I. The War Begins
A. The Italian invasion of
Ethiopia might be considered by some to be the starting point of WWII, but
in the US perspective the war began in Asia. Even when the Germans
re-occupied the Rhineland (territory given to France after WWI), Europe did
not stir. In 1937, Japan launched a full-scale attack on China—attacking its
5 northern provinces.
1. This threatened US
investments and other interests in the region as well as US access to
several vital materials—especially rubber.
2. When President Roosevelt
tried to rally public support for a US response (he proposed some kind of
“quarantine” on Japan) his efforts fell flat—the public wanted nothing to do
with it.
3. The depth of the US
public commitment to isolation was revealed when, in December 1937, the
Japanese bombed and sank a US gunboat (Panay) in broad daylight. The
Japanese claimed it was an accident and the US public forgave them.
B. Hitler began to make his
move in 1938. In March, his forces swept into Austria and Hitler declared an
“Anschluss”—Union-- with Austria. He then demanded that
Czechoslovakia give him the Sudetenland—land on the German border
that was occupied mainly by ethnic Germans. Czechoslovakia refused, but
while it had a decent army, it was no match for the Germans without the
support of others. Instead of offering support, Britain and France met with
Hitler in Munich to discuss his demands.
1. This produced the famous
“Munich Accords.” Britain and France agreed to support Hitler’s
claims on the Sudetenland in return for a promise from Hitler that, “This is
the last territorial claim I have to make in Europe.”
2. Neville Chamberlain,
the British Prime Minister, went home to a hero’s welcome for having
prevented war.
C. Despite his promise of
Munich, Hitler seized the remainder of Czechoslovakia in early 1939 and
started to threaten Poland. After signing a non-aggression pact with Stalin
in August 1939, Hitler invaded Poland (September).
D. Having formal alliances
with Poland, Britain and France declared war on Germany two days after the
invasion of Poland.
III. Global War
A. Following his victory in
Poland, Hitler took little action for several months. Many believed that he
was finished and would be satisfied with the territory he had conquered.
1. In the US, Roosevelt
tried to get the Congress to allow the sale of arms to England and France,
but he got only partial victory. Congress permitted the sale of weapons, but
continued to demand that it be on a cash and carry basis—England and France
would have to pay for anything they bought with cash. Isolationism was still
strong in the US.
B. Then, starting in
November, Hitler invaded the West—taking Finland, Denmark, Norway and
Belgium en route to Paris. Joined by Italy, the Axis powers took France on
June 22 1940.
C. With Britain now facing
Germany virtually alone, attitudes in the US began to change. There was
still a huge movement against entering the war, but Congress did approve
measures that allowed the administration to begin making preparations for
war.
1. In September, 1940,
Congress approved the first peace-time military draft in American
history.
2. By December, 1940,
Britain was virtually bankrupt, and the Congress abandoned it’s “cash and
carry” policy, implementing the new “lend-lease” policy. It allowed the
President to “lend” or “lease” armaments to any nation deemed vital to the
interests of the US.
3. The US became, in
Roosevelt’s words, “the arsenal of democracy.”
4. Still, the US did not
enter the war, and satisfied with an air campaign designed to weaken the
British in preparation for an eventual invasion, Hitler turned his attention
east. He invaded Russia, in violation of their mutual non-aggression pact,
in June 1941.
5. Roosevelt, convinced that
US entry into the war in Europe was inevitable, met with Winston Churchill,
the British leader, in August, 1941
a. Meeting aboard the USS
Augusta, Churchill agreed that if the US entered the war, England would
support US plans for the post-war order. This agreement, called the Atlantic
Charter declared that the aims of the war were not to capture anyone’s
territory, but simply to restore democracy and freedom of the seas, to
establish a post war trading system which focused on free and open trade, to
develop post-war international institutions that would provide some kind of
international security, and which would demand the disarmament of
belligerent states.
b. Roosevelt knew that the
American people would very likely resist entry into the war if these points
were not agreed upon beforehand.
D. In Asia, the crisis in
Europe emboldened Japan, which proceeded to invade Southeast Asia—taking
territories controlled by the French and British there.
1. Roosevelt was finally
able to get Congress to respond to Japanese aggression in Asia, but Congress
would approve only an economic response. The US imposed an embargo on the
sale of oil and steel to Japan first. Following the Japanese invasion of
Indochina, which threatened US rubber supplies, the US froze all Japanese
assets in American banks.
2. The German invasion of
Russia was particularly important, because it made a Japanese assault on the
Russian Far East less urgent. The Japanese realized that the US economic
stranglehold posed a more immediate threat and moved up plans to attack the
US directly. The original Japanese war plan was designed to avoid a direct
fight with the US, as Japan believed it could achieve its objectives by
seizing most of the territory from Russian Siberia to Indonesia, which was
rich in natural resources that Japan needed.
E. The US gradually became
more intimately involved in the British war effort as both American
merchant ships and warships came to be used to ship arms and to protect
others’ ships that were carrying arms. This led inevitably to numerous cases
of German submarine attacks on American shipping.
F. Still, the US public
wanted to stay out of the war. They would remain opposed to US entry into
WWII until the Japanese Attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
1. Japan was desperate. Her
oil reserves were very low and would have run out by the end of 1942.
2. Though the US was
expecting some kind of attack, it was expected more in the Philippines than
elsewhere.
3. The attack on Pearl
Harbor was a complete surprise. It left the US Pacific Fleet crippled,
killing 2,403 people, destroying 8 battleships and most the the Pearl Harbor
aircraft fleet.
4.
Nevertheless, the attack on Pearl Harbor was a failure for the Japanese.
a. They were unable to
destroy the US aircraft carrier battle groups, which had gone to sea days
before.
b. They failed to destroy
the huge oil reserves at Pearl, which would have take months to restore.
c. The attack unified the
American people, who immediately shifted from an isolationist to a war
footing.
5. On the day following the
attack, the US declared war on Japan. Germany declared war on the US shortly
after and the war had become genuinely global in scope.
II. The course of the war.
A. By mid-1940, England faced
Germany alone. Instead of invading England immediately, Hitler decided to
try to break down British defenses through an air campaign. The Battle of
Britain was a long, sustained bombing campaign of England’s major cities.
1. Most historians now
regard this as one of Hitler’s great mistakes. The bombing of London in
particular united the British and strengthened their determination to fight
to the last man. More important, it gave the British time to build up their
own air force and to otherwise prepare for war.
2. A second major mistake of
Hitler was his decision to invade Russia while the air campaign against
England was still underway. The invasion of Russia in June, 1941, seemed to
be an initial success—Stalin’s army was still unprepared and many of his
Generals were inexperienced.
a. However, as virtually
every European invader from the past has learned, a successful invasion of
Russia has to be completed before the bitterly cold Russian winter set in.
Though Hitler moved quickly into Russia, taking huge chunks of territory as
quickly as he had in Poland and France, he was not able to capture Moscow
before the winter hit.
b. Hitler’s army in Russia
made another huge mistake—it treated conquered Russians with great
brutality. This was a mistake because by most accounts, most Russians in
Western Russia especially were not fond of life under Stalin. Had the
Germans treated them well, they may have joined the German side. Instead,
they became violently anti-German and conducted guerilla attacks on German
forces throughout the war.
B. Upon entering the war, the
first US goals were to win the War of the Atlantic and to drive the Axis
powers out of North Africa and back into Europe.
1. Some 400 Allied ships
were lost on the Atlantic to German attack in 1942, and that number
increased to 900 in 1943. However, as US ship production achieved full
operation, the US and British began to turn the tide in 1943.
C. Winning WWII in Europe
1. North Africa Campaign
(Operation Torch)
a. Axis
were winning North Africa (threat to Middle East oil and Suez Canal)
b. Erwin
Rommel's "Afrika Korps" sent
c. Oct.
1942 - Bernard Montgomery stopped advance at El Alamein - turning point
d. Nov.
1942 - Dwight Eisenhower landed in Morocco and Algeria
e. First
action - U.S. battered at Kasserine Pass
f. May 13,
1943 - surrendered at Tunis (Tunisia)
2. FDR and Churchill met
for Casablanca Conference (Jan. 1943)
a.
Unconditional surrender of Axis called for.
b. Plan
invasion of Italy through Sicily
c.
Priority to win control of Atlantic
3. Battle of the Atlantic
a. By
1942, 500 Allied ships lost to Germans, 900 lost in 1942
b. Sonar,
depth charges, air patrols, radar
c.
Atlantic "won" by May, 1943
d. After
summer, 1944, no Allied vessels lost
4. Sicily and Italy
(Operation Huskey)
a. July
10, 1943 - 250,000 Am. and Br. troops landed in Sicily
b. July
25, Mussolini's gov't fell - he was imprisoned
c. Sicily
fell in 38 days!
d. Italy
agreed to surrender and switch sides!
-Pietro
Badoglio new Premier
e. Battle
of Italy became a "bloodbath"
5. While Battle of Italy
going on, Allies met again to discuss strategy
a.
Conferences in Washington and Moscow
b. Planned
an invasion of Europe
c. Nov 23
- "Big Three" (FDR, Churchill, Stalin), or
"Grand
Alliance" met at Teheran, Iran
-Stalin
wanted relief
-Feb 1943
- Russians stopped German advance at
Stalingrad
d. By end
of 1943, events favoring Allies
-Bombing
of Germany
-By
Spring, 1944, Allies control the air
e. Planned
invasion of Western Europe
(Eisenhower put in charge of "Operation Overlord")
6. Operation Overlord
a. After
France fell, Nazis fortified coast, weak spot was
Normandy
b. Allies
amassed 3m troops, tons of equipment in S. England
c. Prior to invasion, Allies
sent 20,000 paratroopers to clear the beaches (five sites - Omaha, Utah,
Gold, Juno, Sword)
d. Feigned
attack at Calais; Hitler fell for it!
e. At
dawn, June 6 (D-Day) Allied army hit the beaches at Normandy
f. July
25, Allies broke out
g. Aug.
15, second invasion force landed on the Med. side of
France
(Cannes)
h. Aug 25,
Paris liberated
i. By
Sept, Allies reached Germany (Siegfried Line); talk of
being home
for Christmas
j. Germany
launched V-1 and V-2 rockets at England
k. By late
fall, Allies slowed down
7. Battle of the Bulge
(Ardennes Forest, near Belgium)
a. Dec.
16, Germans lunched last counteroffensive
b. Pushed
a "bulge" of some 50 miles into Allied line
(75 miles
across)
c. Slowed
Allied advance by 6 weeks; Russians entered
Germany
from the east
d. 77,000
Allied casualties, 100,000 German
e. By late
Jan, the "bulge" had been wiped out
f. But,
before invading, one more conference
8. Yalta Conference
(Crimea) - to plan for post-war Europe
a. Feb.
4-11, 1945
b. Ensured
that Soviets would stay in war vs. Japan
c. Planned
another world organization (United Nations)
9. Fall of Germany (1945)
a. Hitler
still believed he could win!
b. March 6
- bridge at Ramagen (Rhine) captured
c. Took
Ruhr Valley (heavy industry), dropped 245,000 tons of
bombs on
German cities ("saturation bombing")
d.
Before victory complete, FDR died in Warm Springs, GA on
April
12, 1945
e. April
16 - Red Army launched massive attack on Berlin
f. April
25 - US and USSR armies met at the Elbe
g. April
28 - Mussolini captured with his mistress
h. April
30 - Hitler and Eva Braun commit suicide
i. May
2 - Berlin fell to Soviets
j. May
7 - Karl Doenitz (U-boat commander), Hitler's successor,
surrendered to U.S.
k. May
8 - repeated with all Allied reps present
(V-E
Day)
B. After defeating the
Nazis, the Japanese still had to be defeated |