Asian American Pacific Islander Month DDSD 2024.pptx
2312 Online Interwar Europe and WWII
1.
2. The Interwar Period in Europe
• Often called the Age of Anxiety
• After WWI, new governments take over:
• Republics: Germany, Czechoslovakia, Poland, the Baltic States, Greece
• Constitutional Monarchies: Hungary, Yugoslavia, Romania, Albania, Bulgaria
• Almost all of these have major nationalist tendencies (with the exceptions of
Weimar Germany, and Czechoslovakia - which were more centrist)
• Turkey – Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, president from 1920-1938, ultra-nationalist,
secular, and continued attempts to make Turkey ethnically homogeneous
(they had begun the Armenian Genocide during the war, and continued
persecution of Armenians, Kurds, Greeks, and others)
• Italy – Benito Mussolini founds the Fascist Party and becomes Prime Minister
in 1922. Ultra-nationalist, anti-Bolshevik, used paramilitary groups to
establish an authoritarian regime
3. The Interwar Period in Europe
• What is the difference between Fascism/Nazism and Communism?
• Why are the two so opposed to each other?
• Why are they both seen as a threat to democracy?
Flag of the British Fascist Party
The Fasci, ancient
Roman symbol that the
Italian Fascist Party
coopts
Flag of the Spanish
Falange, fascist party
4. The Interwar Period in Europe - USSR
• Soviet Union (est. 1922)
• While consolidating power and defeating the “White” forces during the Russian Civil
War (1917-1922), Bolshevik forces retake lost territory in Belarus and Ukraine, but
are unsuccessful in Poland and the Baltic States.
• Lenin sees the need to stabilize the economy and puts the New Economic
Policy in place, allowing for limited capitalism and foreign investment
(including American companies)
• After Lenin dies (1924) there is a brief struggle for power. Joseph Stalin
succeeds in becoming the leader of the Soviet Union, and ends the NEP in
1928, instead turning to rapid industrialization as a means to build the
economy
• He is much more heavy-handed in his suppression of dissent
• Purges
• Holodomor/forced famines in Ukraine and Central Asia
• The new Soviet Union would not trust the US, since US troops
and goods had supported the “Whites” during the Russian
Civil War.
Lenin’s Tomb, Red Square, Moscow
5. Germany
• The Weimar Republic
• Had taken over after the Kaiser abdicated near the end of WWI
• Was seen as weak by the people for not negotiating better terms for surrender
• Allowing for French occupation in the west
• Accepting a forced demilitarization
• Had to deal with massive inflation, followed by forced deflation during the Great
Depression
• Contended with internal radical movements (both communist and hyper-nationalist)
• Exemplified by the Beer Hall Putsch (1923) in which Hitler and the Nazi party attempted to seize
power in Munich (Hitler was convicted of treason, and sentenced to 5 years, but served 9
months-during which he wrote Mein Kampf)
• Hitler and the Nazis focus on obtaining power through the political system, becoming
more popular in the early 1930s
• Hitler becomes Chancellor in 1933 after the Nazis help form a coalition government
• After a fire in the Reichstag (parliament building), emergency powers are granted to the
chancellor (Hitler would never give up this power)
Paul von Hindenburg, last
President of Weimar Germany
6. Spain and the Spanish Civil War
• Global Depression starting in the 1920s facilitates a rise in anti-
Monarchist political groups
• From 1931-1935 the government attempts to separate church and
state, and to further decrease the power of the monarchy (the king
leaves the country)
• Radical right-wing groups (such as the Falange) and radical
communist groups begin to grow in popularity and conflict with each
other
• In 1935 political factions fail to form a government
• A military insurrection in 1936 takes control of more conservative
areas of the country, arriving in German and Italian airplanes,
sparking a Civil War
British (left) and American
(right) volunteers in the
Spanish Civil War. Many
were communists, but
some just wanted to fight
fascism.
7. Spanish Civil War (cont.)
• Nationalists
• Led by General Francisco Franco
• Funded and supplied by Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy
• Eventually unites Fascists and Monarchists (under Franco, with the support of
the Spanish King)
• Republican Loyalists
• Any political party that opposed the Catholic Church, the Monarchy, or the
Fascists
• Funded and supplied by the Soviet Union, supported by GB and France
• Over 3000 Americans would travel to Spain to fight on this side, some
because they supported communism, some because they opposed fascism,
and some because they longed to fight
• Ernest Hemingway wrote For Whom the Bell Tolls based on his time there as
a journalist
Ernest Hemingway
8. Spanish Civil War (cont.)
• Served as a proxy War between the Soviet Union and Italy/Nazi
Germany
• Airplanes proved decisive in battle for the fascists and tank designs
were perfected on both sides
• Blitzkrieg tactics are used for the first time the fascists
• By 1939 Britain and France no longer support the Republican forces,
and Franco is able to splinter remaining opposition
• Franco would stay in power until 1975 when he died
• The war showed Hitler and Mussolini the extent to which other
European powers and America were willing to intervene (or not
intervene) in European affairs
9. European Leaders in the late 1930s
Adolf Hitler – National Socialism,
Germany
Benito Mussolini (Il Duce)
Fascist Party, Italy
Francisco Franco – Nationalist, Spain Joseph Stalin – Communist, Soviet Union
Albert Lebrun
Prime Minister of France
Neville Chamberlain
Prime Minister of
Great BritainThese two (to the right) are less well-known,
mostly because they appeased Hitler and were
not able to lead their countries effectively as the
war started. Their predecessors (Charles de
Gaulle, France, and Winston Churchill, GB) are far
better known.
10. German Expansion
1936 – Remilitarized the Rhineland
1938 – Anschluss (What is this?)
1938 (Sept) – Annex the
Sudetenland (Where is this?)
1939 (Mar) – “Protectorate of
Bohemia and Moravia” (Where is
this?)
Why did GB and France let all this
happen?
After Czechoslovakia, GB realized
that Germany could no longer be
ignored.
1939 (Sept) - Poland
12. Early War Years
• August 23, 1939 – Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
• Western Poland – Germany
• Eastern Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania – Soviet Union
• September 1, 1939 – Nazi Germany invades Poland
• Within Germany, Hitler also orders the terminally ill be euthanized (to make
room for injured soldiers in hospitals)
• September 3, 1939 – GB and France (and their territories) declare war
on Germany
• September 16, 1939 – Soviet Union occupies Eastern Poland and the
Baltics
• By October 6 Poland ceased to exist
13. Early War Years
• Meanwhile in America
• Neutrality Act of 1935
• Banned selling weapons to nations at war
• Revised in 1936 – banned loans to warring nations
• Neutrality Act of 1937
• Non-military goods could only be sold on a “cash and carry” basis
• What does that mean?
• Neutrality Act of 1939
• Britain and France could get military supplies, but had to send troops to America to take
them back (seen as helping, without drawing the US into the war
• FDR saw that the US military was vastly undersized and started increasing the
size of the army and building more airplanes
• US Army in the interwar period had been reduced to 175,000
• Due to information given to the government by Albert Einstein, FDR ordered
the creation of the Manhattan Project
America First Committee, non-
interventionist group founded
in 1940
14. Early War Years
Old Town Warsaw before the war
(left), after the Nazi invasion
(middle), and now (right).
The Germans not only sought to
take over the Polish capital, but
to destroy it so thoroughly that
the Polish people would lose
their history. The royal castle and
old town were bombed to
oblivion, and the rubble was
removed (top middle).
Warsaw University was also
destroyed thoroughly, and later
rebuilt (bottom row).
15. Early War Years
• After taking Poland, German forces prepared for war in the west, but
had to pause for the winter
• Spring 1940 – Germany takes Denmark and subjugates Norway
• Why Denmark and Norway first?
• Late Spring into Summer 1940 – Netherlands, Belgium, Northern
France
• Blitzkrieg was crucial in the rapid advancement through France, again
following the Schlieffen Plan
• Summer to Fall 1940 – Battle of Britain – What is this?
• With the western front at a stalemate, Hitler and Germany turn to
another goal, invading the Soviet Union (violating the pact from 1939)
16. US Entry (Background)
• In 1937 Japan forms an alliance with Germany and Italy
• This “Axis” Alliance established spheres of dominance for these countries
• Japan and Asia
• Beginning in 1927 China entered a period of Civil War
• In 1931, Japan uses the chaos in China to takeover Manchuria and set up a
puppet state (Manchukuo) – they already had control over Korea since 1910,
and a presence in Manchuria since 1904-1905 (Ruso-Japanese War)
• In 1937 Japanese troops went to the fortress at Beijing and request entrance,
they were denied and attempted a night raiding party, which was repelled
(this was in order to “look for a deserter”)
• They then take over Beijing and start taking more Chinese territory
• Communists and Nationalist cease fighting each other to try to repel the Japanese
• The Japanese continue their expansion in Asia seeing themselves as the first among the
Asian peoples
17. US Entry (Background)
This map shows the territory
taken over by Japan by 1939.
Most concerning for the US was
the expansion into the islands
around Guam and Saipan (US
Territories) and the territories
close to the Philippines.
As war drew closer, the Japanese
would continue to expand,
especially into French Indochina
(present day Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodia).
18. US Entry (Background)
• In 1940 after the Battle of Britain and the Blitz (what was this?), FDR began
actively trying to get more Americans behind the idea of helping the British.
“All aid short of war.”
• Believing a German sea invasion was inevitable, FDR and Churchill negotiate
a trade of 50 aging US warships in exchange for allowing the US to build
bases in British territories.
• The US Congress approved the Selective Training and Service Act in Sept.
1940 – men 21-35 (later 18-45) had to register to be drafted.
• FDR ran for a third term, promising not to take the US into a foreign war.
• After his reelection, he introduces the Lend-Lease Act, passed in March
1941, allowing the US to send $50 billion in supplies between 1941-1944 to
GB, the Soviet Union, the French in exile, China (to fight Japan) and others.
19. US Entry (Background)
• By 1941 German forces had pushed far into Soviet territory
• Began a siege on Leningrad (St. Petersburg) in the summer which would last
until January 1944
• Reached the outskirts of Moscow in December 1941
• Captured Stalin’s own son
• Why did the advance halt?
• The Atlantic Charter was signed by eleven nations in the summer of
1941 (including the US and the Soviet Union)
• Agreed to the self-determination of all peoples after the defeat of Nazi tyranny
• Agreed to the creation of the United Nations
• After the charter, Nazi U-boats began attacking US ships in the Atlantic
• FDR ordered navy ships to protect commercial vessels, Congress modified the
1939 Neutrality Act to allow US ships to make port in warring nations
20. US Entry (Background)
• Japan continues expansion in
Asia, and build airfields in
Indochina
• This prompts FDR to freeze all
assets to Japan and to
increasingly cease most trade in
1940
• Japan fully takes over Indochina
for their resources and issues an
ultimatum to the US in
November 5, 1941 promising the
US would “face conflict” if they
didn’t lift the embargo
• US Pacific fleet commanders
were warned of the threat, but
expected it in Singapore or in the
Philippines
21. Pearl Harbor
• December 7, 1941
• Pearl Harbor in Oahu, HI
• 8 battleships destroyed or disabled
• 11 other ships
• 180 warplanes
• 2400 dead, 1200 injured
• Did not destroy most of the base’s infrastructure
• Did not destroy aircraft carriers, which were out at
sea (this was important, since future actions against
Japan relied heavily on air power)
• Simultaneously attacked:
• US stations in the Philippines, Guam, Wake Islands
• British bases in Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaya
• December 8, US declared war on Japan
• December 11, Germany and Italy declare war
on the US
23. Life in the US
• Congress passes the War Powers Act, December 18, 1941
• Gives the President wide powers during the war
• War Production Board (1942) – oversees the conversion of industry to the
war effort
• Revenue Act of 1942 – increased taxes for most workers (5% of workers to
90% now paying taxes)
• Unemployment sinks to 2% (Federal civilian jobs go from 1 to 4 million)
• Office of Price Administration (1942) - sets price ceilings, initiates rationing
• Smith-Connally War Labor Disputes Act (1943) – allows the government to
seize industries when workers strike (severely limits strikes)
• Women go to work again, including 350,000 in all branches of the
US military
• “Rosie the Riveter,” propaganda used to recruit women workers
• With men and women out of the house, the government funds a day-care program
24. Life in the US (cont.)
• Life for People of Color
• Another 500,000 African Americans leave the South to find work
• A march planned in 1941 on DC pushed FDR to sign a Presidential Order
requiring equal treatment in the hiring of workers
• Many rushed to enlist after Pearl Harbor
• African Americans
• Units were still segregated, and African American troops were relegated to
roles behind the front lines between 1941 and 1944 (when more troops were
needed)
• The Tuskegee Airmen (600 pilots) flew more than 15,000 missions
• Units on the ground fought fiercely
• After the war, though, units were segregated, again
• Mexican Americans
• 300,000 served in the war with many earning Medals of Honor
• Racism still persisted stateside, though
• In 1943, several thousand off-duty white servicemen joined others in LA rioting
through the city, targeting Latinx people and other people of color
• These “Zoot Suit Riots” lasted a week
25. Life in the US (cont.)
• Life for People of Color
• Native Americans
• Were not segregated into separate units
• Nearly 1/3 of eligible men served
• “Code talkers” used the complicated Navajo language (and other native
languages) for allied communications because it could not be learned by
the Germans or the Japanese
• Japanese (Asian) Americans
• Racism in the US spread towards many Asian Americans
• Japanese Americans (the Nisei) saw the most persecution
• With no trials and no due process over 112,000 Japanese Americans were
taken from their homes and put into internment camps
• There were no cases of Japanese Americans committing espionage
• Only in 1983 were those still living given $20,000 each (keep in mind they lost
everything they couldn’t carry with them)
• 39,000 Japanese Americans served in the military, most in Europe
27. Europe After US Entry
• Operation Torch
• 100,000 US/UK troops land in N. Africa
• Directed by Dwight D. Eisenhower
• General George S. Patton was a gifted tactician and took forces all the way to Egypt and back to Tunisia,
then into Sicily
• Casablanca Conference, Jan 1943
• Churchill and FDR meet, agree to step up bombing of Germany, supplies to China, and agree that there
should be no outcome but “unconditional surrender”
• Battle of the Atlantic
• German U-boats ruled the seas until the end of 1942, the Allies had lost 230 ships
• The Allies broke the German radio codes at that time, allowing them to avoid the subs, or destroy them
• When Allied troops entered Italy, the Italian King had Mussolini arrested and Italy switched sides
• Hitler sent German troops into Italy which slowed the Allied advance, taking Rome only two days before
D-Day
• In late fall, 1943, Churchill, FDR, and Stalin met in Tehran, Iran to coordinate the war effort, the US and UK
promised to reopen the front in France, the Soviets agreed to simultaneously push in the east
• In the months before D-Day the Allies ramp up their bombing of Germany, including killing many civilians
• Operation Overlord
• D-Day, 370,000 soldiers and sailors landed on the Normandy coast, while paratroopers landed behind
enemy lines, they pushed across northern France, within weeks the Soviets had also advanced
28. Europe After US Entry
• The Battle of the Bulge – Dec 1944, Hitler
launches a counter attack in the Ardennes
• The push fails and the Allied march
towards Berlin continues
• Feb 1945 – Yalta Conference
• Divided up Europe into spheres of
influence, appeased Stalin to keep
him in the war in the Pacific, though
Stalin agreed to allow elections
• FDR died on April 12, 1945
• Soviet troops reach Berlin on April 28th
• Hitler commits suicide in his bunker on the
30th
• May 2nd Berlin falls and forces in Italy
surrender
• May 7th German command surrenders
unconditionally
31. Jews being deported to the east from Poland,
September 1939 (above)
Jews in Salonika, Greece, gathered for transport
to the camps, July 1942 (below)
33. Loss of Human Life
Final portrait of Istvan Reiner, taken shortly
before he was killed in Auschwitz, c. 1943.
Separating those that would be sent to work, and those
that would be immediately exterminated, Auschwitz-
Birkenau, May 1944
34. Sheer Magnitude
Wedding Rings, kept by the Nazis and hidden in a Salt
Mine, discovered by US troops in May 1945.
Silverware and kitchen items, Auschwitz-Birkenau
During retreat the Nazis tried to burn the evidence
38. Scope and Scale
Jews in Vinnitsa, Ukraine, 1941
Overhead view of Auschwitz-
Birkenau complex, 1944
39. Proximity
Town of Brzezinka
City of Oswięcim
It is difficult to believe any argument that
people living near concentration or death
camps did not know what was happening.
Consider the case of Auschwitz.
The original camp at Auschwitz was a
repurposed army barracks on the edge of
the city of Oświęcim, Poland. You can see
the houses in the town from the fences at
the camp. Likewise, parts of the town of
Brzezinka, Poland, were taken by the Nazis
to house their soldiers and guards, who ran
the camps.
40. Remembrance
This photo is of Israeli high-
school students. Both Israeli
and Polish high-school
students take trips to visit
the camps in Poland every
year.
During one of my visits to
Auschwitz, one of the Israeli
groups was there, honoring
the millions of Jews that
were killed at the camps. It
is common for small items
to be left in rememberance,
such as flowers, photos, or
as is common in Jewish
culture, small stones.
41.
42. The War in the Pacific
• Japan continued to expand and to take territory in Asia
• Hong Kong, Burma, Malaya, and Singapore (all UK territories)
• Solidified control of Indochina (present day Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam
(French territories)
• They then attacked the Philippines with ground troops
• 12,000 US troops and 66,000 Filipino troops were captured and forced to march 65 miles
in 6 days in what was called the “Bataan Death March,” with anyone who fell out of line
being shot or bayonetted. This was in the Spring of 1942.
• Battle of Coral Sea
• The Japanese then turned towards taking Australia
(UK territory)
• May 2-6, 1942, US warships and warplanes defeat the
Japanese near New Guinea, sinking an aircraft carrier and
destroying 70 Japanese planes
43. The War in the Pacific
• Midway
• After Coral Sea, the Americans cracked the Japanese communication codes
and learned that large portion of the Japanese fleet was heading to the island
of Midway, which they intended to take, then use as a launching point to
attack Hawaii again.
• The Japanese took heavy losses on their initial aerial assault, but did not take
the island. The US Central Pacific Fleet (under Admiral Chester Nimitz) then
counter-attacked, defeating the Japanese and halting the push towards HI.
• Guadalcanal and the begin of Island Hopping (leapfrogging)
• General Douglas MacArthur commanded US Marines and ground forces from
UK territories while Admiral Nimitz led the combined Naval forces
• After landing almost 20,000 men on the Solomon Island of Guadalcanal, US forces faced
fierce resistance from the Japanese, and it took over 6 months to take the island, which
is roughly the size of Delaware. Japanese losses were nearly 20,000, compared to 1752
American casualties.
• Allied strategy shifted to focus only on the most important islands, bypassing others,
leaving the Japanese on those islands to “wither on the vine,” (according to Nimitz)
without resupply.
44. The War in the Pacific
• Mariana Islands (Guam, Saipan, Tinian) – June 1944
• Strategically important because Saipan was large enough for an airfield that
B-29 Superfortress Bombers could use
• Japan lost another 20,000 troops, while the US lost 3500 in three weeks of
fighting
• Another 7000 Japanese committed suicide on the orders of their general,
rather than disgrace themselves with surrender
• Leyte Gulf – October 1944
• Largest naval engagement in history
• 216 Allied ships, 64 Japanese ships
• The first time kamikaze attacks were
used against US warships
• Marked the beginning of a long battle to
retake the Philippines
45. The War in the Pacific
• Iwo Jima
• While bombers could use Saipan in the Mariana Islands launch bombing raids,
their fighter escorts needed airstrips closer to Japan
• Iwo Jima is an 8 square mile island 760 miles from Tokyo
• It took 6 weeks to secure the island, with 21,000 Japanese casualties and nearly 7000
US deaths, the air base was never actually built
• Okinawa
• 400sq.mi. island about 400 miles from mainland Japan
• Strategic as the launching point for a potential US ground invasion of Japan
• Fighting went on for 3 months, 49,000 Americans died, and more than 150,000
Japanese soldiers died. 1/3 of US pilots died, 1/4 of submariners
• There is still a US Naval and Marine base in Okinawa today
• A new strategy of heavily bombing the Japanese mainland was
decided upon, with the hopes of forcing surrender, or at least making
an invasion easier
• These “firebombing” raids occurred in 66 Japanese cities, including Tokyo
• Estimates place the death toll at over 200,000 (this is before the atomic bombs)
46. The Atomic Bombs
• As the war continued, it was estimated that it would cost 500,000 US
lives to take Japan by invasion, to say nothing of Japanese potential
casualties
• In early 1945 the Manhattan Project had its first successful test of an
Atomic Bomb in New Mexico
• Whether or not to use the bomb was a topic of heavy debate, but
ultimately President Harry Truman (who had become president when
FDR died) thought that the projected casualties of using the bomb
(20,000) were far more acceptable than the projected losses of an
invasion
• After meeting in Potsdam, Germany, in July 1945 the allies (GB, US,
and USSR) issued the Potsdam Declaration, which promised Japan a
devastating attack if they did not surrender by August 3rd.
47. The Atomic Bombs
• “Little Boy,” a ten foot long uranium bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan,
on August 6th, 1945 (Hiroshima was the Army headquarters of southern Japan)
• The initial blast and firestorm killed 78,000 people, within a year 140,000 had died
because of the effects of radiation poisoning
• The Soviet Union, honoring their commitment to the other Allies, entered
Manchuria on August 8th.
• Japan still refused to surrender, and so on August 9th a second bomb, “Fat
Man,” this one using Plutonium, was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan (a major
shipyard city)
• An estimate 71,000 people died
• Five days later, the Japanese Emperor agreed to an unconditional surrender,
which was signed on September 2, 1945
48. Final Thoughts – A New World
• 50 million civilians died during the war years, as did 22 million
servicemen and servicewomen worldwide
• The US lost 292,000 in combat, and another 114,000 servicemen died in
non-combat related deaths during the war
• The US and the USSR emerged as the two major world powers
• Nuclear warfare was now a reality
• The government of the US was larger than it had ever been, and would
never be the same again
• New technologies developed in wartime would soon find their way into
civilian life
• Changing roles on the home front would become the root of the
feminist movement and the civil rights movement