Allied Military Strategy 1941-1945
Download
Report
Transcript Allied Military Strategy 1941-1945
Allied Military Strategy
(1941-1945)
Causes for World War II
UNDERLYING:
Treaty of Versailles
Nationalism
Worldwide
Depression
Dictatorships
The policy of
appeasement
American
Isolationism
DIRECT:
Germany invading
Poland on
September 1st,
1939
The Liberation of Europe
FDR:
Liberate Europe first
and pursue an “active
defense” in the Pacific
Clear Germany from North
Africa
Late 1942: Only Tunisia
was controlled by Axis
Powers
Erwin Rommel,
the “Desert Fox”
Allied Advances in Europe
(1943-1944)
January,
1943: Allies
agree to fight until they
win “unconditional
surrender”
February 1943: SU
takes back Stalingrad
and moves westward
Same time, Allied
victory at El Alamein
(May 1943) begins to
Allied Advancements Cont…
July
10, 1943: The
invasion of Italy.
Fighting continues
from July 1943 to
June 1944 when
Allies enter Rome
Separate peace was
signed with new
Italian government
in September, 1943
Unconditional Surrender in Europe
(1944-1945)
Britain
and U.S. air raid
strategic sights in Germany
June 6, 1944: D-Day and
the Allied invasion of
Normandy
Battle at Normandy lasted
from June 6-July 24
August 25, 1944: France
liberated
Germany’s Last Gasp Effort
Hitler
was caught between
Allied troops coming from
the West and Stalin’s forces
coming from the East.
December 1944: Battle of
the Bulge
April 25, 1945: Russia and
Allied Forces meet
May 8, 1945: Germany
surrenders (V-E DAY)
YALTA CONFERENCE
(February 1945)
Plans for German
surrender
Stalin agrees to hold
free elections and
help with Japan
Division of
Germany/Berlin into 4
zones
Initiated Cold War
Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin
Allied Military Strategy in the
Pacific (1941-1945)
By
1942, Japan had controlled almost the
entire area of the Pacific (1 mil sq. miles)
Allies were able to hold on to Hawaii and
Samoa
Used powerful combination of land, sea,
and air forces to capture key islands
Implement the strategy of “ISLAND
HOPPING”
Fortunes Shift in the Pacific
Battle of Coral Sea
(May 1942)
Fought
through the air
The
Americans lost an
aircraft carrier in the
battle but stopped the
Japanese attack.
First
time the
Japanese advance had
been halted
Battle of Midway (June
1942)
Japan
tried to lure the
Americans into a large sea
battle around Midway
Island.
Naval
officers had broken
a Japanese code and
learned of the plan.
The
Americans damanged
/destroyed 4 Japanese
carriers and won a major
victory.
Iwo Jima
In
February 1945
American forces set
out to capture Iwo
Jima.
The island would
provide a good base to
launch raids against
major Japanese cities.
Island
located 660
miles from Tokyo
American
control
island by March
Okinawa
Invaded
on April 1, 1945.
The
island was to be the
launching pad for the final
invasion of Japan. (350
miles from Japan)
It
was a bloody battle;
more than 12,500
Americans died
Like
Iwo Jima, the
Japanese refused to
surrender and lost a
staggering 110,000 troops.
Allies
gained control of the
island in June 1945.
Legacy of Total War
(Strategic Bombing)
Targeting cities for their industrial targets
and civilians was viewed as a
psychological weapon to break the
enemy's will to fight.
Cities targeted…….London, Berlin,
Hamburg, Dresden, Tokyo, Osaka,
Kobe……
And then……..Hiroshima/Nagasaki (Aug.
1945)
THE COSTS OF THE WAR
U.S.
lost over 300,000
World suffered at least 60 million
dead (38 million civilians)
Over 25 million Russians alone died
Over 11 million in death camps
New fears arise after the war– fight
to contain Communism– THE COLD
WAR ERA!!