Additional Material: The Washington Navy Treaty of 1922 and the U.S. Navy in the Interwar Years

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Additional Material: The Washington Navy Treaty of 1922 and the U.S. Navy in the Interwar Years"

Transcription

1 10 Additional Material: The Washington Navy Treaty of 1922 and the U.S. Navy in the Interwar Years President Warren G. Harding convened the Washington Naval Conference in 1921 because of worries that a future naval arms race might cause another war. These fears motivated participants to attend from the United States, Great Britain, France, Japan, and Italy. The delegation met to discuss reduction in the size, number, and armament of capital ships. Of the eight participant nations, the Americans, British, and Japanese exerted the most influence. Their negotiations eventually led to the signing of the Washington Naval Arms Limitation Treaty in Each nation came to the table with goals in mind and strategic realities to consider. The key debates occurred over ratios of each nation s capital ship tonnage. Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes led the American delegation. Dealing with the Japanese proved to be the biggest sticking point. Japan s Navy stood as a potential obstacle to American interests in East Asia and the western Pacific. Beginning in the 1890s, Japan s rise to power in Asia had worried American naval strategists. Alone among the non-caucasian peoples, they proved themselves capable of fighting and defeating the great powers. American feelings wavered between racial contempt and fearful suspicion. These came together in the contemporary epithet Yellow Peril, which denoted how the Japanese combined the presumed Asian traits of deviousness and cruelty with the skills in using western military technologies. Against these strategic and cultural backdrops, the high-ranking admirals on the U.S. Navy s General Board offered advice to Secretary Hughes. The Board argued that the number of American capital ships should be maintained at parity with the British Royal Navy and at twice the strength of the Japanese Navy. This would mean a ratio of 10:10:5 for U.S., British, and Japanese capital ships. The General Board reasoned that the Japanese Navy would operate primarily in the western Pacific Ocean, while the U.S. Navy needed to operate in both the Atlantic and Pacific. For its part, the British Royal Navy was stretched even more thinly because of interests in the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. Giving the Japanese more than half the sea power of the Americans and the British would thus bequeath decisive superiority in the Pacific to Tokyo. 1

2 Secretary Hughes rejected the General Board s argument because he knew that the United States fleet would have to build more capital ships to reach the point of doubling the number of Japan. Hughes recognized that Congress would never accede to spending more money to reach this goal. Instead of a 10:10:5 ratio, he proposed the ratio of 5:5:3 for tonnage of the American, British, and Japanese capital ships. Such vessels were defined as those displacing more than 10,000 tons and carrying 8-inch guns or greater. In these strokes, he ended President Wilson s plans to build a U.S. Navy second to none. Many admirals and naval strategists saw Hughes proposals as invitations to Japan to assert naval supremacy in the Pacific. For their part, the Japanese achieved a significant concession when the Americans and British agreed that they would not build any new fortifications or add naval bases in the western Pacific. This meant that the Americans and British would have no additional refueling stations and repair facilities. As with the 5:5:3 ratio, American naval strategists saw this concession to Japan as another step toward impeding American interests in that region. The conference concluded in 1922, and delegations signed the Washington Naval Arms Limitation Treaty, setting the tone for American naval policy and strategy for the next 15 years. In years since, the U.S. Navy of the 1920s and 1930s garnered the derogatory nickname the Treaty Navy. Apart from issues of warship construction, the Washington Naval Arms Limitation Treaty also prohibited American fortifications of new bases in the western Pacific during those decades. This added yet another aspect to Japan s localized superiority in that region. Short Bibliography Evans, David, and Mark Peattie. Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, Felker, C. C. Testing American Sea Power: U.S. Navy Strategic Exercises, College Station: Texas A&M University Press, Goldstein, Erik. The Washington Conference, : Naval Rivalry, East Asian Stability and the Road to Pearl Harbor. Portland, OR: Frank Cass, Hammond, James W., Jr. The Treaty Navy: The Story of the US Naval Service between the World Wars. Victoria, BC: Wesley Press, Kaufman, Robert Gordon. Arms Control during the Prenuclear Era: The United States and Naval Limitation between the Two World Wars. New York: Columbia University Press, Kuehn, John T. Agents of Innovation: The General Board and the Design of the Fleet that Defeated the Japanese Navy. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, Lenza, Lawrence. Power and Policy: America s First Steps to Superpower, New York: Algora, Miller, Edward S. War Plan Orange: The Strategy to Defeat the Japanese, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, The Marine Corps Schools Small War Manual and Lessons Learned in the Interwar Years During the early twentieth century, thousands of Marines spent time in Nicaragua and elsewhere in Latin America. They performed a variety of roles, such as training indigenous forces, conducting counterinsurgency operations, supervising elections, providing disaster 2

3 relief, and creating infrastructure. The U.S. Marine Corps was an agent of empire, a tool of capitalists, or a mentor to underdeveloped peoples, depending upon political slant. Just as the Marines were leaving Latin America in the 1930s, a major transition occurred in the Marine Corps. No more would Marines be involved in so-called small wars or banana wars as they had undertaken since the Spanish-American War. Instead, amphibious warfare represented the new Marine mission, for which some Marines touted their Corps as ideal and uniquely qualified. Nevertheless, the Corps leadership wanted to retain lessons about Marine operations, roles, and activities in small wars. To this end, Colonel E. B. Miller, then- Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps Schools, requested that Marine officers fill out a 40-part questionnaire in One of these officers was a First Lieutenant named Vernon E. Megee. In 1933, he was stationed in San Diego, but he served in Nicaragua from 1929 to 1932 as an aviation supply officer. He also spent two tours in China and one in Haiti since he had enlisted in 1919 and received his commission in Later in his long career, Megee went on to serve in numerous aviation-related billets before becoming Assistant Commandant of the Marine Corps from 1956 through The Marine Corps Schools Questionnaire concentrated on tactical, operational, and logistical aspects of small wars. For the most part, the survey did not deal with matters of politics, strategy, or diplomacy. Because Megee was an aviation supply officer, he lacked sufficient experience to answer most of the questions. Nevertheless, he did provide several intriguing answers. Three of his answers follow, and show that he had a flare for descriptive and candid writing. Megee did not directly answer Question 8-a, which asked, What do you think of the suitability of the Browning Machine Gun, 30 calibre, for use on combat patrols? Of the 3 [inch] Trench Mortar? The Rifle Grenade? The Hand Grenade? However, Megee made these observations about automatic weapons that square with common sense and practicality: Serious study might be given to the question of replacing the [Browning Automatic Rifle] with the [Thompson Submachine Gun] for bush warfare. At the close ranges prevailing the Thompson is the more deadly weapon, its blunt nose.45 caliber bullet has a deadly knockdown effect sometimes lacking in the spitzer type.30 caliber bullet. The advantages of portability, both of gun and ammunition, are obvious, and the general handiness and speed of fire of the [Thompson] make it a murderous weapon in a surprise attack. 1 The Nicaraguan insurgents often ambushed Marine units on patrol, and much of the fighting occurred in jungle areas. Megee also offered some criticisms regarding the Marines training in Question 38-a, which asked, Do you think that a training center, and an Infantry-weapons School should have been established in Managua? Megee responded: It is my opinion that a Brigade training center at Managua, or possibly Ocotal, where newly arrived [Marine] officers and men could have received two months of intensive training in scouting and patrolling work, would have been of inestimable value. The training center at Pont Beudet, Haiti, through which I once passed with my company, taught me more about minor tactics, musketry, and kindred subjects in two months than I had previously assimilated in several years. 3

4 Several other questions also dealt with the issues of if and how the Marines were adequately trained. Lastly, Megee commented on the Marines use of animals in operations. One of his answers merits mention because of its somewhat whimsical nature. Question 21 asked, Do you prefer horses or mules, and why? Megee makes an intriguing reply: Personally, I would choose mules in mountain country, both for saddle and pack. They are more sure footed than horses, and more philosophical about the inevitable abuse they receive on the trail. They are also possessed of an easier gait than the average tropical horse. On the other hand they mire easily in deep mud, and are stubborn about being pushed when tired, and do not have the responsive intelligence of the horse. For real tough going on long trails where forage is scarce and of poor quality the mule is generally conceded to be superior. Answers to the 40 questions provided raw data to help faculty and students at MCS develop small wars doctrine. This process of systematic self-examination and self-criticism regarding practical lessons and experiences of Marines contributed to the great value of the Small Wars Manual of 1935 and the more well-known version in This process also demonstrates the institutional adaptability that has been the hallmark of the U.S. Marine Corps. Retired General Vernon Megee remembered decades later in his memoirs that, at the Marine Corps Schools, committees were set to work compiling new doctrines to cover small war and amphibious operations. Officers of experience in the field were invited to submit comments. I recall sending in my view on small war operations, extracts of which I later found incorporated in the new texts. The Small Wars Manual s 15 chapters explored such operational topics as organization, training, logistics, infantry patrols, convoy escorts, and aviation, all of which the 1933 questionnaire covered to one degree or another in its sections. Megee s own answers to questions did factor into the Small Wars Manual, if not verbatim, then in spirit and tone. The justifications for why he favored the Thompson Submachine Gun over the Browning Automatic Rifle resembled the descriptions in sections on Weapons and Infantry Weapons. Interestingly, his opinions about the BAR s shortcomings were consistent with the Small Wars Manual, but not the Thompson, which the Small Wars Manual found to have many shortcomings of its own. Several sections dealing with Training in the Theater of Operations echoed the need, just as Megee s so strongly suggested, for a training center in Managua. Language similar to his comparisons of horses and mules can be found in the sections titled Pack Horses and Pack Mules. Beyond these, the Small Wars Manual also laid out more politically-oriented principles by which cultural differences may be understood, military governments established, democratic elections administered, and withdrawals of military forces proffered. In conclusion, the Small Wars Manual fell out of circulation by the 1950s. It was not consulted in any meaningful way during the Vietnam War, even though its ideas could have been usefully applied in that conflict. Moreover, the topics and issues addressed in Colonel E. B. Miller s 1933 questionnaire and Lieutenant Vernon Megee s answers could also have yielded invaluable observations for the Vietnam War, and they are certainly relevant to the counterinsurgency operations and nation-building activities in Afghanistan and Iraq between 2001 and

5 Short Bibliography Bickel, Keith B. Mars Learning: The Marine Corps Development of Small Wars Doctrine, Boulder, CO: Westview, Langley, Lester D. The Banana Wars: United States Intervention in the Caribbean, Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, LaFeber, Walter. Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America. 2nd ed. New York: W. W. Norton, Schmidt, Hans. Maverick Marine: General Smedley Butler and the Contradictions of American Military History. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, U.S. Marine Corps Schools, The Small Wars Manual: Fleet Marine Force Reference Publication Reprint. Manhattan, KS: Sunflower University Press, July Isolationist Feelings in the United States in the 1930s On the heels of the stock market crash in 1929, the Great Depression caused even greater military downsizing of the U.S. military than had occurred during the 1920s. The fiscal assault came at the hands of the isolationists, who believed that the United States erred by entering in the First World War, and henceforth should remain insulated from military and political entanglements around the globe. Isolationist politicians included Senator Gerald P. Nye, Republican from North Dakota; Senator Henrik Shipstead, Democrat from Minnesota; Representative Hamilton Fish, Republican from New York; and Representative Frank Church, Republican from Illinois. Their message resonated with most Americans, who cared nothing about the rise of Nazi Germany in Europe or Militarist Japan in East Asia in the 1930s, when they had so much trouble feeding, clothing, and housing themselves. Congress responded to isolationism s political power by slashing appropriations to the U.S. military. Even in the face of the Great Depression, the military s fortunes slowly changed when Franklin D. Roosevelt ascended to the presidency after the election of He looked sympathetically on the plight of the military in part because he served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in Woodrow Wilson s administration from 1913 to The U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, in particular, gained two additional powerful allies in Congress in Representative Carl Vinson assumed the chairmanship of the House Naval Affairs Committee. In this capacity over the next four decades, Uncle Carl acted as patron saint for both seaborne services. On the other side of the aisle, Representative Melvin J. Maas, a Republican from Minnesota, was instrumental in supporting the seaborne services. As the ranking minority member on the House Naval Affairs Committee in the 1930s, he worked closely with Vinson to sponsor legislation to fortify island bases in the Pacific and to continue reforms in the military s promotion system. Maas personified civil-military relations as both a congressmen and an officer in the Marine Corps Reserve. This second role gave him a unique understanding of the military. Maas took every opportunity to alert the American people to the growing global dangers and the need for a strong military to protect American interests. Roosevelt, Vinson, and Maas recognized that the march of events in East Asia and Europe increased the possibility of war. Nevertheless, domestic problems still demanded the lion s share of Americans attention. Unemployment, for example, remained at 16 percent in

6 Isolationists galvanized public resistance against increased military expenditures and reactionary foreign policies. The understandable desire to avoid war led to the passage of the Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and In the event of war, supplying American munitions or floating American loans to belligerent nations would be prohibited, and travel by Americans on belligerent ships would be forbidden. The isolationists also sought to obstruct the efforts of Vinson, Maas, and Roosevelt to increase military preparedness. Note 1. All the quotes come from Vernon Megee, letter to E. B. Miller, April 24, 1933, Box 1, Vernon Megee Papers, Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kansas. Short Bibliography Cole, Wayne. American First: The Battle against Interventionism, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, Roosevelt and the Isolationists, Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, Cook, James F. Carl Vinson: Patriarch of the Armed Forces. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, Dallek, Robert. Franklin D. Roosevelt and American Foreign Policy, Rev. ed. New York: Oxford University Press, Divine, Robert A. The Reluctant Belligerent: American Entry into World War II. 2nd ed. New York: Wiley and Sons, Kennedy, David M. Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, New York: Oxford University Press, Zehnpfennig, Gladys. Melvin J. Maas: Gallant Man of Action. Minneapolis: T. S. Denison,

The Executive Branch: Foreign Policy

The Executive Branch: Foreign Policy The Executive Branch: Foreign Policy for eign pol i cy noun - a government's strategy in dealing with other nations. U.S. Foreign Policy is this country s actions, words, and beliefs towards other countries.

More information

WWII Begins. European Axis Leadership. Benito Mussolini Duce of Italy Adolf Hitler Führer of Germany b d.

WWII Begins. European Axis Leadership. Benito Mussolini Duce of Italy Adolf Hitler Führer of Germany b d. WWII Begins European Axis Leadership Benito Mussolini Duce of Italy 1925 1943 b.1883 - d.1945 Adolf Hitler Führer of Germany 1934-1945 b.1889 d. 1945 Allied Leaders Winston Churchill start speech at 1:04

More information

I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow.

I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow. I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow. The United States entered World War II after the attack at Pearl Harbor. There were two theaters

More information

WORLD WAR LOOMS. America Moves Towards War

WORLD WAR LOOMS. America Moves Towards War WORLD WAR LOOMS America Moves Towards War Americans Cling to Isolationism Public outraged at profits of banks, arms dealers during WWI Americans become isolationists; FDR backs away from foreign policy

More information

The United States Enters the War Ch 23-3

The United States Enters the War Ch 23-3 The United States Enters the War Ch 23-3 The Main Idea Isolationist feeling in the United States was strong in the 1930s, but Axis aggression eventually destroyed it and pushed the United States into war.

More information

Ch: 16-2: Japan s Pacific Campaign. Essential Question: What caused the United States to join WWII? Which was most significant, WHY?

Ch: 16-2: Japan s Pacific Campaign. Essential Question: What caused the United States to join WWII? Which was most significant, WHY? Ch: 16-2: Japan s Pacific Campaign Essential Question: What caused the United States to join WWII? Which was most significant, WHY? Review Aug. 1939: FDR urged Hitler to settle his differences with Poland

More information

SS.7.C.4.3 Describe examples of how the United States has dealt with international conflicts.

SS.7.C.4.3 Describe examples of how the United States has dealt with international conflicts. SS.7.C.4.3 Benchmark Clarification 1: Students will identify specific examples of international conflicts in which the United States has been involved. The United States Constitution grants specific powers

More information

YEARS OF WAR. Chapters 6

YEARS OF WAR. Chapters 6 YEARS OF WAR Chapters 6 The Wars In Asia 1937- Second Sino Japanese War In Europe, Germany invades Poland 1 st of September 1939 Second Sino-Japanese War This war began in 1937. It was fought between China

More information

How did Military Rivalry contribute to the outbreak of war? L/O To consider how militarism led to increasing tensions between the two alliances

How did Military Rivalry contribute to the outbreak of war? L/O To consider how militarism led to increasing tensions between the two alliances How did Military Rivalry contribute to the outbreak of war? L/O To consider how militarism led to increasing tensions between the two alliances Britannia rules the waves Britain had defeated the French

More information

SSUSH14 The student will explain America s evolving relationship with the world at the turn of the twentieth century.

SSUSH14 The student will explain America s evolving relationship with the world at the turn of the twentieth century. SSUSH14 The student will explain America s evolving relationship with the world at the turn of the twentieth century. a. Explain the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and anti-asian immigration sentiment on

More information

Entrance of the United States into World War II was Imminent, Regardless of Pearl Harbor BY ALEXANDRA RUTKOWSKI

Entrance of the United States into World War II was Imminent, Regardless of Pearl Harbor BY ALEXANDRA RUTKOWSKI Entrance of the United States into World War II was Imminent, Regardless of Pearl Harbor BY ALEXANDRA RUTKOWSKI General Background Kellogg-Briand Pact signed on August 27, 1928 Outlawed war as an instrument

More information

Test - Social Studies US History Unit 08: World War II

Test - Social Studies US History Unit 08: World War II Test - Social Studies US History Unit 08: World War II 2014-2015 1. Which of the following best summarize the role of the United States during the Second World War? A. The United States maintained neutrality

More information

Sample Pages from. Leveled Texts for Social Studies: The 20th Century

Sample Pages from. Leveled Texts for Social Studies: The 20th Century Sample Pages from Leveled Texts for Social Studies: The 20th Century The following sample pages are included in this download: Table of Contents Readability Chart Sample Passage For correlations to Common

More information

Chapter 6 Canada at War

Chapter 6 Canada at War Chapter 6 Canada at War After the end of World War I, the countries that had been at war created a treaty of peace called the Treaty of Versailles. The Treaty of Versailles Germany had to take full responsibility

More information

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE MILITARY

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE MILITARY AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE MILITARY Did you know, there has been no war fought by or within the United States that African Americans did not participate in? Throughout American history including the arrival

More information

How did the Second World War start?

How did the Second World War start? 1939-1945 After World War I Newfoundland had suffered both economic and social losses. The years between the wars saw Newfoundland suffer with heavy debts, low employment, the Great Depression and social

More information

Georgia and World War II

Georgia and World War II Georgia and World War II SS8H9 The student will describe the impact of World War II on Georgia s development economically, socially, and politically. a. Describe the impact of events leading up to American

More information

Bywater s War: Pacific Navies Between

Bywater s War: Pacific Navies Between Bywater s War: Pacific Navies Between 1922-1939 Robert Eldridge Historicon 2012 Admiralty Trilogy Seminar Presented by: Clash of Arms Games South Dakota Class Battleship Overview Historical Background

More information

1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade Public Affairs Office United States Marine Corps Camp Pendleton, Calif

1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade Public Affairs Office United States Marine Corps Camp Pendleton, Calif 1ST MARINE EXPEDITIONARY BRIGADE PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICE PO Box 555321 Camp Pendleton, CA 92055-5025 760.763.7047 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA ADVISORY: No. 12-016 December 11, 2012 1st Marine Expeditionary

More information

Where Did the United States Seek Territory for an Empire?

Where Did the United States Seek Territory for an Empire? Where Did the United States Seek Territory for an Empire? LESSON 8 SECTION 24.1 Text pp. 428 434 Read Where Did the United States Seek Territory for an Empire? (pp. 428-434). Study Exercises Use the map

More information

The War in Europe 5.2

The War in Europe 5.2 The War in Europe 5.2 On September 1, 1939, Hitler unleashed a massive air & land attack on Poland. Britain & France immediately declared war on Germany. Canada asserting its independence declares war

More information

SSUSH6: ANALYZE THE CHALLENGES FACED BY THE FIRST FIVE PRESIDENTS AND HOW THEY RESPONDED.

SSUSH6: ANALYZE THE CHALLENGES FACED BY THE FIRST FIVE PRESIDENTS AND HOW THEY RESPONDED. SSUSH6: ANALYZE THE CHALLENGES FACED BY THE FIRST FIVE PRESIDENTS AND HOW THEY RESPONDED. ELEMENT D: Explain James Madison s Presidency in relation to the War of 1812 and the war s significance in the

More information

like during World War I?

like during World War I? Essential Question: What were battlefield conditions like during World War I? Why did the Allies win World War I? From 1870 to 1914, the growth of militarism, alliances, imperialism, & nationalism increased

More information

Chapter 20 Section 1 Mobilizing for War. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

Chapter 20 Section 1 Mobilizing for War. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. Chapter 20 Section 1 Mobilizing for War Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides. Click the Speaker button to listen to the audio again. Chapter Objectives Section 1: Mobilizing for War Explain

More information

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Chapter 10: Building the Military Forces of a World Power, 1899-1917 The literature on the military policy in the 1898-1917 period is substantial and scholarly. The most comprehensive

More information

Valor in the Pacific: Education Guide

Valor in the Pacific: Education Guide Valor in the Pacific: Education Guide Pearl Harbor is located on the island of Oahu, west of Hawaii s capitol, Honolulu. Sailors look on from amidst plane wreckage on Ford Island as the destroyer USS Shaw

More information

Chapter 22 Lecture Outline

Chapter 22 Lecture Outline Chapter 22 Lecture Outline Seizing an American Empire 2013 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. The Philippines Toward the New Imperialism Imperialism in a Global Context Second Industrial Revolution had generated

More information

4. What are the 2-3 most important aspects of this island you think you should know?

4. What are the 2-3 most important aspects of this island you think you should know? In 1941, France invaded French Indochina. This is the area of Thailand that the French still controlled under imperialism. They had controlled this area for its resources and for power for decades. The

More information

The US Enters The Great War

The US Enters The Great War The US Enters The Great War Selective Service Act of 1917 Required all men between 21 and 30 to register for the draft Candidates were drafted through a lottery system and then either accepted or rejected

More information

Key Battles of WWII. How did the Allies win the war?

Key Battles of WWII. How did the Allies win the war? Key Battles of WWII How did the Allies win the war? Battle of the Atlantic 1939-1945 (January 1942 July 1943 were decisive) Around 100,000 casualties; several thousand U-Boats destroyed. Longest continuous

More information

6/1/2009. On the Battlefields

6/1/2009. On the Battlefields On the Battlefields By 1945: 4 th largest in the world. Coastal Patrol in the early days (many PEI soldiers) Germany s Plan: use U-Boats to cut off supply lines between North America and Europe. Canada

More information

Bell Quiz: Pages

Bell Quiz: Pages Bell Quiz: Pages 569 577 1. What did Hitler do to the U.S. three days after Pearl Harbor? 2. What system did the U.S. employ to successfully attack German U-boats? 3. Which country in the axis powers did

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Exam Name MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The realm of policy decisions concerned primarily with relations between the United States

More information

SSUSH19: The student will identify the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War ll, especially the growth of the federal

SSUSH19: The student will identify the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War ll, especially the growth of the federal SSUSH19: The student will identify the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War ll, especially the growth of the federal government. c. Explain major events; include the lend-lease

More information

A. The United States Economic output during WWII helped turn the tide in the war.

A. The United States Economic output during WWII helped turn the tide in the war. I. Converting the Economy A. The United States Economic output during WWII helped turn the tide in the war. 1. US was twice as productive as Germany and five times as that of Japan. 2. Success was due

More information

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND

Timeline: Battles of the Second World War. SO WHAT? (Canadian Involvement / Significance) BATTLE: THE INVASION OF POLAND Refer to the Student Workbook p.96-106 Complete the tables for each battle of the Second World War. You will need to consult several sections of the Student Workbook in order to find all of the information.

More information

Explain why Japan decided to attack Pearl Harbor, and describe the attack itself.

Explain why Japan decided to attack Pearl Harbor, and describe the attack itself. Objectives Explain why Japan decided to attack Pearl Harbor, and describe the attack itself. Outline how the United States mobilized for war after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Summarize the course of the

More information

The First Years of World War II

The First Years of World War II The First Years of World War II ON THE GROUND IN THE AIR ON THE SEA We know that Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, and that both Britain and France declared war on Germany on September 3, 1939.

More information

Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points.

Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Objectives Understand how the United States military contributed to the Allied victory in the war. Describe the aims of the Fourteen Points. Analyze the decisions made at the Paris Peace Conference. Explain

More information

Writing. 6 Teacher Edition. Diagnostic Series. KAMICO Instructional Media, Inc. Instructional Media, Inc.

Writing. 6 Teacher Edition. Diagnostic Series. KAMICO Instructional Media, Inc. Instructional Media, Inc. STAAR CONNECTION Writing 6 Teacher Edition Diagnostic Series KAMICO Instructional Media, Inc. KAMICO Instructional Media, Inc. P.O. Box 1143 Salado, Texas 76571 Telephone: 254.947.7283 Fax: 254.947.7284

More information

Recall y all Random 5. What are five random statements that you can make about the beginning of WWI?

Recall y all Random 5. What are five random statements that you can make about the beginning of WWI? Recall y all Random 5 What are five random statements that you can make about the beginning of WWI? Essential Question: What were battlefield conditions like during World War I? Why did the Allies win

More information

United States reaction to foreign aggression warring Arsenal

United States reaction to foreign aggression warring    Arsenal d. United States reaction to foreign aggression i. 1935: passed Act no arms to warring nations ii. 1939: -n- policy (purpose to aid the Allies) iii. 1941: - Act --> U.S. became the Arsenal of Democracy

More information

Work Period: WW II European Front Notes Video Clip WW II Pacific Front Notes Video Clip. Closing: Quiz

Work Period: WW II European Front Notes Video Clip WW II Pacific Front Notes Video Clip. Closing: Quiz Standard 7.0 Demonstrate an understanding of the impact of World War II on the US and the nation s subsequent role in the world. Opening: Pages 249-250 and 253-254 in your Reading Study Guide. Work Period:

More information

IMPERIALISM AND AMERICA. U.S. II 5a; 1f, i

IMPERIALISM AND AMERICA. U.S. II 5a; 1f, i IMPERIALISM AND AMERICA U.S. II 5a; 1f, i What is Imperialism: Practiced by European nations and Japan throughout the 1800s and early 1900s. U.S, Early 1900 s. In every case, a nation would experience

More information

Cold War

Cold War Cold War - 1945-1989 -A worldwide struggle for power between the United States and the Soviet Union -It never resulted in direct military conflict between the superpowers (they were each afraid of Nuclear

More information

Education and Leader Development Faculty Panel and Faculty Advisory Committee (FAC) Representative Biographies

Education and Leader Development Faculty Panel and Faculty Advisory Committee (FAC) Representative Biographies Education and Leader Development Faculty Panel and Faculty Advisory Committee (FAC) Representative Biographies Kirklin J. Bateman (CISA) Kirklin J. Bateman is Professor of Practice, Department of War and

More information

Fleet Admiral and Commander in Chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Lost two fingers at Tsushima (1905) fighting the Russian navy.

Fleet Admiral and Commander in Chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Lost two fingers at Tsushima (1905) fighting the Russian navy. PEARL HARBOR THE DAY OF INFAMY December 7, 1941 Causes The U.S. demanded that Japan withdraw from China and Indochina Japan thought ht that t attacking the U.S. would provide them an easy win, and a territory

More information

The Quiet Warrior: A Biography Of Admiral Raymond A. Spruance (Classics Of Naval Literature) By John B. Lundstrom, Thomas B.

The Quiet Warrior: A Biography Of Admiral Raymond A. Spruance (Classics Of Naval Literature) By John B. Lundstrom, Thomas B. The Quiet Warrior: A Biography Of Admiral Raymond A. Spruance (Classics Of Naval Literature) By John B. Lundstrom, Thomas B. Buell READ ONLINE I have selected books primarily for their literary and scholarly

More information

World War I Quiz Air Warfare

World War I Quiz Air Warfare World War I Quiz Air Warfare Air Warfare tests your knowledge of aeroplanes. The First World War saw many new weapons, from poison gas to tanks. Also new to the field of war was the aeroplane. First used

More information

U.S. Is Drawn Into the War

U.S. Is Drawn Into the War U.S. Is Drawn Into the War 1. What was the intent of the Japanese when they attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941? They want to destroy the American Navy. vs. Aerial Photo of Pearl Harbor Japanese

More information

SSUSH23 Assess the political, economic, and technological changes during the Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, George W.

SSUSH23 Assess the political, economic, and technological changes during the Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, George W. SSUSH23 Assess the political, economic, and technological changes during the Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama administrations. a. Analyze challenges faced by recent presidents

More information

Schlieffen Plan: Germany s military strategy in 1914 for attacking France through its unprotected Belgian border. Schlieffen Plan Part II (13:01)

Schlieffen Plan: Germany s military strategy in 1914 for attacking France through its unprotected Belgian border. Schlieffen Plan Part II (13:01) 1.2.1: Definitions Schlieffen Plan: Germany s military strategy in 1914 for attacking France through its unprotected Belgian border. Schlieffen Plan Part I (13:01) Schlieffen Plan Part II (13:01) Battles

More information

1 Create an episode map on the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S.A.

1 Create an episode map on the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S.A. WARM UP 1 Create an episode map on the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S.A. 2 You have 15 minutes to do this assignment with one another before we review as a class 3 You will also turn in the JFK/LBJ Episode

More information

Leslie MacDill ( )

Leslie MacDill ( ) Leslie MacDill (1889-1938) Who was MacDill? Leslie MacDill was an early pioneer in American military aviation, a veteran of World War I, and an Army air officer who distinguished himself in aviation development

More information

Chapter Nineteen Reading Guide American Foreign & Defense Policy. Answer each question as completely as possible and in blue or black ink only

Chapter Nineteen Reading Guide American Foreign & Defense Policy. Answer each question as completely as possible and in blue or black ink only Chapter Nineteen Reading Guide American Foreign & Defense Policy Answer each question as completely as possible and in blue or black ink only 1. What are the roots of U.S. Foreign and Defense Policy? 1.

More information

In your spiral create 8 graphic organizers over the material provided. The graphic organizers may only have 3 spokes; therefore you will need to

In your spiral create 8 graphic organizers over the material provided. The graphic organizers may only have 3 spokes; therefore you will need to In your spiral create 8 graphic organizers over the material provided. The graphic organizers may only have 3 spokes; therefore you will need to summarize/combine/rewrite the information. They may look

More information

Red Tailed Angels : The Story of the Tuskegee Airmen Overview: The Tuskegee Airmen

Red Tailed Angels : The Story of the Tuskegee Airmen Overview: The Tuskegee Airmen Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum Red Tailed Angels Red Tailed Angels : The Story of the Tuskegee Airmen Overview: The Tuskegee Airmen 4079 Albany Post Road Hyde Park, NY 12538 1-800-FDR-VISIT

More information

5/27/2016 CHC2P I HUNT. 2 minutes

5/27/2016 CHC2P I HUNT. 2 minutes 18 CHC2P I HUNT 2016 CHC2P I HUNT 2016 19 1 CHC2P I HUNT 2016 20 September 1, 1939 Poland Germans invaded Poland using blitzkrieg tactics Britain and France declare war on Germany Canada s declaration

More information

Fifth Battalion, Seventh Cavalry Regiment Association. First Cavalry Division (Airmobile) ( ) Third Infantry Division (2004-Present)

Fifth Battalion, Seventh Cavalry Regiment Association. First Cavalry Division (Airmobile) ( ) Third Infantry Division (2004-Present) Fifth Battalion, Seventh Cavalry Regiment Association First Cavalry Division (Airmobile) (1966-1971) Third Infantry Division (2004-Present) 13 th Biennial Reunion Banquet Hotel Elegante Colorado Springs,

More information

Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto Admiral Chester Nimitz

Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto Admiral Chester Nimitz The United States in World War II "The fate of the Empire rests on this enterprise every man must devote himself totally to the task in hand." Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto - Commander in Chief of the Japanese

More information

HAWAII OPERATION ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR

HAWAII OPERATION ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR HAWAII OPERATION ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR PROPAGANDA: Attack was on Sunday, December 7, 1941 Sunday = Day off for US soldiers OVERALL: On December 7, 1941, Japan surprise attacks Pearl Harbor Japan dropped

More information

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History

World History since Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History World History since 1500 Wayne E. Sirmon HI 104 World History History 104 World History since 1500 March 21-22 Article Three approval March 22 Hinson Lecture Ram Hall March 24 Online Quiz Chapter 23 March

More information

STATEMENT OF GORDON R. ENGLAND SECRETARY OF THE NAVY BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 10 JULY 2001

STATEMENT OF GORDON R. ENGLAND SECRETARY OF THE NAVY BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 10 JULY 2001 NOT FOR PUBLICATION UNTIL RELEASED BY THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE STATEMENT OF GORDON R. ENGLAND SECRETARY OF THE NAVY BEFORE THE SENATE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE 10 JULY 2001 NOT FOR PUBLICATION

More information

WWII: Pacific Theater

WWII: Pacific Theater WWII: Pacific Theater Island Hopping -U.S. tactic to fight Japan - Leapfrog over unimportant islands, capture strategic islands -Eventual target: Japan General Douglas MacArthur Admiral Chester A. Nimitz

More information

TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION... 53

TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION INTRODUCTION... 53 1880-1899 INTRODUCTION... 1 1891 Profile: Second Lieutenant, Indian Wars... 3 Life at Home... 3 Life at Work... 5 Life in the Community: Fort Buford, North Dakota...9 Historical Snapshot 1890-1891... 12

More information

Grade 8: Module 3A: Unit 1: Lesson 9 Connecting Ideas in Primary and Secondary Sources: What Led to the Attack on Pearl Harbor?

Grade 8: Module 3A: Unit 1: Lesson 9 Connecting Ideas in Primary and Secondary Sources: What Led to the Attack on Pearl Harbor? Grade 8: Module 3A: Unit 1: Lesson 9 Connecting Ideas in Primary and Secondary Sources: What Led to the Attack on Pearl Harbor? This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike

More information

SSUSH19 Examine the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War II, including the growth of the federal government. a.

SSUSH19 Examine the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War II, including the growth of the federal government. a. SSUSH19 Examine the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War II, including the growth of the federal government. a. Investigate the origins of U.S. involvement in the war including

More information

Airborne & Special Operations Museum

Airborne & Special Operations Museum Airborne & Special Operations Museum Gallery Scavenger Hunt for JROTC Cadets Explore the gallery to discover facts about the history of the airborne and special operations forces of the U.S. Army. Search

More information

President Madison s Dilemma: Protecting Sailors and Settlers

President Madison s Dilemma: Protecting Sailors and Settlers President Madison s Dilemma: Protecting Sailors and Settlers Foreign Policy at the Beginning President James Madison took office in 1809 His new approach to protect Americans at sea was to offer France

More information

Follow this and additional works at:

Follow this and additional works at: Naval War College Review Volume 63 Number 3 Summer Article 2 2010 President s Forum James P. Wisecup Follow this and additional works at: http://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/nwc-review Recommended Citation

More information

World War II Invasion and Conquests. Pacific

World War II Invasion and Conquests. Pacific World War II Invasion and Conquests Pacific Douglas Macarthur General in charge of the Pacific Theater. Accepted Japan s surrender on September 2, 1945. Macarthur oversaw the occupation of Japan from 1945

More information

George C. Marshall 1953

George C. Marshall 1953 George C. Marshall pg. 1 of 6 George C. Marshall 1953 Two words above all others became his guide - as he underlined it years later in an address to the graduating class at his old military school - the

More information

Ch 25-4 The Korean War

Ch 25-4 The Korean War Ch 25-4 The Korean War The Main Idea Cold War tensions finally erupted in a shooting war in 1950. The United States confronted a difficult challenge defending freedom halfway around the world. Content

More information

World War II The Pacific Theater 1. Between which what dates did the Pacific War take place? 2. What event between Japan and China did it begin with?

World War II The Pacific Theater 1. Between which what dates did the Pacific War take place? 2. What event between Japan and China did it begin with? World War II The Pacific Theater 1. Between which what dates did the Pacific War take place? 2. What event between Japan and China did it begin with? 3. What does it end with? 4. What was the Great East

More information

Bell Quiz: Use Pages

Bell Quiz: Use Pages Bell Quiz: Use Pages 578-583 1. Who was used in the pacific as radio operators and spoke a code that the Japanese could never break? 2. What was the importance of the American victory at the Battle of

More information

Engineering Operations

Engineering Operations MCWP 3-17 Engineering Operations U.S. Marine Corps PCN 143 000044 00 To Our Readers Changes: Readers of this publication are encouraged to submit suggestions and changes that will improve it. Recommendations

More information

Analyzing the Significance of the Battle of Midway

Analyzing the Significance of the Battle of Midway Daniel C. Zacharda History 298 Dr. Campbell 12/4/2014 Analyzing the Significance of the Battle of Midway 1 In June of 1942 the United States was fresh off a major naval engagement at the Battle of the

More information

Amphibious Ships and Landing Craft Data Book

Amphibious Ships and Landing Craft Data Book MCRP 3-31B Amphibious Ships and Landing Craft Data Book U.S. Marine Corps PCN 144 000103 00 To Our Readers Changes: Readers of this publication are encouraged to submit suggestions and changes that will

More information

Directions: Complete the following questions using the website listed below.

Directions: Complete the following questions using the website listed below. Social Studies Name: Directions: Complete the following questions using the website listed below. http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-i/world-war-i-history Answer questions #1-2 by watching the video

More information

1 Chapter 33 Answers. 3a. No. The United States did not destroy Japan s merchant marine as a result of the Battle of Midway. See page 475.

1 Chapter 33 Answers. 3a. No. The United States did not destroy Japan s merchant marine as a result of the Battle of Midway. See page 475. 1 Chapter 33 Answers Chapter 27 Multiple-Choice Questions 1a. No. The Soviet Union, the United States, and Great Britain were allies against Nazi Germany in the Second World War. Although Roosevelt might

More information

Dramatizing Dilemma 1: What Should President Adams Do to Protect American Ships?

Dramatizing Dilemma 1: What Should President Adams Do to Protect American Ships? 12A Dramatizing Dilemma 1: What Should President Adams Do to Protect American Ships? Characters Narrator President John Adams Advisor to President Adams American Sailor 1 American Sailor 2 French Sailor

More information

Fighter/ Attack Inventory

Fighter/ Attack Inventory Fighter/ Attack Fighter/ Attack A-0A: 30 Grounded 208 27.3 8,386 979 984 A-0C: 5 Grounded 48 27. 9,274 979 984 F-5A: 39 Restricted 39 30.7 6,66 975 98 F-5B: 5 Restricted 5 30.9 7,054 976 978 F-5C: 7 Grounded,

More information

The Civil War Begins. The Americans, Chapter 11.1, Pages

The Civil War Begins. The Americans, Chapter 11.1, Pages The Civil War Begins The Americans, Chapter 11.1, Pages 338-345. Confederates Fire on Fort Sumter The seven southernmost states that had already seceded formed the Confederate States of America on February

More information

LESSON 2: THE U.S. ARMY PART 1 - THE ACTIVE ARMY

LESSON 2: THE U.S. ARMY PART 1 - THE ACTIVE ARMY LESSON 2: THE U.S. ARMY PART 1 - THE ACTIVE ARMY INTRODUCTION The U.S. Army dates back to June 1775. On June 14, 1775, the Continental Congress adopted the Continental Army when it appointed a committee

More information

Mobilization at Home. Economic Conversion. A Nation at War. Pearl Harbor ended any debate over intervention.

Mobilization at Home. Economic Conversion. A Nation at War. Pearl Harbor ended any debate over intervention. A Nation at War Mobilization at Home Pearl Harbor ended any debate over intervention. Economic Conversion Due to FDR s foresight, the economy had already begun to gear up for war production through the

More information

Mon. April 18 Unit 3

Mon. April 18 Unit 3 34 Mon. April 18 Unit 3 International Diplomacy 35 Mon. April 18 Diplomacy: The skill of dealing with people in a sensitive and effective way. States that border Nebraska Directions: Number your paper

More information

Morningstar, James Kelly. Patton s Way: A Radical Theory of War. Annapolis, MD: US Naval Institute Press, 2017.

Morningstar, James Kelly. Patton s Way: A Radical Theory of War. Annapolis, MD: US Naval Institute Press, 2017. Journal of Military and Strategic VOLUME 18, ISSUE 1 Studies Morningstar, James Kelly. Patton s Way: A Radical Theory of War. Annapolis, MD: US Naval Institute Press, 2017. Alexander Salt The legacy of

More information

Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic. President Washington through President Monroe

Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic. President Washington through President Monroe Foreign Policy related to the War of 1812 The Young Republic President Washington through President Monroe 1789-1824 Foreign Policy Summary Monroe s Monroe Doctrine Jefferson s Louisiana Purchase Embargo

More information

DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS. Canadians in Battle - Dieppe

DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS. Canadians in Battle - Dieppe DIEPPE - BASIC FACTS To defeat the Axis powers, the Allies knew they had to fight in Western Europe. Even though they were inexperienced, the Second Canadian Division was selected to attack the French

More information

Foreign and Defense Policy

Foreign and Defense Policy Foreign and Defense Policy The Roots of U.S. Foreign and Defense Policy When the United States was founded it was a weak country on the margins of world affairs, with an uncertain future. Isolationism

More information

Prepared Remarks of the Honorable Ray Mabus Secretary of the Navy Purdue University 8 May 2014

Prepared Remarks of the Honorable Ray Mabus Secretary of the Navy Purdue University 8 May 2014 Prepared Remarks of the Honorable Ray Mabus Secretary of the Navy Purdue University 8 May 2014 Thank you for that introduction. It is an honor for me to be here at Purdue today. Thank you President Daniels

More information

THE UNITED STATES NAVAL WAR COLLEGE

THE UNITED STATES NAVAL WAR COLLEGE NWC 1159 THE UNITED STATES NAVAL WAR COLLEGE JOINT MILITARY OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT A Guide for Deriving Operational Lessons Learned By Dr. Milan Vego, JMO Faculty 2006 A GUIDE FOR DERIVING OPERATIONAL LESSONS

More information

Spanish American War. Overview of War. Causes of Spanish- American War. Causes Leaders Timeline-Events Maps Cartoons Evaluation

Spanish American War. Overview of War. Causes of Spanish- American War. Causes Leaders Timeline-Events Maps Cartoons Evaluation Spanish American War 1 Overview of War Causes Leaders Timeline-Events Maps Cartoons Evaluation 2 Causes of Spanish- American War Imperialism Social Darwinism Yellow Journalism Militarism Industrial Revolution

More information

The Korean War: Conflict and Compromise

The Korean War: Conflict and Compromise The Korean War: Conflict and Compromise Adam Polak Junior Division Research Paper 1,551 Words Have you ever wondered why the Korean War started? Or why the United States thought it was worth it to defend

More information

A European Net Assessment of the People s Liberation Army (Navy)

A European Net Assessment of the People s Liberation Army (Navy) Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies Conference Report A European Net Assessment of the People s Liberation Army (Navy) Prepared by Peter Roberts A European Net Assessment of

More information

The Spanish American War

The Spanish American War The Spanish American War Individual Project Fall semester 2014 R.G. What started this war? Many say that the Spanish American War was started by the unexplained sinking in Havana harbour of the battleship

More information

Setting Foreign and Military Policy

Setting Foreign and Military Policy Setting Foreign and Military Policy Approaches to International Relations Realism A theory of international relations that focuses on the tendency of nations to operate from self-interest. Idealism A theory

More information

The United States and Latin America

The United States and Latin America SECTION3 and Latin America What You Will Learn Main Ideas 1. built the Panama Canal in the early 19s. 2. Theodore Roosevelt changed U.S. policy toward Latin America. 3. Presidents Taft and Wilson promoted

More information

If you re Germany, how can you attack France with a better plan?

If you re Germany, how can you attack France with a better plan? World War I Begins European Economy Stock Markets closed in WW1 because there was a very open market At the beginning of 1914, capital was free to flow from one country to another without barriers. All

More information

The Attack on Pearl Harbor

The Attack on Pearl Harbor The Noise at Dawn The Attack on Pearl Harbor It was a Sunday morning. Many sailors were still sleeping in their quarters, aboard their ships. Some were sleeping on land. At 7:02 a.m. at the Opana Radar

More information