Origins of World War II intro



Download 124.7 Kb.
Page5/8
Date20.05.2018
Size124.7 Kb.
#49847
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8

Life During Wartime


  • Intro

    • The widespread bombing of civilian pops during WW2 meant that there was no safe home front during the war

      • So too did the arrival of often brutal occupation forces in the wake of Japanese and German conquests in Asia and Europe

      • Strategic bombing slaughtered men, women and children around the world

      • Occupation troops forced civilians to labor and die in work and extermination camps

    • In this total war, civilian death tolls far exceeded military deaths

    • Beside the war’s brutality can be placed records of the endurance of the human spirit personified in the contributions of resistance groups battling occupying forces, in the mobilized women, and in the survivors of bombing or concentration camps
    1. Occupation, Collaboration, and Resistance


  • Intro

    • The administration imposed on conquered territories by Japanese and German forces varied in character

      • In territories such as Manchukuo, Japanese-controlled China, Burma, and the Philippines, Japanese authorities installed puppet govts that served as agents of Japanese rule

      • Thailand remained an independent state after it aligned with Japan

        • Rewarded with territories from Laos and Burma

      • Other conquered territories were either considered too unstable or too unreliable for self-rule or was deemed too important to be left alone

        • Territories such as Indochina, Malaya, the Dutch East Indies, Hong Kong, Singapore, Borneo and New Guinea came under direct military control

    • In Europe, Hitler’s racist ideology played a large role in determining how occupied territories were administered

      • As a rule, Hitler intended that most areas of western and northern Europe would become part of a Greater Germanic Empire

        • Populated by racially valuable people

      • Denmark retained its elected govt under German supervision

        • Norway and Holland had their civilian govt remain intact while their govt went into exile

      • Though northern France and the Atlantic coast came under military rule, the Vichy govt remained the civilian authority in the unoccupied SE part of the country

      • The Germans had varying levels of involvement in eastern Europe and Balkan countries

        • Most conquered territories came under direct military rule as a prelude for harsh occupation, economic exploitation, and German settlement

  • Exploitation

    • Japanese and German authorities administered their respective empires for economic gain

      • Proceeded to exploit the resources of the lands under their control for their own benefit regardless of the consequences for the conquered peoples

      • Pillaged all forms of economic wealth that could fuel the German and Japanese war machines

    • The most notorious form of economic exploitation was the use of slave labor

      • As the demands of total war stimulated an insatiable appetite for workers, Japanese and German occupation authorities availed themselves of POWs and local pops to help meet labor shortages

      • By Aug 1944, more than 7 million foreign workers labored inside the Third Reich

      • In China alone, the Japanese military mobilized more than ten million for force labor

    • These slave laborers worked under horrific conditions and received little in the way of sustenance

      • Reaction to occupation varied from willing collaboration and acquiescence to open resistance

  • Atrocities

    • The treatment of POWs by German and Japanese authorities spoke to the horrors of the war as well

      • The death rate among soldiers in Japanese captivity was almost 30%; even higher amongst Chinese POWs

    • The racial ideology of Hitler’s regime were reflected in the treatment meted out to Soviet prisoners of war in particular (2/3.3 million ppl died)

    • Beyond the callous mistreatment of POWs, both German and Japanese authorities engaged in painful and often deadly medical experiments on thousands of unwilling subjects

      • Special Japanese military until (Unit 731) conducted experiments on POWs such as vivisection or amputation without anesthesia

      • Tens of thousands of Chinese became victims of germ warfare experiments

      • German physicians had experiment from high-altitude and hypothermia investigations (to help the survival of German personnel) to bone-grafting surgeries without anesthesia and exposing victims to phosgene and mustard gas to test possible antidotes

        • Painful serological experiments to determine how different “races” withstood contagious diseases

  • Collaboration

    • The majority of people resented occupation forces but usually went on with life as much as possible

      • That response was true in many parts of Japanese-occupied in Asia, where local populations found little to resent in the change from one colonial admin to another

      • In Asia and Europe, local notables often joined the govts sponsored by the conquerors

        • Gained them more power

      • In many instances, bureaucrats and police forces collaborated bc they thought it was better that natives rule than foreigners

      • Businesses and companies collaborated because they prospered financially from foreign rule

      • Still others became collaborators and assisted occupation by turning in friends and neighbors to get revenge for past grievances

      • In western Europe, anticommunism motivated Belgians, French, Danish, Dutch, and Norwegians to join units of Hitler’s elite military formation, the Waffen SS

        • Also accepted volunteers from the Balkans, eastern Europe, and the Caucasus despite its own racial policies

      • In China, several Guomindang (GMD) generals went over to the Japanese

  • Resistance

    • Occupation and exploitation created an environment for resistance that took various forms

      • The most dramatic forms of resistance were campaigns of sabotage, armed assaults on occupation forces, and assassinations

      • Resistance fighters as diverse as Filipino guerrillas and Soviet partisans harassed and disrupted the military and economic activities of the occupiers by

        • blowing up ammunition dumps

        • destroying communication and transportation facilities

        • sabotaging industrial plants

      • More quietly, other resisters gathered intelligence, hid and protected refugees, or passed on clandestine newspapers

      • Resistance also comprise simple acts of defiance such as scribbling anti-German graffiti or walking out of bars and restaurants when Japanese soldiers entered

        • In the Netherlands, ppl associated the Royal House of Orange w/national independence and defiantly saluted traffic lights when they turned orange

    • German and Japanese citizens faced different decisions about resistance than conquered peoples did

      • They had no antiforeign axe to grind, and any form of noncompliance constituted an act of treason

      • Many institutions that might have formed the core of resistance in Japan were weak or had been destroyed

        • Political parties, labor unions, churches

      • There was little to no opposition to the state and its policies in Japan, and in Germany resistance remained generally sparse and ineffective

        • The most spectacular act of resistance against the Nazi regime came from a group of officers and civilians who tried to kill Adolf Hitler on 20 July 1944

          • Bomb they had failed to kill Hitler

    • Attempts to eradicate resistance in movements merely fanned the flames of rebellion bc of the indiscriminate reprisals against civilians

      • Despite the deadly retaliation to those who resisted occupation, widespread resistance movements grew throughout the war

      • Life in resistance movements was tenuous at best and entailed great hardships

      • Kept alive their nations’ hopes for liberation

    1. Directory: site -> handlers

      Download 124.7 Kb.

      Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page