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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. Understanding – let alone condoning – the rationale for Australia's contributions to the war against Hitler in World War II leaves many historians perplexed by what was an obviously poor military and political investment in the Singapore Strategy. The extent to which this move wholly threatened Australia's safety as an isolated white continent was both grand and far-reaching; one might readily surmise that had the adamant caution of some been heeded, this period of history would have had an entirely different outcome. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAusWWII.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
by what was an obviously poor military and political investment in the Singapore Strategy. The extent to which this move wholly threatened Australias safety as an isolated white continent
was both grand and far-reaching; one might readily surmise that had the adamant caution of some been heeded, this period of history would have had an entirely different outcome.
II. COMMENCEMENT OF WAR In 1939, the world collided with itself for the second time. In a show of sheer force, every
major power on the planet -- known as the Allies and the Axis -- was in conflict with one another. What started the Second World War was the combination
of the dictatorial and combative governments of Germany, Japan and Italy; practically on the heels of World War I, where the three countries had already suffered some amount of loss,
they collectively desired to regain their lost power or expand what they had managed to preserve. It was as a direct result of these desires that the three countries
ultimately adopted various orders of dictatorship. Furthermore, they banded together against Communism to gain even more support from Western conservative parties (Hobsbawm, 1995).
Yet another crucial element to prewar considerations was the fact that there existed a great quest for peace. Democracies wanted to get past the entire furor and live
compatibly as they knew the countries were able to do. But it was this desire for peace that ultimately sabotaged such efforts because of their military unpreparedness. When
the League of Nations buckled under due to the withdrawal of the United States, it set the stage for its inability to promote disarmament. Coupled with the long period
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