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Aggression, Appeasement, and War

Aggression, Appeasement, and War. Chapter 31, Section 1. Setting the Scene. During the 1920s, the western democracies tried to strengthen the framework for peace. In the 1930s, that structure crumbled due to dictatorships in Spain, Germany, and Italy (as well as militarism in Japan.)

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Aggression, Appeasement, and War

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  1. Aggression, Appeasement, and War Chapter 31, Section 1

  2. Setting the Scene • During the 1920s, the western democracies tried to strengthen the framework for peace. • In the 1930s, that structure crumbled due to dictatorships in Spain, Germany, and Italy (as well as militarism in Japan.) • Unlike these dictators, leaders of the western democracies were haunted by the memories of the Great War (WWI). • During the 1930s, the two sides tested each other’s commitment and will.

  3. Dictators Challenge World Peace • During the 1930s, dictators took aggressive action but met only verbal protests and pleas for peace from the democracies. • Mussolini and Hitler viewed that desire for peace as weakness and responded with acts of aggression. • Mussolini invaded and conquered Ethiopia. • This only resulted in sanctions by the League of Nations which could not be enforced.

  4. Dictators Challenge World Peace • In defiance of the Versailles Treaty, Hitler built up the German military. • Then, in 1936, he sent German troops into the “demilitarized” Rhineland bordering France – another treaty violation. • Since Germans hated the Versailles Treaty, these actions gained Hitler more popular support at home. • Western democracies denounced the moves but took no real action. • Instead, they adopted a policy of appeasement, giving in to the demands of an aggressor to keep the peace.

  5. Appeasement and Neutrality • The western policy of appeasement developed for a number of reasons: • France was demoralized and suffered from political division. • They could also not move against Germany without British help. • Britain, however, had no desire to confront the German dictator. • Some British even believed that the Germans were justified in violating the Treaty of Versailles because it had been “too harsh” against Germany.

  6. Appeasement and Neutrality • In both Britain and France, many saw Hitler and fascism as a defense against a worse evil – the spread of Soviet Communism. • Additionally, the Great Depression sapped the energies of western democracies. • Widespread pacifism, or opposition to all war, pushed governments to seek peace at any price. • The United States passed a series of Neutrality Acts. • The fundamental goal of American policy, however, was to avoid involvement in a European war, not to prevent such a conflict.

  7. Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis • In the face of the democracies’ apparent weakness, Germany, Italy, and Japan formed what became known as the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis. • The Axis Powers agreed to fight Soviet communism. • They also agreed not to interfere with one another’s plans for expansion. • The agreement cleared the way for these anti-democratic, aggressor powers to take even bolder steps.

  8. German Aggression Continues • In the meantime, Hitler pursued his goal of bringing all German-speaking people into the Third Reich. • Hitler claimed he was seeking Lebensraum(“living space”) for the German people. • Hitler, who believed in the superiority of the German, or “Aryan race,” though that Germany had the right to conquer the inferior Slavs to the east. • “Nature is cruel,” he claimed, “so we may be cruel, too … I have the right to remove millions of an inferior race that breed like vermin.” • This viewpoint is a perversion of Social Darwinism.

  9. Austria Annexed • By 1938, Hitler was ready to engineer the Anschluss, or union of Austria and Germany. • Earlier that year, he forced the Austrian chancellor to appoint Nazis to key cabinet posts. • When the Austrian leader balked at other demands, Hitler sent in the German army “to preserve order.” • The Anschluss violated the Versailles treaty and created a brief war scare but Hitler quickly silenced any Austrians who opposed him. • The western democracies took no actions against Hitler.

  10. The Czech Crisis • Germany’s next victim was Czechoslovakia. • At first, Hitler insisted that the three million Germans in the Sudetenland – a region of western Czechoslovakia – be given autonomy. • Czechoslovakia was one of only two remaining democracies in Eastern Europe. • As British and French leaders searched for a peaceful solution, Hitler increased his demands. • The Sudetenland, he said, must be annexed to Germany.

  11. The Munich Conference • At the Munich Conference in September 1938, British and French leaders again chose to follow a policy of appeasement. • The caved in to Hitler’s demands and then persuaded the Czechs to surrender the Sudetenland without a fight. • In exchange, Hitler assured Britain and France that he had not other plans to expand his territory.

  12. “Peace for Our Time” • Returning from Munich, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain told cheering crowds that he had achieved “peace for our time.” • To Parliament, he declared that the Munich Pact had “saved Czechoslovakia from destruction and Europe from Armageddon.” • French leader Edouard Daladier had a different reaction to the joyous crowds that greeted him in Paris. • “The fools, why are they cheering?” he asked.

  13. The Czech Crisis • The Czech crisis revealed the Nazi menace. • British politician Winston Churchill, who had long warned of the Nazi threat, judged the diplomats harshly: • “They had to choose between war and dishonor. They chose dishonor; they will have war.”

  14. Europe Plunges Toward War • Just as Churchill predicted, Munich did not bring peace. • Instead, Europe plunged rapidly toward war. • In March 1939, Hitler gobbled up the rest of Czechoslovakia. • The democracies finally accepted the fact that appeasement had failed. • At last thoroughly alarmed, they promised to protect Poland, most likely the next target of Hitler’s expansion.

  15. Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact • In order to secure his eastern front for a future war, Hitler began talks with Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. • In August of 1939, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov and Nazi Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. • This pact, also known as the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact, was a peace treaty between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. • Both sides agreed not to attack one another in the upcoming war and to partition, or divide up, eastern Europe between the two of them.

  16. German Expansion

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