QCM : The Road to World War II — 16 questions

Questions et réponses du QCM

1. What was appeasement in the lead-up to World War II?

A strategy of immediate invasion to punish Germany
A plan to divide Germany after fighting began
A military alliance formed to stop Germany
A policy of accepting some of Hitler’s demands to avoid war

A policy of accepting some of Hitler’s demands to avoid war

Explication

Appeasement meant Britain and France gave in to some of Hitler’s demands in the hope of avoiding another war. It was used because they feared conflict and were not ready for it.

2. Which action clearly violated the Treaty of Versailles before the war began?

Britain and France declaring war on Germany
The signing of the Atlantic Charter
The division of Germany at Yalta
Germany reintroducing conscription in 1935

Germany reintroducing conscription in 1935

Explication

Reintroducing conscription broke the Versailles limits on Germany’s armed forces. It was part of Hitler’s rearmament program.

3. What was the main issue at the Munich Conference in September 1938?

How Germany would be divided after the war
How to end the Phoney War
Whether Germany should be allowed to take the Sudetenland
Whether Britain should bomb Berlin

Whether Germany should be allowed to take the Sudetenland

Explication

At Munich, Britain and France accepted Hitler’s demand for the Sudetenland, a region of Czechoslovakia with many German speakers. This became a major symbol of appeasement’s failure.

4. What was the immediate result of the Munich Agreement for Czechoslovakia?

It joined Britain in a military alliance
It was divided into four occupation zones
It was left abandoned to face Hitler’s demands
It gained control of Austria

It was left abandoned to face Hitler’s demands

Explication

The Munich Agreement left Czechoslovakia without protection against Hitler. Britain and France accepted the demand rather than defend it.

5. What event marked the outbreak of World War II in Europe?

Germany invading Denmark in April 1940
The Munich Conference in September 1938
The start of the Battle of Britain
Germany invading Poland on 1 September 1939

Germany invading Poland on 1 September 1939

Explication

The war began when Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939. Britain and France then declared war on Germany on 3 September.

6. What best describes the Phoney War?

A period of little fighting on the Western Front
A German bombing campaign against London
A major naval battle in the Atlantic
A Soviet offensive against Germany

A period of little fighting on the Western Front

Explication

The Phoney War lasted from September 1939 to spring 1940 and involved little fighting in the West. Britain and France largely waited while Germany prepared new offensives.

7. What was the main aim of Blitzkrieg?

To rely mainly on trench warfare
To avoid using aircraft in battle
To destroy enemy forces quickly before they could react
To win by slowly exhausting the enemy

To destroy enemy forces quickly before they could react

Explication

Blitzkrieg was designed to overwhelm an enemy fast with speed and surprise. It used tanks, aircraft, and motorized divisions to prevent an effective response.

8. Why was Norway important to Germany in April 1940?

It was needed to divide Germany into occupation zones
It was the location of the RAF headquarters
It provided a place to sign the Munich Agreement
It helped secure iron ore supplies for war production

It helped secure iron ore supplies for war production

Explication

Norway mattered because Germany needed access to iron ore supplies for its war industry. This was one reason the invasion of Norway was strategically important.

9. What was Hitler’s main objective in the Battle of Britain?

To capture Moscow by air attack
To force Italy out of the war
To end the Atlantic Charter
To destroy the RAF before invading Great Britain

To destroy the RAF before invading Great Britain

Explication

Germany tried to defeat Britain by first destroying the RAF. The attacks focused on airfields, aircraft factories, and radar stations.

10. Which British advantage helped detect German aircraft early during the Battle of Britain?

German control of the English Channel
Immediate support from the United States
A much larger air force than Germany’s
An effective radar system

An effective radar system

Explication

Britain’s radar system gave early warning of incoming German planes and helped the RAF respond. This improved British readiness despite being outnumbered.

11. What was the blackout during the Blitz?

A plan to move the capital to Scotland
A policy of closing all factories during raids
A rule requiring lights to be turned off at night
A system for dividing Germany after the war

A rule requiring lights to be turned off at night

Explication

The blackout was used to make targets harder for bombers to find at night. Streets were dimmed and windows were covered to reduce visibility.

12. Which place was commonly used as an air raid shelter during the Blitz?

Occupation zones in Berlin
Underground stations
Munich conference halls
German tank factories

Underground stations

Explication

Civilians protected themselves in places such as underground stations, public shelters, and gardens. These shelters were part of everyday survival on the home front.

13. Why did Churchill become a symbol of British resistance?

He supported appeasement at Munich
He signed the Treaty of Versailles
He refused to negotiate with Hitler
He led the German air force

He refused to negotiate with Hitler

Explication

Churchill rejected negotiation with Hitler and urged Britain to keep resisting. His speeches helped strengthen morale and national unity.

14. Why did Churchill cooperate with both Roosevelt and Stalin during the war?

Because defeating Nazism was the priority
Because Britain had joined the Soviet Union
Because he wanted to divide France
Because he opposed American military aid

Because defeating Nazism was the priority

Explication

Churchill worked with Roosevelt for American support and with Stalin because defeating Nazi Germany was the overriding goal. This cooperation was part of Allied unity.

15. What was the Atlantic Charter?

A conference dividing Germany into four zones
A plan to invade Poland in 1939
A 1941 agreement setting principles for the post-war world
A treaty that forced Czechoslovakia to surrender

A 1941 agreement setting principles for the post-war world

Explication

The Atlantic Charter was signed by Churchill and Roosevelt in 1941 and set out post-war principles. It included ideas such as self-determination and no territorial expansion.

16. What was decided at the Yalta Conference about Germany?

Germany would be divided into four occupation zones
Germany would join the United Nations immediately
Germany would keep all of its prewar territory
Germany would remain under a single British zone

Germany would be divided into four occupation zones

Explication

At Yalta, the Big Three agreed that Germany would be divided into four occupation zones controlled by the USA, USSR, UK, and France. Berlin was also to be divided into four sectors.

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Appeasement — policy?

Avoid war by conceding to demands.

Treaty of Versailles — violation?

Germany rearmed and reintroduced conscription.

Munich Agreement — purpose?

Accept Hitler’s demand for Sudetenland to prevent war.

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