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Gibbs Do not write on! VUS.11 a and b – World War II The War in Europe World War II began with Hitler’s invasion of Poland in 1939, followed shortly after by the Soviet Union’s invasion from the east of Poland and the Baltic countries (Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia). During the first two years of the war, the United States stayed officially neutral, as Germany overran both France and most of Europe and pounded Great Britain from the air. This German air attack on Britain was called the Battle of Britain. In mid-1941, Hitler turned on his former partner and invaded the Soviet Union. Despite strong isolationist sentiment at home, the United States gradually abandoned neutrality and increasingly helped Great Britain. In 1941 Congress passed the Lend-Lease Act, which allowed the President to sell, lease, or lend defense equipment to nations whose defense the President deemed (considered) vital to American security. Under this law, the United States gave Britain war supplies and old naval warships in return for military bases in Bermuda and the Caribbean Sea. President Franklin Roosevelt compared Lend-Lease to “lending a garden hose to a next-door neighbor whose house is on fire.” The War in Asia During the 1930s a militaristic Japan invaded and brutalized Manchuria and China as it sought military and economic domination over Asia. The United States refused to recognize Japanese conquests in Asia and placed an embargo (ban) on exports of oil and steel to Japan. Tensions rose but both countries negotiated to avoid war. While negotiating with the United States and without warning, Japan carried out an air attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on 7 December 1941. This attack destroyed much of the American Pacific fleet and killed several thousand Americans. President Roosevelt called December 7th “a date that will live in infamy” as he asked Congress to declare war on Japan. After Pearl Harbor, Hitler honored the Axis pact (agreement) with Japan and declared war on the United States. The debates over isolationism in the United States were over. World War II was now a true world war and the United States was fully involved. The United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union were the three most important countries that made up the Allies. Winston Churchill was the British prime minister (leader of the government) during World War II. The Soviet Union had come into existence in 1917, when communist revolutionaries had overthrown the czar (king) of Russia. Josef Stalin was the communist dictator of the Soviet Union during World War II. In theory communism is an economic system in which all property and means of production are owned by society as a whole. As practiced in the Soviet Union, communism was a form of government in which both political and economic decisions were made by a small group of government leaders. Allied Strategy The United States and its allies, Great Britain and the Soviet Union, followed a “Defeat Hitler First” strategy. Therefore, most American military resources were targeted for Europe. In the Pacific, American military strategy called for an “island hopping” campaign. This meant the United States would seize Pacific islands closer and closer to Japan and use them as bases for air attacks on Japan. In addition, the United States would cut off Japanese supplies through submarine warfare against Japanese shipping. Axis Strategy The Axis Powers were the World War II alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan. Germany hoped to defeat the Soviet Union quickly, gain control of Soviet oil fields, and force Britain out of the war through a Gibbs Do not write on! bombing campaign and submarine warfare, before America’s industrial and military strength could turn the tide. Following Pearl Harbor, Japan invaded the Philippines and Indonesia and planned to invade both Australia and Hawaii. Its leaders hoped that America would then accept Japanese predominance (control) in Southeast Asia and the Pacific, rather than conduct a bloody and costly war to reverse Japanese gains. Major Battles and Military Turning Points North Africa: El Alamein – The British defeated German forces, who were threatening to seize Egypt and the Suez Canal. This defeat denied Hitler control over Middle Eastern oil supplies and prevented him from potentially attacking the Soviet Union from the south. Europe: Stalingrad – The Soviet army killed or captured hundreds of thousands of German soldiers in a months-long siege of the Russian city of Stalingrad. This defeat prevented Germany from seizing the Soviet oil fields and turned the tide against Germany in the east. Normandy landings (D-Day) – American and Allied troops under General Dwight D. Eisenhower landed in German-occupied France on 6 June 1944. Despite intense German opposition and heavy American casualties, the landings succeeded and the liberation (freeing) of Western Europe from Hitler had begun. Pacific: Midway – In the “Miracle of Midway,” American naval forces defeated a much larger Japanese force as it prepared to seize Midway Island. Coming only a few months after Pearl Harbor, a Japanese victory at Midway would have enabled Japan to invade Hawaii. The American victory ended the Japanese threat to Hawaii and began a series of American victories in the “island hopping” campaign that carried the war closer and closer to Japan. Iwo Jima and Okinawa – The American invasions of the islands of Iwo Jima and Okinawa brought American forces closer than ever to Japan. Both invasions cost thousands of American lives and even more Japanese lives. Japanese soldiers fought fiercely over every square inch of the islands, and Japanese soldiers and civilians committed suicide rather than surrender. Hiroshima and Nagasaki (the atomic bomb) – Harry S. Truman, who became president when FDR died in April, 1945, faced the prospect of very heavy casualties among both Americans and Japanese, if American forces had to invade Japan itself. Therefore, President Truman ordered the use of atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to force the Japanese to surrender. Tens of thousands of people died in both cities. Shortly after the United States dropped the atomic bombs, the Japanese leaders surrendered. President Truman, thereby, avoided the need for American forces to invade Japan. Gibbs Do not write on! VUS.11ab QUESTIONS – World War II 1. How did the war in Europe begin? 2. What was America’s position on at the beginning of the war? 3. How long did America hold the position in #2? 4. What was the Battle of Britain? 5. What was the Lend-Lease Act? 6. What was President Roosevelt’s reaction to the Lend-Lease Act? 7. How did the war in the Pacific begin? 8. What happened on December 7, 1941? 9. Why was the event from #6 a surprise to the Americans? 10. What was the Axis Pact? 11. What was Roosevelt’s quote about the attacks at Pearl Harbor? 12. Who were the three main countries of the Allies? 13. What were the Axis powers? 14. What were the two Allied strategies? 15. What were the axis strategies? 16. What was Hitler trying to gain in North Africa? 17. What was Germany trying to get in Stalingrad? 18. What happened June 6, 1944? 19. What did the American victory at Midway prevent? 20. Iwo Jima and Okinawa got America closer to _____. 21. In order to avoid being captured, what did many Japanese soldiers do? 22. What president made the decision to use the Atomic Bomb? 23. What was the American alternative to dropping the atomic bomb(s) in Japan? 24. Create a timeline of FIVE events from the narrative. Make sure to include both the date and title of the event.