ROAD TO WORLD WAR II - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 47
About This Presentation
Title:

ROAD TO WORLD WAR II

Description:

THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY 9. Nazi Leaders: Hermann Goring, took over SA 1922, Gestapo 1933; Rudolf Hess, Hitler's Secretary; Joseph Goebbels, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:222
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: Mento8
Category:
Tags: road | war | world | fascism | nazi

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ROAD TO WORLD WAR II


1
ROAD TO WORLD WAR II
2
CAUSES - The Peace of Paris
  • A. The Peace of Paris (collective name for all
    the treaties drawn up). Many countries
    dissatisfied with the agreements either because
    they lost territory or had to pay reparations. In
    Germany, the hated treaty was called the
    Friedensdiktat ("the dictated peace")

3
CAUSES -Economic Problems
  • B. Economic Problems
  • 1. Debt Europeans urged Americans to erase the
    war debt but American leaders insisted on
    repayment. Coolidge said ''They hired the money,
    didn't they?" Nevertheless, the U.S. cut Allied
    war debt in half during the 1920's. In 1931
    Hoover declared a moratorium on payment of war
    debts. Allied debtors defaulted on the remainder
    owed.

4
CAUSES - Economic Problems
  • 2. Inflation in Germany The mark went from 8.4
    to the dollar in 1919 to 7,000 to the dollar by
    December, 1922. When the Allied Reparations
    Commission declared Germany in default on its
    debt the French and Belgians occupied the Ruhr on
    January 11, 1923. Chancellor Wilhelm Cuno
    encouraged passive resistance and printed
    worthless marks which dropped from 40,000 to the
    dollar in January, 1923 to 4.2 trillion to the
    dollar by December. The Ruhr occupation ended on
    September 26, 1923 but the inflationary spiral
    had severe economic, social, and political
    consequences.

5
CAUSES -Economic Problems
  • 3. Reparations Germany defaulted on its
    payments. America feared that radicalism would
    grow in Germany so American bankers loaned
    millions of dollars. This was the beginning of
    the Triangular Relationship
  • 1) Americans bankers loaned money to Germany
  • 2) Germany paid reparations to Allies
  • 3) Allies repaid war debts to United States

6
CAUSES -Economic Problems
  • a. Dawes Plan (1924) reduced Germany's annual
    payments, extended the repayment period, and
    provided more loans.
  • b. In 1928-29 American loans to Germany declined
    as investment in the stock market became more
    lucrative.
  • c. Young Plan (1929) reduced Germany's
    reparations but ineffective as the international
    economy collapsed. Great Britain rejected
    Hoover's offer to exchange war debt for British
    Honduras, Bermuda, and Trinidad.

7
CAUSES -Economic Problems
  • 4. Depression High unemployment (Germany's was
    almost equal to that of the other European
    countries combined - 43 in 1932) and economic
    disorder

8
CAUSES -Economic Problems
  • 5. Economic nationalism- World trade diminished
    1929-1933. Each country worked for its own
    economic welfare rather than trying to find a
    collective solution. This resulted in the raising
    of tariffs worldwide. The London Conference
    (1933) was called to stabilize the international
    monetary situation but it was not effective.

9
CAUSES- Nationalism
  • C. Nationalism countries placed their own
    interests first some looked for restoration of
    national honor

10
CAUSES - . Instability of Democratic Governments
  • D. Instability of Democratic Governments-Rise of
    Dictatorships arose in countries with a weak
    history of democracy - Russia, Japan, Italy,
    Germany, Spain

11
CAUSES Territorial Expansion
  • E. Territorial Expansion

12
CAUSES Failure of League of Nations
  • F. Failure of the League of Nations to enforce
    its rulings An important instrument of diplomacy
    in the 1920s, the league was unable to fulfill
    its chief aims of disarmament and peace-keeping
    in the 1930s. Its failure to act when
  • 1) Japan invaded Manchuria in September, 1931,
  • 2) its non-action during the Sino-Japanese War,
  • 3) its slow response to German rearmament, and
    finally,

13
(No Transcript)
14
CAUSES Failure of League of Nations
  • 4) its failure to prevent the Italian conquest of
    Ethiopia, resulted in its ultimate demise. It
    lost members and fell into disuse before World
    War II. It revived briefly in December 1939 to
    make the meaningless gesture of expelling the
    USSR for its attack on Finland. Some of its
    technical services continued to function until
    the organization was formally terminated on April
    18, 1946, when it was succeeded by the newly
    organized United Nations

15
CAUSES - Pacifism
  • G. Pacifism The terrible loss of life,
    destruction of property, and psychological
    devastation engendered by World War I caused
    Britain, France, and other democratic states to
    withdraw into a shell wherein they could avoid
    war. This deep abhorrence made them ignore or
    explain away the actions of Hitler until it was
    too late.

16
CAUSES Failure of Appeasement
  • H. Failure of the policy of Appeasement Working
    on the premise that they could satisfy Hitler's
    lust for territory, the western powers allowed
    him to take a little bit of territory which only
    convinced him that they would fail to act if he
    took even more.
  • Underlying the policy was a feeling that Germany
    really had been shortchanged in the Treaty of
    Versailles.

17
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • A. American Relief Administration Europe was a
    mess following World War I. This agency
    delivered food to needy Europeans.

18
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • B. Washington Conference (Nov, 1921-Feb. 1922)
    Purpose to reduce the number of naval armaments.
    The U.S., Britain, Japan, France, Italy, China,
    Portugal, Belgium, and the Netherlands discussed
    limits on naval armaments. Problem - No
    enforcement clause.

19
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • 1. The Five Power Treaty set a 10 year moratorium
    on the construction of capital ships and
    established a total tonnage ratio among the top
    five nations. (Britain France the U.S., Japan,
    Italy) Also no new fortifications in Pacific
    possessions.
  • 2. The Nine Power Treaty reaffirmed the Open
    Door in China and recognized Chinese sovereignty.
  • 3. The Four Power Treaty the U.S., Britain,
    Japan, France agreed to respect each other's
    Pacific possessions.

20
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • C. Geneva Protocol (1924) Stated that the nation
    that refused to submit to arbitration by the
    World Court, the League Council, or special
    arbitrators would be termed the aggressor.
    British opposition spelled its failure.

21
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • D. Locarno Pact (1925) Series of agreements
    among European nations prompted by German Foreign
    Minister, Gustav Stresemann. They dealt with
    boundaries, acceptance of arbitration, frontier
    defenses, and the withdrawal of French and
    Belgian forces from the Rhineland (by 1930). As a
    result, Germany joined the League of Nations on
    September 10, 1926. The ''feel good'' atmosphere
    led to the ''spirit of Locarno'' which inspired
    the Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928) signed by 62
    nations Condemned war but lacked enforcement.

22
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • E. London Naval Disarmament Treaty (March, 1930)
    Great Britain and the U.S. wanted to expand the
    naval limitations of the Five Power Treaty. Mild
    reductions in cruiser and destroyer strength were
    made.

23
1920s PEACE ATTEMPTS
  • F. World Disarmament Conference (February 5,
    1932) Much discussion but nothing settled. Ended
    in failure June, 1934.

24
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE
  • A. Fascism collection of ideas and prejudices
    that included supremacy of the state over the
    individual, authoritarianism, a state-regulated
    economy and militarism. Called Nazism or National
    Socialism in Germany.

25
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - ITALY
  • B. Italy
  • 1. Problems
  • a) Disappointment that the 1915 Treaty of London
    which promised the return of ''Italia Irredenta"
    was not honored at Versailles
  • b) There were strikes and agrarian unrest

26
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - ITALY
  • 2. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945) came to power in
    October 1922 with the help of his ''Black
    Shirts'' who marched on Rome in October demanding
    that the king call on Mussolini to form a new
    Cabinet. Mussolini was viewed as one who would
    preserve the law, maintain order, and uphold the
    rights of property-holders. Mussolini
    consolidated his power using censorship,
    abolition of all political parties except
    Fascists, destruction of labor unions. His
    administration is associated with efficiency as
    evidenced by the fact the trains ran on time.

27
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - ITALY
  • 3. Victor Emmanuel III complied and Mussolini was
    granted dictatorial authority for one year. In
    the 1924 elections Fascists won 3/5 of the seats.
  • a. Corporate Organization" business remained in
    private hands but government controls were
    imposed.
  • b. Lateran Treaty 1929 the Church recognized
    Mussolini's Italy and Vatican City was given
    autonomy.

28
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - ITALY
  • 4. Invasion of Ethiopia In 1935 by Italian
    troops. The failure of the League of Nations to
    act spelled its demise

29
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - ITALY
  • 5. Italians experienced a sense of ''National
    exhilaration.''

30
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • C. Germany Third Reich ''would last a thousand
    years"
  • 1. Rise of Hitler (1889-1945) In 1919 he joined
    the German Workers Party in Munich. It became the
    National Socialists German Workers Party in 1920.
    In 1923 he participated in the Munich Putsch or
    Beer Hall Putsch. He was arrested and imprisoned.
    In 1924 there was an economic revival and NAZI
    membership suffered. Fortunately, the depression
    came.

31
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 2. Hitler in Power The NAZI'S enjoyed victories
    in the 1930 and 1932 elections. The Party line
    denounced the Treaty of Versailles, the Weimar
    Republic. It promoted the concept of the Volk -
    the people. It promoted Anti-semitism. Hitler and
    the NAZI'S were supported by landowners who
    thought they could control him. In 1933 Adolf
    Hitler came to power as chancellor to President
    Hindenburg in the Weimar Republic. He vowed to
    revive German military and economic strength, to
    cripple Communism, and to purify the German race
    by destroying Jews.

32
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • He had described his master race theory in his
    1923 book Mein Kampf. He enforced his wishes
    through the use of Sturmabteilung, Stormtroopers
    (SA), the Schutzstaffel (SS), and the Geheime
    Staatspolizei, Gestapo sporting the Nazi symbol,
    the Swastika.

33
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 3. Early moves
  • a) October 24, 1933 Hitler pulled Germany out of
    the League of Nations and ended reparations
    payments.
  • b). January 26. 1934 Germany signs a
    non-aggression pact with Poland (broke France's
    encirclement of Germany via the Little Entente)

34
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • c). June 30, 1934 The Rohm Purge (The Night of
    the Long Knives) Rohm headed the SA. He and it
    posed a threat to Hitler's power. The Gestapo and
    the SS arrested and murdered 84 SA leaders and
    other political opponents.

35
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 4. August 2, 1934 Death of Hindenburg. Hitler
    combined the offices of Chancellor and President.
    He required all civil servants to take an oath of
    loyalty to him. Nazi Youth movement revival of
    German spirit. Deification of the leader

36
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 5. March 15, 1935 Announced that Germany would
    no longer obey the military restrictions of the
    Treaty of Versailles. Hitler had already created
    an air force Luftwaffe and was instituting a
    draft. Rearmament ended unemployment.

37
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 6. June 18, 1935 Naval Pact with Britain
    restricting German naval tonnage (excluding
    submarines) to 35 of that for England.

38
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 7. September 15, 1935 Nuremburg Laws deprived
    Jews of German citizenship and outlawed sexual or
    marital relations between Jews and other Germans

39
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 8. March 7, 1936 German troops invaded the
    Rhineland an area the Treaty of Versailles had
    demilitarized. France did not resist because it
    would not move without British support.

40
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE - GERMANY
  • 9. Nazi Leaders Hermann Goring, took over SA
    1922, Gestapo 1933 Rudolf Hess, Hitler's
    Secretary Joseph Goebbels, Berlin Party chief
    and later propaganda chief Heinrich Himmler,
    head of the SS 1929

41
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE
  • D. Anti-Comintern Pact union of Germany and
    Japan against USSR 1936.
  • Rome-Berlin Axis (Nov., 1936)

42
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE SPANISH CIVIL WAR
  • E. Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) In 1931 Alfonso
    XII was driven out of power. A republic was
    established.
  • 1. Loyalist Republican against the fascist-backed
    insurgents under Francisco Franco.

43
THE RISE OF FASCISM IN EUROPE SPANISH CIVIL WAR
  • 2. Hitler and Mussolini sent military aid to
    Franco. German air force units bombarded Madrid,
    Barcelona, Guernica (the latter inspired
    Picasso's famous painting which became an
    anti-fascist symbol). Italy sent troops tanks and
    other war materiel. The USSR backed the Loyalists
    with advisers and troops recruited from
    anti-fascists around the world. France, Britain,
    and the U.S. practiced nonintervention. 3000
    American volunteers called the Lincoln Battalion
    joined the side of the Republicans. Franco won in
    1939 and ruled until his death in 1975.

44
THE U.S. RESPONSE TO THE RISE OF FASCISM
  • A. Isolationism As trouble increased in Europe
    Americans reasserted their isolationist stand.
    Many resented Europeans who expected the U.S. to
    do what they had failed to do - stop Hitler.

45
THE U.S. RESPONSE TO THE RISE OF FASCISM
  • B. Franklin Roosevelt - emphasized disarmament
    and the horrors of war. In a 1936 Chautauqua
    speech he promised U.S. would stay distant from
    European conflict. He endorsed appeasement during
    the Czech crisis of 1938. FDR did not like the
    behavior of the "three bandit nations". He did
    not like German persecution of Jews or Japanese
    slaughter of Chinese civilians.

46
THE U.S. RESPONSE TO THE RISE OF FASCISM
  • C. Merchants of Death U.S. businessmen were
    accused of being this by promoting war to make a
    profit. DuPont, Standard Oil, General Motors, and
    Union Carbide all sold to the fascists. The Nye
    Munitions Investigations (1934-1937) lodged this
    accusation in regard to WWI.

47
THE U.S. RESPONSE TO THE RISE OF FASCISM
  • D. Neutrality Acts (1935,1936,1937) prohibited
    arms shipments to either side in a war once the
    president had declared the existence of
    belligerency forbade loans to belligerents
    introduced the ''cash and carry'' principle
    forbade Americans from traveling on the ships of
    belligerent nations
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com