Chapter 25 Flashcards

1
Q

isolationism

A

Critics often describe the US as being “isolationist”, but in fact, the US played a more active role in world affairs than it had at almost any previous time in history.

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2
Q

Washington Naval Conf.

A

Most important effort of Hughes to build safeguards against future wars that would not hamper American freedom of action in the world. 1921, was an attempt to prevent what was threatening to become a costly and destabilizing naval armaments race between America, Britain, and Japan.

Hughes startled the delegates by proposing a plan for dramatic reductions in the fleets of all three nations and a ten year moratorium on the construction of large warships. He called for the scrapping of nearly 2 million tons of existing shipping. Far more surprising than the proposal was the fact that the conference ultimately agreed to accept most of its terms, something that Hughes himself apparently hadn’t anticipated.

Five Power Pact established both limits for total naval tonnage and a ratio of armaments among the signatories. For every 5 tons of American and British warships, Japan would maintain 3 and France and Italy 1.75 each.

The Wash. Conference also produced two other, related treaties, the nine power pact, pledging a continuation of the open door policy in china, and the four power pact, by which the US, Britain, France, and Japan promised to respect one another’s Pacific territories and cooperate to prevent aggression.

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3
Q

Kellogg-Briand Pact

A

Kellog Briand Pact of 1928 concluded the effort to protect the peace and international economic interests of the US. When the French foreign minister, Aristide Briand, asked the US in 1927 to join an alliance against Germany, Secretary of State Frank Kellogg instead proposed a multilateral treaty outlawing war as an instrument of national policy. Fourteen nations signed the agreement in Paris amid great solemnity and wide international acclaim. 48 other nations later joined the pact. It contained no instrument of enforcement, but rested instead on the “moral force” of world opinion.

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4
Q

Dawes Plan

A

in 1924, Charles G. Dawes, and American banker and diplomat, negotiated an agreement under which American banks would provide enormous loans to the Germans, enabling them to meet their reparation payments; in return, Britain and France would agree to reduce the amount of those payments. Dawes won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts, but in fact the Dawes Plan did little to solve the problems it addressed. It led to a troubling circular pattern in international finance. America would lend money to Germany, which would use that money to pay reparations to France and England, which in turn would use those funds to repay war debts to the US. The flow was able to continue only by virtue of the enormous debts Germany and other European nations were accumulating to American banks and corporations.

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5
Q

Benito Mussolini

A

Benito Mussolini’s Fascist Party had been in control of Italy since the early 1920s, by the 1930s, the regime was growing increasingly nationalistic and militaristic, and Fascist leaders were loudly threatening an active campaign of imperial expansion.

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6
Q

Chiang Kai Shek

A

there was a major crisis in Asia that was an early step toward WWII. The Japanese, reeling from an economic depression of their own, were concerned about the increasing strength of the Soviet Union and of Premier Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalist China. In particular, they were alarmed at Chiang’s insistence on expanding his government’s power in Manchuria, which remained officially a part of China but over which the Japanese had maintained effective economic control since 1905. When the moderate government of Japan failed to take forceful steps to counter Chiang’s ambitions, Japan’s military leaders staged what was in effect a coup in the Autumn of 1931 , seizing control of foreign policy from the weakened liberals. Weeks later, they launched a major invasion of northern Manchuria.

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7
Q

Stimson’s response to Japan’s aggression

A

For a while, Sec. of State Henry Stimson continued to hope that Japanese moderates would regain control of the Tokyo government and halt the invasion. The militarists, however, remained in command; and by the beginning of 1932, the conquest of Manchuria was complete. Stimson issued stern (but essentially toothless) warnings to Japan and tried to use moral suasion to end the crisis. But Hoover forbade him to cooperate with the League of Nations in imposing economic sanctions against the Japanese. Stimson’s only real tool in dealing with the Manchurian invasion was a refusal to grant diplomatic recognition to the new Japanese territories. Japan was unconcerned and early in 1932 expanded its aggression farther into China, attacking the city of Shanghai and killing thousands of civilians.

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8
Q

Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act

A

Although the new administration had no interest in international currency stabilization or settlement of war debts, it did have an interest in improving America’s position in world trade. FDR approved the Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act of 1934, authorizing the administration to negotiate treaties lowering tariffs by as much as 50 percent in return for reciprocal reductions by other nations. By 1939, Sec. of State Cordell Hull, a devoted free trader, had negotiated new treaties with 21 countries. The result was an increase in American exports of nearly 40 percent. But most of the agreements admitted only products not competitive with American industry and agriculture, so imports into the US continued to lag. Thus other nations were not obtaining the American currency needed to buy American products or pay off debts to American banks.

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9
Q

recognition of the USSR

A

The US and Russia had viewed each other with mistrust and even hostility since the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, and the American government still had not officially recognized the Society regime by 1933.

New relationship was desired to improve trade. Russians also were eager because they hoped for American cooperation in containing the power of Japan, which they saw as a threat. In Nov. 1933, therefore, Soviet foreign Minister Maxim Litvinov reached an agreement with FDR in Washington, the Soviets world cease their propaganda efforts in the US and protect American citizens in Russia. In exchange, the US would recognize the Soviet regime.

Despite this promising beginning, relations with the Soviet Union soon soured once again. American trade failed to establish much of a foothold in Russia; and the Soviets received no reassurance from the US that it was interested in stopping Japanese expansion in Asia. By the end of 1934, as a result of these disappointed hopes on both sides, the USSR and the US were once again not trusting one another.

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10
Q

“Good Neighbor Policy”

A

efforts to enhance both diplomatic and economic relations with Latin America, one of the most important targets of the new policy of trade reciprocity. During the 30s, the US succeeded in increasing both exports to and imports from the other nations in the Western Hemisphere by over 100%. Closely tied to these new economic relationships was anew American attitude toward intervention in Latin America. The Hoover administration had unofficially abandoned the earlier American practice of using military force to compel Latin American governments to repay debts, respect foreign investments, or otherwise behave “responsibly.”

The Good Neighbor Policy did not mean, however, that the US had abandoned its influence in Latin America. instead of military force, Americans now tried to use economic influence. The new reliance on economic pressures eased tensions between the US and its neighbors considerably. It idd nothing to stem the growing AMerican domination of the Latin American economies.

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11
Q

Nye committee

A

An investigation by a Senate committee chaired by Senator Gerald Nye of North Dakota revealed exorbitant profiteering and blatant tax evasion by many corporations during the war, and it suggested that bankers had pressured Wilson to intervene in the war so as to protect their loans abroad. FDR himself shared some suspicions of the Nye investigation. Nevertheless, he continued to hope for at least a modest American role in maintaing world peace

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12
Q

invasion of Ethiopia

A

It became clear that Mussolini’s Italy was preparing to invade Ethiopia in an effort to expand its colonial holdings in Africa. Fearing that a general European war would result, American legislatures began to design legal safeguards to prevent the US from being dragged into the conflict. Resulted in the Neutrality act of 1935

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13
Q

Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, & 1937

A

The 1935 act, and the Neutrality Acts of 1936 and 1937 that followed, was designed to prevent a recurrence of the events that many Americans now believed had pressured the US into World War I. The 1935 law established a mandatory arms embargo against both victim and aggressor in any military conflict and empowered the president to warn American citizens that they might travel on the ships of warring nations only at their own risk. Thus, isolationists believed, the “protection of neutral rights” could not again become an excuse for American intervention in war. THe 1936 Neutrality Act renewed the provisions, and in 1937, with world conditions growing even more precarious, Congress passed a new Neutrality Act that established the so called cash and carry policy by which belligerents could purchase only nonmilitary goods from the US and had to pay cash and carry the goods away on their own vessels.

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14
Q

“Quarantine” speech

A

The United States, FDR believed, could not allow the Japanese aggression to go unremarked or unpunished. In a speech in Chicago in October 1937, the pres. warned forcefully of the dangers that Japanese aggression posed to world peace. Aggressors, he proposed, should be “quarantined” by the international community to prevent the contagion of war from spreading. The president was deliberately vague about what such a “quarantine” would mean. Nevertheless, public response to the speech was disturbingly hostile. As a result, FDR drew back.

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15
Q

Panay incident

A

1937-provided evidence of how formidable the obstacles to Roosevelt’s efforts remained. Japanese aviators bombed and sank the US gunboat Panay as it sailed the Yangtze River in China. The attack was almost undoubtedly deliberate. It occurred in broad daylight, with clear visibility. A large American flag had been painted conspicuously on the Panay’s deck. Even so, isolationists seized eagerly on Japanese protestations that the bombing had been an accident and pressured the administration to accept Japan’s apology.

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16
Q

Sino-Japanese War

A

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17
Q

“appeasement”

A

The Munich accords were the most prominent element of a policy that came to be known as “appeasement” and that came to be identified (not really fairly) almost exclusively with Chamberlain. Whoever was to blame however, it became clear almost immediately that the policy was a failure. Hitler occupied the remaining areas of Czechoslovakia, violating the Munich agreement unashamedly.

18
Q

Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939

A

Stalin had already decided that he could expect no protection from the West; after all, he had not even been inited to attend the Munich Conference. Accordingly, he signed a nonaggression pact with Hitler in August 1939, freeing the Germans for the moment from the danger of a two front war.

19
Q

Neutrality Act of 1939/cash-and-cary

A

It was clear that while the US was neutral, most people favored the Allies. The question was how much they would do to help. FDR felt that at the very least they should provide armaments to the allied armies to help them counter the highly productive German industry.

In 1939, he asked congress for a revision of the Neutrality Acts. The original measures had forbidden the sale of weapons to any nation engaged in war; Roosevelt wanted the arms embargo lifted.

Had to accept a weaker revision due to isolationists. The 1939 measure maintained the prohibition on American ships entering war zones. It did, however, permit belligerents to purchase arms on the same cash and carry basis that the earlier neutrality acts had establish for the sale of nonmilitary materials.

20
Q

Vichy regime

A

a new collaborationist regime assembled in Vichy

21
Q

FDR’s response to the fall of France

A

FDR had already begun to increase American aid to the Allies. He also had begun preparations to resist a potential Nazi invasion of the US. With France tottering, he proclaimed that the US would “extend to the opponents of force the material resources of this nation” and WInston Churchill,the new British prime minister, sent Roosevelt the first of many long lists of requests for ships, armaments, and other assistance without which, he insisted, England could not long survive.

22
Q

Burke-Wadsworth Act

A

After the fall of France, public opinion was shifting and people were starting to see a German victory as a threat. Congress was aware of this sentiment and was also becoming more concerned about the need for internal preparations for war. It approved the Burke Wadsworth Act, inaugurating the first peacetime military draft in American History.

23
Q

America First Committee

A

opposed the interventionist Fight for Freedom Committee.

Powerful lobby which attracted some of America’s most prominent leaders. Its chairman was General Robert E. Wood, until recently the president of Sears Roebuck; ad its membership included Charles LIndbergh, General Hugh Johnson, Senator Gerald Nye, and Senator Burton Wheeler. TI won the editorial support of the Hearst Chain and other influential newspapers and had the indirect support of a large proportion of the Republican party.

24
Q

lend-lease

A

Britain was bankrupt and could no longer meet the cash and carry requirements of the Neutrality acts, yet Churchill insisted they needed help. The president suggested a method that would eliminate the dollar sign from all arms transactions. The new system was labeled lend lease.

It would allow the gov. not only to sell but also to lend armaments to any nation deemed vital to the defense of the US> In other words, America could funnel weapons to England on the basis of no more than Britain’s promise to repay them or return the weapons after the war was over

25
Q

German invasion of USSR

A

At first, Germany did little to challenge these obviously hostile American actions (paroling transport ships in the western atlantic and radioing informations to British vessels about the location of Nazi submarines)

German invaded the Soviet Union in 1941, shattering the 1939 Nazi-Soviet pact. Germans drove quickly and forcefully deep into Russian territory. When the Soviets did not surrender, as many military observers had predicted they would, Roosevelt persuaded Congress to extend the lend lease privileges to them, the first step toward creating a new relationship with Stalin that would ultimately lead to a formal Soviet American alliance.

Now American industry was providing crucial assistance to HItler’s foes on two fronts, and the navy was playing a more active role in protecting the flow of goods to Europe.

So Nazi submarines began a concerted campaign against American vessels. A naval war between the US and Germany had effectually begun.

26
Q

Atlantic Charter

A

Meanwhile, a series of meetings were tying the US and GB more closely together. In August, FDR met with Churchill aboard a British vessel anchored off the coast of Newfoundland. The pres. made no military commitments, but he did join the prime minister in releasing a document that became known as the Atlantic Charter, in which the two nations set out certain common principles on which to base a better future for the world. It was in only vaguely disguised form, a statement of war aims that called openly for the final destruction of nazi tyranny

27
Q

Tripartite Pact

A

Japan took advantage of the crisis that had preoccupied the Soviet Union and the 2 most powerful colonial powers in Asia, Britain and France, to extend its empire in the Pacific.. In 1940, Japan signed the Tripartite Pact, a loose defensive alliance with Germany and Italy that seemed to extend the Axis into Asia (although the pacific and European conflicts were still and forever largely separate).

28
Q

Pear Harbor & Japan’s reasons for attacking

A

At 7:55 AM on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a wave of Japanese bombers attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor. A second wave came an hour later. Military commanders in Hawaii had taken no precautions against such an attack and had allowed ships to remain bunched up defenselessly in the harbor and airplanes to remain parked in rows on airstrips. The consequences of the raid were disastrous for America. Within two hours, the US got great losses. Afterward, we declared war against Japan, which caused Germany and Italy to declare war on us, which caused us to declare war on them. We are now IN THE WAR!

add reasons for attacking