At stake in War. America enters the fray:

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At stake in War America enters the fray: 1941-45

A second World War Fascism on the rise in Europe and beyond in the 1920s and 30s: Italy, Germany, Spain In Japan, imperialism and ethnocentrism drives the Empire of Japan to invade China and set its sights on much of Asia and the Pacific Elements of fascism: Nationalism/ethnocentrism, totalitarian rule of a single party under a strong dictator, militarism, anti-democratic, strict control of the economy via corporatism The WWII Axis Powers had a major interest in geographical expansion, e.g., Japan s invasion of Manchuria in 1931 & China in general in 1937, Italy s invasion of Ethiopia in 1935, & Germany s invasions in Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland et al. This is in some ways a continuation of the sphere of influence fights various European powers engaged in before and during WWI - the goal was control of resources & territory

A second World War Global economic depression and political fragility after the devastation of WWI contributed to the rise of Hitler and the National Socialist Party in Germany NAZI partisans take advantage of the fragility of the Weimar Republican government, using white supremacy and promises of German economic and military superiority as a way to take over German governmental institutions and destroy traditional liberalism/democracy and the left (Socialists and Communists) Payback for the terms of WWI s Versailles Treaty - retaking territory lost in the treaty (plus more) and rearming against the terms of the treaty Starts with ethnically German areas like Austria and portions of Czechoslovakia but doesn t end there Alliances with Mussolini in Italy and Franco in Spain

A second World War Britain, France, the US, Russia, and others not excited about the prospect of more war, but invasions of China and European nations is not okay Appease, or fight? Britain and France don t contest the German annexation of Czech-held, ethnically-german Sudetenland in 1938 in exchange for a promise by Hitler to stop there Germany and USSR enter into secret Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in which they agree to split Poland and then cease aggressions against each other Hitler isn t trustworthy, though. Poland falls to Germans in fall of 1939, and they don t stop there.

Casablanca & the costs of Isolationism Germans attack France in 1940 and occupy the north, coordinating with a corrupt puppet government ruled out of Vichy in the south The film Casablanca, released in 1942, depicts the French- Moroccan city of Casablanca in North Africa during the early part of the war. It is administered by corrupt Vichy officials. Rick s Cafe Americain is a club run by Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart). It s a microcosm of Casablanca itself - a place where vulnerable refugees fleeing Europe go to wait in hopes of securing passage to safe places like the US, where Vichy and German officials mingle, and where spies, freedom-fighters, and underworld criminals coalesce

Casablanca & the costs of Isolationism Many actors in the film are actual war refugees from Axiscontrolled Europe, including ant-nazi Germans; with the war going on as the film was produced and released, this takes on extra emotional significance! The film illustrates the miscarriages of freedom and justice propagated not just by German fascists and corrupt Vichy puppets, but also the injustice that occurs when well-meaning neutral (LOOKING AT U, US pre-1941!) nations fail to act vigorously

The end of US Isolationism Britain fights off German air invasions in 1940 & 41 under PM Winston Churchill, after which Germany goes after Russia in earnest The US tries to maintain a distance from hostilities, wanting to avoid another costly war (in terms of both $$$ and lives), but doesn t maintain perfect neutrality

Fireside Chat FDR s December 29, 1940 Fireside Chat on the Great Arsenal of Democracy discusses the reality of American national security and how to deal with international aggression that affects American friends How did Roosevelt feel that Axis aggression was threatening American interests? What did he think was Britain s role in the international conflict? What action did he advocate in this address? Did he seem to draw any lines for action?

Fireside Chat Remember when I took office in 1933? We mobilized and met our immediate threats head-on. We need to do that now with national security! We should not be entering the fray as combatants right now, but we should be aware of the danger the Axis represents not just to our friends, but to us, too - we have tensions with Japan over China, and Japan and Italy and Germany are now in alliance as of 9/1940! Appeasement doesn t work - those creeps take indiscriminately and want to destroy liberal values. So long as Britain can hold off the Germans, there s no reason for us to jump in; but if Britain falls, the Americas could be next We must mobilize for war NOW, even though we do not plan to enter it in the immediate future The US has assisted and will continue to supply the British in their heroic efforts

The end of US Isolationism FDR wants to enter the war, but US opinion is decidedly antiwar until Pearl Harbor. Lend-Lease program of 3/1941 and the Atlantic Charter agreement of 8/1941 were attempts to help Britain while also pimping out the idea of intervention and the promotion of democratic values in occupied nations Eventually, the US has no choice but to retaliate when the Japanese bomb the Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbor in December, 1941 The US had already dissolved treaties with Japan over the invasion of China, also withholding key supplies from Japan via an embargo of fuel and other military goods Japan felt this meant US intervention on behalf of China was inevitable, thinking that a surprise attack would destroy the Pacific Fleet, buying them time to consolidate their power in China and elsewhere in Asia and the Pacific

The end of US Isolationism Turns out the Japanese jumped the gun, essentially drawing the US into war not just with Japan, but with the entire Axis As our textbook authors say, Pearl Harbor essentially melded two previously-separate conflicts into one, creating a multi-continental, truly world war It also creates a massive American war machine in which vast sectors of industry retool for the war effort on two fronts

Casablanca Discussion/VR5 Is this film a war movie? In what ways does it comment on global politics during WWII? Are FDR s warnings about national security and liberal/ democratic values reflected in the film? Do you think this film could have been made before Pearl Harbor? If so, do you think it would have been as resonant? Why or why not?