Erik Manarino
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Chapter 31 Outline I. Early Challenges to World Peace
A. In
1935,
B. Western
democracies denounced Hitler’s moves but took no real action; instead, they
adopted a policy of appeasement,
giving in to the demands of an aggressor in order to keep the peace. C.
Finally, widespread pacifism,
or opposition to all war, and disgust with the last war pushed governments to
seek peace at any price II.
The Spanish Civil War A.
In 1936, B.
Francisco Franco led a revolt that touched off a bloody war between
people of different political affiliations. C.
By 1939, Franco had triumphed and he created a fascist dictatorship
like those of Hitler and Mussolini. III.
German Aggression Continues A.
In the meantime, Hitler pursued his goal of bringing all
German-speaking people into the Third Reich. B.
By 1938, Hitler was ready to engineer the Anschluss,
or union of C.
At the Munich Conference in September 1938, British and French leaders
again chose appeasement, caving into Hitler’s demands and persuading IV.
The Plunge Toward War A.
As Winston Churchill predicted, B.
In August 1939, Hitler stunned the world by announcing a nonaggression
pact with the C.
In September, 1939, a week after the Nazi-Soviet Pact, German forces
stormed into V.
Why War Came A.
Many factors contributed to World War II. B.
Since 1939, people have debated issues such as why the western
democracies failed to respond forcefully to the Nazi thread and whether they
could have stopped Hitler if they had responded. C.
Many historians today think that Hitler might have been stopped in
1936, before VI.
The First Onslaught A.
In September 1939, Nazi forces stormed into B.
In April 1940, Hitler launched a blitzkrieg against C.
The whirlwind Nazi advance revealed the awesome power of modern
warfare, using air forces and fast-moving armored tanks and troop carriers. VII.
The A.
On B.
On September 7, German bombers appeared over C.
The Battle of Britain showed that terror bombing could not defeat
determined people. VIII. Charging Ahead A.
While the Luftwaffe was blasting B.
In 1940, Italian forces invaded C.
Meanwhile, both IX.
Operation Barbarossa A.
In June 1941, Hitler embarked on Operation Barbarossa
– the conquest of the B.
In Operation Barbarossa, Hitler unleashed a
new blitzkrieg. C.
The Russians, meanwhile, suffered appalling hardships and supplies had
to be rationed. X.
Growing American Involvement A.
President Roosevelt found ways around the Neutrality Acts to provide
aid, including warships, to B.
In early 1941, C.
In August 1941, Roosevelt and Churchill met secretly on a warship in
the XI.
A.
In December 1941, the Allies gained a vital boost when a surprise
action by B.
That morning, Japanese airplanes struck C.
In the long run, the Japanese attack on XII.
Occupied Lands A.
While the Germans rampaged across B.
The most savage of all Nazi policies was Hitler’s program to kill Jews
and others he judged “racially inferior,” such as Slavs, Gypsies, and the
mentally ill. C.
Many Germans pretended not to see what was happening, and some were collaborators, helping the Nazis
hunt down the Jews or shipping tens of thousands of Jews to their death. XIII. The Allied War Effort A.
After the B.
Like the Axis powers, the Allies were committed to total war. C.
As men joined the military and war industries expanded, millions of
women replaced them in essential jobs. XIV. Turning Points A.
During 1942 and 1943, the Allies won several victories that would turn
the tide of battle. B.
In C.
Victory in XV.
The Red Army Resists A.
Another major turning point in the war occurred in the B.
The Battle of Stalingrad was one of the costliest of the war. C.
After the Battle of Stalingrad, the Red Army lifted the siege of XVI. Invasion of A.
By 1944, the Allies were at last ready to open the long-awaited second
front in B.
The Allies chose C.
In XVII. War in the Pacific A.
A major turning point in the Pacific war occupied just six months
after the bombing of B.
After the Battle of Midway, the C.
In October 1944, General Douglas MacArthur
began to retake the XVIII. The
Nazis Defeated A.
After freeing B.
By this time, C.
By March, the Allies had crossed the XIX. Defeat of A.
To save their homeland, young Japanese became kamikaze pilots, who undertook suicide missions, crashing their
planes loaded with explosives into American warships. B.
On C.
Just a few days later, the XX.
Looking Ahead A.
After the surrender, American forces occupied the smoldering ruins of B.
In C.
In both countries, the Allies faced difficult decisions about the
future. XXI. Aftermath of War A.
While the Allies celebrated victory, the appalling costs of the war
began to emerge. B.
During the war, the Allies knew about the Nazi concentration camps but
did not know their full extent. C.
By exposing the savagery of the Axis regimes, the Allies further
discredited the Nazi, fascist, and militarist ideologies that had led to the
war. XXII. The United Nations A.
As in 1919, the World War II Allies set up an international
organization to secure peace. B.
In April 1945, delegates from 51 nations met in C.
Under the UN Charter, each member nation had one vote in the General
Assembly, where members could debate issues. XXIII. The
Crumbling A.
Amid the rubble of war, a new power structure emerged that would shape
events in the postwar world. B.
During the war, the C.
Stalin had two goals in XXIV. Containing Communism A.
Like Churchill, President Truman saw communism as an evil force
creeping across B.
In 1945, the world hoped for an end to decades of economic crisis,
bloody dictators, and savage war. C.
Meanwhile, the spread of ominous new weapons would more than once
raise the specter of global destruction. |