End of WW2 in Europe
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Transcript End of WW2 in Europe
End of WW2 in Europe
Operation Torch
Objective: land and seize nine important objectives along a
nearly 1000 mile coastal front from Casablanca to Algiers
Issues: complex situation;
– some of the French military were loyal to Marshall Petain’s Vichy Regime
while others supported the Allies
– After France fell the French Navy sailed to North Africa and Petain
refused to assure the British that the fleet would not fall into German
hands
– July 1940: the British Navy attacked and severely damaged the
anchored fleet, killing over 1200 French sailors
– The animosity from this situation was difficult for the French to forget.
– There was a fear Americans and British had that the French would fight
against them to preserve their honor
– Lastly, the Allies had to deal with the French General Charles de Gaulle
who had been exiled to London after the fall of France.
End of WW2 in Europe
• 8 November, 1942: Operation Torch began
– 117,000 troops (75% US) attacked in North Africa
– Among the captured in the attack at Algiers was
admiral Jean Darlan, commander of the Vichy
French Forces, and Petain’s deputy.
• Darlan was the only Frenchman with the prestige to stop
the French from resisting the American and British
• So a deal was struck to prevent French resistance
– In return for a cease fire, Darlan would be made the military
governor of French North Africa
– Germans were so angered by this, so they entered Vichy France
and took back control
– A stroke of good luck for the Allies: Darlan is killed by a French
monarchist, this saved the Allies the embarassment of
collaboration with a Nazi.
End of WW2 in Europe
• The whole Darlan fiasco left Stalin to wonder if the Americans and
British would do other deals without the Soviets.
• Charles de Gaulle and the French were disgusted that the Allies
would bargain with the hated Vichy regime. De Gaulle used this to
stake his claim that he should be leading the French armed forces
• The invasion of North Africa was a success and lead
to the downfall of Italy. Italy was the next logical step
after North Africa.
– July 1943: Sicily was invaded, Mussolini was replaced as
head of state, and Italy surrendered to the Americans and
British.
– The country was immediately occupied by German troops.
– At the end of the war the Allies reached the Alps, which was
impressive. But this fighting against the Italians only delayed
the invasion of Western Europe another year.
End of WW2 in Europe
• Key battle of WW2: Stalingrad
– Churchill said it best: it was the Red Army who “tore the guts
out of the German army.”
• City named after the Soviet leader: Josef Stalin
– It was a siege of the city and the Soviets were not backing
down. Every time the Germans sent more troops the Soviets
responded in kind.
– Fighting was brutal
• The Soviets lost more in this battle than the US had during the war
– 19-20 November, 1942 the Soviets counter-attack broke
through the Hungarian, Rumanian, and Italian units guarding
the flank of the German Sixth Army.
– The German generals pleaded with Hitler for permission to
breakout while there was still time, Hitler refused.
End of WW2 in Europe
– German soldiers were outnumbered and freezing. Also
without food, some resorted to cannibalism. The Germans
held out for 2 months.
– End of January 1943, the German Sixth Army surrendered.
• Soviets captured 91,000 prisoners, 1500 tanks, and 60,000 vehicles.
• The Germans had to give up everything they conquered in the spring
of 1942.
– July 1943 the Germans tried one major offensive with 17
armored divisions. In the greatest armored battle in history
the Soviets repelled the attack and pushed ze Germans
back 200 miles.
– The best the Germans could hope for was to hold on to
Eastern Europe. The Red Army had twice as many men and
2 to 3 times the weapons and equipment.
End of WW2 in Europe
D-Day: 6 June, 1944
• Allied invasion of France through Normandy
under US General Dwight D. Eisenhower
– Prior to the invasion a massive bombing campaign
of the French railroad system was conducted
• Killed many Frenchman
– Between 1 April and 5 June, 1944 the Allies lost
2000 aircraft and 12,000 air crew in pre D-Day
operations
– Intense fighting upon landing 5000 ships and
12,000 planes, 156,000 (8 divisions) men on day
one and 5 divisions on day two.
End of WW2 in Europe
– Germans had 60 divisions (11 armored)
• However, there preparations were hampered by disagreements
and miscalculations
– Hitler insisted the entire coast be defended which thinly
dispersed the units
– Because of allies deception the Germans thought the bulk of the
forces attacking would be at Calais which left Normandy ill
protected
– After one week the Allies had more troops in France than the
Germans and controlled the air
• 15 August, 1944: 151,000 American, British, Canadian, and
French troops landed on the Mediterranean coast and took
Marseilles
– The city became a logistical hub. In the Rhone Valley the
railroads were virtually untouched they became a primary means
of transport of men and materials
– Late August 1944 the Allies took back Paris.
End of WW2 in Europe
Beginning in 1942 the Allies began attacking Germany
• Used a technique called “carpet bombing”
– Would bomb almost every major city which resulted in:
• 593,000 German civilian deaths and 3.3 million homes destroyed
– Two deadly bombings took place in Hamburg and Dresden
• Hamburg: July 1943; Allied bombers started a firestorm that killed
40,000 people in about 2 hours
• Dresden: 1945; firestorm killed 135,000
Statistics Break-average result of a single British sortie with a 7 man crew was
less than 3 Germans dead; after an average of 14 missions the plane was
shot down.
– Hitler was determined to hold out because of some new
weaponry his people designed.
• Jet Airplanes; V-1 Cruise missile (22,400 launched, many shot down);
V-2 ballistic missile (1500 launched on London causing great
damage) 15,000 people were killed by the missiles and 45,000
wounded
End of WW2 in Europe
• July 1944: a group of anti-Hitler conspirators attempted to
assassinate him and end the war. A planted bomb went off
at his headquarters but failed to kill him.
– The Gestapo rounded up the conspirators and they were executed.
• The Allied march to Berlin was halted only once at the
Battle of the Bulge (December 1944)
– Allies retook the initiative, crossing the Rhine River on 7
March, 1945 at the Remagen Bridge which the Nazis failed
to destroy.
• Meanwhile, the Red Army was also advancing to Berlin.
– Both armies stopped at the Elbe River.
• There was a concern there would be a collision with the
Red Army.
– This lead to the Yalta Conference. Where it was decided Germany would
be divided into zones of occupation.
End of WW2 in Europe
• 30 April, 1945: Adolf Hitler committed
suicide. Earlier that month, Mussolini was
caught trying to escape and was shot.
• 7 May, 1945 Germany surrendered.
Japan in the Pacific
• Reasons for Japanese Imperialism
– The desire for equality with Western powers
– Access to raw materials and markets
– The instability of East Asia caused by a weak China (fear of western
takeover) and WWII in Europe
• The Great Depression caused Japan to attempt to gain hegemony
over China. China was undergoing increased nationalism under
Chiang Kai-shek, and it resisted Japan’s advances. Nationalism
became a run away force in Japan. The Manchurian Incident of
September 1931 gave Japan the excuse to take all of Manchuria
and set up the puppet state of Manchuko.
– The Manchurian Incident was turning point for Japan. Japan abandoned
its policy of cooperation with the Western powers.
– The military leadership now spoke of an “Asian Monroe Doctrine”,
declaring Japan’s responsibility for maintaining the peace and
controlling the economy of Asia.
Japan in the Pacific
• To achieve it’s policy Japan needed a military that could achieve three goals:
– to defeat the Soviet army, whose strength on the borders of Manchukuo had
been strongly increased
– to protect the home islands against the forces of the US Navy and Air Force
– to induce the Chinese gov’t to accept Japan’s hegemony in Manchuria and
northern China.
Japan never met these objectives.
War in the Pacific Theatre
• Japanese strong after Pearl Harbor
– Controlled a region with a diameter of 5,000 miles
and a population of 450 million
– Had a self-supporting economy
• Japanese plan
– Control the eastern Atlantic to deprive the US of
military bases and cut off the important islands of
Australia and New Zealand
– Australia and New Zealand played a similar role as
England in Europe, crucial staging grounds for
future operations.
War in the Pacific Theatre
• June 1942: Battle of Midway Island
– Most decisive battle in the Pacific
– Japanese mission: lure the US fleet into combat at
the Aleutian Islands, destroy it and occupy Midway
• Japanese occupation of Midway would lead to attacks on
Hawaii and effectively block the US from anything west of
the islands of Hawaii
– US Navy cryptographers cracked the Japanese
code and knew the plan of attack
– US won the Battle for Midway Island
– Japan lost naval and air superiority in the Pacific
and the US took back the Aleutian Islands in May
and August of 1943
War in the Pacific Theatre
• US plan of attack
– “Island Hopping”
• Attack islands and take them over, move on to the next
island until they reach Japan
• The US started this policy even though most of the troops
had been allocated to Europe (only 15% of Allied
resources were in Pacific)
– Plan of attack disputes
• General Douglas MacArthur: army
• Admiral Chester Nimitz: navy
• These two created a two pronged attack for “island
hopping”- army went south and navy, north
War in the Pacific Theatre
• Southern islands could have been left but for a promise to
return to the Philippines by MacArthur when he was
ordered out by FDR in 1942
• November 1944
– B-29 bombers began long range bombing of Japan
• These attacks caused a lot of damage because the
Japanese houses were built of rice paper, so they burned
fast and furious
– March 1945: bombing of Tokyo killed 100,000 people
War in the Pacific Theatre
• After the European Theatre closed the Allied
leaders met at conferences of Yalta and Tehran
– Stalin, FDR, Churchill all met to discuss the Pacific
and Europe
• It was decided that the Soviets would enter the Pacific
Theatre 3 months after the fall of Europe
• Yalta made sure that the USSR would come in at the
convenience of the US
– This would also limit the subsequent expansion
– FDR died in 12 April, 1945 from a stroke
• After he was elected four his fourth term
• Vice Pres. Harry S. Truman became Pres.
War in the Pacific Theatre
• Manhattan Project
– Development of Atomic bomb
• July 16, 1945: first a-bomb detonated in Alamogordo,
New Mexico
• August 6, 1945: first a-bomb dropped on Hiroshima
• August 9, 1945: second a-bomb dropped on Nagasaki
– Rationale: cost-less than carpet bombing; effective-more
effective: 1 bomb rather than many
• After years of slaughter life was cheap in 1945
– There was little moral question about the ethics of using weapons
of mass destruction against defenseless cities
– After the a-bombs were dropped the Japanese
emperor ended the war by surrendering