world war ii: 1942-1944 the allies turn the tide

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WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

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Page 1: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944The Allies Turn the Tide

Page 2: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

The Allied Powers version 2.1• Great Britain, USSR,

and US are three remaining major Allied Powers.

• Franklin Roosevelt (US President) and Winston Churchill (British Prime Minister) didn’t trust Stalin (USSR), but they all agreed to fight until all 3 Axis Powers were defeated The “Big Three” at Tehran, 1943

Page 3: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

By the year 1942, Germany had dominated Europe: • Britain had suffered

major damage from German bombing during the Battle of Britain

• German army controlled mainland Europe from France in the west to Stalingrad in the east

• German and Italian forces controlled North Africa

Page 4: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Meanwhile, in Asia…

• Japan attacked Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941, drawing the United States into the war.

• Philippines – Japan attacked there December 8th .

• By March 1942 – Japan controlled most of Southeast Asia. Hong Kong, Singapore, Dutch East Indies, Malaya, and Burma all fell to Japan. Taken for resources

• China – joined Allies by declaring war on Japan December 9, 1941. Japan controlled east coast of China and Burma (Thailand)

Page 5: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

The Bataan Death March

• Philippines fell in early April 1942 – 76,000 American and Filipino soldiers were taken prisoner.

• Bataan Death March – Japanese force prisoners of war to march 60 miles to a prison camp, executing anyone too weak to continue.

• 10,000 soldiers died on the march, and 15,000 died at the prison camp.

• After war, supervisory Japanese general tried for war crimes in 1946 & executed

Page 6: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

US Strategy in the Pacific• Island hopping (or “leapfrogging”) –

strategy of taking certain strategic islands, rather than trying to take each individual island.

• Allies used submarine and air attacks to blockade and isolate Japanese bases

• Allied commander in the Pacific – General Douglas MacArthur

Page 7: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Battle of Midway (June 1942)– all naval battle. Recognized as THE turning point in the Pacific. From then on, Allies would win most of the battles.

Page 8: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Guadalcanal (Aug 1942-Feb.1943) – first piece of significant Japanese-controlled territory taken by the Allies

Page 9: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Allied offensive begins in North Africahttp://www.history.com/videos/world_war_ii_in_north_africa#world_war_ii_in_north_africa

• El Alamein (Nov. 1942)-US & British forces drove Axis out of North Africa.

• General Dwight Eisenhower leads Allied forces.

• May 1943-- Axis forces in N. Africa surrender

Page 10: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

The Eastern Front

• Hitler had broken his non-aggression pact with Stalin and invaded the Soviet Union-June 1941

• Allies did little to help the Soviet Union—Allies didn’t trust Stalin, sending supplies to USSR was too difficult

• Great stories of heroism by the Russian people in the Battle of Stalingrad (Sep 1942-Feb 1943)—turning point of the war on the Eastern Front

• http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/battle-of-stalingrad

Page 11: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Allied Invasion of EuropeOriginal idea was to invade

Europe through the “soft underbelly” of the Axis

• Allies invade Italy in July 1943—Battles of Anzio and Salerno were near disasters for Allies. Mussolini ousted from power though.– http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Execution_of_Mussolini_(1

945).ogg

• September 1943—new Italian government surrenders; German army still holds Italian territory

• Allied advance through Italy stalls—must create new invasion strategy

Page 12: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

D-Day June 6, 1944http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/d-day/videos/dday-invasion

• What does “D-Day” stand for? Military code for day of any significant operation

• Allied commanders decided invasion of Western Europe was necessary

• “Operation Overlord”—Launched from England, landed at Normandy, France. 5 invasion points plus paratroopers.

Page 13: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Decryption and deceptionhttp://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/d-day/videos/d-day-deception

• Leading up to invasion, the Allies conducted “Operation Bodyguard”, designed to make Germany believe other parts of France would be invaded. Why?– So Hitler would not send reinforcements to

Normandy out of fear that there would be attacks elsewhere.

– Needed to keep German armies in Norway and other parts of French coast from responding to the real invasion.

• How did they fake out the Germans?– False radio transmissions– Air Force bombed other places in addition to

Normandy– Dummy paratroopers dropped over other locations– British Air Force dropped large strips of tin foil in the

North Sea—looked like naval ships on German radar

Page 14: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

Liberating France By late July 1944, Allies landed 2 million troops in France• General George Patton led Allies from Normandy towards Germany• From Normandy, the Allies attacked Nazi armies in Paris, Belgium, and

the Netherlands• The French Resistance in Paris staged an uprising there in August 1944• By late August 1944 France had been liberated• By mid-September 1944 Allied army crossed into Germany

Page 15: WORLD WAR II: 1942-1944 The Allies Turn the Tide

First concentration camps were discovered by Allied army when they entered Germany

http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/the-holocaust/videos/concentration-camp-liberation

• Supervised by American soldiers, German civilians from the town of Nordhausen, Germany bury the corpses of prisoners found at the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp in mass graves, mid-Apr 1945.