III)

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SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY 1918-1941 (PART III) THE NAZI-SOVIET PACT 1939 Stalin knew that USSR was too weak to defeat Germany Still building up USSR s industries Did ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY 1918-1941 (PART III)


1
SOVIET FOREIGN POLICY1918-1941(PART III)
2
THE NAZI-SOVIET PACT 1939
  • Stalin knew that USSR was too weak to defeat
    Germany
  • Still building up USSRs industries
  • Did not want to risk war unless he could win
  • Since he could not trust Britain and France, the
    alternative was to come to terms with Germany
  • Signed the Nazi-Soviet Pact in Aug 1939
  • Agreed to divide Poland among themselves
  • USSR would remain neutral in the imminent war
    along Germanys eastern frontier with Poland
  • Germany would not stop USSR from taking over the
    eastern part of Poland as well as Estonia and
    Latvia
  • Germany agreed later not to oppose USSR taking
    over Lithuania as well

3
THE NAZI-SOVIET PACT 1939
4
THE NAZI-SOVIET PACT 1939
5
WHY STALIN SIGNED THE PACT
  • Recovery of lost USSR territories
  • Gained time for Stalin
  • Stalins worry about fighting a war on two fronts
  • Loss of confidence in Britain and France

6
  • Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov signs the
    Nazi-Soviet Non-aggression Pact while German
    Foreign Minister Von Ribbentrop and Soviet leader
    Stalin look on under a portrait of Lenin, August
    23, 1939.

7
  • Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov signs the
    Nazi-Soviet Non-aggression Pact while German
    Foreign Minister Von Ribbentrop and Soviet leader
    Stalin look on under a portrait of Lenin, August
    23, 1939.

8
  • NAZI LEADERS AFTER SIGNING THE PACT WITH USSR
  • Upon signing the mutual non-aggression pact,
    German Foreign Minister Ribbentrop (center)
    boasted that he could "fill a chest with all the
    treaties that he had violated." (Germany violated
    this treaty after twenty-two months.)

9
WHY STALIN SIGNED THE PACT
  • Recovery of lost USSR territories
  • Land lost in the Brest-Litovsk Treaty
  • Estonia, Latvia Lithuania
  • Secret agreement that Russia could recover
    territory lost to Poland during the Russian civil
    war period
  • Advantage of moving USSRs western frontier
    further away from the main cities and industries
  • In the event of war with Germany, German forces
    would have to fight through all these territories
    before getting to USSR ie creation of a buffer
    zone

10
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11
WHY STALIN SIGNED THE PACT
  • 2. Gained time for Stalin
  • More time to build up his armed forces
  • Why?
  • USSR would be in a better position to fight
    Germany then
  • Probably one reason why the USSR defeated Germany
    later in WWII

12
WHY STALIN SIGNED THE PACT
  • 3. Stalins worry about fighting a war on two
    fronts
  • West Against Germany
  • East Against Japan
  • Limit German expansion to the east by redirecting
    it to the West towards France
  • Front seat to watch the Western powers slug it
    out with Germany

13
WHY STALIN SIGNED THE PACT
  • 3. Stalins worry about fighting a war on two
    fronts
  • 1937 China at war with Japan
  • USSR supported China
  • Stalin feared a Japanese attack on Soviet
    territories in East Asia
  • Did not want to fight a war there and in Europe
  • This war between Japan and USSR never
    materialized but it seemed very likely at that
    time

14
WORLD WAR II
  • WWII started in Sep 1939 with Hitlers invasion
    of Poland on 1 Sep 1939
  • As agreed in the Nazi-Soviet Pact, Stalin moved
    into eastern Poland, Estonia, Latvia Lithuania
    at the same time
  • Less than 2 years later, in June 1941, Germany
    attacked USSR
  • There was no declaration of war by Germany
  • 3,000,000 German troops poured into USSR in one
    of the biggest invasions in world history
  • The Soviet army was swept before it
  • Thus began what the Russians call The Great
    Patriot War

15
WORLD WAR II
German attack on USSR 1941
16
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
  • Information and image sources
  • Moreira J., World in Transition Perspectives on
    Modern World History, Singapore SNP Education
    Pte Ltd, 2000.
  • Kelly N. and Shuter J., As It Was Lived A
    History of the Modern World, Singapore Pearson
    Education Asia Pte Ltd, 2000.
  • Lim S H, Tham Y P, Wang Z and Yeo L, Inroads
    Modern World History, Singapore Oxford
    University Press, 2000.
  • Tate N., A History of the Modern World, Singapore
    Federal Publications, 1995.
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