ch35 APUSH

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Bolstering Britain with the Destroyer Deal (1940)

After France fell to Germany in the Battle of France (June), Hitler launched a series of air attacks against Britain in August 1940. The Battle of Britain raged in the air over the British Isles for months. During the Battle of Britain, radio broadcasts brought the drama from London air raids directly to America homes. Sympathy for Britain grew, but it was not yet sufficient to push the United States into war. President Roosevelt faced a historic decision: whether to hunker down in the Western Hemisphere and let the rest of the world go it alone; or to bolster Britain by all means short of war itself. The most powerful group of those who supported aid for Britain was the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies. Isolationists organized the America First Committee, contending that America should concentrate what strength it had to defend its own shores. On September 2, 1940, President Roosevelt agreed to transfer to 50 destroyers left over from WWI to Britain. In return, Britain agreed to hand over to the United States 8 valuable defensive base sites. Shifting warships from a neutral United States to Britain was a flagrant violation of the neutrality obligations.

U.S. Destroyers and Hitler's U-boats Clash

FDR made the decision to escort the shipments of arms to Britain by U.S. warships in July 1941. In September 1941, the U.S. destroyer Greer was attacked by a U-boat, without suffering damage. Roosevelt then proclaimed a shoot-on-sight policy. On October 17 the destroyer Kearny was crippled by a U-boat. Two weeks later, the destroyer Reuben James was sunk off southwestern Iceland. Congress voted in November 1941 to repeal the Neutrality Act of 1939, enabling merchant ships to be legally armed and enter the combat zones with munitions for Britain.

Freedom for (from?) the Filipinos and Recognition for the Russians

FDR: "Deuces, Asia." US: "Isolationism, dog!" Organized labor: "no moar filipenoz plz" Congress: "A'ight, it's 1934. Time to pass the Tydings-McDuffie Act." Philippines in 1946: "lol im so indie" US: "I didn't really want to support the Philippines in the event of a Japanese attack. No biggie." FDR in 1933: "A'ight, there is a Soviet Union. It exists, guys. Let's trade and ally with 'em. If Germany or Japan get too big for their britches, we'll be there against 'em."

Congress Passes the Landmark Lend-Lease Law

Fearing the collapse of Britain, Congress passed the Lend-Lease Bill in 1941. Nicknamed "An Act Further to Promote the Defense of the United States," it allowed for American arms to be lent or leased to the democracies of the world that needed them. When the war was over, the guns and tanks could be returned. Key opponents of the bill, such as Senator Taft, criticized it, reporting that the arms would be destroyed and unable to be returned after the war. It was praised by the FDR administration as a device that would keep the nation out of the war rather than dragging it in. America would send a limitless supply of arms to victims of aggression, who would in turn finish the war and keep it on their side of the Atlantic. Lend-lease was a challenge thrown at the Axis dictators; America pledged itself to bolster those nations that were indirectly fighting it by fighting aggression. The bill marked the abandonment of any pretense of neutrality. Hitler recognized the Lend-Lease Bill as an unofficial declaration of war. Until then, Germany had avoided attacking U.S. ships. On May 21, 1941, the Robin Moor, an unarmed American merchantman, was destroyed by a German submarine in the South Atlantic, outside the war zone.

Becoming a Good Neighbor

Good Neighbor policy: No more armed intervention in Latin America. Go FDR! In 1934 all marines were gone from Haiti. The Platt Amendment released Cuba from America's grip. In 1936 Panama's grip was relaxed. Mexico's government took US oil properties in 1938 (those jerks) but because of FDR's policy of peaceful intervention, they worked it out in 1941 at the expense of the companies' original stake.

Appeasing Japan and Germany

In 1937, the Japanese militarists touched off an explosion that led to the all-out invasion of China. President Roosevelt declined to invoke the recently passed neutrality legislation by refusing to call the "China incident" an officially declared war. If he had, he would have cut off the trickle of munitions on which the Chinese were dependent. The Japanese, as a result, were able to continue to buy war supplies in the United States. In 1937, Japanese planes sunk an American gunboat, the Panay. Tokyo was quick to make apologies and the United States accepted. In 1935, Hitler violated the Treaty of Versailles when he introduced mandatory military service in Germany. In 1936, he again violated the treaty when he took over the demilitarized German Rhineland. In March 1938, Hitler invaded Austria. (Note: Austria actually voted for the occupation, fully aware that if it resisted, Germany would forcefully take over Austria.) At a conference in Munich, Germany in September 1938, the Western European democracies, unprepared for war, betrayed Czechoslovakia to Germany when they gave away Sudetenland. They hoped that by doing this, Hitler's greed for power would end. In March 1939, Hitler took control of Czechoslovakia. (See Austria note.)

The London Conference

London Economic Conference (1933): 66 countries sent representatives to work together to fix the depression through stability of currencies and exchange rates. At first FDR was all cool with sending US representatives but WAIT that would mean he has no power over inflation! Well America didn't go to the LEC. With such a lack in United States, the LEC totally flopped. That caused nationalistic sentiments to rise and internationalism decreased.

Congress Legislates Neutrality

Neutrality Acts (1935,6,7): Congress' response to popular pressure. They said when the Pres acknowledges a foreign war, no Americans could sail on their ship, sell/transport munitions to them, or loan to them. The Acts were passed to keep us out of war. However, they actually provoked the fighters by declining to use strength to aid friends and defeat foes.

Hitler's Belligerency and U.S. Neutrality

On August 23, 1939, the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression treaty with Hitler. The Hitler-Stalin pact meant that Germany could make war on Poland and the Western democracies without fear of retaliation from the Soviet Union. Hitler demanded from Poland a return of the areas taken from Germany after WWI. After Poland failed to meet his demands, Hitler militarily invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. Britain and France, honoring their commitments to Poland, declared war on Germany; World War II had started. Although Americans were strongly anti-Nazi, they were desperately determined to stay out of the war. The Neutrality Act of 1937 placed a arms trade embargo on Spain and extended the current embargo on Britain and France. Heeding to the need of France and Britain of war materials from America, Congress passed the Neutrality Act of 1939. It stated that the European democracies could buy American war materials as long as they would transport the munitions on their own ships after paying for them in cash. America thus avoided loans, war debts, and the torpedoing of American arms-carriers. Overseas demand for war goods brought a sharp upswing from the recession of 1937-1938 and ultimately solved the decade-long unemployment crisis.

America's Transformation from Bystander to Belligerent

Pearl Harbor was not the full answer to the question of why the United States went to war. Following the fall of France, Americans were confronted with a devil's dilemma. They desired to stay out of the conflict, yet they did not want Britain to be knocked out. To keep Britain from collapsing, the Roosevelt administration felt compelled to extend the unneutral aid that invited attacks from German submarines. Americans wished to stop Japan's conquests in the Far East. To keep Japan from expanding, Washington undertook to cut off vital Japanese supplies with embargoes that invited possible retaliation. Rather than let democracy die and dictatorship rule, most Americans were determined to support a policy that might lead to war.

Secretary Hull's Reciprocal Trade Agreements

Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act (1934): Passed by Congress, aimed at relief and recovery, lowered tariff. Cordell Hull, Sec'y of State, agreed with 21 countries by end of 1939 that if US lowered its tariff, other countries would too. Under the Act, FDR could lower up to 50% and other countries would too! Damn. Foreign trade starkly increased. Foreshadowing: America leads the free-trade international economic system because of the Act.

Surprise Assault of Pearl Harbor

Since September 1940, Japan had been allied with Germany. In late 1940, Washington imposed the first of its embargoes on Japan-bound supplies. The State Department insisted that the Japanese clear out of China, offering to renew trade relations on a limited basis. Forced with the choice of succumbing to the Americans or continued conquest, the Japanese chose to fight. On "Black Sunday" December 7, 1941, Japanese bombers attacked Pearl Harbor, killing 2,348 people. On December 11, 1941, Congress declared war.

Impulses Toward Storm-Cellar Isolationism

Stalin, Mussolini, Hitler. Communist, Fascist, Nazi. USSR, Italy, Germany. Hitler was the worst! Impulsive + friggin huge power = terrible Anyway, Hitler and Mussolini joined forces in 1936 to form the Rome-Berlin Axis. Japan, wanting to "find a place in the Asiatic sun," ended the Washington Naval Treaty and made some big-ass battleships. Mussolini was hungry for some African power so he attacked Ethiopia in 1935. Congress passed the Johnson Debt Default Act in 1934, preventing debt-dodging nations from borrowing further in the United States. Americans remained isolationist because of ocean borders.

FDR Shatters the Two-Term Tradition (1940)

The Republicans chose Wendell L. Willkie to run against President Roosevelt. Willkie's great appeal lay in his personality. The Republican platform condemned FDR's alleged dictatorship, as well as the New Deal. Willkie was opposed not so much to the New Deal as to its extravagances and inefficiencies. Roosevelt challenged the sacred two-term tradition when he decided that in such a grave crisis he owed his experienced hand to the service of his country. Both presidential nominees promised to stay out of the war, and both promised to strengthen the nation's defenses. FDR won the election of 1940; voters generally felt that should war come, the experience of FDR was needed.

America Dooms Loyalist Spain

The Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939 started when Spanish rebels, led by General Francisco Franco, rose against the left-wing Republican government in Madrid. Aided by Mussolini and Hitler, Franco undertook to overthrow the Loyalist regime, which was assisted by the Soviet Union. Although it was legal for the United States to send aid to the Loyalist regime, the United States desperately wanted to stay out of war; Congress amended the existing neutrality legislation so as to apply an arms embargo to both Loyalists and rebels.

The Fall of France

The months following the collapse of Poland were known as the "phony war." The Soviet Union took over Finland despite Congress loaning $30 million to Finland. Hitler overran Denmark and Norway in April 1940, ending the "phony war." Hitler then moved on to the Netherlands and Belgium. By late June 1940, France was forced to surrender. When France surrendered, Americans realized that England was all that stood between Hitler controlling all of Europe. Roosevelt moved with tremendous speed to call upon the nation to build huge airfleets and a two-ocean navy. Congress approved a spending of $37 billion. On September 6, 1940, Congress passed a conscription law; under this measure, America's first peacetime draft was initiated-provision was made for training 1.2 million troops and 800,000 reserves each year. With the Netherlands, Denmark, and France all fallen to German control, it was unsure what would happen to the colonies of Latin America (the New World). At the Havana Conference of 1940, the United States agreed to share with its 20 New World neighbors the responsibility of upholding the Monroe Doctrine.

Hitler's Assault on the Soviet Union Spawns the Atlantic Charter

Two events marked the course of WWII before the assault on Pearl Harbor: the fall of France in June 1940, and Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. Even though the two nations were bound to peace under the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939, neither Hitler nor Stalin trusted one another. Hitler decided to crush the Soviet Union, seize the oil and other resources of the Soviet Union, and then have two free hands to battle Britain. On June 22, 1941, Hitler launched an attack on the Soviet Union. President Roosevelt immediately promised assistance and backed up his words by making some military supplies available. With the surrender of the Soviet Union a very real possibility, the Atlantic Conference was held in August 1941. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met and discussed common problems of the world. The two men came up with the eight-point Atlantic Charter, outlining the aspirations of the democracies for a better world at the war's end. The Atlantic Charter promised that there would be no territorial changes contrary to the wishes of the inhabitants; it affirmed the right of a people to choose their own form of government and to regain the governments abolished by the dictators; and it declared for disarmament and a peace of security, pending a new League of Nations.


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