Presentation 14
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Transcript Presentation 14
The course of the War
World War II on the
Battlefields & At Home
World War I v. World War II
Global conflict
• Two theatres:
Europe and North Africa
Asia/Pacific
• War at sea:
Atlantic
Pacific
Fought in extended battles & campaigns
• Blitzkrieg?
or
• War in slow motion as armies raised,
mobilized, weapons, ships, planes produced?
The course of the war
Extended campaigns:
Britain on the defensive
• Retreat from continent
1941
• Attack on Soviet Union
• US enters
North Africa, 1942
Italian campaign, 1943-45
Invasion of the continent & endgame,
1944-45
1939-1940
Invasion of Poland http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/axis.htm
Entry of Britain and France
• Phoney war:
• German invasion of Denmark and Norway
May, 1940
• Invasion of Netherlands, Belgium, France
• France defeated within 6 weeks
• Britain driven from continent
1940-1942
Battle of Britain: Sept. 1940-41
Battle for North Africa
Germany solidifies hold on S.E. Europe
June 21,1941, Operation Barbarossa:
Germany attacks USSR, bogs down
December,1941
• Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour brings US
into War http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/axis.htm
Turning points:
1942 – El Alemain: allied victory over
Rommel in North Africa
http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/axis.htm
1942-43 – Defence of Stalingrad
1943 – Invasion of Italy
• Mussolini toppled
• Germans invade and occupy
1944
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•
•
•
June 6: D-day – Invasion of Normandy
Liberation of France
Liberation of Belgium
Partial liberation of the Netherlands
War aims
Germany:
•Initially Continental
domination, especially
hinterland to its east
•Restructuring of European
society –
Aryan domination
Allies:
•Unconditional surrender
Arguments over strategy
Stalin’s demand for a second front
• North African campaign as a diversion
Churchill: invade through the Balkans
US: invasion through France – when
ready
Dieppe, 1942
• An effort to placate Stalin
• ‘test landing’
Italian campaign
Factors determining the outcome
The difficulty of invading Britain
Germany’s attack on the Soviet
Union
US entry
Allies’ productive capacity
Ability of allies to maintain
supply lines
Code breaking
• Enigma – capture of German
encryption machine
Civilians and the war
Total mobilization on home fronts
• rationing
• Scramble for raw materials
Civilians as victims of bombing
• UK
• Germany…
Large numbers displaced
• Populations shifted as acts of policy (e.g.
Poland)
• More displaced by war
Occupied Europe
Different policies for different countries:
Poland: dismembered, parts under
‘general government’
Denmark: Danish gov’t allowed to
continue
France:
• north and west occupied
• “puppet regime at Vichy, under Marshall Petain
Netherlands
Occupied territories exploited for resources
& labour
Occupied Europe-II
Occupation & choices it presented
• Collaboration
• Resistance
• Or combination of both?
Resistance movements:
• In some places, from the beginning
• Growth after 1942, when forced labour
drafts begin
Civilians as victims of genocide
•The Final Solution
Wannsee Conference 1942
Ghettos & transit camps
Role of Jewish Councils
Auschwitz
Terezin or Teresenstadt
Efforts to resist or stop the process
Planning the peace - I
Summit negotiations on war aims, postwar
disposition of territory
Casablanca 1943 (Roosevelt + Churchill)
• Agreement on unconditional surrender
Teheran 1943
• Initial agreement on eastern Europe
• Plans for occupation of Germany
Yalta 1945
• Plans for United Nations
• Further agreement on territory
• Concessions to Russia to secure entry into war against
Japan
Planning the peace – II
Bretton Woods conference –1943
• Plans for monetary stability
Fixed system of exchange rates
World Bank and International Monetary Fund to
stabilize
Agreements on trade (GATT)
Domestic side
• UK – plans for welfare state (Beveridge
Report)
• Discussions in resistance movements, among
governments in exile
Other facets
Lidice
liberation of Paris
Market Garden