AP World History Chapter 27

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Presentation transcript:

AP World History Chapter 27 World War II

Answer the following question in writing: Identify three important causes of World War II and explain their significance

Causes WWI – continuing hostilities Japanese imperial ambitions German expansionism Failure to respond to Germany & Japan League of Nations Munich Agreement (1938)

A different type of war Fought in “theaters” instead of having a “front” Included all but 11 countries of the world Air warfare central

Science and War Higher death toll and number of refugees than previous wars Unprecedented scale of human suffering due to changes in moral values and new technologies Deliberate targeting of civilians Industrialized extermination of populations (Jews, Gypsies, Homosexuals, Slavs) -- relativity of values

Science and War Application of scientific discoveries to help war effort: Synthetic rubber Radar Antibiotics Aircraft Missiles Atomic weaponry Duck Tape

Bombing Raids First known purposeful targeting of civilians: Guernica, Spain Planes and pilots on “loan” from Hitler’s Germany to Franco (fascist leader of Spain) Chased down civilians who were fleeing, shot with .50 caliber machine guns mounted on planes Bombed civilian targets Memorialized in Picasso’s “Guernica”

Bombing raids British and US excelled at bombing raids intended to “break the morale” of civilian populations Massive raids on German cities caused substantial death Armament production in Germany continued to increase until late 1944 Germans fired V-1 and V-2 missiles at cities of Britain

Bombing of Civilian populations (cont) Japanese cities mostly wood – very vulnerable to incendiary bombs US bombing raids targeted civilian populations as part of campaign to demoralize Japan into surrender Tokyo – March 1945 – 80,000 killed, 1,000,000 homeless

The Atomic Bomb 1945 – dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki Decision to use bombs questionable Hiroshima – 80,000 vaporized, 120,000 burned or killed from radiation

“the use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan . . . . My own feeling was that in being the first to use it, we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I was not taught to make wars in that fashion, and wars cannot be won by destroying women and children.”97 Admiral William D. Leahy, Truman’s chief of staff

The Holocaust Nazi killing of civilians part of calculated plan to exterminate whole races of people German Jews deprived of citizenship and legal rights, herded into ghettos where many died of starvation and disease 1942 – “final solution” – modern industrial methods to kill off Jews 6 million killed Polish Catholics, homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Gypsies, and the disabled also killed

Effect on the home front Distinction between “front” and “home front” obscured Rapid military movements and air power carried war into homes Armies swept through confiscating anything of value Bombing raids destroyed whole cities Millions fled homes in terror

War and Civilians War demanded huge effort from all civilians In USSR and USA workers pushed to turn out tanks, ships, and other war materials. Mobilization of men gave women significant roles in industry and agriculture

US during war Us flourished during war – economy stimulated by war production Consumer goods in short supply – rationing Saving increased laying foundations for post-war boom Women, African-Americans, and Mexican Americans into jobs once reserved for white men Migration of African-Americans and Mexican-Americans resulted in overcrowding in cities and discrimination Japanese Americans placed in concentration camps, many lost everything

War and Environment Depression slowed down industry and resulting stress on environment War reversed trend – increased damage Some damage due to warfare, but most due to mining, industry, logging Damage of war period small compared to damage of post-war consumer boom

Summary of major effects Ethical standards lost Old global order destroyed by depression, world war, nationalism Collapse of Germany and Japan – reconstruction Rise of two “Superpowers” – USA & USSR (“Bipolarity”), ideologically driven conflicts Colonial powers weakened Attempts to prevent recurrence: European cooperation, United Nations