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Aggression, Appeasement, and War

Aggression, Appeasement, and War. The Road to WWII. Dictators Challenge World Peace: Japan. Japanese Expansionism: “An Asia for the Asians!” Japan had long felt that European powers should not have power in Asia. Japanese Expansion.

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Aggression, Appeasement, and War

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  1. Aggression, Appeasement, and War The Road to WWII

  2. Dictators Challenge World Peace: Japan • Japanese Expansionism: “An Asia for the Asians!” • Japan had long felt that European powers should not have power in Asia.

  3. Japanese Expansion • Felt that it was their duty to conquer these areas to push the colonial powers out • In reality, they would conquer much of Eastern Asia but as an addition to the Japanese Empire • Often times the Japanese were more oppressive than the Europeans • Japanese expansion begins with the invasion of Manchuria in 1931 • This essentially becomes the first invasion of WWII.

  4. Dictators Challenge World Peace: Italy Invades Ethiopia • Mussolini builds a large, modern military to become the pride of Italy • This military is used for his expansionist ideas in Ethiopia first • 1935: Italy invades Ethiopia • HaileSelassie, Ethiopia’s king, asks the League of Nations for help. • They put sanctions, or penalties, on Italy, but have no real power to enforce them. • By early 1936, Italy had conquered Ethiopia

  5. Dictators Challenge World Peace: Hitler’s Challenge • Hitler begins his campaign with several violations of the hated Treaty of Versailles • Built up a large German army which was against the regulations of the treaty • Sent troops and conquered the “demilitarized” Rhineland, bordering France and Germany

  6. Appeasement and Neutrality • Regarding Hitler’s expansion, the Western world adopted a policy of appeasement, or giving in to demands. • Why? Fear of another war similar to WWI. • In both Britain and France, many saw fascism as a response to an even worse threat, communism • Also, the Great Depression left many western countries feeling vulnerable as they would not have the resources to fight another war. • Widespread Pacifism, or opposition to war, broke out world wide.

  7. Rome, Berlin, Tokyo Axis • Rome, Berlin, Tokyo Axis • Germany, Italy and Japan all agree to fight Soviet Communism as well as not to interfere with each other’s plan for expansion.

  8. German Expansion Continues • Hitler continues to attempt to reach his goal of uniting all German speaking people under the Third Reich • Anschluss, Hitler’s plan to unify Austria and Germany. • Hitler annexed Austria by sending in his military. • The Czech Crisis • Czechoslovakia was one of the few remaining democracies in Eastern Europe. • Germany took areas of the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia

  9. Munich Conference • British and French leaders meet to decide how to handle Hitler. • Neville Chamberlain, British Prime Minister, chooses appeasement again, giving Hitler the Sudetenland without conflict.

  10. Failure of Chamberlain • Chamberlain claims to England that he has achieved “peace for our time!” • However, Winston Churchill, felt otherwise, stating “They had to choose between war and dishonor. They chose dishonor, they will have war.”

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