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Chapter 10: The Coming of War Section 1: Dictators & War

Chapter 10: The Coming of War Section 1: Dictators & War. United States History Ms. Girbal Monday, April 13, 2015. Warm-up (4-13-15). Things are happening all over the world and all over the country every day

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Chapter 10: The Coming of War Section 1: Dictators & War

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  1. Chapter 10: The Coming of WarSection 1: Dictators & War United States History Ms. Girbal Monday, April 13, 2015

  2. Warm-up (4-13-15) • Things are happening all over the world and all over the country every day • Tell me about a current event in the United States that took place while we were on Easter Break. • Something you saw on the news, read in the newspaper, magazine, internet…If you did not hear about anything, then research something! • As if you were a reporter, write one paragraph (6-8 sentences) telling me about the current event and how it relates to United States history.

  3. Chapter 10 Timeline • Monday, April 13- Section 1: Dictators and War • Wednesday, April 15- Section 2: From Isolation to Involvement • Thursday, April 16- Section 3: America Enters the War • Start watching America The Story of US: WWII • Monday, April 20- Chapter 10 Quiz • Chapter 10 IDs due • Finish watching the film

  4. Objectives • Explain how dictators and militarist regimes arose in several countries in the 1930s. • Summarize the actions taken by aggressive regimes in Europe and Asia. • Analyze the responses of Britain, France, and the United States to the aggressive regimes.

  5. World War I ended when Germany surrendered to the Allies. An uneasy peace followed. • • Germans resented the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, feeling humiliated in defeat. • Italy and Japan were angered by the treaty, expecting to receive more land as Allied victors. • • Worldwide depression brought despair to many already suffering from war.

  6. Overwhelming problems led some to turn to a new form of government called totalitarianism.

  7. Totalitarian governments developed in several countries during the 1930s. Each of these countries faced crushing problems. Unemployment, hunger, and homelessness were rampant.

  8. Attempted to turn the Soviet Union into an industrial power • Forced people to work in factories and on state-run farms • Killed or imprisoned suspected traitors during the Great Terror • Ruled through fear and massive propaganda Joseph Stalin took control of the Soviet Union following the death of Vladimir Lenin.

  9. Another totalitarian regime formed in Italy. • The government seemed unable to deal with the country’s many problems. • Benito Mussolini formed the Fascist Party. • Mussolini and his followers, the Black Shirts, fought to gain power. Mussolini, called Il Duce, took control of the government, using secret police to maintain control.

  10. In Germany, the Weimar Republic struggled with overwhelming economic and social problems. Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Nazi Party, was appointed chancellor. Hitler seized power and created a totalitarian state.

  11. Hitler rebuilt the nation’s army. His economic policies put people back to work. Many cheered his success. • Controlled the press and education system • Used propaganda to boost his popularity • Used the secret police to silence opposition Yet Hitler ruled with unlimited power. Violently anti-Semitic, Hitler openly attacked Jews, blaming them for all of the country’s problems.

  12. Japan did not become a totalitarian dictatorship, but it did come under the influence of strong military leaders. These leaders attempted to solve their country’s economic problems through aggressive military conquests.

  13. Japanese Expansion, 1931-1939 In 1931, Japan invaded Manchuria, then China- Manchuko. The attack on Nanjing was especially brutal.

  14. Acts of Aggression in Europe and Asia

  15. A weak League of Nations did little to stop the aggression of the totalitarian states or of Japan. • Many feared involvement in another war. • Some believed the Soviet Union posed a greater threat than Nazi Germany. • Others questioned the resolve of their own country and their allies, and embraced a policy of isolationism.

  16. Aggression Goes Unchecked • France and Britain pursue the policy of appeasementagainst aggressive nations • Granting concessions to the enemy in the hope that it will maintain the peace and prevent war. • US and FDR concerned itself with its own economic trouble and embraced the policy of isolationism. • Hitler takes advantage of lack of unity between France, Britain and US as he brings Austria into his Reich. He the goes after the Sudetenland. • Britain and France appeased Germany…

  17. The appeasement of Hitler continued with the Munich Pact. Britain and France sacrificed the Sudetenland to Germany in return for peace. …But peace was not to come.

  18. Homework (4-13-15) • German Aggression Map • Using your textbook and class notes, complete the map on the aggression of Germany in Europe.

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