CONTENT ROAD TO WAR 1 THE RISE OF THE DICTATORS PLUS HOMEWORK AND ANSWERS DICTATORSHIP – SIMPLY IRRESISTIBLE Europe was full of tension because of the economic crisis and the threat of war that still came from German anger over Versailles. People were afraid that no-one was in control, so they turned to dictators. Poor conditions in Europe made people want strong governments. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D FACTORS IN THE RISE OF THE DICTATORS LOCARNO This treaty settled only the Western borders of Germany. The borders in the East were vulnerable if Germany wanted to expand. People wanted strong leaders to protect them. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D DEPRESSION Still affected most of the countries, causing widespread unemployment and poverty. People welcomed strong governments who could put things right. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D DEMOCRACY Was often blamed for the bad conditions. Democratic governments seemed unable to prevent bad things happening, or to improve the situation. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D COMMUNISM Was seen as a threat to all Europe after the Russian Revolution in 1917 – people looked to strong leaders to fight the threat of world revolution by the workers. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D ISOLATIONISM This policy continued. The USA stayed out of world affairs, and Britain and France were not strong enough to stand up to foreign dictators. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D FRANCE Was still suspicious of Germany and was building strong defences along the Maginot Line – many Germans felt they needed a strong leader against the French threat. Maginot Line – was named after the French Minister of War André Maginot, and it was a line of concrete fortifications, obstacles and weapon installations built by France in the 1930s to deter invasion by Germany and force them to move around the fortifications. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D DISARMAMENT FAILED Members of the LON had no intentions of reducing their armed forces further, especially not as the tension began to grow. When Germany asked all countries to disarm to the same level as them in 1932, everyone refused. The Germans saw this as unfair and were determined to build up their armed forces again. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D HOMEWORK 1 Name five countries that had dictatorships between the end of the First World War and the beginning of the Second World War. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D HOMEWORK 2 – ANSWERS ON THE NEXT SLIDE 1. Explain how the Wall Street Crash in America led to economic depression in other countries. 2. Explain what protectionism means. 3. Give three examples of the Depression leading to countries adopting aggressive foreign policies. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D HOMEWORK 2 – ANSWERS 1. Explain how the Wall Street Crash in America led to economic depression in other countries. America stopped buying goods from other countries. This put people out of work, into long and painful unemployment. It was made worse when other countries introduced protectionism. This slowed down world trade and everybody suffered from this with more unemployment following. 2. Explain what protectionism means. Protectionism refers to countries trying to protect their own industries and jobs. They put heavy import duties on goods coming from other countries. This makes imported goods more expensive and so the goods made at home can be cheaper and sell more. 3. Give three examples of the Depression leading to countries adopting aggressive foreign policies. Mussolini’s invasion of Abyssinia, Japan’s invasion of Manchuria, Germany under Hitler. CAMBRIDGE IGCSE – THE ROAD TO WW2 – MR. D