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OPERATION BARBAROSSA, JUNE TO DECEMBER 1941
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BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
<5\
;
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•
-
• -.
23
J
Dudley Branch Library
65 Warren Street Roxbury, MA 02119-3206
Designer:
Malcolm Smythe
First published in the
Editor: Catherine Bradley
United States
Art Director: Charles Matheson
Franklin Watts
Researcher: Cecilia
Weston-Baker
in
387 Park Avenue South
New York NY Illustrated by
1987 by
10016
Ron Hayward
Associates and Stefan Chabluk
All rights reserved
©Aladdin Books Ltd 1986
ISBN 0-531-10321-8
Designed and produced by
Library of Congress Catalog
Aladdin Books Ltd
Card No. 86-62905
70 Old Compton Street
London
W1V5PA
Printed in Belgium
CONFLICT IN THE 20th CENTURY rin
THE
SECOND
WORLD CHARLES MESSENGER Edited by I)r John Piinlotf
FRANKLIN WATTS New York
•
Toronto London Sydney 1987 •
•
•
INTKOMJf !W
War
The Second World war." Although
began
it
EDITORIAL PANEL
often described as a "total
is
as a relatively restricted conflict
between the Anglo-French
and Germany over
allies
September 1939,
the political future of Poland in early it
Series Editor:
Dr John of War
Pimlott, Senior Lecturer in the Department
and
Studies
Sandhurst,
International
Affairs,
RMA
UK
gradually spread, drawing in country after country. In
Denmark and Norway were invaded by
the
Editorial Advisory Panel:
month later it was the turn of Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxemburg and France. Italy joined in
Brigadier General James
April 1940,
Germans;
a
on Germany's side forces
in
June and,
US Army
Chief of Military History 1970-82
.Avis forces
the
General Sir John Hackett, former Commander-in-
1941,
Chief of the British Army of the Rhine and Principal of
in
imasion of Yugoslavia and Greece. In July Russia became involved as
Collins Jr,
after attacking British
Egypt and East Africa, took part
in
L
- including units
King's College, London,
UK
from Rumania and Hungary - poured across her borders
Japan
Operation Barbarossa. Five months
in
(at
war with China since 1937) attacked Amer-
ican, British
produce
and Dutch possessions
a truly global war.
been fought Pacific
later,
and
in the
Far East
in climates as diverse as those
British
Army, and editor of Jane's
Artillery",
Infantry Weapons
to
By 1945, campaigns had and the
in areas as far apart as the Atlantic
Ian Hogg, retired Master Gunner of the
of North
John Keegan, former Senior Lecturer ment of War Studies and Sandhurst,
in the
Depart-
International Affairs,
now Defense correspondent, Daily
RMA
Telegraph
Africa and Southeast Asia. Totality also involved the political aims of the rival
camps and
made by them to achieve those - Allied and .Axis - fought to maintain
the sacrifices
aims. Both sides
Professor Laurence Martin, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne,
their existing political structures while destroying those
The Author:
of their enemies and,
Charles Messenger
resources,
human
complete
victory.
in the process,
diverted huge
as well as material, to the pursuit of
At
same
the
enormous armed forces on
they
time,
land, at sea
and
fielded
in the air,
developed a whole generation of new, more devastating
weapons and indulged distinction
between
Far more than
in the First
1939 and 1945 affected
By September
strategies
in
civilian
aspects of
when
to
become
a
retired
Tank Regiment. He
number of books and
in
writer after 21
full-time military
years' service in the Royal
written a
from the British Army
articles
has
on defense and
historical affairs.
which drew no
military
World War,
all
1945,
and
1980
UK
populations.
conflict
human
between
society.
the Japanese
finally
accepted surrender, an estimated 50 million people had died and, with the atomic dust barely settled over
Hiroshima
and
Nagasaki,
a
new,
infinitely
more
dangerous era of history had dawned. In order
to
understand how the modern world has developed, the events of the six years of "total war" must be examined.
That
is
the purpose of this volume.
Dr John Pimlott
Series Editor
German
troops shelter behind a
Panzer
III,
Russia, 1941.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
A European Conflict,
Chapter 2
Global War, 1941-43
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
1939-41
Appendices The Key Commanders
48
14
Warfare Developments
50 52
30
Land Weapons Naval Weapons Air Weapons Chronology
58
6
Victory Road, 1944-45
The Impact of War
44
60
Acknowledgments
62
H* -
i
m .
'
'/;/:(
% -
56
Index
? WL
~---.-
54
,
......:
f*s
Axis and Axis-controlled territory
Axis
allies
Vichy governmentcontrolled territory
Great Britain and possessions
SAUDI ARABIA
CHAPTER 1 A IMU)P1 \ CONFLICT
During the night of August in Polish station,
31, 1939,
attacked a
craft
men
dressed
German
radio
customs post and forestry station close
the Polish border. Within a few hours
were bombing Polish
airfields,
to
German airand German
tanks and infantry were thrusting across the border.
1939-1941
Army uniforms
The Second World War had begun.
Because Britain and France had publicly expressed Early on September
/,
1939, the Germans invaded
Poland. Britain and France declared
many, but could not t
rn part
I
war un Ger-
real support to their ally,
nion took advantage of this
ofPoland. In spring rrunning
then France
and
the
1
to seize the
940 Hitler turned
German
should attack her, the realized that he as
by Poland
would not be able
if
Germany
leader Adolf Hitler to
annex her
as easily
he had Austria and Czechoslovakia. In the face of
fierce competition
from Britain and France, Hitler had
Norway and Denmark and
managed
Low
Soviet leader, Joseph Stalin, on August 23, ensuring
Countries. Britain,
her with her empire, fought on alone winning the n the J
their determination to stand
summer of 1940. Fhen,
4LIIiih
Britain was no longer on h
to negotiate a
nonaggression pact with the
Soviet cooperation in the invasion of Poland. All that
was now required was
a pretext to invade.
The
inci-
dents on the Polish border were staged by Heinrich
Himmler's Schutz
camp
Stajfeln
(SS), using concentration
prisoners to play the part of the Polish soldiers.
A KLROPEAN CONFLICT,
The
British
and French response
patrols into the Saarland, but that
no
In spite of great gallantry, the Polish forces proved
match
for
.
the
Germans.
Using tanks
bombers, the Germans were fighting
form of warfare,
and
dive-
new mobile
a
Blitzkrieg or "lightning war."
This was
designed to paralyze the enemy through the sheer
that Britain
and France could
on them by attacking Germany
The French,
at least,
relieve the pressure
in the
hoped
that
across to France, placing
of their
it
under the
At sea there was fleets; Hitler
to
for the
U-boat (submarine) campaign
Instead, he launched a
war could
be
first
Benito
SSAthenia, sunk by a U-boat
in the belief that
still
victim was the liner
declared war.
fatalism during 1939, Parliament forced
Prime Minis-
an ultimatum to
his forces
from Poland.
Since there was no reply, Britain declared war
on September
3
and France quickly followed
the time being, Italy did not
United States,
still
become
at
1
The
affairs for the past
twenty years, declared her neutrality on September Polish hopes of positive action by the
were quickly dashed. The French
Polish light tanks stand
=»»•
For
suit.
involved.
little
Western
tentatively sent
chance against the
5.
Allies
some
German
The
convoy system together
in
British
which
protected
a
after Britain
answer was
group of merchant ships
by warships.
This
In the
air,
system
the prewar belief that a major
Europe would be marked by immediate bomber
sail
had
war
in
attacks
on population centers did not materialize. The bomber fleets
of both sides were under
attack civilian targets. military targets to
German
leaflet raids
strict instructions
French
might cause
not to
fears that attacks
civilian casualties
on
and lead
reprisals, restricted Allied air operations to
and attacks on German seaports.
Blitzkrieg.
-* --*•-«»
- ,~
had
to institute the
^ • ti
she was
proved very effective during the First World War.
lam
adopting the policy of isolation
which had kept her out of European
Royal Navy.
against British trade, and the
been viewed with increasing
must withdraw
command
be no mighty clash of battle
had too much respect
an armed merchant ship, only hours
Hitler that he
overall
ally.
the inevitability' of war had
to deliver
British, as
they had done in 1914, sent a small expeditionary' force
Mussolini, to convene a conference. In Britain, where
Chamberlain
They had no
Maginot Line
West.
averted and tried to get the Italian leader,
ter Neville
all.
by advancing into Germany. Meanwhile, the
speed of the operations. All the Poles could hope for
was
was
intention of sacrificing the security of the
1939-41
.
The
fall
Warsaw, but the treated
it
However,
of Poland
September
By
16, city
Germans had surrounded refused to surrender. They now
the
as a military target, subjecting
it
to savage air
and land bombardment. Next day, the Soviets attacked Poland from b\
(
)ctober 6
The ly
the East.
USSR
all
Ten
Warsaw
fell
and
Bug
River, with Soviet Russia
occupying the independent Baltic states of Estonia,
to the
Some
Poles
West, and a government
General Wladyslaw Sikorski that Britain
managed
in exile
in Paris.
was
to set
escape
up by
Hider declared
and France should accept the new situation
Eastern Europe and make peace. Both scornfully
digest
to
the
much
they saw as a
harder task than Poland had been.
There was therefore the
Phony War or
a lull,
to
be known as
British
and French
which came
Sitzkrieg.
The
took the opportunity to continue preparations for the
forestall the
German wheel
The snag was
that
before
it
entered France.
Belgium was neutral and refused
to
allow Allied soldiers into the country
Elsewhere, there was more
activity.
German U-boats
scored successes against the Royal Navy, sinking an aircraft carrier in the fleet
Merchant
and the battleship Royal Oak, the
anchorage
at
Scapa Flow
in the
latter
Shedands.
ship sinkings rose dramatically, and the only-
December when three British ships German pocket battleship GrafSpee in the
bright spot was in
rejected this.
cornered the
The Phony War On October 9, Hitler
wanted time
onslaught. Their plan involved moving into Belgium to
and Germany partitioned Poland rough-
Latvia and Lithuania.
in
later,
been crushed.
resistance had
along the line of the
also
days
generals
his
lessons of Poland and reorganize their forces for what
Plate River in
issued orders to his generals to
carry out an attack in the
West
as
soon as possible.
He
the
air,
to
the picture was equally bleak for
Bad weather hampered operations, and bomber attacks by day on German naval bases
Allies.
envisaged a repeat of 1914, with a massive wheel - a
British
seeping
met with heaw
attack through Belgium, but including Holland.
South America, forcing her crew
scutde her. In the
losses.
Adolf Hitler, surrounded by his generals, watches the attack on Warsaw on September 22, 1939.
~
A EUROPEAN CONFLICT,
1939-41
The Russo-Finnish War At the end of November 1939, Allied attention turned
The
Scandinavia.
to
Soviets
30-year leases on Finnish the Soviet
Union
had been demanding
which would give
territory,
ports in northern waters.
vital
When
the Finns refused to agree to this, the Soviets invaded.
To
the surprise of the West, the Finns stubbornly
resisted,
and revealed grave shortcomings
military
machine, resulting largely from the effects
of Stalin's
purges of his
in the Soviet
commanders
top
few
a
years earlier. However, the French and British failed
any material support
to give
embattled Finns
to the
because of the refusal of neutral Norway and Sweden allow the passage of troops and supplies across
to
their territory. Eventually Soviet
the Finns were forced in
might triumphed and
March 1940
to accept their
enemy's terms.
The Germans invade Norway By
time the Allies had become alarmed
this
Germans
prospect of the
seizing Norway's valuable
mine the Norwegian
iron ore deposits and planned to coast.
The Germans
April,
overrunning
got wind of this and struck in early
Denmark
landing troops from
at the
air
and sea
one day and then
in in
and British quickly sent troops
Norway. The French Norway, but they
to
were too ill-equipped and badly organized
to
do more
than merely delay the inevitable. Nevertheless not until early June that the finally
it
was
troops were
last Allied
evacuated.
The symbol y/Blitzkrieg: a Ju 87B Stuka dive bomber. Blitzkrieg 1940
On May
10, 1940, the long-awaited
West Germans had
in the
finally
German
offensive
opened. During the winter the
refined their plans. Instead of the classic
wheel, they decided to concentrate their main effort on the Allied center, just to the north of the
Maginot Line, by the French This was the region,
hilly
which the
frontier with
end of the
Luxemburg.
and heavily wooded Ardennes
Allies believed
was unsuitable
for
major armored operations.
Preceded by
air
back
in
Meuse
River. This forced the Allies to pull
Belgium,
aggravated
when
the
and
situation
their
Germans
was further
in the center
now
raced
across northern France to the Channel, aiming to split the Allied armies and cut off the British.
After just over two weeks' fighting, the British
it
became
commander, Lord John Gort,
clear to
that his
army
faced annihilation. Evacuation was the only answer.
attacks
parachute operations, the
Stuka dive bombers, broke out of the Ardennes and across the
on Allied
airfields
German Panzer
and
(armored)
Accordingly, on
May
27,
a
launched by the Royal Navy
massive operation was to bring the troops
back
columns dashed through Luxemburg, eastern Belgium
across the Channel. Next day, the Belgians surren-
and Holland. The French and British troops
dered and the
North moved Dyle River
in
as
in the
planned to take up positions on the
Belgium, but
this did
Germans from overrunning Holland Worse, the Allied center began
not prevent the
in a to
way
French troops, were
largely
confined to a small area around the port of Dunkirk.
During the next week,
in
what has been
called the
Miracle of Dunkirk, over 300,000 British, French and
few days. give
British, with
as
German armored columns, supported by Junkers Ju 87
Belgian troops were taken off the beaches, although they had to leave almost
all
their
equipment.
The French Lett
to
defeat
on
fight
own,
their
increasingly disorganized. The 10,
when
blow came on June
war and invaded the French
Itah declared
On June
Riviera.
became
French
the
final
French asked
17. the
which was signed on June 22
an armistice,
for
same railway
in the very
had been used
to sign the Compiegne armistice of November 1918. It was not German superiority in numbers of men and weapons which
coach
that
at
caused the French defeat. The French had neglected their defenses after the First
World War and
also did
not ha\e the will to fight another costly war.
now master of northern Europe. Nazi
Hitler was rulers
were
installed in
all
the occupied countries, with
only the southern half of France being allowed a very
form
limited
French hero of the
First
aged
the
World War, Marshal Philippe
was appointed prime minister. This part of the
Petain,
became known
country in
Here,
of self-government.
as
Vichy France, after the town
which Petain's government took up residence.
Some Frenchmen, determined
to carry
on the
fight,
joined the Free French banner of General Charles de
Gaulle
London, while others
in
movements
inside France.
set
St Paul's Cathedral survives the London
to fear for
extended the campaign for
Royal Navy bombarded them
people, however, were con-
ing
tent to
and
try
live as
best they could under the Nazis.
for all the
It
occupied countries.
much
Mers-el-Kebir, caus-
at
among the French
loss of life
Vichy France firmly against Britain, fied
by the
failure
now
Britain
stood
become prime
bracing
alone,
herself for
of Winston Churchill,
who had
minister on the day that France was
to
will.
To
obtain the
continue the struggle, Churchill
turned to the United States for help.
Although
the
majority
prepared to take part
in
Americans
of
bases
in
scheme
in
the
exchange
for the lease
Caribbean.
In
were
as a for
September 1940, the United States gave destroyers
not
European In
Britain.
Britain
fifty
of British naval
March 1941, under
a
Lend-Lease, the United States began
called
supplying war materials to Britain and other
allies.
Another immediate concern was the French
fleet,
which had escaped the surrender and sailed
to
North
If the fleet
should
Africa, fall
which had declared
into
German hands
it
for Vichy
.
French
would be disastrous
for Britain's fortunes at sea, but the
The
a feeling intensi-
in
French West
French admirals
Battle of Britain
Hitler issued his orders for Operation
Sea Lion, the
invasion of Britain, on July 16. For his troops to be able to get across the
have the
what they saw
was much sympathy
there
conflict,
set
the
certain to happen. Inspired by
invaded, the people set to with a
weapons needed
This
Africa in September.
seemed
the bulldog tenacity
sailors.
of a British and Free French
amphibious operation against Dakar Britain seeks help
invasion which
1941.
refused to surrender their ships to Britain. In July, the
Most
was the same
May
up resistance
Jews soon began
their safety, as the Nazis
their extermination.
Blitz,
command
Channel and
of the
air.
land,
it
was
essential to
The Germans had
to destroy
Royal Air Force. For the next two months a
desperate battle was waged in the skies above Britain as the
RAF's
fighters,
Supermarine
mainly Hawker Hurricanes and
Spitfires, fought to turn
back the waves of
German bombers and fighters. By mid-September, German air force or Luftwaffe had had enough and
RAF
threat of invasion receded. Speaking of the
who
the the
pilots
fought in the Battle of Britain, Churchill said:
"Never has so much been owed by so many Hitler
now decided
to
bomb
to so few."
the British people into
submission and throughout the winter of 1940-41 his
bombers pounded
British cities
people called the Blitz.
Command
tried
to
by night
In retaliation
do the same
to
in
what the
RAF Bomber German
cities.
A EUROPEAN CONFLK
The Royal Navy had hoped
draw the
to
1
,1939-41
Italian fleet
into battle, but without success. Nevertheless, there
was
a very successful operation
on November
11, 1940, in
on shipping
Taranto
which carrier-based
sank one and crippled two of
aircraft
Italy's six battleships.
invades Greece
Italy
Mussolini was having problems elsewhere.
mans had occupied
Rumanian
the
he believed they restore
lay in the Italian
he
prestige,
Italian
The Ger-
oilfields at the
October 1940. Mussolini was angered by
To
in
this,
end of
because
sphere of influence.
decided
to
attack
Greece. His troops crossed the border from Albania on
October 28, but
after initial progress the
on the invaders and drove them back Hitler
now
realized that his ally
and launched another 1941,
Greece.
The
number of
's
underground stations were used as air raid shelters.
to
and
Yugoslavia
then
Royal Navy was able to evacuate a
the British, Australian and
troops sent to assist the Greeks, and
London
into Albania.
needed material help
Blitzkrieg offensive in early April
overrunning
quickly
Greeks turned
the island of Crete. This was
New
Zealand
many were taken
Hitler's next target,
designed to give the Axis powers mastery of the eastern
Meanwhile
at sea the situation
remained grave, espe-
U-boats had the advantage of operating
cially since the
from the French Atlantic
ports.
Such was
against merchant shipping that the
their success
German U-boat
crews called the period of July-October 1940 their
first
Mediterranean, and the Germans mounted an audacious airborne operation on
latter part
Mediterranean.
North Africa
meantime,
of 1940, British attention turned Italy's
entry into the
war created
Egypt and East Africa from the large
garrisons
in
Libya and Ethiopia.
September, the
Italians
Indeed,
advanced some 95
miles) into Egypt before halting
and setting up
Italian
mid-
in
km
(60
fortified
camps, while troops from Ethiopia quickly overran British Somaliland
and probed cautiously into Kenya
and the Sudan. General Archibald Wavell, commanding the British and
Middle
East,
Commonwealth
December
called the Eighth
his
Western Desert Force
Army) launched
By
early
a
them
was indeed
the
end of the
driven the British back into
(later
major raid against reeling back into
February 1941, Wavell's forces had
captured the whole of Cyrenaica, but
a
gloomy time
East
and
Africa
German
under General Erwin Rommel were now sent
troops
in.
light.
for the British, but there
By May 1941,
Ethiopia
had
been
the Italians in
defeated.
A
pro-Fascist revolt in Iraq was put down, and in June
1941, in response to a threat that Vichy French Syria
was about
Germans use of facilities
to allow the
there,
Wavell invaded, quickly forcing the surrender of the
French forces his attention until
in Syria.
Wavell could now concentrate
on Egypt and driving Rommel back. Not
November 1941
did this happen, under Wavell's
successor Claude Auchinleck.
Tobruk was
relieved
and Cyrenaica recaptured. Also crucial to British strategy was the island of Malta. As
it
was, Axis air superiority denied the eastern
Mediterranean
troops.
the Italians in Egypt and sent
Libya.
troops in the
was undeterred, however, by the over-
whelming numbers of enemy In early
Rommel had
were glimmers of
a threat not just to naval domination of the area, but also to
By
month the island was in their hands, with the Royal Navy having to carry out yet another evacuation. In the
It
Italian intervention in
to the
20.
Egypt, with only the fortress of Tobruk holding out.
"happy time."
During the
May
had
to British
merchant convoys and they
to use the longer route around South Africa to
bring supplies to the Middle East. If Malta
Royal Navy would not be able to operate Mediterranean. Hitler and Mussolini realized
launched a prolonged
fell,
the
in
the
this
and
air offensive against the island in
January 1941. For the next 18 months Malta held out.
Operation Barbarossa
The
greatest boost to British confidence came,
ever,
on June
Union.
22, 1941,
ot the Soviet
under
Union and
his rule, the
had
stood
all it
moment had reports
intelligence
preparations.
pact.
aim had always been the destruction
and Western Europe, apart from had
how-
Hitler invaded the Soviet
1939 nonaggression
of the
spite
In
Hitler's ultimate
when
Thej warned
trustful of Hitler,
he took
The Cierman
for.
With Northern
Britain,
arrived.
The
firmly British
knew of
and
Stalin, but,
little
now
these
although dis-
notice.
code-named Barbarossa,
invasion,
therefore took the Russians largely by surprise. Worse, thej
were
in the
middle of
major reorganization and
a
the fact that their troops were concentrated on the frontier, rather than
deployed
hands of the German
in depth,
played into
the^j
Blitzkrieg tactics.
As part of a trade agreement, the Russians had been exporting grain to Germany, and after the last grain train
Brest-Litovsk that the fifteen
minutes
later
it
was only shortly
had crossed the Bug River
at
German guns opened fire. Some German troops moved into
Russian-occupied Poland. Hitler deployed three million
men
for
Barbarossa,
including
Finns seeking
revenge for their defeat of fifteen months before. Gentian troops
A
German PzKpfw
III,
supported by infantry, Rostov, 1941.
in Russia,
summer 1941.
Q£ERV#ON BARBAROSSA, TO DECEMBER 1941 O
A EUROPEAN CONFLICT,
1939-41
Lake Ladoga
was renewed once more,
In October the offensive
but then came the autumn rains, which quickly turned the ground into
mud. Snow followed, and
the
German
armies found themselves in the grip of the Russian winter, but without winter clothing.
the
German advance had ground
reached
just
km
29
early
having
was under
siege
(18 miles) short of
Although the Russians had managed
German
December
to a halt,
furthest extent. Leningrad
its
and the Germans were Moscow.
MOSCOW
By
to
halt the
onslaught, at least temporarily, they were
still
hard pressed and looked to Britain for support. At the
end of September, Britain started sending convoys of
weapons around northern Norway
to the Soviet port of
Murmansk. Otherwise
little
there was
direct support
bom-
that Britain could give, although the continuing
Germany was beginning
ber offensive on indirectly
by preventing more
the Eastern Front, but
One
it
aircraft
tuted themselves, was to
German
move much of it
partisans operating behind the
peasants
welcomed
They were organized
into three
army groups, North,
Center and South. Army Group North was the
Baltic
states
Leningrad, while ultimate objective at
and
to
overrun
up with the Finns
the
in
the
Soviet
insti-
their industry
was out of range of
Also there were a growing
aircraft.
help
was not enough.
important strategy, which the Russians
back behind the Urals, where
many
to
being deployed to
German
number of
lines.
Union had
Germans, believing
While initially
that they
would
restore free enterprise, they were quickly disillusioned
by the
activities
of the
SS
following up the advancing
at
armies. Their systematic brutalities against the civilian
Army Group Center had as its Moscow. Army Group South aimed
population were in line with Hitler's views that the
link
Russians were a subhuman race.
Kiev and the rich farmlands of the Ukraine. few weeks, the Germans had scored some
The
the Soviet positions and surrounded them, creating
Atlantic Charter As 1941 wore on, there were encouraging signs of more active American support for the British cause. At the end of December 1940, US President Franklin D
enormous pockets of troops who were then forced
Roosevelt had publicly declared that the United States
Within
a
spectacular successes. Advancing often as
km
much
80
as
(50 miles) a day, the Panzer columns cut through
to
surrender to the slower moving bulk of the army, the infantry
on
prisoners.
their feet.
The
There were enormous hauls of
Bialystok pocket produced 290,000,
Smolensk 350,000 and Kiev
As spectacular
a massive
as these successes
450,000 men.
were, not every-
thing was going according to plan. Hider began to interfere
increasingly in the
operations. Objectives were
from one army group
momentum was
day-to-day conduct of
changed and troops shifted
to another.
By September
the
beginning to slow down, especially in
front of Leningrad,
where Army Group North found
the lakes and forests hard going. In the center, the
Germans were
halted by Russian counterattacks.
must make herself "the great arsenal of democracy." Then,
in
August 1941 came the
historic
meeting
between Churchill, and Roosevelt on board a warship off
Newfoundland. Here they signed the Atiantic
Charter, which stated that once the Nazi tyranny of
Europe had been overthrown
all states,
both great and
small, would be allowed to choose their
government and
that their integrity
The Charter was also
later signed
would be respected.
by the Soviet Union, and
by the various governments in
United States was
still
exile.
Yet the
not at war, even though signing
the charter prepared the way. Roosevelt that
own form of
still
believed
he could not carry the American people with him.
CONFLICT
IN
11 IK
20 II
I
CENTURY
Throughout the late 1930s Japan had continued to wage war in China against the forces of Chiang
CHAPTER 2
Kai-shek, the Chinese leader. In order to achieve
GLOBAL MAR
her ambition of an empire, however, she looked the wealth-producing col-
increasingly toward
1941-1943
onies of the Western Powers: French Indochina
The surprise Japanese attack on the naval base
at
Pearl Harborfinally brought the United States into the war, but this did not
mean an immediate
(now Vietnam, Laos and Kampuchea) with its vast rice fields; Burma and Malaya, under British rule, with their tin, oil and rubber; and the Dutch East Indies with their oilfields. It was her plan to
latter
create a Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere,
remained under intense German pressure. The British
taking in a crescent running from the Japanese
improvement
in British or Soviet fortunes.
were almost driven back
to the gates
Germans, and the Japanese swept
The
all before
them
round through the Pacific islands and Dutch East Indies to the Burma-India border.
islands
of Cairo by the in the
Pacific and Southeast Asia. Gradually, however, the situation began to change.
halted; the
The Japanese advance was
Germans were stopped and then driven out
ofLily a and
into Tunisia.
German army
in
Stalingrad and the final
offensive in Russia in July
and
then Italy were invaded
Allies.
The Russians trapped a
in
and the Italians joined the
the Pacific.
Germany and
Italy in
September
940, and a neutrality agreement with the Soviet Union 1941.
April
On
1941, Japanese troops
July 24,
peacefully occupied a defenseless French Indochina.
Sicily
The Americans began their "island-hopping"
Tripartite Pact with 1
German
1943 petered out.
In order to enlist allies in Europe, Japan signed a
in
At the same time, she had been mounting
campaign should
to
have
a
free
hand
Roosevelt would not allow Philippines,
a
diplomatic
persuade the United States that she in this.
Southeast It
Asia,
was clear
but
that the
under the rule of the United States since
1898, came under
the Japanese scheme.
GLOBAL WAR,
in the
form
Japan attacks Pearl Harbor At 7 A.M. on Sunday, December
of arms and equipment being supplied to him.
Two
Pearl
There was also American sympathy Kai-shek, which was now being expressed
for
Chiang
7,
1941,
1941-43
US radars at
number of North. They were
Harbor picked up echoes of from the
a large
days after the Japanese takeover of French Indochina,
aircraft
the United States and Britain froze Japanese assets,
thought to be American planes so the alarm was not
thereby ending the export of all raw materials to Japan.
sounded.
Relations between Japan
worsened,
and
this
and the Western Powers aggravated
when
American codebreakers became aware, war
if
as
November
that the Japanese could not suc-
ceed as long as they faced the at its
Pearl
Harbor
in
US
Pacific Fleet, based
Hawaii, Tojo planned to destroy
all,
the
first
Japanese
350 Japanese
aircraft
same number of
US
aircraft,
mostly on the ground,
some
3,700
it
in
sailors,
Marines and
civilians.
This was not, however, the only Japanese operation that day. Simultaneously,
Midway, an
island northwest
of Pearl Harbor, was bombarded by warships. Island, 1,600
km
Wake
(1,000 miles) southwest of Midway,
was attacked from the
air,
as
was Guam, 2,400
km
The
(1,500 miles) west of Wake. Japanese troops crossed
codebreakers were able to deduce, from Japanese
the border with China to invade the British colony
port. Accordingly, his aircraft carriers set sail.
US
were overhead. In
later,
attacked over the course of two hours, destroying the
go
to
the United States did not agree to their
demands. Realizing
aircraft
Some 30 minutes
sinking or damaging 18 warships and killing
Tojo, came to power in October 1941.
1941 wore on, that the Japanese were preparing to
very
a
government, led by General Hide-
militaristic Japanese ki
was
approaching
signals to their ships, that an invasion of Southeast Asia
was about carriers
to
take
place.
However,
the Japanese
maintained radio silence, so there was no
of
Hong Kong.
Singapore and Malayan
subjected to air attack, as was the
US
air
airfields
base
at
were Clark
Field in the Philippines. Japanese troops also landed in
southern Thailand (Siam) and the north of Malaya.
indication of their destination.
US destroyers
I
lie in
ruins following Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor.
JW9C
'+r
'0* 'jfr
-rl
,i*i
*v 'm
C
.(
MMFLICT IN II II 20TI CENTURY I
The United
States enters the
were greeted with
In the United States these attacks
and dismay
outrage
achieved such set in, since
was the belief that the Japanese were incapable of
war
On
have
could
the Japanese
that
total surprise.
West Coast panic
the
people believed that they would be the next
Japanese
target.
ordering
the
US
The
government responded by imprisonment
wholesale
of Japanese
Americans.
The British had also rounded up people of
German and
Italian origin in 1939.
On
formally declared war on Japan, but the Soviet
Union
did not and indeed maintained her neutrality" almost to the end of the war. Italy
On December
declared war on the United
Germany and
11,
mistake on Hitler's part, since, although inevitable that the United States
drawn
European war,
into the
give active support to Britain
it
a
was probably
would be eventually
meant
it
This was
States.
that she
from the
had
to
outset, rather
As
was, faced with a two-ocean war, the United
it
where her
priorities lay.
this,
Roosevelt and Churchill, with their military
met
for
conference
a
in
To do staffs,
Washington (code named
Arcadia) just two weeks after the attack on Pearl
Harbor. In spite of opposition from the decided
that
Germany,
must
priority
the policy of
lie
with
"Germany
US the
first."
Navy, they defeat
States
would send troops and equipment
view to preparing an invasion of Europe. At the
same
inferior
10 Japanese aircraft sank the Royal
Navy's two capital ships which had been sent to the
and Repulse.
area, the Prince of Wales
though
for the
land, even
most part equipped with only bicycles
Japanese
transport,
On
troops
maneuvered
easily
and Commonwealth troops out of
tions for the simple reason that they
which the defenders did
not.
On
as
the
their posi-
used the jungle,
February 15, 1942
Singapore surrendered, to the shock of the British people,
who had
Within
a
believed
it
would never
fall.
few days the Dutch East Indies were also in
Japanese hands. British out of
The Japanese were
Burma. Rangoon had
also driving the
fallen
on March
7;
by the end of April, with the capture of Lashio and
Mandalay, Burma was entirely
in
Japanese hands and
his forces in
On
China were cut
February
Australian
Darwin;
in
people
19,
the
off.
war was brought
when Japanese
early April a
the
bombed
Japanese naval task force
bombed Ceylon (now
Sri
merchant ships
Bay of Bengal.
in the
aircraft
to
Lanka) and sank
a
number of
A British soldier surrenders, Malaya,
1941.
to Britain
they re-endorsed the Atlantic Charter,
time,
which was
had
this was.
of
The United
with
a
On December
all
overland communications with Chiang Kai-shek and
than devoting her attention solely to Japan.
States had to decide
and
warfare
weapons. Malaya proved how wrong
British
and Britain
the political front, the United States
modern
understanding
become
to
the
foundation stone of the
United Nations.
The
Fall of
Singapore
In the
meantime, the situation went from bad
in the
Far East and Southeast Asia.
Wake
quickly
to the Japanese.
fell
1941, the British garrison on surrender, and on
Hong Kong was
December 10
on Luzon
in the Philippines. In
sweeping
all
before
to
worse
Guam and then On Christmas Day forced to
the Japanese landed
Malaya, too, they were
themMt was
here that prewar
misconceptions, on the British side, led to defeat. Singapore,
at
the
southern end of the Malayan
peninsula, had always been regarded as Britain's major naval base in the Far East, and that,
should war break out,
it
it
was
originally believed
could be defended by the
Royal Navy. In 1939, however, there were not the ships to spare, so the
RAF
believing that air
took over the major responsibility,
power would be enough
an) invasion of Singapore and Malaya.
to turn
Coupled
back
to this 1
life.
u TO
*
rfe
vJ!
/
/
i
***sn$^. ^
•
-
^1^
A Japanese artillery unit on the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines, The Japanese This the
American and
to the
The war
invasion of the Philippines
the Philippines, where by early January 1942
left
Filipino troops
had been forced back
Bataan Peninsula on the west side of Manila Bay.
In February-, Roosevelt ordered the
US commander
the Philippines, General Douglas MacArthur, to tralia to take
He was who was
command
in
Aus-
of the remaining Allied troops.
succeeded by General Jonathan Wainwright,
forced on April 9 to surrender Bataan because
of starvation.
The
1942.
treatment of the survivors, especially
If the it
war
at sea for the Allies
was going badly
in the
Far East,
was no better elsewhere. German U-boats had
discovered rich pickings off the eastern seaboard of the
United States. Unlike the slow to
introduce
Americans were
British, the
convoys
especially
for
maritime
shipping between the Gulf of Mexico and Canada, and their
antisubmarine naval forces were sparse.
U-boats took
full
The
advantage of this in their second "happy
time" and during the
first six
months of 1942 no
less
during the Bataan Death March, on their way to prison
than 500 ships were sunk in the area. For a while even
camp was inhuman. Indeed, Allied prisoners of war (POWs) quickly discovered that their Japanese captors
the advantages of the convoy system
The convoys from
German
viewed surrender in battle as dishonorable, so the
suffered at the hands of
POWs
Norway. One convoy, known
lost all status
as soldiers.
Some managed
escape to the island of Corregidor, which
fell
on
May 6.
At Pearl Harbor, the Japanese had missed the
which had been out
aircraft carriers
May, two of these
carriers
were able
attempt to land on the island of
Moresby. Japanese
US
carrier,
damaged, and as
it
was
carrier
aircraft
but the
later sank.
called,
was
US
New
Japanese
Guinea
at
Port
damaged one
carrier Lexington
The
US
at sea. In early
to foil a
badly
to
was
also
Battle of the Coral Sea,
significant in that for the first time
the Japanese had been checked.
Archangel
at the
seemed minor.
Britain to the Soviet
as
Union
aircraft
PQJ7, which
end of June 1942,
lost
no
also
based
in
sailed for less
than
twenty-four of its thirty-five merchant ships.
A
further setback had occurred in February, when,
in order to
Hitler's
escape bombing by the
RAF,
three of
most important warships, Schamhorst, Gneise-
nau and Prinz Eugen, managed to port of Brest and
out of the French
broad daylight up the English Germany. This was called the
sail in
Channel and home
to
Channel Dash and was seen naval power.
slip
as a great insult to British
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
The Eastern Front
On
Eastern
the
cross over onto the
Front
the
were
Russians
under
Kuban
Peninsula and support the
main attack on the Caucasus, coming from the north.
renewed pressure with the coming of spring. Hitler
The Crimea was
decreed that the Caucasus, with
Sevastopol, which held out until the beginning of July.
was
to
its
extensive oilfields,
be the major objective, while
in the
center and
Bv
this time, the
quickly overrun, except for the port of
main
attack
German Panzer columns
had been launched. The advanced east
to the
North the Germans were to maintain a policy of active defense. However Leningrad, whose inhabitants had stubbornly resisted the Germans during the winter of
unable to capture the large numbers of prisoners of
1941-42, was
1941 because the Russians withdrew.
to
be taken.
The Russians managed Marshal Semyon Timoshenko 12,
to strike first
offensive to recapture Kharkov.
when, on
May an
launched
Initially
went well
it
Don
first
River and then wheeled south, but they were
The
rapid
of advance
rate
also
caused
supply
problems, and the tanks were often forced to halt
because of lack of fuel.
The
farther south the
Germans
and the Germans were driven back, but then he was
went, the more serious the supply problem became.
refused
Their forces were also being dispersed because Hider
counterattacked
in
both
Timoshenko permission his forces
to
flanks.
Stalin
withdraw and the bulk of
were surrounded; over 250,000 prisoners
German hands. The first phase of the German
fell
the
May
Crimea,
with attacks aimed part
of which
offensive
had begun
at seizing the rest
troops follow a
had been
to
city
of Stalingrad.
capture
had been overrun
Panzer PzKpfrr IV tank during
the left flank of the offensive.
surrender the
The
Stalingrad,
an
The
prepared
in
and more troops from the main
to
got to Stalingrad, the
the advance into the Caucasus,
city,
more
Russians were not
and Hider drew off more
of
September 1941. From the Crimea the Germans could
German
original
plan
important communications center, in order to secure
into
in early
was becoming obsessed by the
attack.
The
closer they
intense the resistance grew.
summer 1942.
GLOBAL WAR, mid -September, the main
Eventually, by
had petered out Mountains.
The
1941-43
the
in
Caucasus
of the
foothills
Russians were
offensive
under tremendous
still
pressure. Admittedly, their factories beyond the Urals
had stepped up production, especially of tanks and but the need for supplies of equipment from
aircraft,
the
Western
While the
Allies remained.
British Arctic
convoys continued, the Americans opened up another supply route through Persia (now Iran).
Allied strategy
While these supplies helped the Russians, they did not the
relieve
German
wanted was
really
Europe
pressure
for the
What
directly.
Western
Stalin
Allies to invade
soon as possible, and as 1942 wore on he
as
increased
his
calls
"Second Front"
the
for
be
to
opened. This provoked arguments between the American and British planners.
While both sides agreed
that
Europe could not be achieved without an
victory in
invasion of the Continent, the British wanted to clear
Axis
the Soviet troops, led by a Commissar, surrender.
forces
Americans
from North Africa
regarded
but the
first,
theater
this
merely
as
a
"sideshow" and agitated for the invasion of France by the
end of 1942.
The
British thought this
was overly
optimistic, arguing
that if the troops failed to get ashore
themselves
would be
it
and establish and might,
a grave setback
prolong the war for years. Furthermore, a very large
number of landing craft would be needed and became clear that these were going to take longer produce than was 1
originally forecast.
it
to
At the end of July
942, however, President Roosevelt backed up the British,
when
announced
he
support
his
an
for
American invasion of French North
Anglo-
Africa.
This
operation would take the Axis forces in Libya in the rear,
and
it
was agreed
that
it
should be mounted by the
end of October 1942. Appointed
was General Dwight
On
August
D
in overall
command
Eisenhower.
19, 1942, a
Canadian division mounted a
major cross-Channel raid on the French port of Dieppe.
It
was
a disaster, with
get off the beach and
Much
few troops managing
many being
to
killed or captured.
controversy has surrounded this operation ever
since, but
what
it
did demonstrate was that there was a
long way to go before an invasion attempt could be
mounted with any confidence and
that
it
should not be
directed against a port. Nevertheless, Stalin was very
when Churchill Moscow in August 1942 that
displeased
front that year.
told
there
him
in
person in
would be no second
(.<)\I
The
LICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
Alamein
Battle of El
In Libya, at the
end ofJanuary 1942, Rommel attacked
the British Eighth
Arm\ once more and drove
western Cyrenaica. There was
now
it
out of
a pause, while
both
sides prepared for a fresh offensive. \s
it
happened,
the end of
it
was
Rommel who
May, driving the
laid-out Cia/ala Line. After
British
some
struck
from
first at
their poorly
fierce tank battles,
the British were forced to evacuate Libya again
Tobruk, whose defenses had been allowed rate, fell quickly.
and
to deterio-
By the end of June, the Eighth Army
was back on the El Alamein Line, the last defendable position before Cairo - and Rommel was stopped. At the end of August offensive but
mander of
Rommel launched
another
was quickly repulsed by the new com-
the Eighth
Army, General Bernard Mont-
gomery. During the next two months Montgomery built
up
a massive superiority in
then struck the
.Axis
defenses
men and weapons and at
El Alamein on the
night of October 23. After a week's fierce fighting,
Rommel had had enough and withdrew from this
time forever, and a few days later
came
Egypt,
the Allied
invasion of French North Africa, Operation Torch.
Erwifi
Rommel:
"
the "Desert Fox.
NORTH AFRICA CAMPAIGNS, JANUARY 1942-MAY 1943 *
K
Axis advances, January 1942
is
Axis advances up to
y February
Miles
^^^ June 1942 I
gsaa^
Allied counteroffensive,
October Allied
23,
1942 - January 1943
advances
into Tunisia
N.
Torch landings and advances, December 1942
K
Axis counterattacks,
I
I
ALAMEI
GLOBAL WAR, The Torch landings Torch marked the Europe and North
The next step for the Allies was to advance into Tunisia,
US
Army's debut
The
Africa.
would be
would
entirely
in Algeria.
American
war
in the
in
plan was for three
Morocco
landings to be made, around Casablanca in
and Oran and Algiers
The
affairs,
also involve British forces.
first
two landings
while that at Algiers
The
troops taking
part in the Casablanca landings were to
come
from the United
would come
States, while the others
from the Clyde River
react.
The United
to establish that the
States
surrender. British
To
troops
French forces a
token
ensure that
this
landings took place in the early In spite of
how
the
had not broken
in
was able
North Africa
resistance
and
then
would happen, the
US
The hours of November 8.
taking part wore
helmets.
some resistance and casualties to both sides, went relatively smoothly, and it was two
the landings
days before the
French sought an armistice. The
Germans retaliated by occupying Vichy France on November 11. Allies advance on
German
and
a small
Anglo-American task force
Algiers in order to seize
defenses during the decisive battle
The Germans
(500 miles) away.
Italy,
set out
from
Tunis and Bizerte some 800
the threat and started to
fly in
km
quickly responded to
troops from Sicily and
eventually outnumbering their opponents by eight
to one.
The
result
was
a series of
engagements
as the
opposing forces ran into one another, but the Axis forces
had two
distinct advantages.
The road and
off diplomatic relations with Vichy France and
would put up only
direct
in Scotland.
Crucial to the success of the landings was
French would
1941-43
rail
communications running into
Tunisia from Algiers were sparse, which meant that
was very
difficult
to
keep Allied troops
in
it
Tunisia
supplied. Also, Allied aircraft were operating off grass fields,
which quickly turned
rains, while the Axis
soon able
to
mud
in the
autumn
had concrete runways and were
to gain air superiority.
Nevertheless, Allied troops did get to within 24
km
By
the
(15 miles) of Tunis before being driven back.
end of the stalemate.
year,
however, there was an apparent
Meanwhile Montgomery pursued Rommel
through Cyrenaica and Tripolitania, but might, he was never able to trap
try
Rommel and
his forces completely.
of El Alamein, October-November 1942.
as
he
destroy
E3
(
(
)\ii.k:t IN
THE 20TH century
The
Battle of Midway
The
latter half of"
The Solomons and New Guinea Campaigns
1942 saw the
tide gradually begin to
turn in favor of the Allies in the Pacific.
end of May, the
IS
km
the
codebreakers established that the
next Japanese objective was the island of
1,760
Toward
Midway,
lying
(1,100 miles) northwest of Pearl Harbor.
Admiral Chester Ximit/ sent three carriers to intercept the Japanese
fleet,
which had four
engaged
in attacking
aircraft struck.
By
aircraft
were
US
shore targets on Midway, the
the end of the day,
June
4, all
four
Japanese carriers had been destroyed, with the Americans
only
Yofktoum.
It
losing
was
the Japanese
the
veteran
of the
a clearcut victory,
but
it
Coral
Sea,
did not deter
from pressing on with their plans
to
Islands.
The
Allies
decided that the Japanese must be
1942 the
7,
many amphibious when US Marines
of
first
landed on Guadalcanal, one of the southernmost of the
Solomon
Islands.
The Japanese Navy
quickly retaliated
by driving the supporting shipping away from Guadalcanal, thus leaving the
Marines with no
support
air
by August 17, built their own
airfield
on
the island. Nevertheless the Japanese, landing rein-
forcements from their base in Rabaul, efforts to repulse the
began
to drive
made repeated
Americans. These attacks con-
tinued until the end of the year,
when
them back. By now,
the Americans
the Americans had
learned that the Japanese would always die rather than
surrender and the fighting was brutal.
complete the capture of New Guinea and the Solomon
driven out of both areas.
August
landings in the Pacific took place,
until they had,
carriers.
While Admiral Chuichi Nagumo's
On
In the
Papua Peninsula of New Guinea, the Japanese
managed
to establish
themselves
at
Buna, opposite Port
Moresby. They advanced over the
Owen
Stanley
Range toward Port Moresby. By September, the Australians and Americans had stopped their advance
and slowly began to push the Japanese back which they besieged from November.
to
Buna,
Burma Burma, the picture was
With land communications with Chiang Kai-shek now cut, the United In
bleak.
States could only maintain a supply of
equipment Himalayas.
to
him by
Known
air,
weapons and
from Assam over the eastern
by the
pilots as the
Hump,
it
was
the toughest air route in the world, but the supplies
were flown
in.
General "Vinegar Joe"
Chiang Kai-shek.
advise
Wavell,
now
was appointed
Stilwell
He and
to
General Archibald
the British commander-in-chief in India,
agreed that northern and central
Burma must be
recaptured as soon as possible so that land communications with
Trying
to
China could be restored.
save the
Yorktown
at
Midway, June
4,
—m
1942.
"
GLOBAL WAR, It
would take many months
1941-43
reequip and train the
to
Chinese, British and Indian forces to do
This was
this.
aggravated by widespread internal unrest in India.
Mahatma Gandhi had
started a "quit India"
against British rule. This to
be diverted
always,
that
many
campaign
troops had
to internal security duties.
meantime Churchill, impatient
In the
western
meant
wanted Wavell
Burma and
to
for action as
advance into the Arakan
in
recapture Rangoon. Wavell saw
he was short of
this as too ambitious, especially since
landing craft as well as trained and equipped troops.
Most of the landing
were
craft in the theater
up
tied
in
the operations on Madagascar, which the British had
invaded in using
it
May
1942
as a base,
order to prevent the Japanese
in
and Vichy French resistance there
did not end until early
November
1942.
Wavell, therefore, decided to invade the Arakan with a single division in order to recapture
Akyab (now
Sittwe),
which the Japanese were using
an
base to
as
aircraft
dominate the Bay of Bengal. Launched this
operation
.
Sov.et^held territory up to November 18
became bogged down by the end of the year,
with an inadequate supply system and
much
sickness
from malaria severely denting the morale of the troops.
^ ^
- /-'
^..
November,
in
Soviet offensives up to (
<> November
-
December
^
)
German relief attacks November 23 . December 23 Trapped Axis armies
Soviet gains
The Battle of Stalingrad The Germans on the Eastern
Front
in
autumn 1942
were now facing the prospect of another Russian winter. Although they
were better prepared
for
it
than
they had been the previous year, they found that the climate
was often more
bitter
than the fighting.
They
Allied planning for 1943
On January their
meeting of the war,
third
Morocco. The main object was
had not yet captured Leningrad and the Soviets
after
continued to deny them Stalingrad.
the overall strategy for
The German
Sixth
Army under General
Paulus, trying to capture Stalingrad, had
Friedrich its
flanks
identified
Rumanian formations. The Soviets them as weak and on November 19, 1942,
launched
a
protected
by
sudden counterattack on both
flanks.
Within a few days Paulus was cut off with 220,000 troops. Efforts to supply the
followed by an attempt in
surrounded troops by
mid-December
air,
to relieve
Paulus, both failed, and Hitler refused to allow
him
to
break out of the trap in which he found himself.
As the German the
Russians
Germans
relief operation
launched
back
toward
threatened the rear of the
Don and
in the
fresh
the
ground
attacks,
Donetz
German
Caucasus, and
The Russian
while tightened.
grip
"Germany
first"
beginning of to
around Stalingrad mean-
to decide
what
do
also to confirm
victor}-.
A number
For
start,
a
to
in
the
of major policy
of
was reaffirmed.
demanded and obtained agreement for the unconditional surrender of both Germany and Japan. At the end of the First World War the German armies in the
field
meant Hider and soldiers
were not
actually defeated.
who
This
his followers could claim that the
had been "stabbed
politicians,
in
the
back"
by the
agreed to the armistice. In order that
myth could not be repeated, Roosevelt argued
military
the
made.
Casablanca
Roosevelt also
driving
January 1943 Hitler was forced to order them withdraw.
were
the .Allied aim
armies on the lower at the
decisions
this
This
at
North Africa had been cleared and
to a halt, so
River.
and Churchill began
14, 1943, Roosevelt
must be
to
power once and
crush for
all.
There would be no
question of the limited occupation of 1918. Both
that
German and Japanese Germany
as in
Germany and Japan must be overrun and
occupied as a whole. In hindsight,
it
is
possible that this decision pro-
longed the war in that the
had everything
to lose
German and Japanese people
whether they surrendered or
not.
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY There was nothing especially
weapons could help turn
As
far as the
US
by not earning on fighting,
leaders
their
as
if,
to gain
miracle
them,
told
certain defeat into victory.
planners were concerned, the next
was the invasion of France. Churchill and his commanders argued, however, that it would be
objective military
better
first to
enemy
the
knock out
alliance.
which was an
the weakest
Italy,
The
next target should be
ideal launching
the Italian mainland,
member
pad
of
Sicily,
for the invasion of
which Churchill called "the
soft
underbelly of Europe."
Once British
again, Roosevelt, perhaps conscious that the
still
actually
held the upper hand
in
contact
military advisers less,
US
with
the
when
it
enemy,
came
to forces
overrode
his
and agreed with Churchill. Neverthe-
troops would continue to be sent to Britain in
preparation for the invasion of France, and serious
planning for
Two
this
would begin
in April
1943.
other important decisions taken were that the
transatlantic sea routes
must be freed from the danger
of the U-boats and that an Anglo-American bombing
Germany be mounted. The
offensive against
leaders
Allies
men
and,
important, war materials was stepped up, the
would not have the resources
to
-
earn out their
plans. Indeed, Roosevelt had been as good as his word in
July 10 British Eighth
making the United States "the great arsenal of
democracy." The switch of American industry from
petered out. Kasserine had, however, given the icans a nasty shock and learn.
Eisenhower got
showed
rid of the
Patton,
Rommel now
turned on Montgomery', was repulsed
Medenine and
for good. Gradually the Allies pressed the
weapons and equipment.
.Axis forces It
German North
defeat in North Africa Africa,
on January 23, 1943, Montgomery
supply line was not to
become
vital
overstretched.
decided to cross into Tunisia to join the
attacks in
Yon Arnim made
Rommel
.Axis troops,
a series of
probing
on the French, British and American positions
western Tunisia
at
the
end of January. This was
a pre-
much more serious offensive launched by von Arnim and Rommel in mid-February. On February 14, while \ on Arnim attacked in the North, Rommel launched liminary to a
his desert veterans against the
Americans
the line. They were taken by surprise
in the center
of
and the important
British
army commander
some
Italian
in
Tunisia
remaining
bitter fighting.
and German forces
surrendered, 200,000 prisoners falling into
.Allied
hands.
The
invasion of Italy
Planning for the invasion of Sicily had begun in April, while the campaign in Tunisia was essence, Patton's
West of
US
Seventh
the island, while
tackled the East.
The
still
being fought. In
Army would
Montgomery's Eighth Army
on the northeast corner, which was only 8 from the
Italian
sent
reinforcements to plug the gaps and Rommel's assault
clear the
ultimate objective was Messina
mainland. Hopes
km
(5 miles)
that the island
would
be quickly overrun were soon dashed.
Although the troops got ashore with the mountainous country, the
August 17
that
the defenders
little difficulty,
summer
determined German defense meant that
Kasserine Pass was captured.
The
back, but not without
if his
under General Dietloff Jiirgen von Arnim, who were already there.
North Africa
shortly afterward left
was only in mid-May that the
finally
captured the port of Tripoli, which was
who
could be guaranteed to stiffen the resolve of the troops.
a
of organization. All the Allied forces were relying to an
US
to
American commander
and replaced him with General George S
at
increasing extent on
Amer-
had much
that they
peacetime to wartime footing had been a masterpiece
In
Army
recognized the importance of winning the
Battle of the Adantic. Unless the flow of
more
July 10
US Seventh
.Allied
heat and the it
was not
until
Messina was reached and, even then,
managed
to
escape to the mainland.
GLOBAL WAR, Three weeks
the
later,
Allies
landed
in
Montgomery crossed the Strait of Messina and began to work his way up the "toe" of Italy, while on the same day General Mark Clark's US Fifth Army landed at
wage war was
Salerno, south of Naples.
was
Following the invasion of
Sicily, the Italians
German
morale of the
Italy.
sought
"fatally
1941-43
people so that their
ability to
weakened." Specific targets were
agreed upon, including attacks on shipyards building
U-boats
to help in the Battle
of the Atlantic, but there
a difference of opinion
between the British and
American
air
commanders
as
how
to
to
carry out
and were granted an armistice. The feeling had been
Pointblank, as this offensive was to be called.
growing among the
Americans believed
to
Italian
people that
continue the war in the face of so
was pointless
it
many
On
reverses.
Italy,
could attack targets accurately by day without losing too
had
mere figurehead, appointed Marshal Pietro
Harris, on the other hand, had long given up daylight
Victor a
The
armed bombers
German fighters. RAF Bomber Command, led by Arthur ("Bomber")
July 25, Mussolini was overthrown and the king of
been
that their heavily
Emmanuel
III,
who up
until that time
many
aircraft to
Badoglio as prime minister with orders to make peace
raids
with the Allies.
offensive lay in the night-time
Mussolini was arrested and thrown into prison, although he was later rescued by the daring airborne operation.
It
Germans
in a
took time, however, for
the negotiations to be concluded with the Allies and the
surrender
was only announced
September
on
8.
Although taken by surprise, the Germans reacted quickly, rushing troops across the Brenner Pass from Germany.
few weeks
later, Italy
much their
and believed that the key
to kill the
people
houses and
who
to
a
successful air
bombing of cities, not
lived there but to destroy
factories. In the end, the
complemented one another,
so
in that the
two views
RAF
attacked in
what
this
took
by night, while the Americans did so by day,
was called "round the clock" bombing, but time to materialize.
A
formally joined the Allies, declaring
The bombing of the Ruhr The most
war on Germany.
bombing raid of the time was RAF's 617 Squadron on the night of May 16. Two dams were
spectacular
that carried out by the
The bombing offensive against Germany The agreement to launch a combined bombing offensive on Germany was controversial. The overall aim was to destroy and disrupt the German military, industrial
and economic system and
TheMohne Dam
after the
RAF attack on
to
Ruhr dams on destroyed
May
the a
third
damaged, but eight of the
nineteen aircraft involved were
lost.
on German war industry was not
lower the
the night of
and
Although
provided an enormous boost to morale.
16, 1 943.
its
effect
decisive, the raid
CONFLICT
THE 20
IN
This was part of the
which
1 1 1
CENTURY of three major offensives
first
RAF Bomber Command
against the towns and cities
major industrial region.
March
until the
force (US \A1
)
It
launched
lasted
from the beginning of
beginning of July. also
began
1943
in
of the Ruhr, Germany's
The US Army
Air
damaged.
On
October 14 another
on Schweinfurt
raid
produced similar losses and the daylight bombing
campaign was protection;
it
The bombers needed
halted.
would not be
fighter
until the following year,
however, that the P-51 Mustang would be available.
to enter the fray, escalating
damage and gradually extending deeper into Germany. the
its
daylight targets
The
Battle of the Atlantic
The
spring of 1943 saw another of the aims of the
Casablanca Conference achieved, that of winning the
The bombing of Hamburg and Schweinfurt
war against the U-boats
At the end of July, "Bomber" Harris launched four
there
major night raids on the
USAAF
city
making two daylight
was greater than anything so
bombing war and such was that there
winds,
in
was
a firestorm
of Hamburg, with the devastation
experienced
in the
the intense heat generated
accompanied by
fierce hot
which 400,000 people died.
Intelligence reports
showed
that the
building rockets to use in a
new
RAF Bomber Command
raided
station
The
raids. far
at
Peenemiinde on the
attack
had been
merchant ships
a
lost.
in the Atlantic. In
sudden
rise
Bad weather
the
in
March 1943 number of
in April
prevented
the U-boats from increasing their success, but
May saw
the climax of the long battle. Hitler's naval
commander. Admiral Karl Doenitz,
had more U-boats deployed
in the Atlantic than at
other time in the war. Yet,
it
Germans were
managed
on Britain and
intelligence, sea
to coordinate their
and
air.
was now
any
that the Allies
antisubmarine
activities
-
In just over 20 days no less
the
experimental
than 31 U-boats were sunk and Doenitz ordered his
Baltic
coast during
U-boats
USAAF
June
August 17-18, 1943. Earlier that day, the
had
to
withdraw temporarily from the Atlantic. In
1943,
for
the
first
time,
the
of
rate
.Allied
suffered a severe setback when, in an attack on the
merchant ship building was greater than
ball-bearing factory at Schweinfurt, 60 out of 376
remainder of the war the
bombers were shot down and manv others badlv
guard up, but the threat of the U-boat diminished.
.Allies still
losses.
had
to
For the
keep their
ALLIED AND NEUTRAL MERCHANT SHIPPING LOSSES TO SUBMARINES, 1939-1945
2 illion
3 million
million
million^ ( million
September-December 103$ 463,272 tons
'A
January-December 1940 2,394,769 tons
<
January-December 1941 2,388,929 tons
January-December 1942
1
6.892.837 tons
January-December 1943 2,845,596 tons
January-December 1944 50,660 tons
January-August 1945 309^888 tons
Allied sailors capture U-507, a valuable prize,
1944.
June
7,
GLOBAL WAR,
From Stalingrad to Kursk On the Eastern Front, the Germans remorselessly
General
pounded by
Vassili
Chuikov.
SO at
Stalingrad were
NO Advances
Soviet armies under
the
November ^^ German
Marshal Hermann
Field
N,
but
air,
this
proved an
and only
idle boast
a fraction
^> July
I
of the supplies needed were received. Apart from the
,0
under the
of landing on icebound fire
of Soviet guns, the
not have enough transport for this
Russians then
split
the
May
L_.
1944
944 1,00
1 1
160
did
•
had suffered
\
1941.
German
1
1
of the reasons
losses they
during the capture of Crete in
The
One
August
Km
often
Germans simply
aircraft.
was the enormous
airstrips,
-
Miles
|_
difficulties
on
attack
ESKp August 1943 -June
assured Hitler that he could keep Paulus supplied from the
-
~~V Kursk, July 1943
had
Luftwaffe's commander-in-chief,
1942
July 1943
i
Goering, the
1941-43
MOSCOW
SOVIET UNION
MQLENSK
forces in two, and )
on January 31, 1943, until the end,
had been
whom It
in spite
of Hitier's pleas to hold out
Paulus surrendered.
killed at Stalingrad
Some 70,000 Germans
and 91,000 surrendered, of
only 6,000 would eventually return to Germany.
marked the turning point on
the Eastern Front,
showing that the German Army could be defeated. By the beginning of March 1943, the Soviets had driven the Germans back to the line of the Donetz River. Attention now switched farther north, to a large salient or bulge
which the Soviets had carved out
themselves, with Kursk at
Captured Soviet T-34
its
for
center.
tanks, stuck in
a marsh near Tolochin.
^.f 'KURSK) •
KIEV
\S (4 NGRAD
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY In mid-April, to
J
litler
gave orders that this salient was
attacks
was only
from
and
it
and Army Group South from the south. The
was
finally
be removed. Army Group Center was
the north
Papua Peninsula of
were
originally
planned for
to attack
May
as
1,
the ground had dried out after the spring thaw, but Hitler then decided that they
must be delayed
until
new
heavy tanks could be sent to Russia. In the meantime, the Soviets
became
They organized
well aware of the
The
soon as
German
plans.
Consequently, when the Germans
finally
attacked on
the
facing
task
September 1943
that
it
Allies
the
in
Pacific,
clear the Japanese from the remaining
however, was to
They adopted
Islands.
technique
the
of
"island -hopping," securing one island at a time and
bypassing major Japanese bases, such as Rabaul.
On
their defenses accordingly, construct-
ing a network of antitank strongpoints and minefields.
the end of
at
resistance continued,
secured.
next
Solomon
New Guinea
April
carrying
1943,
18,
the
Americans achieved
down Japanese commander in
remarkable coup the
when
they shot
a
the aircraft the
Pacific,
July 5, 1943, they found the Russian resistance very
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of the attack
much tougher
than they expected. Progress was slow.
on Pearl Harbor. Gradually the United States pro-
Then, on July
12, the Russians
counterattacked to the
now
took place the largest
north of Kursk, and there
tank battle of the war. During the Kursk operations
some 3,000 tanks were destroyed, but the Soviets, with their factories producing more and more weapons, could afford these losses, while the Germans could not. Hitler halted the offensive, and from then
on the German
gressed up the Solomon Islands, with
being secured
in
taking place on
By
this time, the
1,
1943.
Americans had more than replaced
Harbor and could afford
their attention elsewhere in the Pacific.
New
The
Japanese defenses and removing the threat
Island-hopping in the Pacific
attack
However, what was needed was
in favor of the Allies.
Buna
(
at the
S Marines
had
definitely turned
The Japanese had
evacuated
end of January 1943, but elsewhere on the
under fire during the assault on Tarawa,
to turn
operations
Guinea and the Solomons were denting the
armies in the East would be on the defensive.
In the Pacific, the tide of fortune
Georgia
August, and landings on Bougainville
November
their losses at Pearl
in
New
on Japan
itself.
As
a
more
to Australia.
direct line of
early as April 1942, in an
audacious raid mounted from an aircraft carrier, a
squadron of B-25 Mitchells under Lieutenant Colonel
James
Doolittle
in the Gilbert Islands,
had bombed Japan.
Xovember 1943.
'
.
i
-
/V
GLOBAL WAR, This was the only attack on the Japanese mainland be mounted
more than
when
more than two
in
years.
It
served as
morale booster for the Allies
a
was
the situation in the Pacific
US
any event,
still
at a
The Western
to
Allies did not raise
1941-43
any objections to
little
these proposals. However, the British realized that the
time
Polish government in exile in
very grave.
London would
not accept
domination by the Soviet Union, any more than by
like
Germany. Matters had been aggravated by the German
direct invasion.
discovery of a mass grave containing the bodies of some
Consequently another island-hopping campaign was
4,000 Polish officers in the Katyn Forest in Russia.
planned
The Germans
In
thought Japan,
planners
Germany, could only be defeated by with
ultimate
its
the
objective
Japanese
mainland. The first target was the Gilbert Islands. In November 1943, Makin and Tarawa were assaulted, the
former
captured
falling
at a
Marines and
The
but the
easily,
sailors
were
only being
latter
Some
high cost in casualties.
1,000
US
the
that
Russians had been
blamed the Germans. The
responsible, but the latter
evidence, however, pointed to the Russians, and the Polish government in exile
demanded an
investigation
by the International Red Cross.
and 2,000 wounded.
killed
campaign now had two axes of advance.
Pacific
stated
At
this
London
point Stalin broke off relations with the
Poles.
For the sake of Allied
unit}-
neither
Churchill nor Roosevelt dared to support the Polish
Burma The
case.
third Allied pressure point
During the
on Japan was
in
Burma.
few months of 1943, the Japanese
first
counterattacked in the Arakan, driving the British and Indian troops there back to Chittagong in India.
needed
Mies
be done before the
to
campaign
could launch a
There was, however, one small success during lines.
February
In
that
1943
Brigadier
Orde
Wingate took a brigade of what he called Chindits, after the mythical
the
Japanese
Burmese beast
lines
and
for
the chinthe, through
two
months attacked
Japanese lines of communication. Although
to
this did
be as good as the Japanese
fighting. StilwelFs
not
Americans
also took
at jungle
up long-range
much time northern Burma
penetration and Merrill's Marauders spent
operating behind
during the
first
enemy
was agreed
in principle that
the country should be partitioned, but the detailed
how
planning of
decided
this
was
be done was
to
left to
lines
in
half of 1944.
for the invasion of France.
The campaign
in Italy did
not impress him. Admittedly, the British and icans
Amer-
had found the going hard and successive German
defense lines meant that progress was slow. By the end of 1943 they were fact that they
still
well to the south of
Rome. The
were tying down German forces cut
Stalin eventually
managed
to secure a
promise from
Churchill and Roosevelt that the invasion of France
would be mounted before the end of that
it
May
1944, and
would comprise landings across the English
Channel and
in the
South of France.
Now
committed
Overlord and Anvil, as these two operations were
code-named, the Western
Allies realized that shortage
of landing craft would prevent any other amphibious
At the end of November 1943 another
historic
meeting
operations being mounted, for example in Burma.
of Allied war leaders took place,
time
Tehran,
concession that Stalin did make
this
at
of Persia (Iran), and involved not just
capital
Churchill and Roosevelt, but Stalin as well.
The main
object was to discuss postwar Europe, and
it
was
who dominated
end of 1941
the proceedings.
onward, the Soviets had made in their sphere of influence
upon with partitioned
the
Germans
was
to
Soviet Union. At
it
From
the
clear that
River.
Russia would join in the after
Poland was
1939 when the country was
Germany had been
Thus, the
Stalin
and that the border agreed
.Allies
One
Tehran was that war against Japan two months at
defeated.
had agreed on the tasks
While the Soviets continued
to drive the
for 1944.
Germans back
and out of Russia, the British and Americans would maintain pressure on the
Germans
in Italy
and prepare
for
what was
be Poland's eastern border with the
all
time, across the English Channel. Allied forces
Tehran he
would go onto the offensive
in
also
proposed that the
border with Germany should be moved westward
Oder
little
ice with Stalin.
to
The Tehran Conference
the
be
at a later date.
Allied planning
achieve a major impact, the British and Indian soldiers
were seen
it
In terms of military strategy, Stalin continued to press
summer. This was "long-range penetration" of the Japanese
Germany,
for
Much
Burma.
to regain
As
to the
Pacific the in
on Japan
to
be the greatest amphibious operation of
in
Burma, and
in the
two island-hopping offensives would close itself.
ET1
CONFLICT IN THF 20TH CFNTURY
3
CHAPTER 3 VICTORY ROAD 1944-1945 Wide Gentian forces
were kept tied down in
Normandy,
ofthe country
Italy, the
quickly liberated the remainder
and much ofBelgium and southern
Holland. Then overstretched supply i
nter weather
•:.
and German
itself.
lines,
the coming
recovery slowed
them
In the East the Russians relentlessly drove the U ntry
and back
into
Germany
In a last desperate gamble Hitler turned on the
Western Allies with a counterattack in December 1
but
it
w.
i
.
After this the time. .
With mobilization and war production reaching new peaks, the Allies were poised for major new offensives.
Europe,
In
movements
resistance
to undermine the Axis from within, at the same time expressing their political allegiances
helped
for the postwar settlement.
Allies successfully landed in France and, after hitter
fighting in
Allied convey sweeps through St. Lo. Normandy, July 1944.
u
end of the
In the Far
back a*
Throughout 1942 and 1943, the occupied countries
resistance
movements
had been growing. They
in
re-
ceived arms and equipment, as well as advisers on the
ground, from the American Office of Strategic Services tive
(OSS) and
(SOE). The
the British Special Operations Execu-
OSS
and
SOE agents often had a hard
time identifying which resistance groups to back. In the Balkans the
Communists, encouraged by the
Soviet Union, used the resistance to seize
power
end of the war. In Yugoslavia, the
groups were
more concerned
to
crush Tito's
royalist
Communist
at the
partisans
than they were to attack the Germans, and indeed collaborated with the
latter.
Nevertheless, the part played
by the resistance movements
in tying
down German
troops which could have been used elsewhere cannot
be underestimated.
VICTORY ROAD,
The Holocaust
Germany
By 1944, time was running out
German
for those
lieved that the
Jews held
in
Himmler be-
concentration camps. Heinrich
Aryan (German and north European)
race was superior to
were subhumans,
a
all
"harmful influence," and should be
In what he called "the final solution,"
Himmler
set
The
concentra-
camps multiplied and when more
traditional
about destroying the Jews in Europe.
such as shooting and hanging, did
killing,
not produce a high enough rate of deaths, he intro-
duced poison-gas chambers into which Jews were herded
1943. In Britain and the Soviet Union, for instance,
men and women who
both
in droves.
Others were
sterilized or
used as
There were constant roundups of Jews and
in
most
and sent
The
cits'.
Many,
fearing what might
into hiding, often sheltered
who were
fully
would be sent
Non-Jews lies it
aware that
if
as well
largely
happen
them, went
to
by non-Jewish families,
they were caught, they too
to a concentration
by being made
was
notably Warsaw, they
camp.
go to work
in
their fami-
Germany. Indeed,
imported foreign labor that allowed
German
snipers
are flushed out by Resistance fighters, August 25, 1944.
mainly
England
begin preparing for Overlord.
to
the mountains, which gave the defenders an advantage.
Their next major objective was Rome, but the
Allies
were held up by the formidable Gustav Line, which the 120
built
km
(75 miles) south of the
city.
In order to get around this, British and .American troops at
Anzio 50 km (30 miles) south of Rome onjanuary
1944.
They
failed
the beaches and a swift
next five weeks,
Hopes
that
as
move
to
German
the success of the landings
was
quickly inland
off
response meant that
in the
balance for the
Germans counterattacked. to the German evacuation
the
Anzio would lead
of the Gustav Line faded and for the next few months
monaster}.
The
on Monte Cassino, with
its
famous
Americans, Britons, Cana-
fact that
New
dians, Indians,
Zealanders and Poles are buried
here gives some indication of the intensity of the fighting.
Parisians dive for cover as beleagured
to
the fighting centered
were often parted from
to
troops,
7
22,
cities,
reason was
other was the difficult} of the terrain, especially
landed
some major
some
One
seasoned veterans of North Africa, were withdrawn
they were forced to wear a large yellow star on their
to live in ghettoes in particular parts of the
progress was slow.
in Italy
before the end of 1943
that
occupied countries they were easily recognizable since
clothing. In
in factories.
Breaking the Gustav Line
Germans had
guinea pigs in inhuman medical experiments.
were made
did not join the armed
work
forces were conscripted to
Meanwhile
methods of
fully until
others and that Jews and Slavs
eliminated.
tion
economy
not to mobilize her war
1944-45
finally
Not
until the latter half
capture
it,
and
Germans withdrew
Rome had been
Roman
Catholic Church.
.Allies at
The
city."
fight in it
did the Poles
Rome.
declared an "open
remains and because
historic
May
Anzio advanced, the
to the north of
both sides agreed not to
that
On
as forces at
of
it
This meant
because of
was the seat of the
Rome was
"liberated" by the
the beginning of June.
relief of
Leningrad
the Eastern Front, the Soviets had gone over to the
offensive immediately after the Battle of
Kursk and by
the autumn of 1943 had driven the Germans back the
its
to
Dniepr River. They now outnumbered the Ger-
mans by two
to
were growing
one and
all
their strength
and confidence
There was,
also, increasing
the time.
German invaders as the Russians advanced westward. The country had been entirely desolated by the Germans, and there was much
bitterness toward the
evidence of atrocities against the civilian population.
was that
therefore understandable that the Russians
when
they reached the
would exact revenge in kind.
German
It
vowed
borders they
EE1
CONFLICT IN
II IE
20TH CENTURY
There was no question that the offensive would pause during the winter months.
The Germans must
not he given time to regroup, and the Russians were
helped
in this b\ the fact that the
mild
unusual!}
on the
winter of 1943-44 was
Eastern
Front.
Their
first
Appointed
in
overall
command
of Overlord was
General Eisenhower, with General Montgomery
to
They both returned
to
command London
the actual landings.
January 1944. Training for the British,
in
American and Canadian troops now
same
number of special
At the
intensified.
devices were developed
came in January when Leningrad was finally relieved. During the 890 days of the siege some 200,000 people had been killed by enemy fire and more
to help the troops get
than 500, 000 had died of cold or starvation.
harbors, which were to be towed across the Channel
success
The Russians now struck blow
Germans.
On
blow on the
after
January 6, attacking from west of Kiev,
time, a
Most
ashore and keep them supplied.
notable of these were the
and anchored offshore so
that
Mulberry
artificial
supply ships could
Under
unload. There was also Pluto (Pipeline
the
had crossed the prewar border with Poland. The
Ocean), which would be the main means of transport-
German Army Group North was driven back during the latter half of January and February from south of
ing fuel supplies. Five beaches were selected for the
tfiej
Leningrad
Latvian and Estonian borders. In the
to the
South, by mid-April the Soviet armies were poised
far
to enter
Hungary and Rumania and were beginning
great
but
skill,
Juno, Gold and Sword
The
Allied air forces also
meant
had
a
major part
positions long after the Russians had bypassed them.
had
air
It
was
crucial that the .Allies
supremacy over the beaches and
also that the
Germans be prevented from rushing up
reserves to
Overlord preparations
drive the invaders back into the sea. In the
The main
leading up to the invasion, the
France,
it
to
be Overlord. Once ashore
would only be
in
matter of time, with the
a
spectacular Soviet advances in the East, before Ger-
many was crushed. Detailed planning Channel invasion had begun
when this
a special
as early as April
1943
headquarters was set up in England for
planners grappled with the problem of where to land.
state
was gathered from many sources on the
of the beaches, tides and
German
defenses along
the entire coastline of northern France. Secret agents,
Commandos were
the French Resistance and
along with
air
used,
photographs and even people's prewar
The Germans had been
holiday picture postcards.
aware from the very beginning that an invasion would be mounted
at
some
time,
and had been preparing the
coastal defenses for the past three years.
They expected the landings
to
be
select another spot
keep
this
elaborate
secret
in
the Pas de
planners decided that they must
and chose Normandy. In order from
deception
the
plans
Germans to make
they the
to
evolved
Germans
continue to believe that the Pas de Calais would be
used and also to persuade Hitler to keep troops tied
down
in
Nor\\a\
in
RAF
and
months strategic
bombing offensive against Germany was halted, and the bombers were given the task of attacking aircraft factories
and railway marshaling yards.
The D-Day landings In
order
to
especially
was scheduled postponement
American and vered by
a
obtain
case there was an invasion there.
the
right
weather
from the point of view of the for
June
conditions,
tides,
Overlord
but bad weather forced a
5,
for twenty-four hours.
Spearheaded by and co-
British paratroop operations,
massive naval bombardment, 70,000 troops
stormed ashore on the morning of June
1944,
6,
establishing themselves against often stiff resistance. In
the next two months, two million .Allied troops
be landed
would
in France.
The Germans were Hider was convinced
Calais since this was the closest point to Britain. For this reason, the Allied
US
for the cross-
purpose. Throughout the next few months, the
Intelligence
to play.
were two other
obliterating the defenses, there
key tasks to be carried out.
were concerned was
and
Apart from the direct support for the landings, which
Hitler's repeated insistence that they should hold onto
event in 1944 as far as the Western Allies
and
for the Americans,
farther east for the British
Canadians.
to
The Germans continued to fight with lost men unnecessarily because of
clear the Crimea.
Omaha and Utah
landings:
main landings
in the
taken by surprise, and for a time that
it
was
a feint
Pas de Calais were
and that the still
to
come.
He therefore refused to allow Rommel, who was now commanding the anti-invasion forces, to move his tank reserves to Normandy. Nevertheless, the Germans, as was so often the
case, quickly recovered
surprise and for the next two
hard going. In
Normandy
months the
from
Allies
their
found
the winding lanes and
it
little
fields
enclosed by hedgerows on top of banks very
much
favored the defender.
^H^ THE D-DAY LANDINGS AND ADVANCES IN NORTHERN FRANCE JUNE 6 - AUGUST 25, 1944 n Allied forces departure points^^^ Anglo-Canadian force advances v and assembly area, June 6 I
Territory held by Germany as of Aug 2
\ US force advances
THE D-DAY BEACHES JUNE 6 Anglo-Canadian
US force landings
•
force landings
ISIGNY
BAYEUXO CAEN«
The Bomb Plot On July 20, 1944, battling
away
in a
field
officers in conjunction with politicians
A bomb
room where
Hitler
headquarters.
movement
in
~J
while the Western Allies were
Normandy,
in
in East Prussia.
N
a dramatic event
hidden
in a briefcase
was holding
There
Germany
had
a
a
against Hitler for
and one previous attempt on attempt was the work of a
his
life.
number of
British infantry follow a Churchill tank in
wanted
to
occurred
The
exploded
ruthlessly
conference
been
still
at his
resistance
some
time,
This second senior
army
come
attempt
to
terms with the
failed
hunted down.
the conspirators
priests,
who
conspirators
the
Many were
executed.
were
Among
was Rommel, who three days before
had been wounded
in
France
later forced to take his little
and
and
Allies.
own
in
life.
an
air attack.
The Bomb
He was Plot had
effect on the course of the war except to make
Hitier distrust his generals
bocage country ofNormandy, June 1944.
more and more.
ri'RY
The
Juh
In
Eisenhower, however,
liberation of Paris
and Canadians wore down
British
the
German armor
in
Normandy.
Pattern's
LS
the
Third Army
then quickly cleared Brittany and moved west and
The
(
ierman
line
east.
was pushed baek and soon the Allied
tanks were dashing aeross France in pursuit of a beaten
enemy.
On
August
Operation Anvil (now renamed
15,
Dragoon), the landings
to
move northward
US
to link
Seventh Army
up with the armies
in
French Resistance.
would
Paris to
troops, after five days' fighting with the
Free French
ists
Germans surrendered
later the
tr\
It
was apparent
that the
The
Belgium and on September
now
The farther east the supply lines became.
Hopes
Commun-
for
liberated.
It
both liberated and
moved, the longer
their
to
It
that
the
took time to
open them up again
now began
to
to
run
short of fuel and were forced to halt, thereby giving the
chance
a
There was now
Montgomery the
Men of the
I
debate on what to do next.
believed that he could achieve victory by
end of 1944 with
side if,
a
on
a
broad
front, at least as far as the
be-
Rhine, even
because of the supply situation, progress might be
very
much
slower.
Operation Market Garden Nevertheless, Eisenhower allowed
Montgomery
to
put
Ever since D-Day, June
into action.
6,
1944, there had been a large airborne army sitting in
England waiting
to
be used. Montgomery had devised a
plan for putting pressure on the
German
flank by
single thrust
S 82nd Airborne Division
US
Eisenhower gave him two British airborne division
September
launched. at
and
a Polish airborne brigade.
17, Operation Market Garden was
The Americans
successfully seized bridges
Eindhoven and Xijmegen and
linked
airborne divisions, a
up with them, but the
British
ground forces
farthest objective,
Arnhem, which had been given
to
at
the British and
Polish paratroopers, proved to be overly ambitious.
The
link-up forces were constantly held up. After eight
days' bitter fighting, the paratroopers
were ordered
to
withdraw from Arnhem, but only 30 per cent arrived
to recover. a fierce
He was
thus determined that the Allies should advance side
On
that they could shorten
shipping. Consequently, the Allies
Germans
would be
through Holland: the Maas, Waal and Lower Rhine.
was
into fortresses.
reduce them and even longer
and
British soon reached
them were dashed when Hitler ordered Channel ports be turned
such a narrow advance
supplied
extremely vulnerable to attack on the flanks.
the Allies faced a problem. Allies
that
seizing crossings over the three major rivers that ran
was
3 Brussels
was an exhilarating few weeks liberators alike, but
felt
adequately
forestalled by
to seize power, but this
the arrival of de Gaulle.
be
one of his ideas
northern and eastern France.
Ten days
not
south of France, began
in the
and General Alexander Patch's began
could
on Germany.
back inside the Allied chance
to finish the
1944 was gone.
drop near Nijmegen, September 1944.
•
•
•
lines.
war
With
in the
this failure, the last
West before
the end of
VICTORY ROAD, toward Myitkyina. the
It
was slow going not
resolute Japanese
just
because of
defense but also because of
Chiang Kai-shek's continual
hesitation. Indeed, at
point the Americans threatened to cut off
To
order to get the Chinese to move.
both
advance,
1944-45
Merrill's
one
aid in
all
support the
Marauders and Wingate's
Chindits were dropped behind the Japanese Eventually Myitkyina was captured on August
lines.
3.
A problem now arose in China. The Japanese were earning out an offensive, directed against both Chiang Kai-shek's forces and those of his
Mao
Communist
Tse-tung. This new offensive was aimed
Szechuan province
in the Southeast,
where the Amer-
icans had established air bases from
Japan.
The Americans proposed
which
bomb
to
that Stilwell be put in
all
Chinese forces but Chiang Kai-shek and
advisers
had become increasingly disenchanted
charge of his
rival,
at the
with Stilwell and used this opportunity to obtain his dismissal.
bombing
The problem
by events in the
The
with the threat to the
US
was solved, however,
offensive against Japan Pacific.
destruction of Japanese naval aviation
In the Southwest Pacific the Americans and Australians
New
continued to clear
Guinea and the Solo-
Xew
mons. By mid-February 1944,
Burma
Progress in
The
first
had seized the Green
half of 1944 finally saw an upturn in
Both sides had been preparing
was the Japanese who struck
mount
to
first.
Burma.
attacks,
but
it
At the beginning of
February, two Indian divisions were advancing steadily
major
attack.
by the Japanese
in the
into the Arakan, to secure positions for a
They were unexpectedly
On
flank.
hit
previous occasions the British and Indians
had always pulled back, but
commanding
Slim,
ordered his
men to
the
this
time General William
British
stand fast and
it
weeks' bitter fighting the Japanese
Fourteenth
Army,
worked. After three fell
back exhausted.
This also occurred on the central
front,
which
followed the line of the Chindwin River and relied for its
supplies on a single road running from the railhead
at Dimapur through Kohima and Imphal in India. On March 8, a Japanese army struck at the last two named
places.
By
early
April
the
garrisons
surrounded and they became entirely airlift
system,
their supplies
much
of both were reliant
of it carried out by the
and reinforcements. After
on an
USAAF,
for
bitter fighting
Burma, goaded by
Kai-shek had begun
to
Stilwell,
Chiang
advance from Ledo southward
Zealand troops
which put the
used
on
power
air
to tackle It
Allies only
(100 miles) from the main Japanese base
Rabaul. Rather than attempt to capture to neutralize
Dutch
Xew km
it,
it,
at
the Allies
and MacArthur moved
Guinea.
was much the same
Truk, some 3,200
where
in the Central Pacific,
(2,000 miles) west-northwest of
the Gilbert Islands, was the
main Japanese base. By
mid-February the Marshall Islands were
in
US
hands,
again after bitter fighting. This brought them 1,250
km
They now launched
air
(800 miles) closer to Truk. attacks
on the base and during two days, February
17-18,
they
1944,
dropped
thirty
times
explosive as the Japanese had on Pearl
as
much
Harbor and
rendered Truk unusable.
Admiral Ximitz, commanding the Central Pacific,
US
now turned on
US
forces in the
the Mariana Islands.
Marines landed on Saipan on June
15, but four
days later a Japanese carrier task force attempted to intervene.
It
was
disastrous. In
what became known
the Battle of the Philippines Sea,
244 Japanese
the Japanese were driven back by early July.
In northern
km
160
Islands,
and sank
aircraft for the loss
a carrier, while a
another carrier.
US
as
down of their own
pilots shot
of just 31
US submarine accounted for
ED Nevertheless, the Japanese on Saipan fought with their usual determination
and
Landings were then made on
August the Marianas were
h\ earl\
meant
some 27,000 men.
lost
Guam
and Tinian, and
US
in
Americans were now
that the
range of Japan, and later in the year they
bombing squadrons from China
to
hands. This
bombing moved their
within
four carriers, three battleships, ten cruisers and eleven
and
Indicative of the growing Japanese desperation,
was
It
cost the
smaller ships.
five
the introduction of the kamikaze pilot.
The word means
"divine wind" and the pilots were volunteers for special suicide units which
the Marianas.
Americans an
aircraft carrier
destroyers.
would
fly
packed with
their aircraft,
explosives, into Allied ships in the belief that to die for
§ strategy in the Pacific
I
now
H\
cleared, and
had been
MacArthur's and Nimitz's forces were
commanding position
a
New Guinea
remainder of
the
to
emperor was the highest form of honor.
the
mount combined
in
operations.
The Americans, however, were
know
not to
at the
time the extent of the damage which they had inflicted
on the Japanese Navy
at
the Battle of Leyte Gulf. In the
a
meantime, with the Japanese using every form of
debate on what to do next. Originally, the American
maritime transport available to reinforce Leyte, the
planners had agreed that the next objective should be
Americans were
had been the case
\s
Northwest Europe, there was
in
the Philippines, but as
1944 wore on, alternatives were
still
locked in combat on the island
at
the year's end.
suggested by the planners.
me
(
air
was
to
power very much closer
that heavier
bomb
to
Japan. This would
mean
loads could be carried and another
supply route could be opened to China. Another
air
was
invade
to
Kyushu. \\
go straight for Formosa, which would put
Both
these
ideas,
Mac Arthur
However, both
would be overextending
It
was then agreed
should be captured the Filipinos
return, argued that the liberate
of Japan,
and
this
Leningrad
southern Philippines
Mac Arthur, who had vowed 1
942
that
to
he would
Americans were duty bound
was eventually accepted. in
the
to
It
was
also
Dutch East
Borneo and the Celebes should be bypassed.
in
Having seized Peleliu Morotai
for their
Philippines
in
The the
Ulithi in the Carolines as a fleet anchorage,
decided I
to
.eyte in the center
in
as
Mac Arthur
bypass the island of Mindanao and go for of the Philippines. Landings were
made here on October 20, 1944. The Japanese now tried the same used
and
airfields, as well
the
tactic that they
had
Marianas, that of using their ships to
US ships supporting the landings. Between October 23-26, the Japanese naval forces engaged in destroy the
battle with the
The
result
was
US a
3rd and 7th Fleets
at
Leyte Gulf.
disaster for the Japanese
destruction of their naval power. They
lost
no
and the less
than
they were
the
now
front.
Soviet terms had been moderate
-
a return to
agreement of March 1940 - but there was
demand
that the Finns disarm the
The Finns
the north of the country. this.
since
from the main German
isolated
German
a
troops in
could not agree to
Negotiations were therefore broken
off,
but in
now wanted a formal surrender, but the Finns objected. At the same time, the Germans promised them reinforcements and
June they were re-opened.
that the
the Palau archipelago
much needed
May
January 1944, the Finns had approached
Soviets for an armistice,
Stalin
Finland remained in the war.
The reconquest of the
but then in
in the spring,
Russians began to attack once more. In the extreme
the
left in early
made during
maintained during the rest of the year. There was a
temporary pause
their operations.
agreed that the Japanese forces Indies,
months of 1944 on the Eastern Front was
north they put pressure on Finland. After the relief of
and main island of Luzon, before they did anything else,
progress which the Soviets had
the early
in
the Philippines, including the northernmost
all
The good
Philippines.
originated
the
Soviet advance into Poland
and Nimitz objected that
that the
first.
when he
which
bypassing
envisaged
ashington,
this
southernmost island
the
The
Two weeks France, struck
It
was only
at this stage
United States broke off relations with Finland.
the
first
after the
.Allies
had landed
in
north of the Pripet Marshes, the one area
where the Germans territory.
Western
main Soviet offensive resumed. They
still
had
a
toehold
in
Soviet
Minsk and then Grodno were recaptured,
much of northeast Poland was cleared and the German Army Group Center virtually destroyed. The Soviets now attacked south of the Pripet Marshes and soon linked up with the more northern thrust, and the end of July had closed
the Baltic the
to the Vistula, while
near
German Army Group North was
danger of being cut off Attention
up
now turned
to
in the
Warsaw.
at
in
Courland peninsula.
VICTORY ROAD,
: The Warsaw Uprising The Poles had organized
directed from
an underground army, called
Home Army, under General Tadeusz Bor-Komorowski. When the Germans seemed on the point of
more
the
evacuating the
city,
ordered the
to rise against
Poles assumed that the Soviets,
suburbs of the
August
move
for the next
during which
of
Home
in
Soviet
began
while
On
indeed changed sides, while the Bulgarians,
pilots
the
it
was too
city
The
liberated Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital, with the help
of Tito's partisans and entered the plains of Hungary.
all
Coming up
Controversy surrounds the
The
stiffening
and
However,
it
German
was not
resistance
in Stalin's interest to allow Poles
still
members of the Waffen-SS, help
to
capital, at
resistance
and could make no progress.
Efforts to outflank the city to the north
had been
also
troops, including
Hungarian
November, they found the
unexpectedly tough
were very stretched.
their supply lines
against Budapest, the
the beginning of
to this
Soviets had good military reasons for not
getting involved, in that
German
Warsaw Uprising
Rumanian oilfields at Ploesti. now began a huge outflanking operaroll back the German right flank. They
Russians
tion designed to
themselves
September, but
resistance by October 2.
day.
who up
also occupied the
to land
and the Germans crushed
late
(450
quickly surrendered and
until
dropped some sup-
Russians
Rumania
now had managed to retain a semblance of neutrality, made overtures to the British and the United States. The Soviets countered this by invading Bulgaria, which quickly declared war on Germany. The Bulgarians offered no resistance to the Soviet troops, who
made no
destroyed. British,
a belated air supply operation in
by then
km
to their support.
Warsaw was
to a
South. Beginning on August
miles) in 18 days.
Army, but were not allowed
territory,
in the
the
reinforcements into the
American and Free Polish plies to the
was not so
had come
20, the Soviets advanced no less than 725
two months there was bloody fighting
much
difficult to control after the war.
halt, this
to help the Poles.
The Germans rushed and
London them. The
the uprising began, but the Soviets
1
it
major part in the
would make Poland
who had reached
would come
city,
to play a
If the Soviet offensive in the center
the Polish government in
Home Army
London
liberation of their country since
1944-45
and south were
checked and by the end of the year Budapest was in
crush the
German Warsaw
hands.
Uprising,
August 1944.
LRV
The Germans prepare Alter the failure of
which had
Ri\cr,
used
at
the end of
Germans in Montgomery
To
gradual!)
and the
US
first
German border in a
It
was
finally
all
\ery
in
Allied troops actually crossed
US
it
could only be
in
on
all
finally
First
Army became
the Hurtgen Forest.
sides, they
stiff resist-
which to
great
secrecy.
matter of time before
to
prolong the fighting.
chose to
through the Ardennes, the same attack route
that had proved so successful
May
in
1940. This time
there were, however, differences. For a start
winter rather than spring, and there
was
it
was snow and
ice
on the ground. The Germans did not have
their air
superiority of 1940 and they were faced by
a battle-
hardened and confident enemy.
The Germans had Allies
three advantages, however.
The
chose to ignore various pieces of intelligence
pointing to a
German
attack, not believing that they
were capable of it. In the event, the Germans were able to
assemble an entire army group, including 1,000 in
The US
complete secrecy.
Ardennes were
wounds
gen Forest.
fog
Finally,
after
troops in the
from the United
either fresh divisions
States or licking their
combat
in the
Hurt-
masked German movements
and placed severe restrictions on
had
been
West designed
The
.Allied air
pow er.
Battle of the Bulge
The Germans launched
be dented.
Hitler
it
He
from the Americans.
were running desperately
This optimism was now
counteroffensive in the
a
mount
tanks,
defeated, especially since,
short of resources with
In
to
September, near Aachen. There
stiff battle in
Germans were
hemmed
opened
along the front, the Western Allies remained
confident that the
be
and Free French were doing
Although the Germans were putting up ance
to
November 1944. Leasing the own devices, reached the German border.
General Courtney Hodges'
engaged
Antwerp was
if
northern Holland to their
the south, the
the same, the
be done
to
advance into Germany.
shipping
banks of the Scheldt
This was seen as vital to support the
as a port.
\llied
Market Garden, Montgomery had to clearing the
turned his attention
splitting the British
a counterattaek
planning to
a
recapture
\nrwerp, thus cutting the Allied supply line as well as
On
their attack
the flanks of the arrack they
on December
were soon held up, but
much
confusion.
YAXCES IN EUROPE,
1944-45 on August 25, 1944 K Allied advances up v to December 1944 Allied advances up to May 8, 1945 Allied territory
\
.
—
Axis-held territory at
in
number of Germans dressed
the center they advanced rapidly, capturing a
prisoners and creating
16.
May
8,
1945
Neutral countries
VICTORY ROAD,
1944-45
The Yalta Conference It
would take the Western
and begin
resumed
Warsaw
all
of January to recover
advance once more. In the East, the Soviets
to
on January
their offensive five
Allies
days
later. It
12, finally liberating
was against
this
background of
West
progress in the East but standstill in the three major Allied
war
met once more,
Stalin,
that the
leaders, Churchill, Roosevelt this
and
time at Yalta on the Black
Sea. Victory
Germany was now
against
in
and
sight,
Roosevelt was very keen that the Soviets should become
war against Japan.
actively involved in the
declare
war
as
soon as he could
Stalin agreed to
Germany had been
after
defeated. In return, Roosevelt and Churchill gave Stalin a free
hand
in Poland,
Hungary, Rumania and Bulgaria,
although there was an assumption that the postwar
government of these countries would be determined on the basis of free elections.
concede
Stalin did, however,
were now trying
British
to prevent a takeover
Communists, would remain of influence.
Greece, where the
that
in the
Western
it
than the Western
Allies.
The
the current Soviet offensive by
American
in
troops during Battle
in the eastern part of
of the Bulge.
American uniforms were sent
in to operate
One
town, Bastogne, a key communications center in
however,
was,
denied
to
them.
Hastily
reinforced by an airborne division, the garrison held tight,
Germans
allowing the in the side
to bypass
it
but becoming a thorn
of the advance.
very short of fuel, having failed to capture any Allied supplies,
something on which they had relied
planning. Moreover, on
December
in their
forces.
should take
Eisenhower agreed that Montgomery
command
of the northern flank of the
and he moved British formations forward into
blocking positions. In the south,
Patton,
seeing what was happening,
even before being given orders to do to turn his
army north
in just
so.
move north
He was thus
48 hours and the
Bastogne on December 26 marked the end of
The
Battle of the Bulge
the west and
it
had
Germans were
failed.
was
Hitler's last
able
relief
of
German
gamble
in
driven back to the line of the
Oder and
Neisse Rivers. Budapest continued to hold out for some
and
indeed
Germans launched
the
armored counteroffensive
When
this
That
in
night,
February
13,
saw one of the more
bombed Dresden. This was one of which the Western
but, apart
surrendered
finally
13.
controversial Allied actions of the war,
east"
strong
a
order to relieve the garrison.
petered out, the garrison
on February
it
"read" the battle well and began to plan for a
Soviets quickly overran the
remainder of Poland, East Prussia was isolated and the
weather
23, the
cleared and Allied aircraft were able to support the
hopes.
would support
the major cities
Germany.
With Warsaw captured, the
time,
Furthermore, the Germans were beginning to run
salient
be
The bombing of Dresden
region,
ground
latter
bombing
to
much closer
behind the
lines.
the
sphere
Germany, the Soviets were
In
responsible for taking Berlin, since they were to
by the
Allies'
Allies
the
to
bomb,
historic buildings,
fleeing
from the East.
Many have condemned the bombing as inhumane the city
Yet
it
RAF
the "cities of the
had agreed
from having many old and
was packed with refugees
when
since
contained no targets of military significance.
was an attempt
that the Soviets
together.
to
demonstrate to the Germans
and the Western
The Germans rushed
and were able
Allies
were acting
troops from the
West
to halt the Soviet offensive, at least
temporarily, by the third
week
in February.
RV
The
This reduction the
Germany
Allied advance into
Allies
German
in
moving forward once
get
to
The
mor-e.
defenses west of the Rhine quickly collapsed,
German
and the) destroyed from one
at
\mericans. British
West helped
strength in the
all
the bridges over the river, apart
Remagen. which was quickly seized by
Two
weeks
on March 23 and 24. the
later,
and Americans crossed the Rhine
in strength
Ruhr,
and quickly enveloped and surrounded the taking the surrender of no less than 320,000
The
troops trapped there by April 18.
dampened,
however,
death
the
b\
the
German
euphoria was of
President
Roosevelt on April 12, although Vice-President Harry
Truman immediately stepped
Some
of Eisenhower's
into his place.
commanders,
subordinate
notabh Montgomery and Patton, wanted him
go
to
direct for Berlin in order to beat the Russians to the city.
Eisenhower refused on the grounds that
already been agreed
During the on
last
faded.
reality
that Berlin
was
it
had
a Soviet objective.
few months of the war, Hider's grip
Along with
he had installed
his staff,
L
S
troops battling through
Germany, 194?.
himself in an underground bunker in Berlin, and
seldom appeared above ground. By mid-April the Soviets were advancing once
more and had reached
the
suburbs of Berlin. In Italy, too, the
After slowly pushing the
defenses were crumbling.
enemy back during
the last
then, in April 1945, launched
and
what would turn out
to
Germans back toward the passes of the Alps. More and more Italian partisans joined in to harry them in the rear. They also captured Mussolini, who was hiding in the Como area, offensive,
final
driving the
and unceremoniously shot both him and hanging
their bodies upside
down
in a
own
life.
market square.
Later that day, April 30, Russian
soldiers hoisted a Soviet tlag Reichstag, the
German
declared that the war in
was not happy about
the surrender
keen
also
since he had
this,
document signed
in Berlin,
It
was not
reply
and
8.
wanted
and he was
were
that they
in the early
evening of the
until the
Germans
8th that the Soviets informed the
them
May
Prague, capital of Czechoslovakia,
to capture
before the war's end.
against
day.
to surrender.
still
fighting
There was no
hours of the following day, after a
massive bombardment, Soviet troops entered Prague.
Only then did the guns
in
Europe stop
firing.
his mistress,
This occurred on April 28, only two days before Hitler
took his
Truman now
Europe would formally end the following Stalin
German
half of 1944, the Allies had paused for the winter
be their
Churchill and
on top of the ruins of the
The war
against Japan
This
Japan as
left
Allies, since the Soviet
against
her.
Troops,
transferred from the
parliament.
major problem for the Western
a
Union had aircraft
not declared war
still
and ships were now-
European theater
to the
Far East
and, indeed, the British already had a fleet operating in
The
German surrender
the Pacific under the Americans.
Hamburg and
Japan was now in a desperate power were virtually destroyed.
state.
and the Americans reached the Elbe, where thev met So\iet troops. Hitler had appointed Admiral Doenitz
succeeded
almost
In the North, the British captured
as his successor.
He
tied to
Schleswig-Holstein, where
he negotiated surrender with the forces
in
Italy
had,
Allies.
however,
alreadv
unconditionally on April 29, and
on Ma\
2.
was signed
The surrender of at
Liibeck,
all
all
The German surrendered
fighting finished
other
German
Eisenhower's headquarters
at
forces
Reims.
in
establishing an
Her
.Allied
naval and air
submarines had total
blockade
around the Japanese mainland, which meant that she
was now starved of the raw materials, especially rubber and the
oil,
on which she
Americans
bombing in the
had,
relied to
since
wage war. Furthermore,
November
1944,
been
the industrial cities of Japan from their bases
Marianas.
VICTORY ROAD, Japanese defeat in Burma In Burma, the Chinese had continued from the north during the
November,
at the
last
the British had crossed the
Iwo Jima and Okinawa their
advance
few months of 1 944. In
end of the monsoon
(rainy) season,
Chindwin and were driving
toward Mandalay. In the Arakan another offensive had
Akyab was seized by amphibious
been launched.
assault in early January 1945,
month
a
and
determined Japanese
at the
end of the
counterattack
was
repulsed at Kangaw.
This
offensive
down,
priority for supplies
was switched
Rangoon. Mandalay
fell
fierce fighting
were
at
less,
in
March
however, to the
advance on
after twelve days'
km
(50 miles) short of Rangoon.
broke, but General Slim was, nonethe-
determined
to
continue his advance.
was secured on
Americans were already looking objectives,
Marianas.
of these was the island of Iwo Jima, a tiny
May to
3.
Meanwhile, the
and tackling
their next
designed to take them even closer
Japanese mainland.
US flamethrower in action
to
the
km
The Americans
(400 miles) north of the
thought
it
would be
a useful
base for fighters escorting heavy bombers in raids on
Japan. After intensive sea and
US
IVlarines
air
bombardment, the
landed on February 19. They expected to
secure the island in four days, but such was the ferocity
of the Japanese defense, that lives
Okinawa was
it
took about
It
was seen
weeks
five
of 6,800 Americans.
the next objective.
It lies
midway be-
tween Formosa and Japan, as well as being close
to
China.
an ideal base for the invasion of Japan.
as
The Japanese were
in considerable strength
on the
island
and had prepared very strong defenses, so the invading forces landing
attacks
Troops were landed to the south of Rangoon by sea, and the city itself
first
volcanic island lying 640
because
and by the beginning of May the British
Pegu, only 80
The monsoon
The
and cost the
slowed
1944-45
on April
1
,
found
sunk or damaged during the 6,
it
tough going. Kamikaze
on the supporting ships led first
in a final naval flourish, the
last
remaining
to thirteen
few days.
On
being April
Japanese sent their
fully operational battleship,
Yamato, in a
suicide attack against the Allied shipping, but she
sunk by
US
carrier-based aircraft on the next day.
duringfierce fighting to take Iwo Jima, February 1945.
was
DROPPING THE ATOMIC BOMB
o
BLOMON ISLANDS GUADALCANAL
MacArthur's
k-,-
forces
-i '
'
Japanese-held on
territory
August
15,
1945
1000
Miles
THE ENT) OF THE WAR IN THE FAR EAST
In the end,
it
took three months to clear Okinawa,
and the campaign cost the Americans some 50,000 casualties (12,500 killed)
seemed
and the Japanese 110,000.
that the closer the Allies got to the
mainland,
more
the
Japanese resistance became. of Japan
The
itself
When
raids.
spectacular of these
B-29s
dropped
bombs on Tokyo, capital
and
war against Japan
killing
1,700
Some consider
starting fires in
started.
of
incendiary
40 per cent of the
80,000 people. These raids ruined
the war economy and shook
civilian
They
it
necessary to use the atomic
conferences took place
believed that the unceasing air attacks on the
Japanese mainland, combined with the destruction of her naval power and her virtually complete lack of the necessary raw materials with which to continue the war,
meant
that she
Allied invasion,
was already beaten. Even without an it
was merely
Potsdam, a suburb of Berlin.
at
German) would Soviet
Truman,
Stalin
and Chur-
Apart from agreeing that the government of
powers -
rest in the
hands of the four major
Britain, France, the
Union - each of
whom
United States and the
would have
a
zone of
occupation, and that the seal of government would be in
Berlin, the
a matter
of time before
feelers
and the only sticking
point appeared to be the question of unconditional
of the great Allied wartime
last
\ttending were President chill.
bomb on Japan.
she would surrender. Furthermore, the Japanese had
morale.
Potsdam Conference 1945 the
an
of Truman's circle of military advisers did not
been putting out peace In mid-July
as well as
advantage in dealing with increasing Soviet stubborn-
bombing
tons
end
to a quick
on July
to bring
ness on the future of the postwar world.
The most 9-10 was on March when 234
over
as a test
the
Boeing B-29 bombers
were
was exploded
first
the
the invasion
these proved disappointingly
ineffective, nighttime fire raids
the
Japanese
Air Force maintained the
offensive against Japan, sending
bomb. Indeed,
the fact
developed the atomic
at last
This gave the United States the means
fanatical
They viewed
United States had
16.
with increasing concern.
US Army
on daytime
and
desperate
It
The Potsdam Conference was dominated by that the
main topic on the agenda was how
hasten the defeat of Japan.
to
surrender:
the
Potsdam declaration demanded
Japan be occupied and declaration of little
its
war criminals
war might well make
tried.
this a
A
that
Soviet
problem of
consequence.
On
the other hand, there were indications that the
Japanese government was not speaking with one voice
and
it
was known
that
it
included a sizeable militarist
element that was prepared to cost.
If this
faction
invasion might well
fight
on regardless of the
gained the
upper hand, then
become
necessary.
VICTORY ROAD,
_ Dropping the atomic bomb Having obtained finally declare
The Japanese government
agreement that he would
Stalin's
war on Japan, Truman
told
him
that the
United States now possessed a more powerful than any previously used. This was the atomic
bomb bomb
may have known about from Soviet spies United States. On July 26, Truman, Churchill
which
Stalin
in the
and Chiang Kai-shek issued
a joint
ultimatum
to
Japan
demanding unconditional surrender.
The Japanese government way
positive
to
bomb be used
On
that very
Moscow, on
as
same
Truman ordered
2.
ambassador
to
day, the Japanese
but
behalf,
the
when
8,
the Soviet
Western
Soviet
minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, refused to see
August
that
soon as possible after August
the instructions of his government, asked
on Japan's
foreign
him
until
Union declared war.
B-29
called Enola
Gay took
Its
target
time the
80,000
was the
city-
first
off from Tinian, in the
operational atomic
bomb.
of Hiroshima. At 8:15 A.M. local
bomb was dropped and people
outright,
the explosion killed
seriously
injured
37,000,
obliterated over 6,325 hectares (4 square miles)
and
caused complete chaos.
The aftermath of the B-29 fire
U+jZ
The
only
to continue fighting until the
was
of agreement
area
institution of the
the
that
emperor must be maintained. With
no immediate reaction forthcoming, the Americans
dropped August
second bomb,
a
That same
9.
time on Nagasaki, on
this
day, the
Soviets launched a
The Japanese surrender The shock
of these three events caused Emperor
Hirohito to do something that no Japanese emperor
had ever done before. spoke
at a
the next day, the 10th, he
in order to save his people further suffering.
were
sent
expressing it
was
the Japanese to
ditional surrender
was
Messages
willingness
to
be another four days and a
further intercession by the
emperor before the uncon-
finally
accepted.
announced the surrender on the radio
The emperor
to his
people in
another unprecedented step. Only, however, with the formal surrender ceremony presided over by General
USS
Mac Arthur on
board the battleship
September
1945, could the Second World
finally
raids: devastation in Tokyo,
On
Cabinet meeting, siding with the peace party
surrender, but
In the meantime, in the early hours of August 6, a
Marianas, earning the
end.
immediately
massive attack on the Japanese forces in Manchuria.
the Soviet government to negotiate with the Allies
and those who wished
faced an intense debate
to surrender
did not respond in any
begin with, and
the
between those who wanted
1944-45
1945.
2,
be said
to
have ended.
Missouri on
War
4 1
IK
I
[N THE
20TH CENTURY Bclscn: the horror
During the
CHAPTER
THE
The Second World War, far more than
its
predecessor,
total war, with civilians
finding themselves time and again on the front left
ec/
nipped
Vie human
and economically exhausted and
to face the problems cost
- among than
had been
millions
and the survivors
in the midst of
and formerly
economic
and ruined cities.
arrangements were needed
to the defeated
to restore
occupied countries.
time, the old colonial empires
had been
order
At
the
fatally
weakened, and confrontations between the I nited States
and the Soviet
I
nion carried the threat offuture
nightmares. In V)45, lutpes that the world could resoke its
current
and future problems without
now
lay in the
I
less
than 50 million people lost their
the
most cosdy war,
War no
lives. It
human
terms of
in
combatants, almost the same
was
life,
in
were
total as in the First
World War. The Soviet Union suffered the highest casualties, with 20 million deaths, but Poland,
where the war had begun, suffered most, with
some 22 per cent of her population being killed. The high proportion of civilian casualties meant that
ill-
of refugees and shatteredfamilies
chaos, food shortages, black markets Political
of the Second World
was
it
truly a total war,
parts of the world
where
its
and there were few were not felt.
effects
of the postwar world.
catastrophic,
-faced the task of reconstruction
me
line. It
Europe and many other parts of the world
physically
six years
history. Yet, of these, less than 17 million
IMPACT OF MAR m caled the true horrors of
ofthe concentration camps.
recourse to conflict
nited Nations.
As
any war, the Second World
in
both "man's inhumanity of humankind.
qualities
place
the
in
German
War
brought out
to man" and the highest The atrocities which took
concentration
camps
and
Japanese prisoner-of-war camps illustrated only too well
how
cruel
humans can
be.
On
the other hand, the
countiess acts of selfless bravery and sacrifice on the battlefield,
bombing of
human The equally.
in
the
cities
concentration camps,
during the
and elsewhere showed the best of
nature.
horror of war affected both rich and poor
This helped break down
class barriers in the
democracies of Western Europe, which was reflected in the election
of Socialist governments to power in the
immediate aftermath.
-
The US was
never directly attacked and her people
same hardship
did not suffer the
Being
as elsewhere.
were
subjected
same
the
to
contribution of women and blacks
United
the
In
States,
armed
the
for
as
but
forces,
also
factories
women
form of war work, either
in
and elsewhere, but
was on
it
Only
a greater scale in the
.
on the front
and
line
actually
kill
bomber regiment composed
which
greatly
a
distinguished
Hero of
and
itself,
award. In other countries
woman who
located approaching
German
bombers and another woman who directed the aircraft
x^t^
'
1
-^W*frv a V-2 attack
rescue services, help out following
proved
names
to
be as brave as men.
Some
of the
movements
in
Europe were of women, and
partisans in Yugoslavia suffered exactiy the their
as
Thus
male counterparts.
took another stride forward in their battle to
establish equality with
they lost ground as
men, although,
as after 1918,
men came back from
reclaimed the jobs that they
felt
were
the
war and
While some Indians and Burmese transferred
their
allegiance to Japan, the concept of the Greater East
Within the
occupied countries. Nevertheless, those the British
felt
who
granting their countries independence.
Commonwealth also and Canada fell more under
Britain's relationship with the
changed. Both Australia
the influence of the United States. Australia especially
had been more
closely involved with the
United States
during the campaign in the Pacific.
US Armed
Forces, segregation between
and the
only
In Western Europe a
Displaced
created,
new breed of people had been These
Persons.
included
survivors of Hider's concentration camps,
given a combat role.
everything;
would take another war,
It
in
Korea, before segregation was broken down.
British
Empire
significant
landmark
self-determination. This Asia,
where the
was
early
demonstrated that the white
in
the
struggle
especially so in
for
South-
Japanese victories had
man was
those
in the free forces
For the different peoples of the British Empire, the war
not all-powerful.
the
who had lost who had been press-ganged into working in German factories and fields; those who feared to return to Eastern Europe; those who fought
difference from 1917-18 was that black units were
a
by
Refugee problems
and whites was maintained,
The breakup of the
fought for
that Britain could only repay her debt
traditionally the
male preserve.
east
London,
treatment handed out to the inhabitants of Japanese-
in the various resistance
same hardships
marked
in
March 1945.
did not work. This was mainly due to the often brutal
women
blacks
J^-'-^yp/
guns onto them. However, she was not allowed
the occupied countries in
women
_3lL
Asia Co-prosperity Sphere, proposed by the Japanese,
Women
the
The
<^p
anti-
to pull the trigger.
greatest
B^>
i
i
close
was more often
it
-"^=»
ijpBws
during the
came very
also
—
f
There was
one female sniper was
women
2^~~
serve
the Soviet Union, Russia's highest
to killing. In Britain, for instance,
than not a
women
the enemy.
JJUJR
''.^v
-
-
X
entirely of women pilots,
fighting for Stalingrad at least
made
..
Second World War.
Union, however, did
in the Soviet
wk^k
fBil
during 1914-18,
to fight
«»
I
i
uniform or in the factories
men
to allow
.
;f^'Jg5
.
a
>*
a"
women had done some
exempted. In many countries,
I »
1
as well
men, with only mothers of small children being
as
I *
jfflriLff
manpower
the
for
producing war materials. This affected
/
m'
1
was
there
just finding
*
1^'
:•
Europe,
in
meant not
conscription and this
'
food
stringent
rationing that Europeans had to endure.
The
^R
A
IB •B
-7
Canadians nor Amer-
self-sufficient in food, neither
icans
W*
/
*"•!
wish
to
of the occupied countries but had no
be under Soviet domination; and those foreign
nationals
who had
fought
voluntarily or otherwise.
Many had no
on
Above
all
the
German
side,
there were the Jews.
wish to remain in Europe and wanted to
settle in Palestine.
OMUCT IN THE 20TI
(
I
CENTURY
The spread of communism The the
Soviet
Union had suffered greater
Western
spread
Indeed, as early as September 1945, taking advan-
lilies.
1
loss
of life than
tage
of international
communism
in
1945
of the fact that the Free French were in no
Ho
position to reestablish themselves in Indochina,
lowever, the prospects for the
Chi Minh declared an independent republic of Viet-
were
brighter than they had been even in 1919. Eastern
nam. The struggle against communism
Europe was now dominated by Soviet Russia, although she had agreed that the people of these countries would
would engage the French and then the Americans
have the right to decide their
government through
Communist
too.
Greece,
in
In
Economic problems Perhaps
had the upper hand. In
war between Communists and those who
civil
looked to the Western democracies continued to
In the
the
role
in
operations
against
Germany and
many
had
strategic
Allies
had
was not
situation
poised to seize power.
troops raise the red flag over the
German parliament
+*f-
* X
£ ''V\
V;
•
T^
.
s.
had been
and roads. Thus the
%s
\
1 r
dim*-
*
-
>T' *X
w ^
m
"CI
u!
•
still
conquered intact, the
US bombing
Japanese industry.
t
1m
was
bombing campaign, which
as bad, but the
**M >
1945
result of both fighting
to take total responsibility for the
virtually destroyed
g-
was the
largely destroyed the railways
by the Allies (and captured from the Japanese), were
t;
in
industry
peoples. In Japan, with the government
Malaya and Indochina, equipped with arms supplied
The triumph of the Allies: Soviet
problem
countries,
Italy this
on land and the
the
Japanese occupation forces. By the end of the war those in
In
serious
destroyed, people were homeless, food was short. In
flare
Far East, Communist guerrillas had often leading
most
the
economic.
up, with British troops supporting the latter.
taken
for
Tse-tung was
the Balkans,
Yugoslavia, and in Albania,
partisans
Mao
Vietnam
ready to seize power from Chiang Kai-shek.
own form of postwar
elections.
free
was all-powerful
Tito
the next thirty years. In China, too,
in
building in Berlin, April 1945.
had
THE IMPACT OF WAR The Western European
countries which had been
under German occupation were They,
too,
since
it
had suffered from the bombing, especially
had been
on
concentrated
also
left
Countries
been fought over and suffered much damage
as a result. Britain
much
and
industry
Low
communications, and France and the
had
bad way.
also in a
was not
cost of the
war had
her virtually bankrupt, her people were exhausted,
and large parts of her major towns and
had been
cities
Out of these meetings produced
came
in detail.
into
force
the United Nations Charter was
On to
October 24, 1945, the Charter
mark
a
new
step
forward
in
achieving lasting world peace.
The postwar world The problems facing
Only the United States emerged from the war
in a
more
the world in 1945 were
formidable than those of 1918, even though the extent
of victory was
devastated.
US
summer
shoulder too
in a position to
The enormous
of the burden.
Francisco Conference in the spring and early
of 1945, attended by the representatives of fifty nations.
much
greater. Indeed, in
Second World War had brought
many ways the number
to the fore a
which had
of global problems which had been growing before
provided the hardware and equipment necessary for
1939. German, Italian and Japanese fascism had been
stronger
position.
final victory. all
was
It
The war had
industry*
stimulated her
the Allied nations were in her debt.
wartime
economy and
During the
later
conferences, the Americans began to
.Allied
dominate proceedings, especially
in dealings with the
bomb
possession of the atomic
United
enormous
an
States
between communism and capitalism, colonialism and self-determination, "haves" and "have nots,"
Arab and many
others.
be an easy place
enigmatic Stalin.
The
vanquished, but the war had not solved the conflicts
whether the Russians realized
which
to live.
although
was not yet
clear.
THE FINAL RECKONING: MILITARY AND CIVILIAN
Truman, like President Wilson in 1918, had announced that the United States would
CASUALTIES,
shoulder her share of the burdens of the world.
1
Certainly, President
SEPTEMBER 1939-ALGLST
which could ensure conflict
on the
that there
300,000 military,
up some mechanism
to set
would never be another
scale of 1939-45, especially with the
emergence of the atomic bomb. After the
First
War, the League of Nations had
do
there was hope in
On
January
1,
failed to
World
this,
but
successor, the United Nations.
its
1942, twenty-six nations then fighting
Germany, including the
5-8 million civilian
3
a declaration
of coop-
which the term United Nations was
first
used. Another twenty-one countries later followed
suit.
4-5 million military,
593,000 civilian dead 4 China: 3 million military
At Tehran on December
1,
1943, Roosevelt, Stalin
and Churchill had declared that they recognized the peace
which
on the United Nations "to make a
command
will
goodwill
the
overwhelming masses of the peoples banish
the
and
terror
scourge
in the
of war
of the
world and for
many
generations."
However,
it
was not
autumn of 1944
until the late
that the
United Nations was
set
summer and
early
structure of the postwar
down. This took place
two-phase Allied conference, held in
dead
5 Japan: 1
million military,
600,000 civilian dead 6 Yugoslavia: 500,000 military, 1
million civilian
dead
200,000 military, 400,000 civilian dead 8 Great Britain: 300,000 military, S>7,000 civilian
responsibility resting
dead
Germany:
7 France:
governments of the
exiled
occupied countries, had signed eration in
dead
2 Poland:
up the United Nations
Another urgent task was
1945
Russia:
6 million military, 14 million civilian
Setting
Jew and
post- 1945 world was not to
also gave the
advantage, this
in
The
at
at a
Dumbarton Oaks
Washington, D.C. This was followed by the San
dead
9 Italy: 150,000 military, 150,000 partisans civilian dead 10 United States: 300,000 military dead
European Jews: 5-9 million dead (from a of 9 million)
total
(
(
)\I I.ICT IN
THE 20TH CENTURY
CONFLICT IN THE 20th CENTURY: APPENDICES The style of warfare between 1939 and 1945 reflected the technological developments in weapons during the previous 20 years. The most successful commanders were those who had the vision to exploit these new weapons to the utmost and the flexibility to adapt them to the varying conditions in each theater of war. Both sides improved and developed ways of fighting in the jungle, desert, at sea and in the air.
THE KEY COMMANDERS Charles de Gaulle (1890-1970) Free French leader. De Gaulle became the leading exponent of armored warfare in France in the 1930s. In May 1940 he was in command of an armored division and then briefly became Undersecretary of War
He was NATO's first Supreme Allied Commander Europe (1950-52) and President of the United States (1953-61
rose to be Chief of Staff of the
German Army in July 1944, only to be dismissed in March 1945.
before fleeing to Britain just before the French armistice with the
Germans. He soon became the leader of the Free French and his moment of triumph came in August 1944 when he returned to Paris and was
Arthur Harris (1892-1984) British Marshal of the RAF. One of the most controversial figures of the Second World War, "Bomber" Harris led RAF Bomber Command from 1942 until the end of the war. He firmly
installed as President of the
Committee
of National Liberation.
His single-minded aim to restore
French fortunes made him a difficult and he bitterly resented not being invited to the Tehran and
believed that Germany could be brought to defeat through bombing.
ally,
He was President France 1945-46 as well as from
Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964) American general and Allied
Yalta conferences. of
Dwight Eisenhower
1958-69.
Heinz Guderian (1888-1954) German Panzer commander. Guderian was appointed General of Panzer Troops in 1938 and played a leading role in the Polish and French campaigns and the invasion of Russia in 1941. Dismissed by Hitler at the end of 1941 for making a tactical withdrawal against orders, he was recalled to duty as Inspector of Panzer Troops in early 1943. He
commander. After a distinguished World War, MacArthur rose to be Chief of Staff of the US Army and then became military adviser to the government of the Philippines. fighting record in the First
Dwight Eisenhower (1890-1969) American general and Supreme Allied
Commander in
Eisenhower was
a
Europe. founder member
US Tank Corps,
of the
action in the First
but did not see
World War.
Recalled to active duty in July 1941, he conducted the defense of the Philippines against the Japanese and then became commander of the
In
June 1942, he was appointed commander of US forces in Europe. He was in charge of the Allied operations in North Africa 1942-43
and the invasions of Sicily and In December 1943 he became
Southwest Pacific area. His "islandhopping" strategy was highly successful and saved many
Italy.
He finished the war as Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers in the Pacific theater. He casualties.
Supreme Commander, Allied I
itionary Force in \\
Europe and
(.onducted Overlord and the
campaign in Northwest Europe. His powers of diplomacy made him an ition warfare commander.
later commanded the United Nations' forces in the Korean War, but was removed for wanting to
Heinz Guderian
extend the war to Red China.
APPENDICES Bernard Montgomery (1887-1976) British army commander. "Monty" was one of the few commanders to come out of the campaign in France in 1940 with his reputation intact. Appointed to command the British Eighth Army in Egypt in August 1942, he led it through North Africa, Sicily and Italy and then from 1944 commanded 21st Army Group in the Normandy landings and in Northwest Europe. The secret of his
Isoroku Yamamoto (1884-1943) Japanese admiral. Responsible for building up the Japanese Navy before the war, Yamamoto was opposed to going to war with the United States. Nevertheless he planned the attack on Pearl Harbor. Having studied at Harvard University and been the naval attache in the United States, he was
success was careful preparation for his battles and ensuring that every
inflicting the greatest possible
man knew what was expected
so that Japan could obtain the best
convinced that Japan would lose in the long run and he believed in
damage
of
possible peace terms.
him. His brash self-confidence, while a morale booster to his own men, created much friction with his fellow
commanders
in the Allied
in the shortest period of time
at Pearl
In April 1943 he died
Isoroku
Yamamoto
aircraft
He succeeded
Harbor, but failed at Midway.
when his
was shot down by US
fighters
camp. After the war, he became Chief of the British General Staff and then NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe.
Konstantin Rokossovsky (18961968) Soviet army commander. Dismissed from the Soviet Army and imprisoned during Stalin's purges in
Chester Nimitz (1885-1966) American admiral. An outstanding US naval commander, Nimitz was given command of the US Pacific Fleet shortly after Pearl Harbor. His intelligent use of information gleaned from intercepts of top secret Japanese messages resulted in the victory at Midway and from then on
the 1930s, Rokossovsky
he commanded the drive toward Japan in the Central Pacific. He maintained a rivalry with
MacArthur for resources in the Pacific. Quiet and efficient, he was highly regarded by all.
was
recalled
during the Russo-Finnish War. He first made a name for himself in the defense of Moscow at the end of 1941 and then played a leading role in the victory at Stalingrad. As commander of the Belorussian
Front, he failed to go to the help of
the Poles in
Warsaw in August
1944.
In 1945 he cleared northern Poland
and Danzig and met with the
British
near Liibeck.
Erwin Rommel (1891-1944) German army commander. Rommel won Germany's highest bravery award in the First World War. He proved
Georgi Zhukov (1896-1974) Soviet
commander. He first came prominence during the operations against the Japanese in Mongolia just before the outbreak of the Second World War and was appointed Chief military
to
of Staff of the Soviet
and
decisive.
himself a skilled tank division commander in France in 1940. He took the Deutsches Afrika Korps to Libya in early 1941 and for the next 18 months consistently outfought the British. After his defeat at El
Alamein he conducted
a very skilful
withdrawal into Tunisia, where he surprised the Americans at Kasserine Pass. After tours of duty in Italy and the Balkans, he took charge of Army Group B in France until
wounded
in July 1944. Implicated in
Bomb Plot, he was forced to take his own life. A fearless commander, who led from the front, he was
the
Bernard Montgomery
popular with his men.
Army in
January 1941. Later, in August 1942, he became Deputy Commissar for Defense. He was deeply involved in the overall conduct of all Soviet operations on the Eastern Front, but often took personal charge, especially during the siege of Leningrad, the 1944 offensives and the capture of Berlin. At the beginning of the war. he was cautious but became more daring
Georgi
Zhukov
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
WAKFAHi: DEVELOPMENTS Special Forces by both sides.
Blitzkrieg
enemies
means "lightning war" and was the secret of the German success on land during 1939-42. The doctrine was developed by British
very easy to outflank and infiltrate defenses in the jungle, so
Blitzkrieg
in the jungle.
It is
the Allies learned to stand fast rather
and Captain Basil Liddell Hart, but the Germans, especially
than withdraw and to disrupt the enemy by frequent counterattacks. Another important tactic was the ambush, for which, of course, the
General Guderian, applied
jungle
military theorists Major General
J.
F.
C. Fuller
it
in the
had
is
ideally suited.
The troops
use of fast-moving armored columns closely supported by aircraft. These
be trained to react very rapidly, especially in returning quick and accurate fire. Resupply was always a problem, although not so much for the
were used as
Japanese,
1930s. In essence Blitzkrieg meant the paralyzing of the enemy through the
aerial artillery, to slice
through the enemy defenses and disrupt their ability to
command and
control their forces. Follow-up
troops
would then reduce the
still holding out. It proved remarkably successful in Poland, France and the Balkans. In Russia, however, Blitzkrieg faltered mainly because of the vastness of the country. Also Hitler launched his attack too late in the year, which meant that the tanks ground to a halt in the autumn mud and winter snow. The weather also hampered fuel and fodder supplies
defenses
(much relied
The
of the
German army
still
on horse-drawn transport). adopted the
Allies, too,
Blitzkrieg concept, especially after
the breakout from
Normandy
in
1944, and during the Soviet offensives on the Eastern Front in 1944-45.
Jungle warfare
The Japanese
victories after Pearl
to
subsist
on the
Allies,
other hand, placed increasing
soldiers
had
to take tablets daily to
protect themselves from
it.
Desert warfare
The North African
desert
was by far
the "cleanest" battleground since, apart from wandering Arabs
was numbers
and the
coastal towns, there
little
chance
of civilians
of large
being caught in the fighting. The
dominant weapon was the tank, and was marked by bursts of fast-moving and furious fighting followed by sometimes long pauses while both sides drew breath and regrouped. Because advances were often rapid, supply lines became very stretched, and for a long time it was this that prevented either side from winning a decisive victory.
the campaign
much of the time, Rommel handled his tanks much better than For
tended
He
kept his tank forces
to split theirs up. Often, too,
but also learning to live in the jungle,
Rommel would
which can be a frightening place for those who do not know it. Gradually, however, spearheaded by the Chindits, Merrill's Marauders and
into a trap, using his
is
in
New Guinea, the
the coast, but the vastness of the
Libyan Desert meant that there was always an open flank, of which both sides, but
more especially the
British, took advantage.
of
Small teams
men were used to gather
intelligence and cause disruption behind the enemy's lines. Battle of the Atlantic
the British in 1939, there
The
concentrated, while the British
Allies learned to fight as well as their
The
close to
using makeshift landing strips. Malaria was a constant problem and
who were able to
little.
the British.
just battle tactics,
was always
emphasis on resupply by air, either dropping supplies by parachute or
on very
Allies failed to recognize that jungle
meant not
battle area
This was the most crucial campaign of the war at sea. As an island nation, Britain had to maintain her maritime trade, and her transatlantic links were vital, as had been demonstrated by the U-boat campaign in the First World War.
Harbor quickly revealed that the Japanese understood the jungle, while the Allies did not. Indeed, the fighting
main
lure the British tanks
own armor to
draw them toward cunningly concealed anti-tank guns, of which the foremost was the 88 mm. Another aspect which marked the fighting was the extensive use of
While convoying was
instituted
was
by
a
desperate shortage of escort ships
and aircraft. Likewise, although the Germans had only 50 U-boats at the onset, these were soon inflicting damage out of all proportion to their numbers, and surface ships and aircraft also
played their
part.
Doenitz, the Flag Officer U-boats,
convinced Hitler that priority must be given to U-boat construction and soon many more merchant ships were being sunk than could be replaced. In 1940 Doenitz introduced the "wolf pack" concept, which meant groups of U-boats deployed along the convoy routes, notably in the "Black Gap" in the mid-Atlantic which was beyond the range of British and North American air cover.
The fortunes fell,
of both sides rose and but in mid-1943 came the
turning point
when the Allies
finally
upper hand. Their eventual success was due to a number of
got the
factors
- the
ability to
decipher radio
between the U-boat headquarters and the U-boats at sea, improved technical aids for detecting and destroying U-boats, long-range patrol aircraft and good
traffic
escort drills.
APPENDICES Bombing it was thought that the bomber aircraft was invincible and could be used to defeat a state by Strategic
Before the war
direct attacks on its centers of government and population. Although there was no formal
prohibition of the
bombing
of
both sides went to war recognizing that such attacks went against the spirit of the laws of war. Apart from the bombing of Warsaw civilians,
in 1939,
which the Germans deemed
a military target
would not
because the Poles
surrender, and of
Rotterdam, which was bombed by mistake in May 1940, both sides held to this until the Battle of Britain.
U-boats under construction, 1941.
Airborne warfare This was a new form of warfare. The Germans were the first to demonstrate how effective airborne forces could be when on May 10, 1940, a party of glider-borne paratroop engineers captured the Belgian fortress of Eben Emael. This was followed by the capture of Crete
by paratroops
in
May 1941. However,
airborne operations were also very costly in transport aircraft,
and the
Germans mounted few after Crete. The British also formed parachute battalions, which were used in Tunisia and during the invasion of Sicily. The Normandy landings were preceded by US and British airborne landings. The tragedy at Arnhem in September 1944 showed that airborne troops had to be relieved quickly by ground forces. They did, however, play a crucial role in the British crossings of the Rhine.
The use of radar and the monoplane fighter did, however, prove that the bomber could be intercepted and shot down before it reached its target. The British and Germans were therefore forced to mount their bombing attacks by night in order to protect their aircraft
from fighters. Inaccurate bombaiming devices and navigation systems meant that bombing accuracy was low and civilian targets were inevitably hit. As a result, both reverted to "area bombing," designed to affect civilian morale and hit war industries.
The Germans
failed to bring about
the collapse of Britain during the Blitz in the winter of 1940-41. The Allies also failed against
Germany,
although industry was severely, but not critically, disrupted. The Americans believed that daylight bombing could succeed if bombers weie given sufficient protective armament, but their experiences over Germany during 1943 showed that this was not enough and longrange fighter escorts were needed.
Bombing by night became technological battle. there
a
On the one side
and and on the achieve navigational and
was the need
to detect
intercept the bomber,
other to
homing accuracy,
as well as
protection against night fighters.
Enola Gay, the converted B-29 which dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
It
can be said that the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan represented the only decisive use of strategic bombing.
E£l
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY First
LAM) WEAPONS Tanks At the outbreak of war, tanks were basically of three types - heavy, medium and light. Heavy tanks were used to break through enemy defenses, medium tanks to exploit a breakthrough and light tanks to carry out the traditional cavalry role of
reconnaissance, although this was also
done by armored
cars.
There
The alternative was to look for a compromise between firepower, mobility and protection. Good examples of this were the US Sherman, the most widely produced tank of the war, the German PzKpfw IV and the Soviet T-34, perhaps the best tank, in terms of robustness and simplicity, to be produced by either side.
were, however, exceptions to this
There were also, especially by the developments in
World War tradition
of "super
heavy" artillery, the main emphasis during 1939-45 was on mobility. Artillery had to be able to keep up with and support fast-moving armored formations at all times. It was the field gun - the US 105-mm howitzer, British 25 pounder, German 105 and Soviet 76 mm which was the workhorse of both sides, backed up with medium guns
mm
of
155-mm caliber. By the middle of the war,
self-
propelled artillery, often using an existing tank chassis, began to be introduced to give even greater
British,
mobility, and examples of this were
"specialized armor," tanks for
the
into the fast-moving Blitzkrieg
particular tasks, such as bridgelayer
concept, and neither did the British, who had infantry support tanks
tanks and tanks fitted with
Canadian-designed Sexton. Wheeled antitank guns were also an artillery responsibility and, like tank guns,
genera] rule in that the
Germans had
no heavy tanks, since they did not
fit
Some
instead.
As the war progressed, tank design became very much a race between gun and armor, but there were penalties to be paid.
A tank with a
gun and very thick armor was inevitably very large, which meant that its mobility suffered. This was
big
some of the later German models - the Panther and
flails for
clearing mines.
countries produced armored
fighting vehicles with the sole task of
destroying other tanks. The
Americans developed the tank destroyer, the Germans the Sturmpanzer and Jadgpanzer and the Soviets the
SU assault gun.
especially so with
Artillery
the Royal Tiger - although they were
Although the Germans and, to a lesser extent, the British, with their coastal artillery, did carry on the
formidable in defense.
T-34 tank in action
on the Eastern Front.
A US Sherman
German Hummel and
the
.
calibers
grew
larger as tanks
became
better protected.
Undoubtedly, the most formidable was the German 88 mm, which was feared by all Allied tank of these
crews.
The other main artillery branch was anti-aircraft, and guns ranged from large caliber used against highflying bombers to small, highly mobile quick-firing cannon like the Swedish-designed Bofors.
tank/alls into
German hands
in 1944.
The German 88-mm antitank gun
The German PzKpfw IV Infantry weapons The infantryman's basic weapon, the rifle and bayonet, remained much the same as in 1914-18. However, light machine guns weighing much less than their 1914-18 forebears and submachine guns were developed to increase an infantryman's firepower at
the lowest level.
own
were also much
lighter
than the cumbersome trench mortars of the First World War. In fact the greatest concern of the infantry was the tank threat. In 1939, most armies were equipped with the antitank rifle, but this soon became ineffective because of the increasing thickness of tank armor.
weapon.
The other major development was and missiles, which was an area pursued by the Germans alone. During the late 1930s and the first part of the war, they worked on what became known in strategic rockets
Mortars, the infantry's "artillery,"
because they could put down a heavy weight of explosive onto a small area of ground. Curiously, the Western Allies never adopted this weapon to the same extent except as an amphibious-landing support
The
lay in the hollow charge, or
as Vergeltungsvva/Jfen ("Vengeance"
or V- Weapons),
solution
Monro
named for the US engineer discovered it in the 1880s. A projectile with a cone-like hollow head lined with metal would, when detonated, create a stream of molten metal and hot gases which would penetrate armor. The US Bazooka, German Panzerfaust and British Projector Infantry AntiTank (PLAT) were all excellent tankeffect,
who
ambush weapons. Rockets There were some notable rocket developments during the Second World War. On the battlefield itself it was the appearance of the multiple-barreled rocket launcher, the German NebeJwerfer and Soviet
Katyusha. They were important
The V-2 rocket
which
Hitler
regarded as "miracle weapons" designed to turn impending defeat into victory. There
the V-l
,
which was
were two types, in effect a
packed with explosive, and the V-2, a guided rocket. Not until June 1944. just after pilotless aircraft
the
Normandy landings,
did the
Germans begin to use them in action. London and Antwerp suffered most. Apart from giving the Western Allies a scare, there were never enough produced to have any significant impact on the course of the last year of the war.
(
(
)\FLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
NAVAL WEAPONS Aircraft carriers
development in the war at sea during 1939-45 was that the aircraft carrier superseded the battleship as the most important
The most
significant
warship. The effectiveness of aircraft against warships had been
demonstrated by the US air theorist General Billy Mitchell in the early 1920s in a series of experiments using ships laid up from the First World War. Except for Germany and the Soviet Union, all the world's major navies possessed aircraft carriers at the outbreak of war. But it was not until the end of 1941 that the potential of the aircraft carrier
was
convoys against the submarine, using their aircraft to seek and
As dominance destroy.
a result of the increasing
of the carrier, the
battleship's roles carrier protection
were reduced and shore
to
bombardment.
ship's propellers.
Submarines The power of the submarine also increased. At the outbreak of war submarine ranges were much greater than they had been in 1914-18 and they were true ocean-going vessels.
dramatically improved by the introduction of the Schnorkel,
Underwater capability was
In 1939, however, submarines
number of drawbacks. They were not
still
suffered from a
able to
operate underwater for long because
on Pearl Harbor, which was launched from carriers.
the air inside the vessel
From then
on. the aircraft carrier
dominated the war
in the Pacific,
giving navies the ability to
mount
long-range strikes without bringing their fleets within the range of the enemy guns. Smaller carriers also played their part in protecting
and they had
became
to surface to
any event, underwater speeds were low. This meant that a submarine only dived or
it
was
getting close to
its
target
had been discovered. Another problem from which the
German U-boats
that the U-boat could
which enabled the submarine
to
travel at relatively high speeds
underwater and very quietly in order reduce the risk of detection. These developments, how ever, came too late to restore Germany's fortunes. r
stale
recharge
their batteries. In
when
which meant
"breathe," and the Walther Turbine
to
demonstrated with the Japanese attack
in the first year of the war, was torpedo unreliability. It was the Germans who took the lead in overcoming these problems. They developed torpedoes which would automatically home in on the target. The first type had a preset zigzag course which increased the chances of hitting a ship in a convoy. Later they introduced an acoustic torpedo which homed in on the noise of a
suffered, especially
Antisubmarine warfare
SONAR,
or
called
introduced in 1918,
it.
ASDIC as
the British
detected a submarine underwater by bouncing sound impulses off it. To detect a submarine on the surface, two types of devices were used, apart from visual contact.
Radar
at
Sea
Destroyer
SONAR, or ASDIC worked by bouncing sound waves (1) off underwater objects such as a submarine (2), after which depthcharges
(3)
could be fired
to
collapse the submarine's hull. the surface, the submarine
On
(4)
could be detected by normal radar (5), although in this case the target would be smaller.
•nger torpedo bomber flies over aircraft carrier deck.
APPENDICES
Amphibious warfare Little attention was paid
to landings
from the sea before 1939, but they
became a very marked characteristic of the Second World War. A successful landing required very close cooperation
among air force,
navy and army, and
it was very important that the troops quickly established themselves on the shore so that they could effectively resist
counterattacks.
A Landing Ship Tank, about to The
was
unload, southern France, August 1944.
The most important element of an amphibious landing was the landing craft, flat bottomed with a ramp,
Allies at an early stage of the war.
which took the troops
which was operated by hand. By 1943 sets with a 32-km (20-mile) range were in service. Radio direction-finding was the
They were,
Early types were small and designed
other method. This detected
that the information gained
submarine radio transmissions and a bearing to the submarine could be obtained. With two sets operating on
of date.
first
radar, using a
rotating aerial,
different ships, the submarine's
exact position could be established
by charting the intersection
of the
as
on land and
in the air,
invaluable in establishing the
enemy's intentions, although often the time taken to decipher meant
was out
To destroy the submarine, the depth charge, delivered by both ships and aircraft, was the main weapon. These were "bombs" fired in a pattern and set to detonate at a
bearings.
certain depth. Later, the British
The top-secret codes used by the German and Japanese submarines, code-named ULTRA and MAGIC
introduced Hedgehog, a launcher which fired 24 explosive projectiles simultaneously, which would only detonate if they hit something solid.
respectively,
were broken by the
merely to land troops, but larger ships were built to carry tanks and other heavy equipment, as well as fire-support vessels armed with guns
and multi-barreled rocket launchers. Often obstacles below the tide line and the nature of the beach meant it was not possible to land troops without getting their feet wet. Kits were developed to enable tanks to
swim ashore, as well as special tracked amphibious vehicles, which could also swim.
Mines As in the
First World War, mines played an important part in the war at sea. They were laid by both ships
Retlected radio waves are picked up by Destroyer
Surfaced
to the shore.
The traditional type of which relied on a ship hitting mine, and it
/—J
aircraft.
to detonate
it,
quickly gave
the magnetic type.
submarine
this
way to
The answer to
was degaussing.
A cable, placed
around the hull of the ship and connected to the generators, could produce a countermagnetic field and
Reflected sound waves are picked up by Destroyer
r Depth charges
cancel out the existing one. Acoustic mines, detonated by the noise of the ship's propellers, and pressure mines, which worked by responding to the varying water
pressure under a moving ship, also made their appearance, as did
combinations of these. To make the task of rendering them safe more various anti-handling devices were introduced. Another type of mine was the limpet, which could be attached to the hull of the difficult,
Submerged submarine
ship and had a timing device. It was used in Special Forces operations.
7
C
(
)MLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
AIR
WEAPONS Fighters It
was the monoplane eight-gun with radar, which
fighter, together
disproved the prewar belief that the bomber "would always get through."
and Germans had some outstanding fighters, the Supermarine Spitfire, Hawker Hurricane and Messerschmitt Bf 109, which were all modified to improve speed and range and remained in service throughout the In 1939, the British
war. all
The Japanese Zero outclassed
existing Allied fighters in the
early days of the
The Germans
war
in the Far East.
also introduced the
Focke\VulfFwl90. The Germans used the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka dive bomber to provide close support for troops on the ground. This was even fitted with sirens to frighten the enemy. The Allies had fighter-bombers like the Soviet Ilyushin 11-2 Sturmovik and the British Typhoon. To combat night bombers, radarequipped Messerschmitt Bf 110s and de Havilland Mosquitos were introduced, and to protect day
The German Me 262
jet
had
a top speed
on the other hand, had drawn up specifications for long-range four-
during the
improved
unlike the RAF, believed that
Bombs
bomber had enough guns, it could operate by day. and the B-l was known as the Flying Fortress. However, this only became really
As the war progressed, bombs became larger and heavier. At the beginning the largest was the 500pounder (227-kg), but soon 455-kg
if
the
km (2,800 miles) and a load of 5.5 tons. It was this
of 4.500
type that dropped the atomic
bombs
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
and 909-kg
possible with the introduction of the
(1,000-lb)
long-range fighter escort. Also on
bombs were developed. The heaviest conventional bomb
long flights the B-17's
bomb
load
year of the war.
Bombers The Germans lacked a true strategic bomber in terms of range and bombload, and this was one of the reasons they failed to win the Battle of Britain and to disrupt Soviet war industry. The RAF and the USAAF,
situation
with the appearance of the Boeing B29 Superfortress, which had a range
bomb
had several successes last
was restricted. However, the
engined bombers well before the outbreak of war and these made their appearance in 1941. The two best known were the Avro Lancaster and the Boeing B-l 7. There was, however, a difference in philosophy. The Americans,
bombers, long-range fighters like the Republic P-47 Thunderbolt and North American P-51 Mustang, with a range of 2,090 km (1.300 miles), eventually gave effective cover. The most radical development was, however, the appearance of the jet fighter. In 1944 it finally came into service in the shape of the Gloster Meteor, which was used to intercept V-l flying bombs, and the German Messerschmitt Me 262, which, although somewhat unreliable,
o/869 km/h (540 mphj.
The North American P-51 Mustang
(2,000-lb)
APPENDICES
aircraft flying
toward England.
It
was
originally called Radiolocation,
implying the use
bounced
name
of radio
waves
off solid objects, but the
US
Radar (Radio Direction and Ranging] was soon universally adopted. Radar played a vital role in the Battle of Britain, and the Germans soon afterward set up their own system, combined with antiaircraft guns and night fighters, to protect Germany from the RAF's night bombing.
Lancaster S-Sugar of No 467 Squadron
is
was the British 9,975-kg (22,000-lb) Grand Slam, which was
war,
'bombed
of
This was called the Kammhuber Line after the general responsible for installing it. Radars installed in night fighters enabled them to
up.'
detect, locate of all
used
all
Allied efforts were pooled in
the United States under what
to destroy the Bielefeld railway
viaduct in Germany in March 1945. Incendiary bombs, using thermite or phosphorus, and delayed action bombs were also used by both sides.
called the
Manhattan
was
Project.
was not until July 16, 1945 that an atomic bomb was successfully testexploded, at Alamogordo in the New
and attack enemy
bombers. Likewise, the bombers themselves had radar systems which enabled them to locate their targets
It
accurately.
Mexico
Systems were also introduced to jam or confuse the enemy's radars. The best known was Window, which
desert.
revolutionary development was the atomic bomb. At the beginning of the
Radar
consisted of strips of aluminum which were dropped by the
war
the
Radar came to dominate the war in air, perhaps even more so than at
bombers, producing a cloud-like effect on the radar's display. This
The most awesome and
began to investigate how atomic energy could be transformed into a weapon. With the entry of the United States into the scientists
British
Chain
Coastal radar
back
Home Radar, (1)
picks
(3) to fighters (4).
sea.
It
was the
British
late
1930s in order
to detect hostile
system, now called Chaff, is still very much in use as a counter to missile attack.
"Window"
1940
up bombers
who first
installed a defensive system in the
(2);
information
is
fed
at War, 1944 Lead aircraft (1) drops "Window" (3) and protect bombers (4).
(2) to
confuse radars
1
£fc P^? ^
j^SX
Normal
-
"Window" confusion
CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY
1942
CHRONOLOGY
January
1 26 nations sign the Declaration of the United Nations
Washington, DC Axis forces cleared from Cyrenaica (Libya) in
1941
1939 September
German invasion
1
of
Poland
September 3 Britain and France declare war on Germany September 17 Soviet invasion of
January 19 February 7 defeated
November 30
Soviet attack on
Italians decisively at
Beda
Fomm in Libya
Germany and Bulgaria
Italy attacks
Greece from
Albania 11
1940 ^^ ^^ ^^
of British
^»
Peace between Soviet Union and Finland signed in
Moscow German invasion of Denmark and Norway May 10 German invasion of France
April 9
and the Low Countries begins; Churchill appointed British prime minister
May 15 May 27 May 28
Holland surrenders Dunkirk evacuation begins Belgium surrenders
June 10
Italy declares war,
invading southern France next
day June 22 the
French sign armistice with
Germans
July 3-8
French
British
bombard the
fleet in
North African
ports
July 16 Hitler issues orders for the invasion of Britain
September 13
Italian forces invade Egypt from Libya September 15 Climax of the Battle
of Britain:
London
is
heavily
bombed September 27 Japan joins Axis October 7 German troops enter Rumania October 28 Italy invades Greece from Albania
November 5 Roosevelt reelected US President November 20 Hungary and then Rumania
join the
December 9
British launch recapture
Axis
British troops begin to
drive the Italians out of Egypt
March 24
March
British cleared
from
Singapore surrenders Japanese enter Rangoon,
7
Burma on Tokyo
April 18
Doolittle raid
May 4-8
Battle of the Coral Sea in
the Pacific
May 6 US fortress of Corregidor
Rommel begins
May 19-28 Germans victorious at
(Philippines) surrenders his first
offensive in Libya April 6 Germany invades Yugoslavia (surrenders April 17) and Greece (surrenders April 21) April 13 Soviet Union and Japan sign five-year nonaggression pact April 29 Pro-Fascist revolt in Iraq, which British put down
May 5
attacks in
Somaliland and enter
Ethiopia
March 12
January 31 Malaya February 15 capital of
US Lend-Lease Bill
becomes law
March 16
Rommel
January 21 Libya
sign military pact
March
Finland
British invade Eritrea
February 8
March 9
Poland
January 6
Emperor Haile Selassie
re-
enters his capital in Ethiopia
May 20 German airborne assault on Crete, which falls on May 31 June 8 British attack Syria June 22 Hitler invades Soviet Union July 12 Britain and Soviet Union sign mutual assistance pact August 9-12 Churchill and Roosevelt meet off Newfoundland and draw up the Atlantic Charter August 25 British and Soviet troops enter Iran to secure the oilfields
September 8 Leningrad surrounded
November 18
British launch a major offensive in Libya December 4 German drive on
Moscow halted December 7 Japanese
Kharkov on the Eastern Front
May 26 Rommel attacks and soon breaks the British Gazala Line in Libya June 4-7 Battle of Midway (Pacific)
Eisenhower assumes
June 24
command
on
US troops in
July 1-27 First Battle of El Alamein in Egypt July 3 Germans secure Sevastapol in the
Crimea
August 7
US landings on
Guadalcanal (Solomon Islands, Pacific)
August 9
Germans capture
Caucasus
oilfields
August 12 Churchill, Stalin, US and Free French representatives meet in Moscow to discuss the Second Front August 19 Canadian raid on Dieppe fails August 30-September 2 Montgomery repulses Rommel at
Alam
Haifa, Egypt
September attack
of all
Europe
1
Germans reach the
outskirts of Stalingrad
Roosevelt meet in Washington,
October 23-November 4 Second Battle of El Alamein November 8 Allied landings in French North Africa (Torch) November 11 Germans occupy Vichy France
DC
November 19
Pearl Harbor brings the United States into the
war
December 1 1
Germany and Italy war on the United States December 22 Churchill and declare
(Arcadia)
December 31
Japanese capture Manila, capital of the Philippines
Soviet counter-
offensive at Stalingrad
APPENDICES
44
1943 Anglo-US
January 14-23 conference
at
at
Anzio,
Stalingrad
US troops finally
secure Guadalcanal in the
Solomons February 14-22
Battle of
Kasserine, Tunisia
Anglo-US
April 23
HQ set up in
invasion of Europe May 13 Final surrender of Axis
Normandy
Atlantic
US Marines
land on
New
Solomons Battle of Kursk (Eastern
Georgia,
July 5-12 Front)
Anglo-US landings
in
Sicily
Mussolini overthrown in
Italy
July 25-August 3 Hamburg devastated in bombing raids August 14-24 Allied Quadrant Conference in Quebec August 1 7 USAAF lose 60 aircraft in first Schweinfurt raid August 23 Soviets recapture
Kharkov
September 3
Allied landings
across the Strait of Messina on Italy
September 8
Italy makes peace with the Allies September 9 Allied landings at
Salerno
October 13
war on in
Soviets retake Kiev
US
landings on
Tarawa and Makin
in the Gilbert
Islands (Pacific)
November 28-December 1
Tehran Conference - Churchill, Roosevelt
and Stalin meet
Union
Paris liberated; Allied
troops begin attacks on the Gothic
Soviets retake
October 14 USAAF lose heavily second Schweinfurt raid
US troops begin to break Normandy beachhead
July 28 Soviets retake BrestLitovsk August 1 Polish patriots rise in Warsaw (crushed October 2) August 15 Allied landings in southern France August 23 Rumania surrenders to
Line
Italy declares
life
fails
the Soviet
Germany
November 6 November 20
cut off in the Baltic states July 20 Attempt on Hitler's
July 25 out of
US
landings on
in the Philippines
December 16-January 20, 1945 German counteroffensive Ardennes
in the
(Battle of the
Bulge)
1945 January 17 Warsaw liberated February 4-1 1 Yalta Conference with Churchill, Roosevelt and
February 13 Budapest finally falls February 13-14 Bombing of Dresden February 19 US landings on Iwo Jima, Pacific
land on Saipan
(Mariana Islands) June 19-20 Battle of the Philippine Sea (Pacific) June 22 Soviet offensive in Belorussia begins July 9 German Army Group North
August 25
(Italy)
September 24 Smolensk
US forces
June 15
Mindoro
Stalin
captured June 4 Rome liberated June 6 Anglo-US landings in
temporarily away from North
July 25
Leningrad relieved
Rumania
May 16-17 RAF Dambuster raid May 24 German U-boats ordered
July 10
Italy
January 27 January 31
May 18 Monte Cassino (Italy)
forces in Tunisia
June 21
at
launched in central Burma March 29 Soviet troops enter
Britain to begin planning the
President Roosevelt
December 15 Allied landings
US landings on the Marshall Islands (Pacific) February 15 Soviets reenter Estonia February 29 US landings on the Admiralty Islands (Pacific) March 8 Major Japanese offensive
surrender
February 9
7
elected for a fourth term
January 22
Casablanca
Germans
January 31
November
(Italy)
September 3 Brussels liberated September 8 Bulgaria declares war on Germany September 15 US troops cross the German border between Aachen and Luxemburg September 17-24 Allied airborne
March March
3
Manila secured
7
US troops seize Remagen
bridge over the Rhine March 9-10 Fire raid on Tokyo
April
Final offensive launched in
1
US
Italy;
landings on Okinawa President Roosevelt dies
April 12
and is succeeded by Truman April 25 US troops make contact with the Soviets on the Elbe River, southwest of Berlin April 28 Mussolini killed by partisans
German forces
April 29
sign an
armistice in Italy
April 30
May 1
Hitler
commits suicide
Berlin surrenders to the
Soviets
May 3 Rangoon recaptured by the British
May 7 Germany formally surrenders
Okinawa finally secured
June 21 July 16
First successful
atomic
bomb test July 16-August 2 Conference July 26
Potsdam
Attlee replaces Churchill as
operation to seize river crossings in Holland (Market Garden) September 19 Armistice signed between Finland and the Allies
prime minister August 6 Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima August 8 Soviet Union declares war on Japan August 9 Atomic bomb dropped on
October 20 US landings, Leyte October 23-26 Battle of Leyte Gulf
September 2
off the
Philippines
British
Nagasaki surrenders
Japan formally
E
:
ET1 CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY bombing
INDEX Note:
Numbers
illustrations or
in
'
bold refer to
maps
British
Army
Belgium, 8,9. 34 Dunkirk. 9. 58
28,35,36.54.54,56-57.5657
France, 32, 33, 33. 34
Albania, 11 Allied forces. Western advances, 20, 20, 21, 22. 24.
Germany,
38, 39.
North Africa, 20.21,24 Norway, 9
25.25,26,32.34.34.35, 35.39,39,40.41.42
40
11, 19,20,
Singapore, 16 Southeast Asia, 16, 22,
23,29,35,35,41
conferences, 16, 23, 29, 39,
42.47.58,59 defeats, 9, 10, 11,15,16. 17.
expeditionary force, 7 Western Desert Force, 11,
20,24,25,49
23,29,34.34
British Empire. 45
26,29,32,34.35.36.40, 19.21,22,23, 24,28,29,31,34,35,36, 38,39,50 weapons. 10, 16.24,25,26, 41.41,54,55.56.57; Anvil." 29, 34 Arcadia Conference, 16, 58 Ardennes. 38 Arnhem, 34, 36,51 artillery, 30,52,53 Atlantic, Battle of, 24,25,26, 26,50 Atlantic Charter, 13,58 atomic bomb, 30. 42, 42, 43, 47.51,51,56,59 Auchinleck, Claude, 11 Australia, 16, 17,21,21,22, 28,35,45
Canada. 45,58
23, 29,
17, 19, 31, 32, 33, 34,
Casablanca, 21; conference,
23,26,59 casualties, cost of war, 7, 8, 10,
15,17,19,26,31,36,39,41, 42,43,44,46,47,47 Caucasus, 18, 18-19, 23 Chamberlain, Neville, 7 Chiang Kai-Shek, 14, 15, 16,
Battles
conscription, 45
Balkans,
6,
Atlantic., 24, 25, 26, 26,
Britain, 6.
50
10,51,56,57,58
Bulge, 38, 39 Coral Sea, 17,58
58 Kursk, 26.26. 27,31,59 LeyteGutf, 36 Midway, 22, 49, 58 Stalingrad. 14, 18. 23,23,
11.12,50
59
movements. Vichy France, 10,
58; resistance 10, 31, 32;
North Africa, 21;
•Overlord." 24, 29. 30, 32,
47
Warsaw
Uprising,
Balkan offensive, 37;
Battle of the Bulge, 38, 39;
Dresden
air raids, 39, 39;
surrender, 40; postwar, 29, 42, 45; final casualties,
47
Ghandi, Mahatma. 23 Gilbert Islands, 28, 28, 29, 35 Goering, Field Marshal
Hermann, 27 Graf Spee. 8 Great Britain: how war began,
German
Dunkirk.
US,
9:
offensives,
relations with
10, 13; Battle of Britain,
10. 10: offensives in
de Gaulle. General Charles. 10, 34,48 German Air Force (Luftwaffe) campaigns Ardennes, 9.38.39 Eastern Front, 27 Great Britain, 10, 10, 17 Holland and the Low Countries, 9, 9, 38 Malta, 11
German Army Blitzkrieg strategy,
7, 9, 9,
12,50 campaigns Ardennes, 11,
9, 38, 39 Eastern Front, 12,18,18,
19,19,23,23,27,27, 28,29,30,31,32 France, 10, 21,34 Holland and the Low Countries,
Mediterranean, 11; support for Soviet Union, 13: Atlantic Charter, 13: declares war on Japan, 16; defeats in Far East and Southeast Asia, 15, 16; Battle of El Alamein, 20. 20: Allied "Torch" operation, 21: victory in North Africa, 24: strategy for Japan, 22-23;
Germany. 23. 24.25: "Overlord," 24, 29, 32,33, 33. 34, 59; invasion of Italy,
for
24;Gustav Line, 31: raid on Germany, 24,25.25, 26: Tehran Conference. 29; "Market Garden," 34, 34; Yalta
bombing
8, 9, 9, 38,
39
Conference, 39; Potsdam Conference, 42; postwar. 44. 45. 47; final casualties. 47;
see also Allied forces Greece, 11,39.58
Italy, 24, 29,
30 North Africa, 11,20.20. 21,21.24
Guam,
Norway,
Harris, Arthur, 25, 26, 48
9
Poland, 6, 7,7, 8,8. 12. 39 Panzer Armies, 9, 13, 18, 18
German Navy
U-boats, 7,8, 11,17.24,26,
convoys, 17 Norway, 9
26,50,51,53,59 Germany: how war started.
15. 16,36 Guderian, Heinz, 48, 48, 50
Hiroshima, 42, 43, 51, 59 Hitler, Adolf: invasion of
Poland,
6, 7, 8, 8:
Stalin, 6:
D-Day. 32,33, 34 Denmark, 9, 58
58
31, 32, 39;
9:
"Channel Dash," 17
Doolittle, Colonel James, 28,
bombing of, 24, 25, 25, 26: Battle of Atlantic, 26; defeat on Eastern Front. 29,
Allied
6-8. 58:
33, 34; liberated, 34,59;
Crimea, see Eastern Front Czechoslovakia, 6, 6
50
8. 9. 30. 34. 51. 58.
Blitzkrieg. 7,9.9.
11,27,58
Doenitz, Admiral Karl, 26, 40,
27.45,49.59 Belgium.
convoys. 7. 11. 13, 17, 19, 50, 53 Coral Sea, Battle of, 17, 58 Crete,
ElAlamein.20.20. 21.49.
Finland, 9, 36, 58, 59 food rationing, 45 France; how war began, 6,7,8; Finnish campaign, 9; in Norway, 9; Dunkirk. 9: invasion by Germany, 10,
Bulge, Battle of the, 38, 39
Burma, 14, 14, 16, 22, 30.35,35,58,59
Alamein, 20,20,21; Vichy France, 21: Battle of Stalingrad, 18,23,23,26: defeat in North Africa, 24; Italy declares war on. 24: of El
37, 37;
45,48
11,23,31,32,37, 39,46,58.59 Baltic States, 8, 13, 32, 36, 59 Bataan Peninsula, 17, 17
Axis forces, 6, 6. 11, 19, 20. 20. 21,23,24.38, 58, 59; see also Eastern Front
56
Free French forces, 10, 34, 38,
Bulgaria, 37,58. 59
22,35,43,45 China, 14, 16,22,23,35,35, 36,41 Chindits, 29,35,35 Chuikov, General Vassili, 26, 29,42 Churchill, Winston, 10, 13, 16, 19,23,24,29,39,40,42,43, 47.58 communism, 39, 40, 46, 46, 47 concentration camps, 6, 31, 44,45
Austria, 6
21,49,58
final casualties.
Brussels, 34, 58
41 strategies, 17,
12, 13, 13, 58; signs Tripartite Pact. 14; declares
27,28,31,32,36.39.58,59
11, 21; in
see also Allied forces, Battles, Great Britain
naval operations, 7, 9, 10, 11.16,17, 19.22,24.25,
war on US, 16; offensives on Eastern Front, 18, 19: Battle
9; Battle of
invades Soviet Union, 12,
fighter aircraft, 9, 9, 10, 25. 26.
Italy. 24. 25. 29, 31,
air operations, 7, 8, 11, 21,
East Africa, 11 Eastern Front, 13, 18, 23, 27,
Countries,
Britain, 10, 58; Malta, 11;
40
Holland, 34
25,28,28,29,31,32,32, 33.34.35,35.36,38,38, 39.40.41.42.58,59
Low
Eisenhower, General Dwight, 19,24.32,34.39,40,48,48, 58 El Alamein, Battle of, 20. 20,
Balkans, 11
17,22,26,
"Dragoon," see "Anvil" Dresden, 39, 39, 59 Dunkirk, 9, 58 Dutch New Guinea, 35
Egypt. 11.20,49,58
campaigns
airraid shelters, 11 aircraft. 11, 15, 16,
raids 7, 8, 9, 10, 15,
17,22,24,25,25, 26.28, 32,35,36,39,42,43.43.46, 51,51,54,56.57.57 Bor-Komorowski, General Tadeusz, 37 Britain. Battle of, 6, 10,51,56, 57.58 16,
6,
Pact with
ultimatum from
Britain, 7; launches U-boat campaign, 7; invasion plans in West, 8; Battle of Britain. 10, 58; support for Italy. 1 1
"Barbarossa," 12, 13; strategy for Eastern Front,
Bomb Plot,
7,7, 8; Pact with Soviet
18, 23, 27, 28;
Union,
33, 59; Allied invasion, ("Overlord"), 32; strategy
invades France and the
7, 12;
Norway,
9:
on
INDEX ports, 34; Battle of the Bulge,
38, 39; death,
Holland, 59
40
8, 9, 30,
34,38, 58,
29,31,35,35 infantry weapons, 53. 53 Iraq, 11,58 India, 22,23,
Nagasaki, 42, 43
Italian fleet, 11;
Nagumo, Admiral Chuichi, 22
of troops, 1 1
Nazis (National Socialists), 10, 13 New Guinea, 22, 28, 35, 36 New Zealand, 31,35 Nimitz, Admiral Chester, 22,
Malta, 11; Prince of Wales,
35,36,49
non-involvement, 7; invasion of France by, 10,
Italy;
58; campaign in North Africa, 11, 24, 58; invasion of Greece by, 11, 58; defeats,
;
evacuation importance of
16; Repulse, 16;
Royal Oak,
8;SSAthenia,7 Rumania, 37, 58, 59 Russia, see Union of Soviet Russo-Finnish War, 9
43; postwar, 45;
47 United Nations. 16, 44, 47, 58 United States of America; final casualties, 44,
declares neutrality,
7;
relations with Britain, 10,
13,16; with Japan, 14. 15; Pearl Harbor raid, 14, 15, 15,
Socialist Republics
Normandy, 30, 32, 33, 33 North Africa, 11, 19, 20, 20, 21,21,23,24,31,48 Norway, 6,9, 58
on Japan,
16. 58; enters war, 16; Battle
of Coral Sea, 17,58;
"Sea Lion," 10 Sicily. 21, 24,48,49,51.59 Sikorski, General Wladyslaw, 8
shipping losses, 17; supply routes, 19; "Torch," 20, 20, 21; strategies for: Pacific, 14,
11: air offensives in Malta,
Okinawa, 41,42,59
Singapore, 14. 15, 16
17,22,28,29,35,36,39;
11; signs Tripartite Pact, 14;
"Overlord," 24, 29, 31, 32, 33
Sitzkrieg, 8
Southeast Asia, 22-23;
Allied invasion of, 14, 24, 25; surrender of German
Slim, General William, 35, 41 Pacific, theater of
Germany. 23, 24, 25; France, 24, 29; North Africa, 24;
forces in, 40; postwar world, 45; final casualties,
47 Iwo lima,
41, 41, 59
Japan; how war began, 14, 14, 15; attacks Pearl Harbor, 15, 15; campaigns in Far East
and Pacific, 15,16, 16, 17, 17,22,23,28,29,35,35,41, 41, 42, 42; USSR joins war against, 29, 59;
US air
attacks on, 35, 36, 41, 42, 43;
naval power, 36, 40; air power, 40: Hiroshima, Nagasaki, 42, 42, 43; postwar, 46-47; final casualties,
14,15,15,16,17,22,28-29, 30,35,36,40-43,45,49,58, 59 Patton, General George, 24, 34, 39,40 Paulus, General Friedrich, 23, 26 Pearl Harbor, 14, 14, 15, 15,
41 Kasserine Pass, 24, 49, 59 Katyn, 29 Kursk, Battle of, 26, 26, 27, 31, 59
Leningrad, 13, 18, 23, 31, 36,
58,59 Libya, 11,19,20,58 Luftwaffe, see
German Air
Force
started, 6;
and
Warsaw 59; Warsaw
into, 36;
uprising, 37, 37, liberated, 39; postwar, 29, 45; final casualties, 44, 47
Potsdam Conference, 42, 59 prisoners of war (POWs), 17, 44
Malta, 11
Roosevelt, President Franklin Delano, 13, 14, 16, 17,19,
Mariana Islands, 35, 36, 41 "Market Garden," 34, 34, 38,
11,
20,20,21,24,32,33,49,58
23,24,29,39,40,47,58,59
59 Marshall Islands, 35 Merrill's Marauders, 29, 35,
Royal Air Force (RAF); attacks on German naval bases, 8; Battle of Britain, 10;
35,50
response to "Blitz," 10; Singapore and Malaya, 16;
Mers-el-Kebir, 10
Middle East, 10, 11, 19, 20, 20, 21,21,24 Midway, Battle of, 22, 49, 58 mines, 28, 55
Montgomery, General
raids
on Germany,
10, 24,
25, 25, 26; "Overlord," 32;
Dresden bombing, 39, 39 Royal Navy, 7; convoy system, 11,13,17, 19; pursues Graf Spee, 8; Dunkirk, 9; Mers-el-Kebir incident, 10; 7,
Bernard, 20, 21, 24, 32, 34,
38,39,40,49,49 11, 24,
Conference, 29; German counterattack in Italy, 31; "Overlord." 24, 29, 31,32, 33, 34, 59: Finland. 36; Yalta Conference, 39; Allied
23,29,35,35,41,45 SS(SchutzSra#elnJ,6,13 Stalin, Joseph, 6, 12,18, 19,
29,39,40,42,43,47
29,35 submarines, 52-53, 52-53 Sudan, 11
Rome, 31 Rommel, General Erwin,
7,
Germany,
Southeast Asia, 14, 15, 16, 22,
Stilwell, General Joseph, 22,
MacArthur, General Douglas, 17,35,36,43,48 Malaya, 14, 15, 16
Mussolini, Benito,
South Africa, 11
36,49,58,59 "Phony War, "8 Poland; how war
15,57,57 Rangoon, 23,41,59 refugees, 45 Reichstag, 40, 40 resistance movements, 10, 31, 33.34,44 Rhine River, 40, 51,59 rockets, 26, 53, 53 Rokossovsky, Konstantin, 49
58
10, 10, 11, 11
Japan, 22,2829,41; Allied raid on
Italy, 24, 25;
Philippines, 14, 14, 15, 16, 17,
radar,
London Blitz,
58,59 Somaliland, British, 11, 58
Stalingrad, Battle
advance
56
Bill, 10,
Islands, 22, 28, 35,
of, 14, 18,
23,23,27,45,49,59
Tehran
advance into Germany, 40; Far East campaigns, 40-42, 42; Potsdam Conference, 42; drops atomic bombs, 42, 42, 43; surrender of Japan to, 43; postwar, 44, 47; final casualties, 47; see also
Sweden, 9 Syria,
24, 25;
11,58
Allied forces
,
pilots, 36,
Lend-Lease
Solomon
16,17,22,28,54,58 Petain, Marshal Phillipe, 10
France, 6, 7; German invasion of 6, 7,7,8,8,58: partitioned, 8; Soviet
Jews, 10, 31,45
Kamikaze
of, 14,
relations with Britain
47
jet fighters, 56,
war
40
Battle of Britain, 10;
and
tanks, 7,18,18, 21,27, 28, 52,
52
Tehran Conference,
29, 47,
59
Thailand, 15
V-weapons, 45, 53, 53 Vichy France, 10, 11,21 von Arnim, General Dietloff Jiirgen,
Timoshenko, Marshal Semyon, 18
24
Wainwright, General
Tojo. General Hideki, 15
Jonathan, 17
Tokyo, 42, 43
Wake, 14,15,15
"Torch," 20, 21, 58 torpedoes, 53 Truman, President Harry, 40,
warfare tactics, 50-51, 54, 55
42,43,47 Tse-tung, Mao, 35 Tunisia, 14,21,24,49
Wavell, General Archibald, 11,
22,23 weapons,
U-boats, see German Navy Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR); Pact with Germany, 6, 12; and Poland. 8; war with Finland, 9, 58:
invasion by
see also weapons Warsaw, 8, 8, 36, 37, 39, 49, 59 Washington Conference, 16
Germany of,
12,
12, 13, 13, 58; neutrality
with Japan, 16; attack on Caucasus, 18, 18, 19; Battle
9, 12, 17, 18, 21, 27,
30, 41, 51, 52-57, 52-57; see
also Allied forces, bombing raids Western Desert Force (Eighth
Army), 11,20, 24, 25,49 Wingate, Brigadier Orde, 29, 35 women, 45, 45 World War I, 7,10, 23
of Stalingrad, 18, 23, 23, 26;
Battle of Kursk, 27, 27, 28:
Tehran Conference, 29, 47; war with Japan, 16, 58; Eastern Front, 29. 31, 32, 59;
advance
to
Warsaw,
28.49,49 Yugoslavia. 11.45, 58
36, 37,
Warsaw
Uprising, 37; liberates Warsaw, 39; Yalta 37:
Yalta Conference, 39, 59 Yamamoto, Admiral Isoroku,
Conference, 39; Poland overrun by, 39; advances in Balkans, 39; Germany surrenders, 40; Potsdam
Conference, 42; declares war
Zhukov, Georgi,
49,
49
E
C< )\'FLICT IN
THE 20TH CENTURY
FUH 1lIKll READING German Air Force Operations in Salem, NH, 1968) Erickson, John, The Road to Berlin: Continuing the History of Stalin's War with Germany (Westview, Deichmann,
P.,
Support of the
Army (Ayer,
Boulder, CO, 1983) Erickson, John, The Road to Stalingrad (Westview,
Boulder. CO. 1983) Foot,
M.
R.,
Alistair,
(Penguin,
New York,
1985) Smith, R. Harris, OSS: The Secret History of America's First Central Intelligence Agency (Univ. of California Berkeley, 1972) Strawson, John, The Battle for North Africa (Scribner, New York, 1969) Time-Life Book Editors and Halloran, R., Japan at War (Time-Life, Alexandria, VA, 1981) Weigley, Russell F., Eisenhower's Lieutenants: The Campaign in France and Germany, 1944-1945 (Indiana Univ. Pr., Bloomington, 1981) Winter, J. M., The Great War and the British People (Harvard Univ. Pr., Cambridge, MA, 1986) Pr.,
S.O.E. in France:
An Account of the Work
of the British Special Operations Executive in France 1940-1944 (Univ. Pubns. of Am. .Frederick, MD, 1984)
Home.
Saward, D., Bomber Harris: The Story of the Marshall of the Royal Air Force (Doubleday, New York, 1985) Seaton, Albert, The German Army 1933-45 (Meridian,
To Lose a
New York,
Battle:
France 1940
1979)
Lewin, Ronald, The American Magic: Codes, Ciphers and the Defeat of Japan (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, New York, 1982) Liddell Hart, B. H., History of the Second World War (Perigee, New York, 1970) Nissen, N. H., ed., Scandinavia During the Second
Winton, John, War in the Pacific: Pearl Harbor to
Tokyo Bay (Mayflower,
New York,
1979)
World War, Munch-Petersen, T, tr. from Scandinavian (Univ. of Minnesota Pr., Minneapolis, 1983) Nitobe, I., Bushido, The Warrior's Code, ed. Lucas, C. (Ohara, Burbank, CA, 1975) Salmaggi, Cesare and Pallavisini, Alfredo, eds., 2194 Days of War: An Illustrated Chronology of the Second World War (Mayflower, New York, 1979)
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Cover:
MARS; title page: MARS;
Bilderdienst: page
8:
page
7:
Ullstein
Ullstein Bilderdienst; page
MARS: page 10; Imperial War Museum; page 11: War Museum; page 12 (top): Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 12 (bottom): MARS; page 15: MARS; page 16: MARS; page 17: Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 18-19: MARS; page 19: MARS; page 20: Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 20 (bottom): MARS: page 21: MARS; page 22: MARS; page 25: Photosource/Keystone; page 26: MARS; page 27: MARS; page 28: MARS; page 30: MARS: page 31: Camera Press; page 33: Suddeutscher Verlag; page 34: MARS; page 37: Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 39: MARS; page 40: MARS; page 41: MARS; page Imperial
MARS; page 44: Photosource/Keystone; page 45: BBC Hulton Picture Library: page 48 (bottom left):
43: 9:
Popperfoto; page 48 (bottom right): Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 49 (top): Suddeutscher Verlag; page 49 (bottom left): Photosource Central Press; page 49 (bottom right): Photosource; page 51 (top): Photosource/ Keystone; page 51 (bottom): Pilot Press: page 52 (bottom left): Suddeutscher Verlag; page 52 (bottom right): Ullstein Bilderdienst; page 53 (top left): Ian Hogg; page 53 (top right): Robert Hunt Library; page 53 (bottom): Suddeutscher Verlag; page 54: MARS; page 55: MARS; page 56 (both): Pilot Press; page 57:
V
Photosource/Central Press.
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CONFLICT IN Tin? 20TII CENTURY From the world's
first total
war
to the East- West clashes
and the
ongoing struggles in today's world, this series truly highlights the conflicts of our century. The first four volumes trace the history of conflict, while the final six are topical and up-to-date, providing the basis for current affairs discussion. Conflict in
its
is
used
widest sense to include the social, economic and political
impact of the wars that provide the central themes of each book.
Titles in the series:
The First World War The Second World~War The Middle East
Rise of the Asian Superpowers
Southeast Asia
South and Central America
Africa
The
Rise of the Dictators
The Cold War
Terrorism and
Civil Strife
A FRANKLIN WATTS LIBRARY EDITION
ISBN 0-531 -10321
-8
-4