INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

36
INTERWAR EUROPE

description

PERCENTAGE OF LABOR FORCE UNEMPLOYED SOURCE: Dietmar Petzina, Die deutsche Wirtschaft in der Zwischenkriegszeit (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1977), pp. 16-17.

Transcript of INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Page 1: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

INTERWAR EUROPE

Page 2: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

PERCENTAGE OF LABOR FORCE UNEMPLOYED

Page 3: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

SOME HISTORIANS SPEAK OF THE INTERWAR PERIOD AS THE “ERA OF

FASCISM”Several movements arose to imitate Mussolini’s political

style, including Le Faisceau and the “Cross of Fire” in France, Hitler’s Nazis, the Austrian Home Guard, and Spanish Falange. Their common features:

1.The search in national history and traditions for role models and values, and attacks on “internationalism”.

2.The call for rule by a warrior elite, and close cooperation with a paramilitary league.

3.Imitation of the techniques of the socialist labor movement, with the aim of suppressing it.

Historians still debate whether fascism necessarily implies imperialist expansion or racism.

Page 4: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Benito Mussolini as “il Duce”

Page 5: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

THE CONSOLIDATION OF FASCIST RULE

1924-26: Matteotti Crisis induces Mussolini to impose outright dictatorship. Fascists suppress all other parties and independent trade unions.

1927-29: A network of state-sponsored “syndicates” organizes workers, industrialists, artisans, and farmers.

1929: Mussolini signs Lateran Treaty and a Concordat with Pope Pius XI.

Mussolini often talked about reviving the glorious Roman Empire, but the Corfu Incident of 1923 was his ONLY act of blatant aggression before 1935, and Italian forces evacuated the island after four weeks.

Page 6: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Mussolini with his wife and five children in 1930

At a Vatican reception with

Cardinal Eugenio

Pacelli

Page 7: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Magazine cover for Fascist Youth

(1931):“Fascism

promises you neither honors nor luxury nor

riches but rather duty and struggle.”

See P.M.H. Bell, 66.

Page 8: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Mussolini launches a

construction project and

then helps to fight the “battle

of wheat” in Littoria in 1932.

Page 9: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

FASCISTS PROCLAIMED A GRAND PROGRAM OF INDUSTRIALIZATION BUT HAD ONLY MODEST

SUCCESS:Steel production (1,000’s of metric tons)

YEAR FRANCE ITALY1922 4,538 9831924 6,670 1,3591926 8,617 1,7801928 9,479 1,9601930 9,444 1,7431932 5,638 1,3961934 6,155 1,850

Italian production did not decline as much as French during the Great Depression because of increased spending on arms….

Page 10: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Mussolini reviews a new detachment of mini-tanks, 1932: Western leaders believed that his bark was worse than his

bite…

Page 11: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Munich’s Odeon Square, August 2, 1914

“To me those hours seemed like a release from the painful feelings of my youth. Even today I am not ashamed to say that, overpowered by stormy

enthusiasm, I fell down on my knees and thanked Heaven from an overflowing heart for granting me the good fortune of being permitted to

live at this time” (Mein Kampf, p. 161)

Page 12: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Adolf Hitler with two

fellow dispatch

runners in his Bavarian

regiment and his dog, Foxl, in Fournes,

France (1915)

Page 13: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Anton Drexler, the railroad machinist who invited Hitler into his “German Workers’

Party” in September 1919 and renamed it the National Socialist

German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) in 1920

Page 14: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

25-Point Program of the German Workers’ Party (Feb. 1920)

#1. We demand the union of all Germans to form a Great Germany.#3. We demand land and territory (colonies) for the nourishment of our people and for settling our excess population.#4. None but members of the nation may be citizens of the state. None but those of German blood, whatever their creed, may be members of the nation. No Jew therefore may be a member of the nation.#7. If it is not possible to nourish the entire population of the state, foreign nationals (noncitizens of the state) must be excluded from the Reich.#8. All non-German immigration must be prevented.#11. Abolition of incomes unearned by work.#13. We demand nationalization of all businesses (trusts).#16. We demand creation and maintenance of a healthy middle class, immediate communalization of wholesale business premises, and their lease at a cheap rate to small traders….

Page 15: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Hitler dictated vol. 1 of Mein Kampf in

Landsberg Prison in 1924

TOTAL GERMAN SALES:

1929: 23,0001932: 80,000

1933: 1,500,000

1945: 10,000,000

In Vol. 2 (1925) he argued that Germany must acquire Lebensraum:See P.M.H. Bell, pp. 87-92.

Page 16: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

THE POLARIZATION OF THE GERMAN ELECTORATE IN THE GREAT

DEPRESSION:In the election campaign of July 1932,

many felt that Germany was on the brink of civil war.

0%5%

10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%

1919 1928 1930 Jul-32 Nov-32

CommunistSocial DemocratModerate (Libs + RC)Con./ NationalistNazi

Page 17: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“A combat veteran

votes for Adolf Hitler!”

(presidential campaign poster

from 1932)

Page 18: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

President Hindenburg

appointed Hitler as Chancellor on

January 30, 1933.“In our deepest

need, Hindenburg chose Adolf Hitler

as Reich Chancellor. You

too should vote for List #1”

(February 1933)

Page 19: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Defense Minister Werner von Blomberg

brought his fellow generals to meet with Hitler on February 2, and Hitler promised

them unlimited funding for

rearmament.

Page 20: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

HITLER’S “PEACE SPEECH,” May 17, 1933

“This generation of young Germans has suffered too much from the madness of war to inflict it on anyone else…. Just as we love and are faithful to our own nationality, so too do we recognize the national rights of other

peoples and desire with all our hearts to live with them in peace and friendship.” ….National Socialism, Hitler declared, sought only to save Germany from the threat of Communism, put the millions of unemployed back to work, and restore a stable government with law and order.

Page 21: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

German map of the arms race (1934)

Page 22: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

FROM LENIN TO STALIN

1921: Lenin favors small business and the family farmer with the New Economic Policy.1924-27: Succession struggle after the death of Lenin leads to the victory of Stalin and exile of Trotsky.1928-32: In the first Five-Year Plan, Stalin decrees the “collectivization” of agriculture to accelerate industrialization. The results are catastrophic.1934/35: USSR joins the League of Nations and signs treaties of alliance with Czechoslovakia and France.1937-38: Criticism of collectivization leads to the “Great Purge,” i.e., the execution of two million army officers, civil servants, and C.P. functionaries.

Page 23: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Joseph Vissarionovich

Jugashvili, code-named

“Stalin” (1878-1953):photographed with Lenin in

1922

Page 24: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“Industrialization is the path to socialism!”

(Soviet poster, 1927)

Page 25: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“We will smite the kulak who agitates

for reducing the cultivated area”(USSR, 1930):

Food production plummeted after Stalin ordered

collectivization, and millions of Ukrainian peasants starved.

Page 26: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“Imperialists cannot stop the triumphal march of the Five-

Year Plan”(USSR, 1930):

See P.M.H. Bell, pp. 136-40.

Page 27: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“Long Live the Workers’ &

Peasants’ Red Army!”

(Stalin & Marshal Voroshilov,

USSR, 1935)

Page 28: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

THE ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF THE C.P. CENTRAL COMMITTEE

(names in red all executed on Stalin’s orders)

Page 29: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

“Stalin cares about everyone in the Kremlin,”

USSR, 1940

Page 30: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

TOTAL DEFENSE SPENDINGIN MILLIONS OF 1952 DOLLARS

YEAR Japan* Italy Ger-many

USSR** U.K. France USA

1930 218 266 162 722 512 498 699

1933 356 351 452 707 333 524 570

1934 384 455 709 3,479 540 707 803

1935 900 966 1,607 5,517 646 867 806

1936 440 1,149 2,332 2,933 892 995 932

1937 1,621 1,235 3,298 3,446 1,245 890 1,032

1938 2,489 746 7,415 5,429 1,863 919 1,131

* Japan’s total is hard to measure because of major charges to Manchukuo and other overseas dependencies.** Stalin’s command economy and slave labor camps make the Soviet total the most difficult to calculate.

Page 31: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Wall Street on “Black Tuesday,” October 29, 1929

Page 32: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Wall Street crashed on “Black Tuesday,” October 29, 1929

Page 33: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

HERBERT HOOVER (1874-1964)

A trained mining engineer, raised as a Quaker

1917-19: Director of American Relief Administration

1920-28: U.S. Secretary of Commerce

June 1931: Hoover Moratorium suspends all payments on war debts and reparations

1931/32: Demands worldwide disarmament

Page 34: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Ramsay MacDonald (1866-1937) Raised a Scottish

Presbyterian, became a Christian pacifist

Resigned as Labour Party chair in August 1914

First Labour prime minister, 1924 and 1929-31

Formed a National Government with the Conservatives in September 1931

Sponsored Round Table Conference with Gandhi and Statute of Westminster in 1932

Page 35: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

Hunger Marchers have arrived in Chester on their way to Washington DC, December 2, 1932

Page 36: INTERWAR EUROPE Interwar Europe,

THE FAILURE OF DIPLOMACY IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION

The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 outlows the “recourse to war for the solution of international controversies.” Ratified by 34 countries, including France, the USA, Germany, and the Soviet Union.

Geneva World Disarmament Conference, February 1932—January 1934

Lausanne Reparations Conference, June 1932

London World Economic Conference, June-July 1933