The World War Two abhishek ABHISHEK SINGH IX - B
May 20, 2015
The World War Two
abhishek
ABHISHEK SINGHIX - B
This topic will look at the following events/issues
• Hitler’s aims• Steps to World War Two• The policy of ‘Appeasement’• The Nazi/Soviet Pact• Why did Britain and France declare
war on Germany in 1939?• How far was Hitler’s foreign policy to
blame for the outbreak of war in 1939?
abhishek
January 1933 – Adolph Hitler becomes Chancellor (Primeminister) of Germany
A strong leader declared to the German people that he would restore German pride, rebuild their shattered country and have vengeance for
the Treaty of Versailles.abhishek
Hitler’s aims
Abolish the Treaty of Versailles‘The Versailles Treaty is worthless.
60 million German hearts and minds are on fire with anger and
shame. They will cry out we want war!’
Destroy Communism‘The menace of Russia hangs
over Germany. All our strength is needed to rescue our nation from this international snake’’
Lebensraum‘It will be the duty of German
foreign policy to get large spaces to feed and house the growing
population of her. Destiny points us towards Russia.’
Re-build Germany’s
armed forces
Create a ‘Greater Germany’
Anschluss with Austria. Hitler believed that they belonged
together’
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• German Army limited to
• Germany had to pay
reparations to allies
• Accept war guilt
• Germany lost % of its territories and colonies
• The Rhineland was demilitarised
• Anschluss (union) with Austria was forbidden
• Germans were forced to live in Czechoslavakia (the Sudentenland) and Poland (including Danzig)
Abolish the Treaty of
Versailles!
Thought that the Treaty of Versailles was unjust and humiliating
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Lebensraum
• Germany's future, Hitler declared, entirely depended on meeting its need for more Lebensraum -living space; the German nation had a right to a larger share of land. The question was where the space could be acquired "at the lowest cost." The answer lay not in overseas colonies but in Europe itself, "in immediate proximity to the Reich."
• Hitler’s ‘Greater Germany’ would have a population of over 85 million
• Germany’s land would be insufficent to feed this many people
• Hitler intended to expand Eastwards towards Poland and Russia. Russians and Poles were Slavs – Hitler believed them to be inferior and so Germany was entitled to take their land.
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Destroy Communism!
•Hitler believed that the Bolsheviks helped cause German defeat in World War One
•Feared Bolshevik take over
•Thought that they were inferior
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Steps to War
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Step One – Austria 1934
Hitler persuaded Austrian Nazis to stir up trouble in Austria
They took over the Chancery and shot Chancellor Dollfuss dead
Hitler offered to send German troops in ‘to keep peace’
Mussolini of Italy did not like Hitler at this stage
Sent Italian troops up to the border with Austria – clear threat to fight if Hitler moved German troops in
Hitler had not built up German Army enough to take on Italy yet – he backed down
Failed attempt at Austrian Anschluss
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Step TwoRe-armament
As soon as he came to power, Hitler began breaking the Treaty of Versailles by re-
arming Germany
He began in secret – e.g. setting up the
‘German Gliding Club’ to train pilots.
Also in 1935 he introduced CONSCRIPTION,
increased spending on arms and said the
German Army would increase to 500,000 men.
In 1935 Germany signed Anglo-German naval agreement.
German navy limited to35% of British.
In 1935 he abandoned
secrecy & announced the creation
of the new German Luftwaffe.
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He needed larger armies to protect Germany, and large
armies also provided jobs and solved unemployment problems caused by
The Great Depression.
Reasons and Reactions
Britain sympathized with Germany, believing that the
Treaty of Versailles had been too unfair
on them. They also believed that a strong Germany would act asa barrier against Communism.
The French were angry with Britain, but there was
little they could do.
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Step ThreeThe Saar Plebiscite in 1935
Saar coalfields had been under League of Nations control since Treaty of Versailles
Treaty of Versailles said after 15 years Saarlanders could decide by plebiscite whether to join Germany
Massive majority (90%) voted to go back to Germany
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Step FourRemilitarisation of the
Rhineland
The Treaty of Versailles forbade Germany to have any troops or fortifications in the Rhineland area, bordering France.On March 7th 1936 Hitler took a huge gamble and ordered German troops to march into the Rhineland. This directly broke the terms of the Treaty of Versailles.
They had secret sealed orders to retreat if Britain or France objected.
Hitler had ordered his generals, commanding 22,000 men, to retreat if France showed any signs of retaliation. This did not occur. German soldiers and armed policemen marched straight into the Rhineland.
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Reasons and Reactions
France and Russia had made a treaty to protect each other from
Germany. Hitler said that he should be allowed to place troops on his own frontier.
France was going through an internal political crisis at the time and there
was no political leadership to concentrate against Nazi Germany.
Britain generally supported the view that Nazi Germany was only
going into her own "backyard" and that this section of Versailles did not
need to be enforced in the mid-1930’s. It was believed that Germany was
behaving in a reasonable and understandable manner.
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Step FiveAnschluss with Austria (1938)
Hitler had now allied with Mussolini, after Mussolini was angered by League of Nations sanctions on Italy after the invasion of Abyssinia
Hitler told Austrian Nazis to stir up trouble in Vienna again
Then he put pressure on chancellor Schuschnigg to invite German troops in to keep peace
Schuschnigg gambled & called for a plebiscite, hoping Austrians would say no, and make it impossible for Hitler to invade.
Hitler did not wait, moved his troops to the border of Austria and threatened to invade if Schuschnigg did not resign.. Schuschnigg forcibly resigned and a Nazi supporter replaced him. Hitler’s troops marched into Austria four days before the plebiscite, and used German troops to ‘supervise’ the voting. Not surprisingly he got a 99.75% vote in favour of Austria joining Germany.
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Reasons and Reactions
There were lots of German people living in Austria and Hitler said the people of Austria wanted to unite
with Germany. Austria was economically weak
and Hitler promised to solve this problem.
France and Britain refused to help Austria. The British prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain felt the Treaty of Versailles was wrong and that Austria
and Germany should be united. Thiswas justified by the fact that they
were both German speaking nations.
Hitler was now even more convinced that Britain and France would not
Stand in his way in the future.
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Steps to War
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Step SixSpanish Civil War 1936-39
In 1936 civil war broke out in Spain between the right wing Nationalists and the left wing
RepublicansThe world promised not to intervene, but Hitler
decided to send help to the nationalists
He did this so that he could train his men in his new techniques, especially using Blitzkrieg.
German troops, aircraft and military advisors helped General Franco to win this war.
THE DIVE BOMBING OF GUERNICA IN 1937
Was a turning point for Britain and France – they saw what air warfare
could do – made many consider Appeasement
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Step Seven Sudentenland 1938
The Sudetenland contained 2 million German speakers
They had NEVER been part of Germany (Austrian before 1919)
Hitler demanded ‘self-government’ for the Sudeten Germans
The Czechs were outraged…
Chamberlain hesitated…
Chamberlain flew to Germany twice &
agreed
Then Mussolini called a conference at Munich
Hitler then demanded that the
Sudetenland be given to Germany
The Czechs were not invited!
Britain, France, Italy & Germany agreed to give the Sudetenland to Germany
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Sudetenland Continued – The ‘Peace of Paper’At Munich, Chamberlain and Hitler signed a separate treaty. It promised that Britain and Germany would never go to war with
each other again…
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Step Eight – Czechoslovakia March 1939
Hitler promised at Munich that he did not want any more landIn March 1939 Germany invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia was an independent state, it had no German minority
They guarantee to defend Poland if it is attacked
He thinks GB & France are letting Hitler move east to attack him!
Decides to buy time to re-build shattered Red Army…abhishek
Step Nine – Nazi-Soviet Pact August 1939
I can’t invade Poland if Britain & France attack me in the West AND the USSR attacks me from
the East
I can’t fight Germany yet – I’ve just purged my Red Army! And Britain & France won’t help ME!
So…
They signed the Nazi-Soviet Pact
They promised not to attack each other
In secret they promised to divide Poland between them
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Step Ten – Invasion of Poland
September 1939
1st September – Germany invades Poland
Britain and France give 48 hrs to withdraw
3rd September – Britain and France declare war on Germany
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IVIL WAR IN SPAIN
NSCHLUSS WITH AUSTRIA
UDENTENLAND CRISIS
ITLER TAKES OVER REST OF CZECHOSLAVAKIA
TALY AND GERMANY FORM PACT
AZI-SOVIET PACT
ERMANY INVADE POLAND
E-OCCUPATION OF THE RHINELAND
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Improvement in technology
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For all the role of science, mathematics, and new inventions in earlier wars, no war had as profound an effect on the technologies of our current lives than World War II (1939-
45). And no war was as profoundly affected by science, math, and technology than WWII.
We can point to numerous new inventions and scientific principles that emerged during the war. These include advances in rocketry, pioneered by Nazi Germany. The V-1 or
“buzz bomb” was an automatic aircraft (today known as a “cruise missile”) and the V-2 was a “ballistic missile” that flew into space before falling down on its target (both were rained on London during 1944-45, killing thousands of civilians). The “rocket team” that developed these weapons for Germany were brought to the United States after World War II, settled in Huntsville, Alabama, under their leader Wernher von Braun, and then helped to build the rockets that sent American astronauts into space and to the moon.
Electronic computers were developed by the British for breaking the Nazi “Enigma” codes, and by the Americans for calculating ballistics and other battlefield equations.
Numerous small “computers”—from hand-held calculating tables made out of cardboard, to mechanical trajectory calculators, to some of the earliest electronic digital computers,
could be found in everything from soldiers’ pockets to large command and control centers. Early control centers aboard ships and aircraft pioneered the networked,
interactive computing that is so central to our lives today. abhishek
abhishek
THANK YOU!!