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Chapter Twenty-Five: Diplomacy and World War II 1929-1945

The document summarizes major events in American diplomacy and involvement in World War II from 1929-1945. It discusses Herbert Hoover's foreign policy of non-intervention, Japan's invasion of Manchuria, and FDR's Good Neighbor policy in Latin America. It also outlines the rise of fascism in Europe, America's shift from isolationism to supporting Britain through lend-lease, and the US entry into the war after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Finally, it summarizes key battles and conferences in both the European and Pacific theaters that led to the Allied victory and the founding of the United Nations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
112 views

Chapter Twenty-Five: Diplomacy and World War II 1929-1945

The document summarizes major events in American diplomacy and involvement in World War II from 1929-1945. It discusses Herbert Hoover's foreign policy of non-intervention, Japan's invasion of Manchuria, and FDR's Good Neighbor policy in Latin America. It also outlines the rise of fascism in Europe, America's shift from isolationism to supporting Britain through lend-lease, and the US entry into the war after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Finally, it summarizes key battles and conferences in both the European and Pacific theaters that led to the Allied victory and the founding of the United Nations.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter Twenty-Five

Diplomacy and World War II


1929-1945
Herbert Hoover’s Foreign Policy
Japanese Aggression in Manchuria
• Japan took over Manchuria in September
1931, and renamed it Manchukuo
• League of Nations condemned Japan, but
nothing else
• Stimson Doctrine
– The US refused to recognize the regime of
Manchukuo
Latin America
• Hoover stopped interventional policies
– Troops left Nicaragua and Haiti
Franklin Roosevelt’s Policies
1933-1938
• Good-Neighbor Policy
– Pan-American Conferences
• Roosevelt promised to give later problems to the
arbitration
• Promised help against anyone who was aggressive
– Cuba
• Removed the Platt Amendment
– Mexico
• Mexican President Cardenas took over oil properties
• Roosevelt convinced Americans to settle
Economic Diplomacy
• Recognition of the Soviet Union
• Tydings-McDuffie Act (1934)
– Independence for Philippines
• Reciprocal Trade Agreements
– Roosevelt reduced tariffs on foreign imports
Events Abroad: Fascism and Aggressive
Militarism
• Dictators rose up in Italy, Japan, and Germany
• Italy
– Mussolini
– Fascist
• Germany
– Hitler
– Nazi
– Anti-Semitic
• Japan
– Nationalist, Militarist
American Isolationists
• Revisionist history of WW1
– People continued to preach that the US entrance
into the War was a dire mistake
Neutrality Acts
• Neutrality Act of 1935
– Forbid travel and trade with aggressive nations
• Neutrality Act of 1936
– Forbid loans to aggressive nations
• Neutrality Act of 1937
– Forbid arms trade with nations involved with the
Spanish Civil War
The Spanish Civil War
• Fascists, with General Franco, were fighting
with the Loyalists
• US remained neutral
• Franco won, and established a dictatorship
Prelude to War
• Appeasement
– Ethiopia, 1935
• Mussolini took over Ethiopia. LON gave in.
– Rhineland, 1936
• German troops militarized the Rhineland.
– China, 1937
• Japan invaded china. US ship Panay sunk.
– Sudetenland, 1938
• Hitler takes over Czechoslovakia. Conference at Munich
ensues.
Results
• Finally, the US decides to help quarantine the
Axis powers
• Arms buildup ensued.
From Neutrality to War, 1939-1941
Outbreak of War in Europe
• Appeasement failed
• Invasion of Poland
– Germany invaded Poland
– Britain and France declare war
• Blitzkrieg
– ‘Lightning War’
– Germany took over Scandinavia, Denmark, and
Norway, then France
Changing US Policy
• Cash and Carry Policy
– Allowed Britain to buy arms with cash
• Selective Service Act (1940)
– Drafted men between 21 and 35
• Destroyers For Bases deal
– Britain gave the US permission to build bases on
British soil, and the US gave Britain 50 ships
The Election of 1940
• Republican
– Wendell Willkie
• Democrat
– Franklin Roosevelt (3rd term)
• Roosevelt won (Again)
Arsenal of Democracy
• Four Freedoms
– Justified lending money to Britain
• Lend-Lease Act
– Arms were given to Britain on credit
• Atlantic Charter
– Defined US and Britain peace objectives
• Shoot On Sight
– Protect Britain ships from German submarines
Dispute With Japan
• Economic Action
– Roosevelt stopped trade with Japan, and later
froze it’s assets in the US and cut off their access
to oil
Pearl Harbor
• On Sunday, December 7th, 1941, Japanese
planes bombed Pearl Harbor, killing thousands
• The US declared war on Japan, one day later
World War II: The Home Front
Industrial Production
• The War Production Board was set up to manage
war industries
• The Office of War Mobilization was set up to
control raw materials
• The Office of Price Administration regulated all
aspects of civilian life (How is that different from
fascism? *shakes head*)
• Smith Connally Anti-Strike Act of 1943
– The government could take over strike-ridden
businesses
Impact on Society
• African Americans
– Joined the war effort
– Discrimination abounded
– Congregation of Racial Equality
• Smith vs. Allwright
– Ruled that it was unconstitutional to deny membership in
political parties to blacks
Impact on Society
• Mexicans
– Worked in wartime industries and the military
– Braceros (farmers) were allowed to enter the
nation without papers
– Zoot Suit Riots in 1943
• Whites and Mexicans fought over the streets
Native Americans
• Worked in the military and wartime industries.
Japanese Americans
• Suspected as spies
• 100,000 Japanese put into camps
• Korematsu vs. US
– Upheld relocation based on wartime crisis
Women
• Many women served in the military, and the
others fell in to replace the men in the
working class
The Election of 1994
• Democrats
– FDR nominated (4th term)
• Republicans
– Thomas Dewey
• FDR won again :)
World War II: The Battlefronts
Fighting in Germany
• Defense at sea, Attacks by air
– Focused on
• Defeating the submarines
• Bombing the German cities
• From North Africa to Italy
– Allies had to retake Africa (Operation Torch)
– Took over Sicily, and Mussolini fell
• From D Day to Victory in Europe
– British, Canadian, and US forces invaded France
• German Surrender and Discovery of the Holocaust
– Hitler commits suicide, Nazi armies surrender
– 6 million Jews were systemically murdered
Fighting Japan
• Turning Point, 1942
– Battle of the Coral Sea
• US stopped a Japanese invasionary force
– Battle of Midway
• Japanese messages were decoded and four Japanese
carriers were destroyed (And 300 planes)
• Island Hopping
– Took over Japanese islands one by one
• Major Battles
– Battle of Leyte Gulf (1944)
– Battle of Okinawa (1945)
The Atomic Bomb
• Directed by Oppenheimer
• Tested in Alamogordo in New Mexico
• Bomb dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
• Japan surrendered aboard the Missouri
Wartime Conferences
• Casablanca
– Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to invade Sicily
• Teheran
– Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin agreed to invade France
• Yalta
– Germany would be divided
– Free elections
– Soviets would declare war against Japan
– Soviets would control the Sakhalin island
– The United Nations would be founded
• Soon after Yalta, Roosevelt died, and Churchill was
replaced.
The War’s Legacy
• Costs
– 300,000 American's died
– 320 billion spent
• United Nations founded on October 24th, 1945

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