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Chapter 22 A Time of Tyrants Isolation and Infamy
The Fight for Fortress Europe The War in the Pacific
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Tyrants Italy: Mussolini Fascism Il Duce
Conquered and annexed Ethiopia
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Tyrants Germany: Hitler Mein Kampf Nazi Party Führer “Third Reich”
Rebuilt military
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Tyrants Japan: Hirohito and Hideki Tojo Emperor Hirohito
Tojo led the military Manchuria and China
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Tyrants Japan canceled Washington Naval Treaty Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis
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Tyrants Soviet Union: Stalin Crushed opposition Millions died
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Coming of War German troops move into Rhineland Austria Anschluss
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Coming of War Sudetenland Munich Conference Czechoslovakia
No one stands up to Hitler yet
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Coming of War Hitler and Stalin sign Nazi-Soviet nonaggression pact
Hitler promptly invades Poland Blitzkrieg
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Germany Britain and France declare war but do little in Poland Denmark
Norway Vidkun Quisling
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Germany Attack to the west France Luxembourg Holland Belgium
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Germany Luftwaffe Dunkirk Britain faced the Nazis alone
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Britain Battle of Britain Daylight bombing Night bombing
British resolve Churchill
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Germany Surprise attack on Soviet Union Wehrmacht Operation Barbarossa
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Isolationism Traditional isolationist foreign policy War debt problem
Great Depression
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Isolationism Most Americans sympathized with Allies
Neutrality Act of 1939 “Cash-and-carry” America First committees
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1940 FDR runs for 3rd term “Your boys are not going to be sent...”
Republicans nominated Wendell Wilkie
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Arsenal America the “arsenal of democracy” Lend-Lease Act
“Flying Tigers”
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Arsenal Atlantic Charter Germany attacks American vessels
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Pearl Harbor Japan continues to seize territory Douglas MacArthur
Japan’s chief naval threat was the U.S.
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Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941 Surprise attack Successful attack
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Pearl Harbor Missed American aircraft carriers
Americans able to rebuild United American nation
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Philippines MacArthur forced to leave Bataan Corregidor “Death march”
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Japan Doolittle leads first raid on Japan Battle of Midway
Admiral Nimitz Battle of the Coral Sea
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Home Front Field and factory Surrendering of some individual freedoms
Expansion of federal power over economy
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Home Front War Production Board Rationing Recycling
Many women entered the workforce
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Home Front Tax increases Payroll deductions
National debt increased sixfold Blue and gold stars
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Fight for Europe Africa Mussolini defeated by British
Rommel and the Germans push back British
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Fight for Europe Africa Bernard Montgomery
Americans land in western Africa Operation Torch Dwight D. Eisenhower
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Fight for Europe Italy Casablanca Conference Sicily
Slow progress north through Italy
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Fight for Europe D-day Eisenhower: Supreme Allied Commander
June 6, 1944 Normandy coast of France
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Fight for Europe D-day Nazis resisted but could not repel invasion
Advance to Paris Most of France liberated by end of 1944
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Fight for Europe Battle of the Bulge Put a bulge in the Allied lines
Bastogne Germans pushed back
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The Pacific Island hopping Guadalcanal Marianas Philippines
Battle of Leyte Gulf Kamikazes
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The Pacific Iwo Jima Okinawa Suicides
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The Pacific Yalta Conference
FDR had just won re-election over Thomas Dewey Harry Truman
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The Pacific Yalta Conference
Formation of an international organization for peace high on FDR’s agenda Misconception
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The Pacific Yalta Conference FDR thought he could deal with Stalin
Misconception
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The Pacific Yalta Conference
Stalin agreed to join the fight against Japan but wanted territory in exchange
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Europe Victory achieved in May 1945 Potsdam Conference Atomic bomb
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The Pacific Ultimatum to Japanese Hiroshima Enola Gay Nagasaki
Bocks Car
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The Pacific Japan surrenders September 2, 1945
Fifty million had died in WWII
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