War Affects the World

1. The Gallipoli Campaign

British attack on ______

Knock ______out of the war

Get supplies to ______

Persuade neutral ______states to join Allies

A failure

______humiliated

Bulgaria joins ______.

2. Battle for the Dardanelles

 Notable ______failure to take straits b/t Black Sea & MedSea

______died

Hopes of a supply line to ______dashed

3. The Battle of Verdun

February to ______1916

Germany wanted to “______France white”

Massive ______against French city of Verdun

1,400 artillery along 8-mile front

1 ______shells fired on first day

Casualties

______: 542,000

______: 434,000

4. The Battle of the Somme

July – November 1916

Allied attempt to relieve pressure on ______

British attack along the ______

Preceded by 7-day ______barrage

British had 57,000 ______on the first day

Casualties

______: 600,000

______: 500,000

5. Eastern Front

Battle of Tannenberg, Sept. 1914

______pushed out of Germany

______Russians died

Battle of Limanowa, Dec. 1914

Russia pushed out of ______- ______

6. Battle of Tannenburg

1st major battle on the ______

German victory

Result of premature Russian invasion of ______

However, it did divert German forces from the ______, enabling the Allies to halt the ______advance on Paris

7. Russian effort collapses, 1916

Lack of ______

Troops poorly ______

Ports blockaded

______(Baltic Sea),Ottomans (Black Sea)

Only asset were ______numbers

8. The United States and World War I
______tradition

Wilson declares USA ______in European war

Wilson calls for “______without victory”

US banks ______belligerents money

Pro-Allied sentiment in ______

9. Sussex Pledge

The Sussex pledge was a promise made in 1916 during World War I by ______to the ______prior to the latter's entry into the war.

indiscriminately ______any non-German vessel using their U-boats

______attempted to appease the United States by issuing the Sussex pledge, which promised a change in Germany’s naval ______policy.

In 1917 ______became convinced they could defeat the Allied Forces by returning to unrestricted submarine warfare before the United States could enter the war, thereby ______the Sussex pledge.

10.The Sinking of the Lusitania

May 7, 1915

______- passenger liner

Sunk by ______U-boat

1,200 lives lost

128 ______dead

Pushed USA closer to ______

11. Germany Announces Unrestricted Submarine Warfare

January 31, 1917

Germans promise to sink any ship that enters the ______

Cut off supplies to ______& ______

Force ______surrender

US ______ships sunk

12. The Zimmerman Telegram February 28, 1917

British intelligence intercepted German telegram to ______

______promised Mexico territory lost to USA in Mexican War (1846-48)

______did not take the telegram seriously

The USA, however, did

April 6, 1917 – USA ______on Germany

13. Home Front

______touched all lives

______economy (rations)

All able-bodied people put to ______

Civil liberties ______

Official use of ______

14.Bernard Baruch

War Industries Board

Coordinated ______of war supplies.

15. Popular Nationalism was inflamed

______leaned heavily on public opinion.

______was manipulated

______became normal

16. Propaganda

______or ______spread to advance a cause or damage an opponent’s cause.

Section 3 quiz

Choose the letter of the best answer.

____ 1. In 1917, Germany returned to its policy of unrestricted submarine warfare, hoping to

A. bring the United States into the war.

B. force Russia to withdraw from the war.

C. keep cargo ships from reaching Great Britain.

D. destroy the British ships blockading German ports.

____ 2. World War I was a "total war" in the sense that

A. it brought great suffering to civilians.

B. nations from all over the world were involved.

C. new technologies played a large part in the war.

D. the nations involved devoted all their resources to it.

____ 3. The system of rationing was designed to limit

A. civilian antiwar activities.

B. production of luxury items.

C. purchases of consumer goods.

D. the number of men needed in the civilian work force.

____ 4. The purpose of propaganda during World War I was to

A. censor the press.

B. inform the public.

C. expose antiwar activity.

D. influence public opinion.

____ 5. The Zimmerman note, which pushed the United States to enter the war, exposed the German plan to

A. make a truce with Russia.

B. help Mexico regain U.S. territory.

C. sink passenger ships without warning.

D. plant German spies in the United States.

____ 6. The armistice signed near Paris in November 1918 brought an end to

A. World War I.

B. Kaiser Wilhelm's rule.

C. the Second Battle of the Marne.

D. Russia's involvement in the war.