chapter 31 section 4
DESCRIPTION
Toward Victory. Chapter 31 Section 4. Setting the Scene - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Chapter 31 Section 4
Toward Victory
Setting the Scene General Douglas MacArthur stood at the dock on
Corregidor in March 1942. A boat waited to evacuate him from the fortified island in the
Philippines. Although the United States Army and Filipino defense forces had battled to keep the
Japanese out of the island chain, they had not been successful. Thousands of Allied civilian men,
women, and children were being held in prison camps throughout the islands, and American and Filipino soldiers were under attack on the Bataan
peninsula. After reaching Australia, MacArthur pledged his determination to free the Philippines
with the words "I shall return.” Allied troops found that the war in Southeast Asia
and the Pacific was very different from that in Europe. Most battles were fought at sea, on tiny
islands, or in deep jungles.
I. War in the PacificBy May 1942, the Japanese controlled much of SE Asia, many Pacific islands, and the Philippines
I. War in the PacificHundreds of American and Filipino soldiers were killed during the Bataan Death March
I. War in the PacificIn May and June 1942, the US stopped the Japanese advance at the battles of the Coral Sea and Midway Island
I. War in the PacificAugust 1942 - US Marines and Soldiers landed at Guadalcanal and began the "island-hopping" campaign
I. War in the PacificBy 1944, Admiral Nimitz’s navy was blockading Japan; bombers pounded Japanese cities and industries
I. War in the PacificOctober 1944 - MacArthur began to retake the Philippines; the British were winning in the jungles of Burma and Malaya
MacArthur returns to the Philippines
British in Burma
II. The Nazis DefeatedAllied bombers hammered Germany with round-the-clock bombing raids
Dresden, Germany
II. The Nazis DefeatedDecember 1944 - Allied armies advanced into Belgium; Germany launched a massive counterattack – the Battle of the Bulge
II. The Nazis DefeatedMarch 1945 - the Allies crossed the Rhine River into Germany; Soviet troops closed in on Berlin
Crossing the Rhine River near Worms, Germany
Red Army in Berlin
II. The Nazis DefeatedLate April - American and Soviet soldiers linked up at the Elbe River
II. The Nazis DefeatedAs Soviet troops entered Berlin, Hitler committed suicide. Germany surrendered on May 7, 1945 – V-E Day
A soldier raises the Soviet flag over the Reichstag in Berlin
III. Defeat of JapanMost of the Japanese navy and air force had been destroyed, yet the Japanese still had a two- million man army
III. Defeat of JapanOfficials estimated that an invasion of Japan would cost over a million casualties - scientists offered another way to end the war
Provision Order of Battle for Invasion of Japan
(August 1945)
III. Defeat of JapanJuly 1945 - Allied scientists successfully tested the first atomic bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico
On July 16, 1945, the first atomic bomb, equivalent to eighteen thousand tons of TNT, was detonated at the Trinity Site
III. Defeat of JapanPresident Harry Truman warned the Japanese to surrender or face destruction, but they ignored the deadline
The "Potsdam Declaration" described Japan's present
perilous condition and ended with an ultimatum: Japan
must immediately agree to unconditionally surrender, or
face "prompt and utter destruction".
III. Defeat of JapanAugust 6,1945 - the Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, killing more than 70,000 people
Crew of the Enola Gay Hiroshima after the atomic bomb
III. Defeat of JapanAugust 8th - the USSR declared war on Japan and invaded Manchuria - Japan still did not surrender
III. Defeat of JapanAugust 9th - the US dropped a second atomic bomb on Nagasaki, killing more than 40,000 people
Aftermath of Nagasaki bombingAtomic “Mushroom cloud”
III. Defeat of JapanEmperor Hirohito forced the government to surrender - the peace treaty was signed aboard the battleship Missouri on September 2, 1945
An Ongoing Controversy Dropping the atomic bomb brought a quick end to the war. It also unleashed terrifying destruction.
Ever since, people have debated whether the United States should have used the bomb. Why
did Truman use the bomb? First, he was convinced that Japan would not surrender without an invasion that would result in an
enormous loss of both American and Japanese lives. Truman also may have hoped that the bomb
would impress the Soviet Union with American power. At any rate, the Japanese surrendered
shortly after the bombs were dropped, and World War II was ended.