u.s. foreign policy in the 1930’s
DESCRIPTION
U.S. Foreign Policy in the 1930’s. Isolationist America and the Coming of WWII. WWI: a Mistake?. Johnson Debt Default Act (1934). Sen. Hiram Johnson (R-CA) Prohibited all loans to countries which had defaulted on WWI loans from U.S. Only Finland had repaid in full. “Uncle Shylock”. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
U.S. Foreign Policy in the 1930’s
Isolationist America and the Coming of WWII
WWI: a Mistake?
Johnson Debt Default Act (1934)
Sen. Hiram Johnson (R-CA)• Prohibited all loans to
countries which had defaulted on WWI loans from U.S.
• Only Finland had repaid in full
“Uncle Shylock”
Sen. Gerald P. Nye, D-ND• Senate Munitions (Nye) Committee, 1934-1935• “Merchants of Death”• “ . . . war is not a matter of national
honor and national defense, but a matter of profit for the few.”
Neutrality Acts, 1935-1939Designed to prevent American entry into the
FIRST World War• Neutrality Act of 1935 empowered the president, on finding a state of
war, 1. to declare an embargo on arms shipments to the belligerents 2. to announce that U.S. citizens traveling on belligerents' ships did so at their own risk. 3. This act set no limits, however, on trade in materials useful for war, such as copper, steel, and oil
• Neutrality Act of 1936 added a prohibition on extending loans or credits to belligerents.
• Neutrality Act of 1937 included civil wars, empowered the president to add strategic materials to the embargo list, and made travel by U.S. citizens on belligerents' ships unlawful.
Hitler’s Invasion of PolandSeptember 1, 1939
Non Aggression Pact of 1939
Charles Lindbergh, 0ctober, 1939 I believe that we should adopt as our program of American neutrality - as our contribution to western civilization -- the following policy:
1. An embargo on offensive weapons and munitions.2. The unrestricted sale of purely defensive
armaments.3. The prohibition of American shipping from the
belligerent countries of Europe and their danger zones.
4. The refusal of credit to belligerent nations or their agents.
“Cash and Carry” Neutrality Act of 1939
1. Belligerents (Allies) were permitted to buy American arms and strategic materials,
2. But they had to pay cash and to transport the goods in their own ships.
3.The president was empowered to designate a "combat zone" in time of war, through which American citizens and ships were forbidden to travel.
Tripartite Pact (1940)
“Fall of France”
Battle of Britain
1940
First Ever Peace Tine Draft
Destroyers for Bases Deal ,1940
50 WWI U.S. Destroyers for 8 British Naval Air Stations in the Western
Hemisphere
Wendell Willkie’s“One World”
A New Vice-President • Henry A. Wallace replaces John N.
Garner
FDR Press 1940 Conference“No American boys will be sent into any
foreign wars.”“I hate war. Eleanor hates war. We all
hate war.”
"An Act to Promote the Defense of the United States“ HR 1776
• “Lend –Lease”-1941• “Arsenal of Democracy”• “ The Allies need planes, tanks and guns. And we will Give them planes, tanks andguns.” –FDR• “All Aid Short of War”
America First CommitteeSenators Gerald Nye (ND),William Borah (ID)Burton K. Wheeler (MT)
Sen. Burton Wheeler on Lend-Lease
• “It warranted my worst fears for the future of America, and it definitely stamps the President as war-minded.”
• “The lend-lease-give program is the New Deal's triple-A foreign policy; it will plow under every fourth American boy.”
• “If it were, then we should lend and lease war materials. If it were, then we should lendand lease American boys. . . . Our boys will be returned - returned in caskets.”
“Uncle Joe” – Our Pal
SS Robin Moor
• August 9,1941• USS Augusta• Placentia Bay,
Newfoundland
Undeclared Naval War in the North Atlantic
USS Greer Incident• September, 1941
USS Kearny attacked by U-568October 17, 1941
USS Reuben JamesHave you heard of a ship called the good Reuben JamesManned by hard fighting men both of honor and fame?She flew the Stars and Stripes of the land of the freeBut tonight she's in her grave at the bottom of the sea.CHORUS:Tell me what were their names, tell me what were their names,Did you have a friend on the good Reuben James?One hundred men were drowned in that dark watery graveWhen that good ship went down only forty-four were saved.'Twas the last day of October we saved the forty-fourFrom the cold icy waters off that cold Iceland shore.It was there in the dark of that uncertain nightThat we watched for the U-boats and waited for a fight.Then a whine and a rock and a great explosion roaredAnd they laid the Reuben James on that cold ocean floor.Now tonight there are lights in our country so brightIn the farms and in the cities they are telling of the fight.And now our mighty battleships will steam the bounding mainAnd remember the name of that good Reuben James.Many years have passed since those brave men are gone;Those cold Iceland waters are still and they're calm.Many years have passed, but still I wonder why --The worst of men must fight, and the best of men must die. --Woody Guthrie
• Escort Duty of Iceland• Torpedoed and Sank by U-552• 100+ Killed
“Shoot on Sight” Orders by FDR
Barbarossa
October, 1941
September, 1941
Angooki B-gata (暗号機 B型 ) ("Type B Cipher Machine"),
“MAGIC” Machine “Ultra” decrypted“Purple”
Ambassadors Kichisaburo Nomuraand Saburo Kurusu
U.S Secretary of State Cordell Hull
The END of Isolationism