1 / 12

WWII: America Enters the War

WWII: America Enters the War. Neutrality. President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared U.S. neutral two days after France and Britain declared war on Germany Official position at the beginning of WWII: Neutrality U.S. supported Britain and France

cheri
Télécharger la présentation

WWII: America Enters the War

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WWII: America Enters the War

  2. Neutrality • President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared U.S. neutral two days after France and Britain declared war on Germany • Official position at the beginning of WWII: Neutrality • U.S. supported Britain and France • Neutrality laws banned the sale of weapons to nations at war (Germany, France, Britain)

  3. Destroyers-for-Bases Deal • British Prime Minister Winston Churchill asked FDR for American destroyers (battleships) • Britain had lost ½ of its own destroyers by 1940 • Britain needed destroyers to: • Protect cargo ships from German U-Boats • Protect Great Britain from German invasion • FDR trades 50 U.S. destroyers for the right to build military bases on British-controlled land • Newfoundland • Bermuda • Caribbean Islands

  4. American Isolationism • Isolationism- policy to avoid participation in foreign affairs (European wars) • Debate: • Isolation • Stay out of war in Europe • Intervention • Enter War • Help Allies • Protect Democracy • Fight Dictators

  5. FDR Defends the Four Freedoms • Four Freedoms U.S. and Britain stood for: • Freedom of Speech • Freedom of Worship • Freedom from Want • Freedom from Fear

  6. Lend-Lease Act • Allowed U.S. to lend or lease arms to any country considered “vital to the defense of the United States” • Allowed FDR to send weapons to Britain if Britain returned them, or paid the U.S. back after the war • FDR feared the fall of Britain • Germany, Japan, and Italy would conquer the world • U.S. should be the great “arsenal of democracy” • Keep the British fighting so U.S. doesn’t have to • America sent $40 billion in weapons, vehicles, and supplies to Britain

  7. Nazi-Soviet Pact • Hitler violates the Nazi-Soviet Pact • Germany invades USSR • American Lend-Lease Act sends aid to USSR • Britain vows to aid any country willing to fight against Nazism

  8. Hemispheric Defense Zone • British Navy did not have enough ships to stop German U-Boats from patrolling the Atlantic Ocean • Hemispheric Defense Zone • Western half of the Atlantic Ocean was part of the Western Hemisphere = Neutral • U.S. Navy patrolled the western Atlantic • Reported U-Boat positions to British

  9. Atlantic Charter • Agreement between America and Britain to post-war relationship • Democracy • Non-aggression • Free Trade • Economic Advancement • Freedom of the Seas • 15 anti-Axis (Germany, Italy) nations signed Atlantic Charter • FDR pledged to force an “incident” which would justify him opening hostilities • U-Boats and American destroyers face-off in the Atlantic • “Shoot-on-sight” policy

  10. Embargoes on Japan • Britain needed all ships in Europe • Left India and other British colonies in Asia unprotected • FDR helps Britain by hindering Japanese ability to seize British colonies • FDR applies economic pressure to Japan • 1940 FDR restricts the sale of strategic materials (materials important for fighting a war) to Japan • Scrap Iron • Steel • Oil • Airplane fuel • Japan signs alliance with Germany and Italy

  11. Embargoes on Japan • 1941, FDR sends Lend-Lease aid to Japanese-occupied China • Wanted China to keep Japan from gaining territory in Asia • Failed • Japan invaded Indochina • Threatened British colonies • FDR response to Japanese aggression in Asia • Japanese assets in U.S. frozen • Reduce oil shipments to Japan • Sends General MacArthur to Philippines to build-up U.S. military presence

  12. Embargoes on Japan • Japan responds to U.S. military build-up in the Philippines and oil embargo • Planned to attack: • British Colonies • Dutch Colonies • The Philippines • American fleet at Pearl Harbor

More Related