Terms & Names
Terms & Names
MAIN IDEA
MAIN IDEA
Neville
Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
appeasement
nonaggression
pact
blitzkrieg
Charles de Gaulle
Using the sudden mass
attack called blitzkrieg,
Germany invaded and quickly
conquered many European
countries.
Hitler’s actions started World
War II and still serve as a
warning to be vigilant about
totalitarian government.
WHY IT MATTERS NOW
WHY IT MATTERS NOW
One American's Story
War in Europe
In 1940, CBS correspondent William Shirer stood in the for-
est near Compiègne, where 22 years earlier defeated German
generals had signed the armistice ending World War I. Shirer
was now waiting for Adolf Hitler to deliver his armistice
terms to a defeated France. He watched as Hitler walked up
to the monument and slowly read the inscription: “Here on
the eleventh of November 1918 succumbed the criminal
pride of the German empire . . . vanquished by the free peo-
ples which it tried to enslave.” Later that day, Shirer wrote a
diary entry describing the führer’s reaction.
A PERSONAL VOICE WILLIAM SHIRER
I have seen that face many times at the great moments of his life. But
today! It is afire with scorn, anger, hate, revenge, triumph. He steps off the monu-
ment and contrives to make even this gesture a masterpiece of contempt. . . . He
glances slowly around the clearing, and now, as his eyes meet ours, you grasp the
depth of his hatred. But there is triumph there too—revengeful, triumphant hate.
—Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent, 1934–1941
Again and again Shirer had heard Hitler proclaim that “Germany needs
peace. . . . Germany wants peace.” The hatred and vengefulness that drove the
dictator’s every action, however, drew Germany ever closer to war.
Austria and Czechoslovakia Fall
On November 5, 1937, Hitler met secretly with his top military advisers. He bold-
ly declared that to grow and prosper Germany needed the land of its neighbors.
His plan was to absorb Austria and Czechoslovakia into the Third Reich. When
one of his advisors protested that annexing those countries could provoke war,
Hitler replied, “‘The German Question’ can be solved only by means of force, and
this is never without risk.”
742 C
HAPTER 24
William Shirer,
a journalist and
historian, became
well known for his
radio broadcasts
from Berlin at
the beginning of
World War II.
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Page 1 of 6
UNION WITH AUSTRIA
Austria was Hitler’s first target.
The Paris Peace Conference following World War I had creat-
ed the relatively small nation of Austria out of what was left
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The majority of Austria’s 6
million people were Germans who favored unification with
Germany. On March 12, 1938, German troops marched into
Austria unopposed. A day later, Germany announced that its
Anschluss, or “union,” with Austria was complete. The United
States and the rest of the world did nothing.
BARGAINING FOR THE SUDETENLAND
Hitler then
turned to Czechoslovakia. About 3 million German-speak-
ing people lived in the western border regions of
Czechoslovakia called the Sudetenland. The mountainous
region formed Czechoslovakia’s main defense against
German attack. (See map, p. 744.) Hitler wanted to annex
Czechoslovakia in order to provide more living space for
Germany as well as to control its important natural
resources.
Hitler charged that the Czechs were abusing the
Sudeten Germans, and he began massing troops on the
Czech border. The U.S. correspondent William Shirer, then stationed in Berlin,
wrote in his diary: “The Nazi press [is] full of hysterical headlines. All lies. Some
examples: ‘Women and Children Mowed Down by Czech Armored Cars,’ or
‘Bloody Regime—New Czech Murders of Germans.’”
Early in the crisis, both France and Great Britain promised to protect
Czechoslovakia. Then, just when war seemed inevitable, Hitler invited French
premier Édouard Daladier and British prime minister Neville Chamberlain to
meet with him in Munich. When they arrived, the führer declared that the
annexation of the Sudetenland would be his “last territorial demand.” In their
eagerness to avoid war, Daladier and Chamberlain chose to believe him. On
September 30, 1938, they signed the Munich Agreement, which turned the
Sudetenland over to Germany without a single shot being fired.
Chamberlain returned home and proclaimed: “My friends, there has come
back from Germany peace with honor. I believe it is peace in our time.”
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ADOLF HITLER
1889–1945
“All great world-shaking events
have been brought about not by
written matter, but by the spoken
word!” declared Adolf Hitler. A shy
and awkward speaker at first,
Hitler rehearsed carefully. He
even had photographs (shown
above) taken of his favorite
gestures so he could study them
and make changes to produce
exactly the desired effect.
Hitler’s extraordinary power as a
speaker, wrote Otto Strasser,
stemmed from an intuitive ability
to sense “the vibration of the
human heart . . . telling it what it
most wants to hear.”
World War Looms 743
A
A. Answer
Annexation of
Austria and the
Sudetenland.
MAIN IDEA
MAIN IDEA
A
Summarizing
What moves
did Germany make
in its quest for
lebensraum?
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Page 2 of 6
Chamberlain’s satisfaction was not shared by Winston Churchill,
Chamberlain’s political rival in Great Britain. In Churchill’s view, by signing the
Munich Agreement, Daladier and Chamberlain had adopted a shameful policy of
appeasement—or giving up principles to pacify an aggressor. As Churchill bluntly
put it, “Britain and France had to choose between war and dishonor. They chose
dishonor. They will have war.” Nonetheless, the House of Commons approved
Chamberlain’s policy toward Germany and Churchill responded with a warning.
A PERSONAL VOICE WINSTON CHURCHILL
[W]e have passed an awful milestone in our history. . . . And do not suppose
that this is the end. . . . This is only the first sip, the first foretaste of a bitter cup
which will be proffered to us year by year unless, by a supreme recovery of moral
health and martial vigor, we arise again and take our stand for freedom as in the
olden time.
speech to the House of Commons, quoted in The Gathering Storm
The German Offensive Begins
As Churchill had warned, Hitler was not finished expanding the Third Reich. As
dawn broke on March 15, 1939, German troops poured into what remained of
Czechoslovakia. At nightfall Hitler gloated, “Czechoslovakia has ceased to exist.”
After that, the German dictator turned his land-hungry gaze toward Germany’s
eastern neighbor, Poland.
1940
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London
Berlin
Paris
Dunkirk
Munich
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Moscow
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(unoccupied zone)
FRANCE
IRAN
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TURKEY
GREECE
ALBANIA
ITALY
BULGARIA
YUGOSLAVIA
SWITZ.
ROMANIA
HUNGARY
AUSTRIA
LUX.
BELG.
GERMANY
NETH.
POLAND
EAST
PRUSSIA
SOVIET UNION
LITHUANIA
DENMARK
LATVIA
ESTONIA
FINLAND
NORWAY
SWEDEN
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60°N
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Axis powers
Axis-controlled by Dec. 1941
Allied territory, Dec. 1941
Neutral countries
German troop movements
Maginot Line
0 200 400 kilometers
0 200 400 miles
German Advances, 1938–1941
GEOGRAPHY SKILLBUILDER
1.
Region Which European countries did Germany invade?
2.
Location How was Germany’s geographic location an
advantage?
744 C
HAPTER 24
B
Skillbuilder
Answers
1. Austria,
Yugoslavia,
Bulgaria, Greece,
Romania, Slovakia,
Hungary, Poland,
Lithuania, Latvia,
Estonia, Finland,
Norway, France,
Denmark, the
Netherlands,
Belgium, and the
Soviet Union.
2. It was centrally
located.
B. Answer An
attempt to do
whatever was
necessary to
pacify Hitler;
Churchill saw it
as an abandon-
ment of moral
principles that
would lead to a
war and nation-
al disaster.
MAIN IDEA
MAIN IDEA
B
Analyzing
Motives
What was
appeasement, and
why did Churchill
oppose it so
strongly?
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Page 3 of 6
C
THE SOVIET UNION DECLARES NEUTRALITY
Like Czechoslovakia, Poland
had a sizable German-speaking population. In the spring of 1939, Hitler began his
familiar routine, charging that Germans in Poland were mistreated by the Poles
and needed his protection. Some people thought that this time Hitler must be
bluffing. After all, an attack on Poland might bring Germany into conflict with
the Soviet Union, Poland’s eastern neighbor. At the same time, such an attack
would most likely provoke a declaration of war from France and Britain—both of
whom had promised military aid to Poland. The result would be a two-front war.
Fighting on two fronts had exhausted Germany in World War I. Surely, many
thought, Hitler would not be foolish enough to repeat that mistake.
As tensions rose over Poland, Stalin surprised everyone by signing a
nonaggression pact with Hitler. Once bitter enemies, on August 23, 1939 fas-
cist Germany and communist Russia now committed never to attack each other.
Germany and the Soviet Union also signed a second, secret pact, agreeing to
divide Poland between them. With the danger of a two-front war eliminated, the
fate of Poland was sealed.
BLITZKRIEG IN POLAND
As day broke on September 1, 1939, the German
Luftwaffe, or German air force, roared over Poland, raining bombs on military
bases, airfields, railroads, and cities. At the same time, German tanks raced across
the Polish countryside, spreading terror and confusion. This invasion was the first
test of Germany’s newest military strategy, the blitzkrieg, or lightning war.
Blitzkrieg made use of advances in military technology—such as fast tanks and
more powerful aircraft—to take the enemy by surprise and then quickly crush all
opposition with overwhelming force. On September 3, two days following the ter-
ror in Poland, Britain and France declared war on Germany.
The blitzkrieg tactics worked perfectly. Major fighting was over in three
weeks, long before France, Britain, and their allies could mount a defense. In the
last week of fighting, the Soviet Union attacked Poland from the east, grabbing
some of its territory. The portion Germany annexed in western Poland contained
almost two-thirds of Poland’s population. By the end of the month, Poland had
ceased to exist—and World War II had begun.
Background
Luftwaffe in
German means
“air weapon.”
745
German Junkers JU-87
dive-bombers, commonly
known as Stukas, were
a mainstay of
Germany’s blitzkrieg
style of attack.
A German tank unit
in Western Poland
in 1939.
C. Answer The
development of
improved tanks
and airplanes
had made
blitzkrieg tactics
effective.
MAIN IDEA
MAIN IDEA
C
Evaluating
How did
German blitzkrieg
tactics rely on
new military
technology?
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D. Answer As a
way of protect-
ing their inde-
pendence.
746 C
HAPTER 24
THE PHONY WAR
For the next several months after the fall of Poland,
French and British troops on the Maginot Line, a system of fortifica-
tions built along France’s eastern border (see map on p. 744), sat
staring into Germany, waiting for something to happen. On the
Siegfried Line a few miles away German troops stared back. The
blitzkrieg had given way to what the Germans called the sitzkrieg
(“sitting war”), and what some newspapers referred to as the
phony war.
After occupying eastern Poland, Stalin began annexing the
Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Late in 1939, Stalin
sent his Soviet army into Finland. After three months of fighting,
the outnumbered Finns surrendered.
Suddenly, on April 9, 1940, Hitler launched a surprise invasion
of Denmark and Norway in order “to protect [those countries’] freedom
and independence.” But in truth, Hitler planned to build bases along the
coasts to strike at Great Britain. Next, Hitler turned against the Netherlands,
Belgium, and Luxembourg, which were overrun by the end of May. The phony
war had ended.
France and Britain Fight On
France’s Maginot Line proved to be ineffective; the German army threatened to
bypass the line during its invasion of Belgium. Hitler’s generals sent their tanks
through the Ardennes, a region of wooded ravines in northeast France, thereby
avoiding British and French troops who thought the Ardennes were impassible.
The Germans continued to march toward Paris.
THE FALL OF FRANCE
The German offensive trapped almost 400,000 British
and French soldiers as they fled to the beaches of Dunkirk on the French side of
the English Channel. In less than a week, a makeshift fleet of fishing trawlers, tug-
boats, river barges, pleasure craft—more than 800 vessels in all—ferried about
330,000 British, French, and Belgian troops to safety
across the Channel.
A few days later, Italy entered the war on the side of
Germany and invaded France from the south as the
Germans closed in on Paris from the north. On June 22,
1940, at Compiègne, as William Shirer and the rest of the
world watched, Hitler handed French officers his terms of
surrender. Germans would occupy the northern part of
France, and a Nazi-controlled puppet government, head-
ed by Marshal Philippe Pétain, would be set up at Vichy,
in southern France.
After France fell, a French general named Charles
de Gaulle fled to England, where he set up a govern-
ment-in-exile. De Gaulle proclaimed defiantly, “France
has lost a battle, but France has not lost the war.”
THE BATTLE OF BRITAIN
In the summer of 1940, the
Germans began to assemble an invasion fleet along the
French coast. Because its naval power could not compete
with that of Britain, Germany also launched an air war at
the same time. The Luftwaffe began making bombing
D
For months there
was nothing much
to defend against,
as the war turned
into a sitzkrieg
endured by
soldiers such as
this French one
on the Maginot
Line.
Children watch with wonder and fear as the battling British
and German air forces set the skies of London aflame.
Background
Hitler demanded
that the surrender
take place in the
same railroad car
where the French
had dictated terms
to the Germans in
World War I.
MAIN IDEA
MAIN IDEA
D
Analyzing
Motives
How did Hitler
rationalize the
German invasion
of Denmark and
Norway?
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Page 5 of 6
runs over Britain. Its goal was to gain total control of the
skies by destroying Britain’s Royal Air Force (RAF). Hitler
had 2,600 planes at his disposal. On a single day—August
15—approximately 2,000 German planes ranged over
Britain. Every night for two solid months, bombers pound-
ed London.
The Battle of Britain raged on through the summer and
fall. Night after night, German planes pounded British tar-
gets. At first the Luftwaffe concentrated on airfields and air-
craft. Next it targeted cities. Londoner Len Jones was just 18
years old when bombs fell on his East End neighborhood.
A PERSONAL VOICE LEN JONES
After an explosion of a nearby bomb, you could
actually feel your eyeballs being sucked out. I was holding
my eyes to try and stop them going. And the suction was
so vast, it ripped my shirt away, and ripped my trousers.
Then I couldn’t get my breath, the smoke was like acid and
everything round me was black and yellow.
quoted in London at War
The RAF fought back brilliantly. With the help of a new
technological device called radar, British pilots accurately
plotted the flight paths of German planes, even in darkness.
On September 15, 1940 the RAF shot down over 185 German
planes; at the same time, they lost only 26 aircraft. Six
weeks later, Hitler called off the invasion of Britain indefi-
nitely. “Never in the field of human conflict,” said
Churchill in praise of the RAF pilots, “was so much owed by
so many to so few.”
Still, German bombers continued to pound Britain's
cities trying to disrupt production and break civilian
morale. British pilots also bombed German cities. Civilians in both countries
unrelentingly carried on.
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WINSTON CHURCHILL
1874–1965
Churchill was possibly Britain’s
greatest weapon as that nation
faced the Nazis. A born fighter,
Churchill became prime minister
in May 1940 and used his gift as
a speaker to arouse Britons and
unite them:
“[W]e shall defend our island,
whatever the cost may be, we
shall fight on the beaches, we
shall fight on the landing-
grounds, we shall fight in the
fields and in the streets, we
shall fight in the hills; we shall
never surrender.”
World War Looms 747
1938 1940
1937 1939
Neville Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
appeasement
nonaggression pact
blitzkrieg
Charles de Gaulle
1. TERMS & NAMES For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
MAIN IDEA
2. TAKING NOTES
Trace the movement of German
expansion from 1937 to the end of
1940 by supplying events to follow
the dates shown on the time line.
What event was the most
significant? Why?
CRITICAL THINKING
3. ANALYZING MOTIVES
To what extent do you think lies and
deception played a role in Hitler’s
tactics? Support your answer with
examples. Think About:
William Shirer’s diary entry
about headlines in the Nazi
newspapers
Soviet-German relations
Hitler’s justifications for military
aggression
4. EVALUATING DECISIONS
If you had been a member of the
British House of Commons in 1938,
would you have voted for or against
the Munich Agreement? Support
your decision.
5. DRAWING CONCLUSIONS
Review Germany’s aggressive
actions between 1938 and 1945.
At what point do you think Hitler
concluded that he could take any
territory without being stopped?
Why?
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