WWII_Ch_17_2-3_War_in_Europe_and_the_Pacific
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Transcript WWII_Ch_17_2-3_War_in_Europe_and_the_Pacific
The World At
War
The War for North Africa
and Europe
Ch 17 Sec 2
Ch 17 Sec 2 - Essential
Questions
What was the Allies’ overall plan
for winning the war?
What was the US strategy in
Europe and Asia?
What were the key events of the
war in Europe?
How was Europe finally liberated
by the Allies?
The US and Britain Join Forces
Winston Churchill met with FDR to map out
war plans on Dec 22, 1941
Germany and Italy were perceived as the
greater threat so it was decided to
concentrate on Europe first then the Pacific
Axis Gains by 1942
By 1942 Hitler’s forces held
the European continent and
pounded England with aerial
bombardments while driving
deep into Russia and across
Northern Africa to attempt to
take the Suez Canal in Egypt
Allied Hope
The Situation was bleak in 1942 but the
Allies had:
Natural Resources
Skilled Workforce with significant
reserves
Ability to produce massive amounts
of weapons and ammunitions
Determination of millions of antifascists
The capacity of the USSR to endure
Battle of Stalingrad
• 1941 Winter bogs down Germans
• August 1942 Germans move South toward
Industrial city of Stalingrad
• Stalin orders to hold city at all cost
• 9/10 of city taken by house by house with
hand to hand combat but winter set in
again
• 1.1M Soviets Die/Germans
surrender/West
Soviets Halt Nazi Drive
The size of the USSR, resistance from
civilians, and the Russian winter all
contributed to the first Nazi setback of the
war
The Battle of Stalingrad pitted the Red
Army vs. the Germans in bitter house to
house fighting over a city of rubble
100,000 Germans surrendered
The USSR lost more troops in the battle
than the US lost the whole war
2nd defeat outside of Kursk, forced Nazi
retreat
The Plan for invasion
• The Soviet Union had pressed the United
States and Britain to start operations in
Europe, and open a second front to
reduce the pressure of German forces on
the Russian troops.
• While the American commanders favored
Operation Sledgehammer, landing in
Occupied Europe as soon as possible, the
British commanders believed that such a
course would end in disaster.
The North African Front
While Stalingrad was pounded
Stalin pressured the US and Britain
to open a second front in Europe
The Allies decided on Operation
Torch the Allied invasion of North
Africa led by General Dwight D.
Eisenhower (Supreme Commander
of U.S. forces in Europe)
In Nov. 1942 107,000 mainly US
troops landed in Casablanca, Oran
and Algiers
Winning North Africa
The US forces attacked from the East, the
British forces from the West in an effort to
pinch the German Afrika Corps led by
General Erwin Rommel “The Desert Fox”
The Afrika Corps surrendered in May 1943,
after the Battle of El Alamein
The Casablanca Conference
In January 1943 FDR and Churchill met in
Casablanca in French Morocco to agree to
accept only an unconditional surrender from
the Axis Powers
They also decided after North Africa not to
open an second front in France but to attack
Italy
The Italian Campaign
Summer of 1943 the Allies captured Sicily
On July 25, 1943 Mussolini was stripped of
power, and Hitler flooded Italy with troops
The Allies landed near Anzio outside of
Rome
“Bloody Anzio” 25,000 Allied, 30,000
German Causalities
Fighting in Italy raged until early 1945
Mussolini was killed by Italian citizens
Famous Allied Generals
Patton
Montgomery
The Moscow Conference
In October 1943 Sec. of State Cordell
Hull, Anthony Eden of Great Britain,
and Foreign Minister Molotov of the
USSR met in Moscow
They issued The Moscow Declaration
that a World Organization for the
maintenance of peace would be set-up
after the war
The Bombing of Germany
British bombers flew night missions and US
B-17’s flew day missions over Germany
Bombing missions over the Rhineland and
the Ruhr successfully took out factories
The British began targeting civilian targets
as Germany had done
Hamburg was leveled – 60,000 – 100,000
people were killed ( 60 other cities were
bombed) Munich, Berlin and Cologne
Dresden- 650,000 incendiary bombs were
dropped, 135,000 killed, 8 sq. miles
destroyed
The Cairo Conference
In Nov. 1943 FDR and Churchill met in Cairo
with Gen. Chaing Kai-shek the political and
military leader of China
They promised to make Japan give up all
territory it had acquired especially in China
The Teheran Conference
In Nov. 1943 FDR, Churchill and Stalin
met for the first time and pledged to work
together to win the war but also the peace
Plans for the opening of a second front were
discussed
D-Day The Battle for France
Under IKE”s command the US, Britain, and
Canada assembled 3 million troops to attack
Normandy in Northern France.
The Allies tricked Hitler to think the invasion
would come at Calais 150 miles away
Operation Overlord the largest land, sea,
and air invasion in history was launched on
June 6th 1944
German resistance was brutal in some
spots like Omaha Beach
U.S. Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower
Eisenhower Decides on D-Day
The Allies Gain Control
After 7 days of fighting the Allies
held an 80 mile strip of France
Within a month the Allies landed
1million troops, 567,000 tons of
supplies and 170,000 vehicles
August 1944 Paris was liberated
September 1944 Belgium and
Luxembourg were liberated
American Generals
Patton
Bradley
The Election of 1944
FDR ran for an unprecedented 4th Term
against Thomas E. Dewey Republican
Governor of NY
Senator Harry S. Truman was added to the
ticket as a vice-presidential compromise
candidate
The Battle of the Bulge
In October 1944, the Allies entered
Germany
On December 16 Hitler launched his last
major counterattack of the war (B of the B)
On Dec. 16th 1944 Eight German tank
divisions broke though US defenses along
an 80 miles front
SS troopers murdered 120 American POW’s
The Germans ran out of gas and without air
cover they lost 120,000 troops, 600 tanks,
1600 planes and were forced to retreat
The Yalta Conference
In February 1945 FDR, Churchill and Stalin
met in the Soviet port of Yalta in the Crimea
Sea
They agreed to call an Allied Conference to
draft the UN Charter in San Francisco
They agreed to divide Germany into
American, Soviet, French, and British
Occupation Zones
They agreed to allow free elections in
Poland and adjust its border
They agreed to ensue the establishment of a
democratic form of government for all
liberated European nations
Yalta Conference II
Secretly the USSR agreed to declare war on
Japan after the Germany surrender in
exchange for an occupation zone in
Northern Korea
FDR’s Death
While posing for a posing for a portrait FDR
complained of a headache and took a nap
He died of a stroke or a cerebral
hemorrhage
Vice-President Harry S. Truman took over
V-E Day
By April 25th the Red Army was
storming Berlin
Hitler blamed the Jews for staring the
war and his Generals for losing it
On April 29th he married Eva Braun
They both committed suicide and had
their bodies burned
On May 8th, Germany surrendered
V-E day was celebrated through the US
and the world
Germany Surrenders!
Ch 17 Sec 3-The War
in the Pacific
The Japanese had overran the
Philippines, Hong Kong, French
Indochina, Malaya, Burma,
Thailand much of China, the
Dutch East Indies, Guam, Wake
Island, the Solomon Islands, and
two of the Aleutian Islands which
were part of Alaska.
Essential Questions:
• What were the key turning points in
the war in the Pacific?
• What was the Allied plan to fight
Japan?
• How was the atomic bomb
developed and why was it used?
• What where the challenges facing
the Allies in building a just and
lasting peace?
The Bataan Death March
Just hours after Pearl Harbor the
Japanese attacked the Philippines, and
drove US forces to the Bataan
Peninsula
“I shall return” General Douglas
MacArthur
Bataan Death March – 80 mile march of
US POW’s and Filipinos
Allies Stem the Japanese Tide
After Pearl Harbor and Macarthur’ fleeing
the Philippines the US was looking for a
victory
On April 18th, Lieutenant Colonel James
Doolittle led 16 bombers on a bombing raid
of Tokyo. The Doolittle Raid lifted US spirits
Battle of the Coral Sea
In May 1942 the US and Australians stopped
the Japanese drive to invade Australia in a
5-day carrier battle
The Battle of Midway
The US broke the Japanese Code and
knew that Midway Island northwest of
Hawaii was to be the target
Admiral Chester A. Nimitz commanded
the US fleet
The Japanese lost four carriers, a
cruiser and 250 planes
After Midway the Allies began their
“Island Hopping Campaign” to Japan
Midway was a turning point in the
Pacific
Admiral Chester A. Nimitz
Allies on the Offensive
In August 1942 the Allies launched
their counter offensive on the Solomon
Islands and Papua , near New Guinea
Us Marines engaged in a bitter 6 month
fight on the island of Guadalcanal
In November 1943 1,000 Marines died
fighting for the island of Tarawa
Early in 1944 American forces
occupied Guam, Saipan, and Tinian in
the Marianas Islands
June 1944 the Japanese are defeated
at the Battle of the Philippines Sea
Battle of Leyte Gulf
In October 1944 178,000 Allied troop, 738
ships converged on Leyte Island in the
Philippines, the Japanese lost 3 battleships,
4 carriers, 13 cruisers and almost 500
planes
Gen. MacArthur – “People of the
Philippines: I have returned.”
Kamikaze
In the Philippines, 424 kamikaze pilots sunk
16 ships and damaging another 80
The Battle of Iwo Jima
• In February 1945 the US
launched an attack on Iwo Jima
“Sulfur Island” to secure a
heavy bomber launching base
• 20,700 Japanese troops were
entrenched in tunnels and
caves
• More than 6,000 Marines died
and only 200 Japanese survived
The Battle for Okinawa
In April 1945 US Marines invaded
Okinawa
1,900 Kamikaze attacks sunk 30 ships,
damaging 300, and killing almost 5,000
sailors
By June 21,1945, 7,600 Marines had
died, while 110,000 Japanese perished
some in ritual suicides
Estimates Allied losses for a mainland
Japan invasion was 1 million
Americans and 500,000 British
The Manhattan Project
In 1939 Albert Einstein wrote a letter to FDR
stating that a Uranium bomb could be
produced and that Germany might develop
it first
FDR established the Advisory Committee on
Uranium, which became The Manhattan
Project
In 1942 Italian scientist Enrico Fermi
successfully controlled a chain reaction in
Chicago
Plutonium was then needed to mold the
bomb
The Manhattan Project II
The top secret project involved building 37
installations in the US and Canada, it
employed 120,000 people and cost $2 billion
The military leader of the project was
General Leslie Groves and the research
director was J. Robert Oppenheimer
On July 16th 1945 after research tests at Los
Alamos the first atomic bomb was
detonated on the Trinity Test Site in
Alamogordo, NM
Oppenheimer “ Now I am become Death, the
destroyer of worlds.”
Decision to Drop the Bomb
A Massive Invasion of Japan was scheduled
President Truman while attending the
Potsdam Conference in Germany with
Churchill and Stalin learned of the test and
issue the Potsdam Declaration that Japan
unconditionally surrender or face “prompt
and utter destruction”
The Interim Committee was made up of
government leaders and scientists they
discussed options besides the bomb, but in
the end decided to advice President Truman
to drop the bomb
The Bombs in Japan
On August 6th, 1945 the B-29 Bomber Enola
Gay dropped “Little Boy” a uranium bomb
on Hiroshima , 180,000 people were killed or
wounded
On August 9th, “Fat Man” a plutonium bomb
was dropped on Nagasaki, 80,000 people
were killed or
injured
Unconditional Surrender V-J Day
On August 14th after the second
bomb and a Soviet attack in
Manchuria the Japanese
surrendered
On September 2nd on the USS
Missouri in Tokyo Bay General
Douglas MacArthur presided over
the signing of the formal surrender
President Truman declared
September 2nd, 1945 V-J Day
Occupation of Japan
During the seven year occupation Allied
Commander General Douglas MacArthur
introduced a free-market economy, changed
the government, guaranteed basic
freedoms, and wrote the Japanese
Constitution
During the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunals
over 1,100 Japanese were arrested, seven
put to death including Hediki Tojo
The Nuremberg Trials
Twenty –Four surviving Nazis leaders were
put on trial for crimes against humanity,
crimes against the peace, and war crimes
12 of the 24 were sentenced to death:
Joachim Von Ribbontrop, Rudolph Hess,
Herman Goering and Albert Speer were
convicted, others went to prison
The US Supreme Court Justice Robert
Jackson was the prosecuting attorney
Nearly 500,000 Nazis were tried later for
lesser crimes
War Totals
Between 40-50 million deaths, one half the
causalities were women and children
More than 405,000 Americans died, 670,000
were wounded
20-25 million Soviets were killed
6 million Jews were killed during the
Holocaust, 10 million people total
Over 200,000 were killed from the atomic
bombs
Hundreds of thousands were killed in aerial
bombings
Towards a United Nations
In July 1944 representatives of 44 Allied
Nations met in Bretton Woods, New
Hampshire and established the World Bank,
The International Monetary Fund ( IMF) and
established a foundation for The Global
Agreement on Tariff and Trade ( GATT)
In Late summer and Fall of 1944
representatives of the USSR, Great Britain,
and China met with delegates of the US at
the Dumbarton Oaks Conference outside
Washington to discuss the UN Charter
The United Nations
During April to June 1945, 300
representatives from 51 countries met in
San Francisco to draw up the UN Charter
Seven Bodies of the UN:
General Assembly
Security Council – US, RUS,FRA,GB,CHINA
Secretariat
Economic and Social Council
International Court of Justice
Trusteeship Council
Specialized Agencies (Ex. WHO)