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Essential Question: What role did the U.S. play in winning the wars in Europe & the Pacific? Warm-Up Question: What other major American war is most similar.

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Presentation on theme: "Essential Question: What role did the U.S. play in winning the wars in Europe & the Pacific? Warm-Up Question: What other major American war is most similar."— Presentation transcript:

1 Essential Question: What role did the U.S. play in winning the wars in Europe & the Pacific? Warm-Up Question: What other major American war is most similar in its resemblance to the U.S. entrance into WW2? Lesson Plan for Wednesday, February 25, 2009: Warm-Up Q, Battlefront Video & Notes

2 When the U.S. entered WW2 in late 1941, victory seemed remote
Japan dominated the western half of the Pacific Ocean Germany controlled almost all of Europe Germany pressed into Russia Axis armies controlled Northern Africa & threatened the Suez Canal But…over the next 2 years, the U.S. & the Allies began to win the wars in Europe & the Pacific

3 Achieving Victory in Europe Video (11.52)

4 The U.S. wanted to attack across Nazi-controlled France by 1943
Europe The U.S. wanted to attack across Nazi-controlled France by 1943 The USSR “freed” Poland, Hungary, Romania England wanted to attack Italy from Northern Africa in 1942 In 1942, U.S.-Anglo troops began the Italian campaign & Stalin was ANGRY To win the European campaign, 2 different plans were proposed In 1943, the Soviet army won at Stalingrad; Germany was never again on the offensive

5 The Allies began to win the Battle of the Atlantic in 1941 with Lend-Lease aid, but took control in 1943 with America’s entry into the war

6 Tehran Conference, 1943 By agreeing to “Operation Overlord” (D-Day), the Allies would divide the Axis military across two fronts In 1943, FDR, Churchill, Stalin met in Tehran, Iran for the first of three wartime conferences: The USA, Britain, USSR coordinated their war strategy FDR & Churchill finally committed to Stalin’s demands to open a western front (D-Day) Discussed plans to create a “general internat’l organization” to promote “peace & security” (UN) FDR proposed a future United Nations dominated by “4 policemen” (USA, Britain, China, & USSR) with power to “deal immediately with any sudden emergency which requires action” Stalin agreed to declare war on Japan after the defeat of Germany Broader international cooperation also became a central theme of the negotiations at Tehran. Roosevelt and Stalin privately discussed the composition of the United Nations. During the Moscow Conference of the Foreign Ministers in October and November of 1943, the United States, Britain, China, and the Soviet Union had signed a four-power declaration whose fourth point called for the creation of a "general international organization" designed to promote "international peace and security." At Tehran, Roosevelt outlined for Stalin his vision of the proposed organization in which the future United Nations would be dominated by "four policemen" (the United States, Britain, China, and Soviet Union) who "would have the power to deal immediately with any threat to the peace and any sudden emergency which requires action."

7 The long-awaited 2nd front came on June 6, 1944 with D-Day
Europe U.S. & British troops landed at 5 strategic points, pushed through France drove towards Germany The long-awaited 2nd front came on June 6, 1944 with D-Day

8 Allied ingenuity helped win the war: U. S
Allied ingenuity helped win the war: U.S. soldiers were trained to problem-solve rather than wait for orders Hedgerows in Normandy

9 Yalta Conference in February 1945
The “Big 3” met at Yalta to discuss post-war Europe given the eminent defeat of Germany: Stalin refused to give up Eastern Europe but he did agree to “self-determination” Stalin agreed to send Soviet troops to the Pacific after the German surrender if the USSR could keep Manchuria To recognize the independence & sovereignty of nations in Eastern Europe

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11 Soon after the Yalta Conference in Feb 1945, FDR died…and Harry Truman became president

12 In late April 1945, the Allies broke through the Eastern & Western Fronts forcing both Italy & Germany to surrender

13 The Discovery of the Holocaust

14 The Discovery of the Holocaust
The Last Days video Document analysis questions: When did the U.S. gov’t know about the Holocaust & what was the govt’s response to the Holocaust? To what degree can the U.S. gov’t be held accountable for the Holocaust? What should the U.S. have done? Show chapters 2, 3, 4, 9, 13, 16, 17 (total 25 minutes)

15 Essential Question: What did the American government know & what was the government’s response to the Holocaust? Reading Quiz Ch 26 A ( ) Lesson Plan for Thursday, February 26, 2009: RQ 26A, Finish Battlefront Notes, the American Role in the Holocaust—show 25 min clip of Last Days, examine docs, & discuss

16 Europe Europe

17 Achieving Victory in the Pacific Video (8.47)

18 The Doolittle Raid on Tokyo on April 18, 1942 was a morale boost
“Island-hopping” allowed the Allies to win strategic islands without investing precious time, resources, & American lives The Doolittle Raid on Tokyo on April 18, 1942 was a morale boost U.S. victory at Midway in 1942 gave the Allies naval supremacy

19 The Japanese refused to play according to the Geneva Convention “rules” of war

20 The German surrender in May 1945, allowed the U. S
The German surrender in May 1945, allowed the U.S. to turn its full attention towards Japan Victories at Saipan in 1944 & Iwo Jima & Okinawa in 1945 allowed for bombings on Japan

21 The Decision to Drop the A-Bomb
With no definitive end it sight, how would the Allies defeat Japan? The U.S. military favored a full-scale invasion of Tokyo by 1946 The Japanese refused to surrender & were arming civilians for an Allied invasion At the Potsdam Conference in July 1945, Truman gave the order to use the atomic bomb

22 Essential Question: What role did the U.S. play in winning the wars in Europe & the Pacific? Warm-Up Question: What was the significance of: Lend-Lease, Atlantic Charter, Stalingrad, D-Day, Midway, Iwo Jima, Appeasement, Tehran, Yalta, Potsdam Lesson Plan for Wednesday, February 25, 2009: Warm-Up Q, Battlefront Video & Notes

23 Enrico Fermi at the University of Chicago (physicist who developed the nuclear reactor)

24 The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb Group Activity
How should President Truman bring an end to the Pacific theater of WW2 in 1945? Each student group will be given a role: civilian, scientific, military, diplomatic From your role’s perspective, what possible options exist to end the war? What are the positive & negative consequences of each alternative? What is your groups’ recommendation to President Truman to end the war? Why? Now that we’ve heard from each “role,” what are your opinions? Was this the correct decision? Explain Read “Truman’s Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb.” Does this article change your opinion?

25 Triumph & Tragedy in the Pacific
In August 1945, the USA forced Japan to surrender by dropping 2 atomic bombs Effect of the atomic bomb: Saved hundreds of thousands of American (& Japanese) lives Revenge for Pearl Harbor Showed the USSR that the USA had the ultimate weapon (began the Cold War nuclear arms race)

26 Nagasaki Hiroshima

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28 WW2 Timeline (Allies, Axis, USSR)

29 Its Finally Over!

30 After the War (4.19)

31 Conclusions WW2 was the largest & deadliest war in history & changed the U.S. Wartime industry ended the Great Depression, expanded the size of the federal gov’t, & ushered in affluent decade The USA emerged as a world superpower, developed a nuclear arsenal, & engaged a Cold War against the USSR


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