Book Read Free

A Patriot's History of the Modern World

Page 67

by Larry Schweikart

Tuchman, Barbara, 142

  Tucker, Preston, 354

  Turkey

  Arabs in, 198

  and Armenian massacre, 220–22

  and Germany, 114

  postwar boundaries of, 220

  Tuskegee syphilis experiments, 182, 183

  Tuttle, Ted, 415

  U-boats. See Submarine warfare

  Udet, Ernst, 314

  Umm Diwaykarat, Battle of, 38–39

  Unamuno, Miguel de, 283

  Unemployment, during Great Depression, 242, 250, 253, 254

  United Fruit Company, 227

  United States

  air power of, 315, 358–59

  anti-Semitism in, 187

  aviation development in, 174–77

  Caribbean interventions of, 33–34, 223

  casualties of, 414

  in Civil War. See Civil War

  and colonial period land ownership, 210–11

  cultural influence on Europe, 176–77, 228–30, 231–34

  cultural influence on Latin America, 233–34

  economy/economic policy. See Agriculture; Business and industry; Great Depression; Tax policy

  eugenics movement in, 179–87

  and German reparations, 216, 217, 257

  Hitler’s views of, 216–17, 292, 315–17

  Indian policy of, 211–12

  –Japan relations, 210, 305–8, 348–50, 421

  Latin American interventions, 223–24

  in Mexican War, 106–10, 118, 127

  in Nicaragua, 224

  See also Spanish-American War

  Latin American investments, 224, 226–27

  Lend-Lease aid to Britain, 331, 347

  Lend-Lease aid to Soviets, 341–43, 402–3

  military preparedness of, 293, 331–34

  Panama Canal project, 51–58

  Pearl Harbor attack, 308, 349, 350–51, 396

  Philippine intervention, 30–33, 127, 223

  raw materials needs of, 304

  and Spanish Civil War, 284–85

  trade restrictions of (Smoot-Hawley), 217, 218, 226, 240, 245, 299, 311

  in World War I. See World War I, United States in

  in World War II

  air war, 358-59, 381–84

  in D-Day invasion, 409

  Japanese-American internment, 370, 419, 420

  military capability of, 379–81

  military production of, 353–56

  North African campaign, 377–78

  Western Front, 412–13

  See also Pacific War

  See also American exceptionalism; Progressivism

  United States Army

  African American regiments, 107–8

  buildup of, 332–33

  lack of unit cohesion, 333–34, 379

  mentality of soldiers, 380

  post-World War I, 8

  replacement system in, 334, 379–80, 410

  in Spanish-American War, 8, 26–28, 31

  volunteer vs draftee, 125

  in World War I, 126–38

  in World War II, 377–78, 379–81, 391–92, 401, 409–10

  United States Navy

  Aeronautics Bureau, 175

  buildup of, 170–71, 332

  deepwater fleet, 17–20

  Dewey’s command, 15–16

  Newport sex scandal, 250–51

  Nimitz’s command, 395–97

  Pacific bases, 172

  in Pacific War, 376, 416–17

  Pearl Harbor attack, 308, 349, 350–51, 396

  rising presence of, 356–57

  in Spanish-American War, 8, 25–26

  and Washington Naval Conference, 8–9, 170

  USSR. See Soviet Union

  Valenti, Jack, 233

  Valera, Éamon de, 42

  Vandegrift, Alexander, 368

  Vanderbilt, Alfred Gwynne, 52

  Vanderbilt, Cornelius, 177

  Van Hise, Charles, 180

  Vélez, Lupe, 234

  Vemork hydroelectric plant, 319

  Venezuela, 226

  Verdun, Battle of, 104–5

  Verne, Jules, 50

  Versailles Conference

  British position, 155, 159, 160, 161, 164

  colonial issues at, 162, 198, 199

  differences among European leaders, 156–57, 159, 161–62

  failure of collective security, 167–69

  failure of democratic goals, 165–67

  and Fourteen Points, 153–56

  French position, 155, 159–61, 164

  and German reparations, 161, 169

  Hitler’s “stab-in-the-back” theory of, 136, 260

  and League of Nations, 158

  national boundary readjustments of, 154, 155, 163–65, 218–19

  Palestine issue at, 201

  Parisian social backdrop to, 162–63

  and Polish independence, 154–55, 312

  unintended consequences of, 214

  Wilson at, 157–59, 161–62, 163–64

  Veterans, of World War I, 137–38, 395

  Vichy France, 326, 336, 348, 377

  Vidor, King, 137

  Villa, Francisco “Pancho,” 106–7, 108–10, 116, 127

  Wagemann, Ernest, 179

  Wages, minimum, 180, 181, 253

  Wake Island, 362

  Wallace, Henry, 245, 402

  Walsh, David, 304

  Wal Wal Incident, 273

  Wampanoag, USS, 18

  Wanamaker, John, 112

  Wannsee Conference, 388, 389

  War bonds, 123

  Warburg, Paul, 249

  War crimes

  Holocaust, 329, 360, 383, 384, 387–90

  Japanese, 391, 421–22

  Nazi slave labor, 360, 383, 384–86

  in World War I, 88–90

  Warfare

  chemical, 101–2

  in democratic societies, 419–20

  future of, 75–77

  guerrilla, 127

  obsolescence theory of, 69–70, 75

  sanctity of life concept in, 134

  and social change, 117–18

  ten-year rule, 277, 329

  total air war, 357–58

  trench, 102–4

  Western way of, 38, 39–40, 92, 134, 380, 391–92

  See also Weapons; specific wars

  War Finance Corporation, 123

  War Industries Board (WIB), 121

  War production. See Military production

  Warren, Francis E., 108

  Warsaw Ghetto, 387

  Warsaw Uprising, 389

  Washington Naval Conference, 8–9, 170–71, 173

  Wavell, Archibald, 374

  Wealth, redistribution of, 119

  Weapons

  atomic bomb, 417–18, 419, 421

  bayonet charge, 75, 92, 129, 131

  chemical, 101–2

  and disarmament, 167–68

  long-range bombers, 174

  in Spanish-American War, 27, 28

  Weimar rearmament, 169, 258–59

  See also Military production

  Webb, Sidney, 179, 180

  Wedemeyer, Albert, 333, 402

  Weeks, John, 174

  Weinberg, Gerhard, 256

  Weindling, Paul, 195

  Weizmann, Chaim, 162, 200, 390

  Welfare state, 360–61

  Wells, H.G., 179

  Wengeroff, Vladimir, 233

  Wever, Walther, 314

  Weygand, Maxime, 324–25, 326

  Wheeler, Joseph, 27

  White, Henry, 158, 162

  White, Henry Dexter, 402

  White, William Allen, 47

  Whittlesey, Charles, 104, 137–38

  Wilde, Oscar, 18

  Wilhelm II, Kaiser, 21, 23, 76, 77, 78, 80, 112, 136

  Williams, Oscar F., 20

  Wilson, Henry, 84, 85

  Wilson, Woodrow, 8, 49

  eugenics theory of, 180

  Fourteen Points of, 153–56, 159, 161

  and
League of Nations, 157, 158, 199

  and McAdoo, 123

  and Mexican War, 106, 107–8, 109

  on national self-determination, 154, 163, 218

  presidential election of 1916, 115

  Progressivism of, 116–19, 120, 143

  relationship with European leaders, 156–57

  at Versailles Conference, 157–59, 161–62, 163–64, 218

  weapons procurement policy of, 120, 121–23

  and World War I entry, 108, 115–16

  and World War I neutrality, 110–15

  Witte, Sergei, 72

  Wobblies, 125

  Wolseley, Garnet, 36

  Woman Rebel, The, 184

  Women, in labor market, 353–54

  Wood, Leonard, 26, 27, 29, 30, 128

  Woodville, Richard Caton, 38

  Woolworth (F.W.), 228–29

  Works Progress Administration (WPA), 252

  World Disarmament Conference of 1932, 167–68, 258

  World War I

  aftermath for Europe, 138–39

  Belgian invasion, 85–90

  Christmas truce, 99–100

  Churchill in, 328

  colonial troops in, 100–101, 102, 104

  Eastern Front, 106, 126–27, 140

  economic costs of, 70–72

  Europe at outbreak of, 71–73, 75–79

  final advance, 134, 135–37

  military tactics in, 90–92

  miscalculations of belligerents in, 83–86

  and obsolescence of war theory, 69–70, 75

  outbreak of, 79–83

  poison gas in, 101–2

  and Russian ceasefire, 126–27, 147, 154

  Schlieffen Plan, 81, 87, 92–99, 106

  surrender of Germany, 137

  trench warfare, 102–4

  U–boat attacks, 110–12, 115, 120, 169–70, 171

  United States in

  air war, 129, 131, 135

  at Belleau Wood, 129–30

  censorship during, 124–25

  entry, 108, 115–16

  financing of, 123

  heroic exploits, 133–34, 137–38

  independent command of, 126, 127, 132

  loss replacements, 135

  MacArthur’s exploits in, 394–95

  and merchant shipping, 120–21

  Meuse-Argonne offensive, 129, 131, 132, 135

  military production, 120, 121–23

  neutrality, 110–15

  Pershing’s command, 126, 127, 128–29, 131–32

  regiment formation, 134–35

  tactics of, 128–29, 131, 135

  veterans of, 137

  war of attrition, 104–6

  See also Versailles Conference

  World War II

  aftermath in Europe, 310–11

  air power in, 357–59, 381–84

  Allied command, 376–77, 378, 406–9, 412–13

  and American exceptionalism, 9–10

  Ardennes offensive, 412–13

  Battle of Britain, 326–30

  Berlin, fall of, 413–14

  Casablanca Conference, 401–2, 403

  in Crete, 335–36, 374

  D-Day invasion, 409–10

  Eastern Front, 337–41, 343–47, 369–73, 380, 382, 397–400, 403–4, 410

  espionage in, 327, 331–32, 397

  “Europe First” strategy in, 376, 393

  financing of, 290

  Free French forces in, 336

  French collapse, 319–26

  in Greece and Balkans, 334, 335, 337, 374

  Holocaust during, 329, 360, 383, 384, 387–90

  human cost of, 414

  Italian campaign, 403, 404

  in Middle East, 336, 373–74, 375–76

  and military production. See Military production

  moral considerations in, 419–22

  naval power in, 356–57, 375, 400

  in North Africa, 334–35, 376–78

  Norway invasion, 317–19

  outbreak of, 296

  “Phony War,” 313, 317

  raw materials needs as motive for war, 311–12

  submarine warfare in, 313, 331

  surrender of Germany, 414

  Tehran Conference, 402–3

  U.S. entry, 308

  U.S. military capability, 379–81

  U.S. military preparedness, 332–34

  Yalta Conference, 403, 414

  See also Pacific War

  Wright, Frank Lloyd, 7, 64–65, 66, 68

  Wright brothers, 177

  Wurch, Ernest, 78

  Yalta Conference, 403, 414

  Yamamoto, Isoroku, 60, 171, 349, 350–51, 352–53, 367, 400

  Yamashita, Tomoyuki, 362

  Yellow fever, 29–30, 50, 54–55

  York, Alvin, 133, 137–38

  Young, Owen, 216, 217

  Ypres, Battle of, 99, 101, 102, 103, 105

  Yuan Shikai, 209

  Yugoslavia, 164, 165, 256, 271, 273, 335, 411, 414

  Zapata, Emiliano, 107

  Zeitzler, Kurt, 344

  Zhukov, Georgy, 345–46, 347, 398

  Zimmerman telegram, 116

  Zinoviev, Grigory, 148

  Zionism, 200

  Zog I, King of Albania, 165

 

 

 


‹ Prev