I. The
Road to War |
|
A. |
The Rise of Fascism |
|
|
1. |
The
nation’s neutrality was challenged by the aggressive actions of
Germany, Italy, and Japan, all determined to expand their borders and their influence. |
|
|
2. |
In
1931,
Japan
occupied
Manchuria; then in 1937, it launched a full-scale invasion of
China. |
|
|
3. |
In
1935,
Italy
invaded
Ethiopia, and by 1936, the Italian subjugation
of
Ethiopia
was complete. The League of Nations condemned the aggression, but it could not
stop
Italy. |
|
|
4. |
Germany
presented the gravest threat to the world order in the 1930s. There, huge World
War I reparations payments, economic depression, fear of communism, labor
unrest, and rising unemployment fueled the rise of Adolf Hitler and his
National Socialist (Nazi) Party. |
|
|
5. |
Hitler became chancellor in 1933, assumed dictatorial powers, and, as he made
clear in his book Mein Kampf (My Struggle), sought to overturn
the territorial settlements of the
Versailles
treaty, to “restore” all of the Germans of Central and Eastern Europe to a
single German fatherland, and to annex large areas of
Eastern
Europe. |
|
|
6. |
Part
of Hitler’s vision was that “inferior races” and other “undesirables” had to
make way for the “master race.” He launched a persecution of Jews. |
|
|
7. |
Wanting to avoid a war with
Germany,
Britain
and
France
took no action. |
|
|
8. |
Hitler’s 1935 announcement of plans to rearm
Germany—in
violation of the
Versailles
treaty—met with no resistance. |
|
|
9. |
Germany
reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936, and
later that year Hitler and
Italy’s
Benito Mussolini joined forces in the Rome-Berlin Axis. |
|
|
10. |
Also in 1936,
Germany
and
Japan
signed a pact to create a military
alliance against the
Soviet Union. |
|
B. |
Isolationists versus Interventionists |
|
|
1. |
During the early years of the New Deal,
America
limited its involvement in
international affairs. |
|
|
2. |
Partly owing to disillusionment with American participation in World War I,
isolationism built in Congress and the nation throughout the 1920s. |
|
|
3. |
Gerald P. Nye, a senator from
North
Dakota, headed a congressional investigation into the
profits of munitions makers during World War I; his committee concluded that
war profiteers, whom it called “merchants of death,” had maneuvered the nation
into World War I for financial gain. |
|
|
4. |
Although most of the committee’s charges were dubious or simplistic, they gave
momentum to the isolationist movement, contributing to the passage of the
Neutrality Act of 1935. |
|
|
5. |
The
Neutrality Act imposed an embargo on arms trading with countries at war and
declared that American citizens traveled on the ships of belligerent nations at
their own risk; in 1936, the Neutrality Act was expanded to ban loans to
belligerents, and in 1937, it adopted a “cash-and-carry” provision. |
|
|
6. |
Despite their Loyalist sympathies, the neutral stance of the
United States,
Great Britain, and
France
virtually assured a fascist
victory in the 1936 Spanish civil war. |
|
|
7. |
In
1938, Hitler sent troops to annex
Austria, while simultaneously scheming to seize part of
Czechoslovakia. |
|
|
8. |
At
the Munich Conference in September 1938, Britain and France capitulated to
Germany’s aggression, agreeing to let Germany annex the Sudetenland—the
German-speaking border areas of Czechoslovakia—in return for Hitler’s pledge to
seek no more territory. |
|
|
9. |
Within six months, Hitler’s forces had overrun the rest of
Czechoslovakia
and were threatening to march
into
Poland. |
|
|
10. |
In
August 1939, Hitler signed the Nonaggression Pact with the Soviet Union, which
assured
Germany
it would not have to wage war on two fronts at once. |
|
|
11. |
On
September 1, 1939, German
troops attacked
Poland; two
days later,
Britain
and
France
declared war on
Germany. World War II had begun. |
|
|
12. |
President Roosevelt, with the support of most Americans, sought to keep the
United States
neutral. |
|
|
13. |
By
mid-1940,
Germany
had
overrun Western Europe, leaving
Great Britain
as the only power in
Europe fighting Hitler. |
|
|
14. |
In
America, the Committee to Defend
America
by Aiding the Allies led the
interventionists, while the isolationists formed the America First Committee,
which had the support of the conservative press, to keep
America
out of the war. |
|
|
15. |
The
National Defense Advisory Commission was created in 1940 to put
America’s
economy and government on a defense footing. |
|
|
16. |
After winning an unprecedented third term as president in 1940, Roosevelt
concentrated on persuading the American people to increase aid to
Britain. |
|
|
17. |
In
March 1941, Roosevelt convinced Congress to pass the Lend-Lease Act, to “lease,
lend, or otherwise dispose of” arms and other equipment to any country whose
defense was considered vital to the security of the
United States. |
|
|
18. |
The
“lend-lease” was extended to the Soviet Union, which became part of the Allied
coalition after it was invaded by
Germany;
the full implementation of lend-lease marked the unofficial entrance of the
United States
into the European war. |
|
|
19. |
The
United States
and
Britain’s
Atlantic Charter called for economic collaboration between the two countries
and for guarantees of political stability after the end of the war and also
supported free trade, national self-determination, and the principle of
collective security. |
|
|
20. |
By
September 1941, Nazi submarines and American vessels were fighting an
undeclared naval war in the Atlantic, unknown to the American public; without a
dramatic enemy attack,
Roosevelt hesitated to
ask Congress for a declaration of war. |
|
C. |
The Attack on
Pearl
Harbor |
|
|
1. |
The
final provocation came not from
Germany
but from
Japan. |
|
|
2. |
Throughout the 1930s, Japanese military advances in
China
had upset the balance of political and economic power in the Pacific; Roosevelt
suggested that aggressors such as
Japan
be “quarantined” by peace-loving nations, but the
United States
avoided taking a
strong stand. |
|
|
3. |
During the sack of
Nanjing in 1937, the
United States
refused to intervene, leading to the deaths of 300,000 Chinese. |
|
|
4. |
Japan
craved the conquest of more territory and
signed a pact with
Germany
and
Italy
in 1940. |
|
|
5. |
After
Japan
occupied part of
French Indochina,
Roosevelt retaliated with
trade restrictions and embargoes on aviation fuel and scrap metal. |
|
|
6. |
When
Japanese troops occupied the rest of Indochina, Roosevelt froze Japanese assets
in the
United States
and
instituted an embargo on trade with
Japan, including oil shipments. |
|
|
7. |
The
United States
knew that
Japan
was planning an attack but did not know
when or where; on
December
7, 1941, Japanese bombers attacked
Pearl Harbor. |
|
|
8. |
On
December 8, Congress voted to declare war on
Japan;
three days later,
Germany
and
Italy
declared war on
the
United States, and the
United States
in turn declared war on them. |
II.
Organizing for Victory |
|
A. |
Financing the War |
|
|
1. |
Presidential power expanded dramatically when Congress passed the War Powers
Act of
December 18, 1941.
The act gave
Roosevelt unprecedented authority
over all aspects of the war. This act marked the beginning of what historians
call the imperial presidency: the
far-reaching use of executive authority during the latter part of the twentieth
century. |
|
|
2. |
Defense mobilization definitively ended the Great Depression. Between 1940 and
1945, the gross national product doubled, after-tax profits of American
business doubled, and farm output grew by one-third. |
|
|
3. |
The
Revenue Act of 1942 expanded the number of people paying income taxes from 3.9
million to 42.6 million. Taxes on personal income and business profits paid
half the cost of the war. |
|
|
4. |
The
number of civilians employed by the government increased almost fourfold;
leadership of federal agencies was turned over to volunteer business
executives, such as Henry J. Kaiser, a contractor who had built the monumental
Hoover Dam. |
|
|
5. |
Many
wartime agencies extended the power of the federal government. One of the most
important agencies was the War Production Board (WPB), which awarded defense
contracts, evaluated military and civilian requests for scarce resources, and
oversaw the conversion of industry to military production. |
|
|
6. |
The
WPB preferred to deal with major corporations; these very large businesses
would later form the core of the military-industrial complex of the postwar
years. |
|
|
7. |
Working together, American business and government turned out a prodigious
supply of military hardware: 86,000 tanks, 296,000 airplanes, 15 million rifles
and machine guns, 64,000 landing craft, and 6,500 cargo ships and naval
vessels. |
|
B. |
Mobilizing the American Fighting Force |
|
|
1. |
An
expanded state presence was also evident in the government’s mobilization of a
fighting force; by the end of World War II, the armed forces of the
United States
numbered 15 million. |
|
|
2. |
The
military segregated the nearly 1 million African Americans who fought in all
branches of the armed forces and assigned them the most menial jobs; Mexican
Americans and Native Americans were never officially segregated. |
|
|
3. |
Among the most instrumental soldiers were the Native
American “code talkers.” No axis nation ever broke the codes devised by Native
Americans. |
|
|
4. |
Three
hundred fifty thousand American women enlisted in the armed services and
achieved a permanent status in the military. The armed forces limited the types
of duty assigned to women; they were barred from combat, and most were assigned
to jobs reflecting stereotypes of women’s roles in civilian life. |
|
C. |
Workers and the War Effort |
|
|
1. |
Government and corporate recruiters sought to remedy the war-induced labor shortage
and drew on patriotism to urge women into the workforce. |
|
|
2. |
Women made up 36 percent of the labor force in 1945, compared with 24 percent
at the beginning of the war, though they faced much discrimination, sexual
harassment, and inequitable pay. |
|
|
3. |
Women’s
participation in the labor force dropped temporarily when the war ended, but it
rebounded steadily for the rest of the 1940s. |
|
|
4. |
Organized labor responded to the war with an initial burst of patriotic unity;
on December 23, 1941, representatives of the major unions made a nonbinding
“no-strike” pledge for the duration of the war. |
|
|
5. |
In
the face of domestic and wartime discrimination, African Americans manifested a
new mood of militancy. |
|
|
6. |
African American leaders pointed out parallels between anti-Semitism in
Germany
and racial discrimination in
America;
they pledged themselves to a “Double V” campaign: victory over Nazism abroad
and victory over racism and inequality at home. |
|
|
7. |
In
response to the threat of a black “March on
Washington,”
Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, prohibiting
“discrimination in the employment of workers in defense industries or
government because of race, creed, color, or national origin,” and established
the Fair Employment Practices Commission (FEPC). |
|
|
8. |
The
FEPC did not affect segregation in the armed forces and could not enforce
compliance with its orders. |
|
|
9. |
African
American groups flourished; the NAACP grew to 450,000 by 1945, and the Congress
of Racial Equality was founded and became known nationwide for its demonstrations
and sit-ins. |
|
|
10. |
The
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) built on their communities’
patriotic contributions to the defense industry and the armed services to
challenge discrimination and exclusion. |
|
|
11. |
Unions expanded membership during World War II.
Roosevelt
set up the National War Labor Board (NWLB), which established wages, hours, and
working conditions and had the authority to seize plants that did not comply. |
|
|
12. |
Dissatisfaction peaked in 1943, a year in which a nationwide railroad strike
was narrowly averted and John L. Lewis led the United Mine Workers on a strike;
Lewis won wage concessions, but he alienated Congress and the public. |
|
|
13. |
Congress passed the anti-union Smith-Connally Labor Act over
Roosevelt’s
veto, and strikes were entirely prohibited in defense industries. |
|
D. |
Politics in Wartime |
|
|
1. |
In
his 1944 State of the Union address, FDR called for a second Bill of Rights to
guarantee that all Americans had access to an education and a job, adequate
food and clothing, and decent housing and medical care. |
|
|
2. |
FDR’s
Bill of Rights remained largely rhetorical since it received no congressional
support until after the war ended. |
|
|
3. |
The
Servicemen’s Readjustment Act (1944), known as the GI Bill, provided education,
job training, medical care, pensions, and mortgage loans for those who had
served during the war. |
|
|
4. |
Roosevelt’s call for social legislation was part of a
plan to woo Democratic voters and reinvigorate the New Deal coalition. |
|
|
5. |
In
1944, Roosevelt sought a fourth term because of the war; Democrats dropped
Henry Wallace as vice president, as his views were seen as too extreme, and
teamed Roosevelt with Harry S. Truman to run against Governor Thomas E. Dewey
of New York. |
|
|
6. |
In a
close election,
Roosevelt received only 53.5 percent
of the popular vote; the party’s margin of victory came from the cities, and a
significant segment of this urban support came from organized labor. |
III. Life
on the Home Front |
|
A. |
“For the Duration” |
|
|
1. |
People on the home front worked on civilian defense committees, collected old
newspapers and scrap material, served on local rationing and draft boards, and
planted “victory gardens” that produced 40 percent of the nation’s vegetables. |
|
|
2. |
The
Office of War Information (OWI) strove to disseminate information and promote
patriotism; the OWI urged advertising agencies to link their clients’ products
to the war effort. |
|
|
3. |
Popular culture reflected
America’s
new international involvement and built morale on the home front; many movies
had patriotic themes, demonstrated heroism of ordinary citizens, or warned of
the dangers of fascism, while newsreels and on-the-spot radio broadcasts kept
the public up to date on the war. |
|
|
4. |
Perhaps the greatest source of Americans’ high morale was wartime prosperity as
federal defense spending had ended the depression. Workers earned higher
take-home pay, despite wage freezes, than at any point since the 1920s. |
|
|
5. |
The
major inconveniences of the war were the limitations placed on consumption:
almost everything Americans ate, wore, or used during the war was subjected to
rationing or regulation by the Office of Price Administration. |
|
B. |
Migration and the
Wartime City |
|
|
1. |
The
war affected where people lived; families followed service members to training
bases or points of debarkation, and the lure of high-paying defense jobs
encouraged others to move. |
|
|
2. |
As a
center of defense production,
California
was affected by the wartime migration more than any other state, experiencing a
53-percent growth in population. |
|
|
3. |
As
more than a million African Americans migrated to defense centers in
California,
Illinois,
Michigan,
Ohio, and
Pennsylvania, racial
conflicts arose over jobs and housing. |
|
|
4. |
In
Los Angeles, male Latinos who belonged to pachuco (youth) gangs dressed in “zoot suits”; blacks and
some working-class white teenagers also wore zoot suits as a symbol of
alienation and self-assertion, but to adults and Anglos, the attire symbolized
wartime juvenile delinquency. |
|
|
5. |
In
Los Angeles, zoot-suiters
became the target of white hostility toward Mexican Americans; in July 1943,
rumors that a pachuco gang
had beaten a white sailor set off a four-day riot. |
|
|
6. |
For gays and lesbians, the wartime migration to urban
centers created new opportunities for gay men and women to establish
communities. But widespread hostility kept the vast majority of gays and
lesbians silent and hidden. Once in the service, homosexuals found
opportunities to participate in a gay culture often more extensive than that in
civilian life. |
|
C. |
Japanese Removal |
|
|
1. |
Despite some racial tension, the home front was generally calm in the 1940s;
German and Italian Americans usually did not experience intense prejudice, and
leftists and Communists faced little repression after the
Soviet
Union became an ally. |
|
|
2. |
The
internment of Japanese Americans on the West Coast was a glaring exception to
racial tolerance, a reminder of the fragility of civil liberties in wartime. |
|
|
3. |
In
early 1942,
Roosevelt issued Executive Order
9066, which gave the War Department the authority to evacuate Japanese
Americans from the West Coast and intern them in relocation camps for the rest
of the war. |
|
|
4. |
Despite the lack of any evidence of Nisei disloyalty or sedition, few public
figures opposed the plan. |
|
|
5. |
The
War Relocation Authority rounded up 112,000 Japanese Americans, two-thirds of
whom were citizens, and sent them to internment camps in
California,
Arizona,
Utah,
Colorado,
Wyoming,
Idaho, and
Arkansas. |
|
|
6. |
The
Japanese Americans who made up one-third of the population of
Hawaii were not interned; the Hawaiian
economy could not function without them. |
|
|
7. |
Furloughs for seasonal workers, attendance at a college, and enlistment in the
armed services were some routes out of the internment camps. |
|
|
8. |
Nisei Gordon Hirabayashi was among the few Japanese Americans who actively
resisted incarceration. A student at the
University of
Washington,
Hirabayashi was a religious pacifist who had registered with his draft board as
a conscientious objector. He challenged internment by refusing to register for
evacuation; instead, he turned himself in to the FBI. |
|
|
9. |
Tried and convicted in 1942, he appealed his case to the Supreme Court in Hirabayashi
v. United States (1943). In that case, and also in Korematsu v. United
States (1944), the Court allowed the removal of Japanese Americans from the
West Coast on the basis of “military necessity” but avoided ruling on the
constitutionality of the internment program. |
|
|
10. |
Congress issued a public apology in 1988 and awarded
$20,000 to each of the 80,000 surviving Japanese American internees. |
IV.
Fighting and Winning the War |
|
A. |
Wartime Aims and Tensions |
|
|
1. |
The
Allied coalition was composed mainly of
Great
Britain, the
United States,
and the
Soviet Union, and its leaders (Winston
Churchill, Roosevelt, and Joseph Stalin) set overall strategy. |
|
|
2. |
Churchill and
Roosevelt’s Atlantic Charter
formed the basis of the Allies’ vision of the postwar international order, but
Stalin had not been part of that agreement, a fact that would later cause
disagreements over its goals. |
|
|
3. |
The
Russians argued for opening a second front in Europe—preferably in
France—because
it would draw German troops away from Russian soil. |
|
|
4. |
In
November 1943, Roosevelt and Churchill agreed to open a second front in return
for Stalin’s promise to fight against
Japan
when the war in
Europe ended. |
|
|
5. |
The
delay in creating the second front meant that the Soviet Union bore the brunt
of the land battle against Germany; Stalin’s mistrust of the United States and
Great Britain carried over into the Cold War. |
|
B. |
The War in
Europe |
|
|
1. |
During the first seven months of the war, the Allies suffered severe defeats on
land and sea in both Europe and
Asia. |
|
|
2. |
The
turning point in the war came when the Soviets halted the German advance in the
Battle of Stalingrad; by 1944, Stalin’s forces had driven the Germans out of
the
Soviet Union. |
|
|
3. |
In
North Africa, Allied troops, under the leadership of General Dwight D.
Eisenhower and General George S. Patton, defeated
Germany's Afrika Korps led by General Erwin Rommel. |
|
|
4. |
The
Allied command moved to attack the Axis through
Sicily
and the Italian peninsula; in July 1943, Mussolini’s fascist regime fell, and
Italy’s
new government joined the Allies. |
|
|
5. |
The
Allied forces finally entered
Rome in June 1944,
although the last German forces in
Italy
did not surrender until May
1945. |
|
|
6. |
The
invasion of
France
came on
D-Day,
June 6, 1944;
under General Eisenhower’s command, more than 1.5 million American, British,
and Canadian troops crossed the
English Channel. |
|
|
7. |
In
August 1944, Allied troops helped to liberate
Paris;
by September, they had driven the Germans out of most of
France
and
Belgium. |
|
|
8. |
In
December 1944, after ten days of fighting, the Allies pushed the Germans back
across the
Rhine
River
in the Battle
of the Bulge, the final German offensive. |
|
|
9. |
As American,
British, and Soviet troops advanced toward
Berlin,
Hitler committed suicide in his bunker on April 30;
Germany
surrendered on
May 8, 1945. |
|
|
10. |
As
Allied troops advanced into
Germany,
they came upon the extermination camps where 6 million Jews, along with 6
million other people, were put to death. |
|
|
11. |
The
Roosevelt administration had information about the camps as early as 1942, but
so few Jews escaped the Holocaust because the
United States
and the rest of the
world would not take in the Jews. |
|
|
12. |
The
War Refugee Board, established in 1944, eventually helped to save about 200,000
Jews who were placed in refugee camps in various countries. |
|
|
13. |
Factors combining to inhibit
U.S.
action were anti-Semitism, fears of economic competition from a flood of immigrant
refugees to a country just recovering from the depression, failure of the media
to grasp the magnitude of the story and to publicize it accordingly, and the
failure of religious and political leaders to speak out. |
|
C. |
The War in the Pacific |
|
|
1. |
After
Pearl Harbor,
Japan
continued its conquests in the Far East and began to threaten
Australia
and
India. |
|
|
2. |
In
May 1942, in the
Battle of the Coral Sea,
American naval forces halted the Japanese offensive against
Australia, and in June, Americans
inflicted crucial damage on the Japanese fleet at Midway. |
|
|
3. |
Over
the next eighteen months, General Douglas MacArthur and Admiral Chester W.
Nimitz led the offensive in the Pacific, advancing from one island to the next. |
|
|
4. |
The
reconquest of the
Philippines
began with a victory in the Battle of Leyte Gulf, in which the Japanese lost
practically their entire fleet; by early 1945, triumph over
Japan
was in sight, with costly American
victories at Iwo Jima and
Okinawa. |
|
|
5. |
The
use of kamikaze missions, combined with the Japanese refusal to surrender,
suggested to American military strategists that
Japan
would continue to fight
despite overwhelming losses. |
|
|
6. |
When
Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met at
Yalta in
February 1945, victory in
Europe and the
Pacific was in sight, but no agreement had been reached on the peace to come. |
|
|
7. |
When
Harry Truman took over the presidency, he learned of the top-secret Manhattan
Project, charged with developing the atomic bomb. It cost more than $2 billion
and employed 120,000 people. |
|
|
8. |
Truman ordered the dropping of atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of
Hiroshima, on August 6, and
Nagasaki, on August 9. |
|
|
9. |
At
the time, the belief that
Japan’s
military leaders would never surrender unless their country was utterly
devastated convinced policymakers that they had to deploy the atomic bomb. |
|
|
10. |
One
hundred thousand people died at
Hiroshima and
sixty thousand at
Nagasaki;
tens of thousands more died slowly of radiation poisoning. |
|
|
11. |
Japan
offered to surrender on August 10 and signed a formal treaty of surrender on
September 2, 1945. |
|
D. |
Planning the Postwar World |
|
|
1. |
One
source of conflict was Stalin’s desire for a band of Soviet-controlled
satellite states to protect the
Soviet Union’s
western border. |
|
|
2. |
Roosevelt and Churchill agreed in principle on the idea of a Soviet sphere of
influence in
Eastern Europe. Roosevelt pressed
for an agreement that guaranteed self-determination and democratic elections in
Poland
and neighboring countries but, given the presence there of Soviet troops, had
to accept a pledge from Stalin to hold “free and unfettered elections” at a
future time. |
|
|
3. |
Germany
was to be divided into four zones to be
controlled by the
United States,
Great Britain,
France, and the Soviet Union;
Berlin would be partitioned among the four. |
|
|
4. |
The
Big Four made progress toward the establishment of the United Nations; its
Security Council would include the five major Allied powers, plus six other
nations participating on a rotating basis, and permanent members of the
Security Council would have veto power over decisions of the General Assembly. |
|
|
5. |
The
United Nations was to convene in
San Francisco
on
April 25, 1945;
Roosevelt suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and
died on
April 12, 1945. |
|
|
6. |
Fascism had been
defeated, thanks to a strange alliance between the capitalist nations of the
West and the Communist government of the
Soviet Union.
The coming of peace would strain, and then destroy, the victorious coalition. |