World War II: Causes, Characteristics

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WORLD WAR II: CAUSES,

CHARACTERISTICS

Mr. Peña AP World History

“Nature is cruel, so we may be cruel, too… I have the right to remove millions of an inferior race that breeds like vermin”

-Hitler

Adolf Hitler

CAUSES OF WWII

 Political instability & economic devastation

Depression

High war debt owed by Germany

High inflation

Massive unemployment

 Rise of Fascism

Fascism = militarist, dictatorial

Germany – Adolf Hitler

Italy – Benito Mussolini

 Japan – Hideki Tojo

*Became the Axis Powers (Rome-Berlin-Tokyo

Axis)

Rise of Hitler

 Nazi Party organized, 1920s

 Nazi party largest in Germany, 1932

 Hitler voted as chancellor, 1933

 New parliament created

 450, 000 members

 Larger than German army

Benito Mussolini in Italy

 Fascist leader who took control of Italy in 1922

 Wanted to create another

Roman Empire

 Invaded Ethiopia in 1935

Japanese Expansion

 Sought total control of

Pacific (resources)

 1931- military occupation of

Manchuria

 1936- Japan signs

Pact with Germany,

Italy

 Nanking Massacre-

December 1937

Immediate Causes of WW II

In Germany Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 as a fascist dictator.

Hitler Hated the Treaty of Versailles and violated it.

First he built up the German military. Then he sent troops into the Rhineland. This was a direct violation of the Treaty of Versailles, which said in 1919 that

Rhineland was a demilitarized zone.

Immediate Causes of WW II

Hitler wanted to conquer whoever he felt was inferior to the Germans or Aryans. He wanted “living space” for the Germans in Eastern Europe.

On September 1, 1939 Germany invaded Poland without a declaration of war. This starts World War

II.

Immediate Causes of WW II

Britain and France declared war on Germany on

September 3, 1939.

Italy declared war on France and Britain on June 10,

1940.

“Blitzkrieg”

In German blitzkrieg means “lightning war”.

Hitler used blitzkrieg during his invasion of Poland.

Blitzkrieg included surprise attacks, rapid advances into enemy territory, and massive air attacks that struck and shocked the enemy.

Germany achieved most of its victories in World War

II with the Blitzkrieg tactic.

Blitzkrieg

“Phony War”

Britain sent troops to wait with the French down behind the Maginot Line.

Reporters called this quiet time of not much action the

“phony war”

Maginot Line

The Maginot Line was a defense for France against an invasion of Germany.

The Maginot Line was established after World War I.

The line showed to be little use in 1940 when Germany invaded France for the third time.

Maginot Line

“Blitzkrieg: German soldiers being parachuted into Holland - May 10, 1940”

Early Axis Triumphs

In April 1940 the quiet time of the war exploded into action.

Hitler launched a series of blitzkriegs.

Norway and and Denmark both fell.

Germany had overrun the Netherlands and Belgium.

Germany along with Italy forced France to surrender.

World War II in 1939/1942

Fall of France

Hitler’s Major Blunder

The Germans invaded France in May 1940.

Retreating Allied forces made it to Dunkirk and found themselves trapped between the advancing Nazis and the English Channel. The British sent every boat they could get across the English Channel to pick up troops off the beaches of Dunkirk.

Miracle at Dunkirk

The event at Dunkirk is called a miracle because the retreating allies had lost hope and then the British pulled through for them and rescued 338,000 men.

France Surrenders (June 22, 1940)

On June 22, 1940 France signs an armistice with

Germany in occupied France.

An armistice is a cease fire or a truce.

The Franco-German Armistice divided France into two zones. One zone was under German military occupation and the other was under French control.

In 1942 Germans occupied all of France

June 22, 1940

Battle of Britain

The Germans developed two plans to take Britain

 Operation Sea Lion, an amphibious landing on the British coast

 A great air offensive to gain air superiority and destroy the British industrial base

“Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the

British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” (Winston Churchill)

WAR IN THE PACIFIC

 Japanese aggression in the East (China)

 December 7, 1941 – Pearl Harbor

 U.S. attacked without warning

 U.S. declared war on Japan

 Germany declared war on the United States

Pearl Harbor is attacked on Dec. 7, 1941

U. S. Involved In War

World War II in the Pacific

Japan mounted combined operations in 1941 in East

Asia, Southeast Asia, and across the Pacific, opening a war front from the borders of

India to Hawaii. This supremely aggressive move was meant to secure the resources and markets needed to sustain the

“Greater East Asia Co-

Prosperity Sphere.” It proved impossible to defend: Chinese resistance, a daring US islandhopping campaign in the

Pacific —culminating in the explosion of atomic bombs over Hiroshima and

Nagasaki —and Soviet assaults on Manchuria defeated Japan completely.

The Eastern Front (in Europe)

 Hitler had strategic and ideological reasons for invading Russia

Strategically he knew that the Soviet Union and the

US were critical to Britain’s willingness to keep fighting

He also felt he needed the agricultural and raw material resources of Eastern Russia

Ideologically he viewed the Soviet Union as an amalgamation of his greatest enemies, the Jews and the Slavs

Operation Barbarossa

 Hitler based his plan on the assumption he could destroy the Soviet Union within one year

 Critical to his success would be to catch and destroy the Soviet Army at the border areas

 If that did not occur, the Russians could use their vast territory to trade space for time and cause the

Germans huge logistical problems

Operation Barbarossa

On June 22, 1941, Hitler invaded Russia in

Operation Barbarossa

The operation encompassed a total troop strength of about

4 million men, making it the biggest single land operation ever

Benefiting from initial surprise, by the end of

July Hitler had occupied a portion of Russia twice the size of France

Operation Barbarossa: Battle of Moscow

 Despite dropping temperatures and critical supply shortages, the German high command pressed on with the attack

 The German soldiers were still in summer uniforms and suffered terribly

German soldier during the battle of Moscow

Operation Barbarossa: Battle of Moscow

 By Dec 4 the Germans had clawed their way to

Moscow’s outskirts, but they could not continue

That night temperatures were -25 degrees

Fahrenheit

One infantry regiment suffered 300 frostbite casualties

 On Dec 6 the Soviets counterattacked

Stalingrad (1942)

On June 28 the Germans launched their summer offensive

The Germans made good headway with one advance moving east toward

Stalingrad and the Volga

River and another moving south into the Caucasus

In August Hitler’s erratic attention swung from the

Caucasus to Stalingrad

Stalingrad

On Aug 24 the Germans attacked Stalingrad’s suburbs and began fighting their way into the city

Hitler began shifting forces from the Caucasus to

Stalingrad

The nature of the urban fighting favored the defenders and the Soviets mounted a stubborn defense

Stalingrad began to drain the German army but Hitler would not back off

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

Stalingrad

On Nov 19 the Soviets launched a massive counterattack north of

Stalingrad

Hitler’s overly centralized and completely out-of-touch command system broke down in the face of the Soviet onslaught

The Soviets encircled

Stalingrad and Hitler ordered his commanders to stand fast anyway

By this point in the war, no one was willing to confront

Hitler

Stalingrad (1943)

 All attempts to breakout or break through failed and on Feb 2 the Germans surrendered

Out of 250,000 soldiers trapped in the Stalingrad pocket, approximately

90,000 became prisoners

Barely 5,000 survived the war

German POWs

Greatest Extent of Axis Control

The Eastern Front

Ultimately enormous logistical shortcomings made

Barbarossa a failure

 Germany proved capable of fighting battles very well, but was less capable of fighting a war of prolonged duration

In the total four years of fighting on the Eastern Front, an estimated 4 million Axis and 9 million Russians were killed in battle

20 million Soviet civilians were killed as a result of extermination campaigns against Jews, communists and partisans, casual massacres, reprisal killings, diseases, and

(sometimes planned) starvation.

Battle of Stalingrad Losses

1,400,000

1,200,000

1,000,000

800,000

600,000

400,000

200,000

0

1st Qtr

Germany

Soviet Union

Allies push back into Europe

D-Day

June 6, 1944 - Landing on Normandy

Beach

Normandy Invasion,

D-Day June 6, 1944

Allies United:

U.S.S.R, England and The U.S.

Joseph Stalin, Franklin Roosevelt, & Winston Churchill

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