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Map1 Europe: Map2 Map3 BLITZKRIEG CAMPAIGNS French and German Plans; Battle of France and the Low Countries: Map4 French and German Plans for the Battle of France 1940 : Allied military plans expected the German armed forces to strike using a variant of the Schlieffen Plan used in the First World War. The French Dyle Plan intended to meet the German offensive in Belgium. The Germans, however, adopted a plan attributed to Erich von Manstein that placed the weight of the attack at the center of the front and thus anticipated the French plan. Map5 Battle of France: May 12-13, 1940 The armored weight of the German attack on France struck westward in the Ardennes region, in the weakly held center of the Allied front. This was an unanticipated move and it led to a serious crisis for the Allied armies and leadership. Map6 Battle of France, Dinant: May 14-15, 1940 General Hoth's 15th Panzer Corps broke through the French defensive line at Dinant. The French 1st Armored Division counterattacked on May 15th, engaging General Rommel's 7th Panzer Division, but to no avail. Map7 Battle of France, Sedan: May 14, 1940 The panzer divisions of General Guderian's 19th Panzer Corps broke through French defenses at Sedan and pressed forward as rapidly as possible to prevent the French armed forces from reforming a new defensive line. Map8 Battle of France: May 14-24, 1940 After breaking through the weakly held Ardennes region of the Allied line, the German panzer corps raced to the English Channel. Map9 Battle of France, Dunkirk: May 25-31, 1940 German armed forces pressed the Allied armies trapped in the north, from south and east, into the English Channel. Meanwhile, German infantry divisions reinforced the southern flank of the the German penetration. Map10 Battle of France: June 4-14, 1940 Once the Allied armed forces in the north were eliminated, German armed forces regrouped and attacked southward, breaking through the Weygand Line the French had built up. Map11 EASTERN FRONT German Invasion Plans: Map12 Marcks Plan The initial German military proposal for an invasion of the Soviet Union which feature called for two army groups and primary strikes in the direction of Moscow and Kiev with a secondary attack toward Leningrad. The northern army group would push southward after reaching Moscow, linking up with the southern group at Kharkov. Map13 Final Plan After consultations with Hitler, the final plan for Operation Barbarossa called for the diversion of forces from the central army group, after the capture of Smolensk, to support the northern army group in attacking Leningrad and only after achieving this would the central army group continue operations toward Moscow. The objectives of the southern army groups essentially remained the same. Map14 Order of Battle on the Eve of Operation Barbarossa June 21, 1941 Three German army groups faced three Soviet fronts. The German forces had effective superiority at the center of the front. Soviet forces held a numerical advantage on the northern and southern flanks. Map15 Operation Barbarossa: June 22 - September 1, 1941 German armed forces achieved strategic surprise and made substantial progress towards their initial objectives. Army Group Center reached Smolensk by July. Large Soviet military forces were surrounded as a result. An operational pause ensued at the center of the front while armored forces from Army Group Center struck south to link up with forces striking northward from Army Group South. This move destroyed a substantial concentration of Soviet armed forces around Kiev. Map16 Operation Typhoon: September 30 - December 5, 1941 German armed forces regrouped in September, after the destruction of Soviet military forces around Kiev, with the intention of launching a final offensive against Moscow (Operation Typhoon) before winter. The attack began with promise but the autumn rains made it impossible to continue the operation until the winter frost arrived. By this time, German military units were exhausted and the Soviet defenders were demonstrating increasing resistance. Map17 Soviet Counteroffensive: December 6, 1941 - April 30, 1942 As the German drive to capture Moscow faltered, the Soviets launched a devastating counteroffensive that created a crisis in the German military command. The depleted German armed forces were ordered by Hitler to hold at all costs and they attempted to do so. Soviet military operations expanded in scope as the counteroffensive progressed. Map18 Operation Blue The German losses sustained in the first year of warfare led to a less ambitious series of objectives being specified for the second summer campaign. Hitler's focus was on gaining control of the resources in the Caucasus. After the campaign was underway, the city of Stalingrad on the Volga became another objective. The extended left flank was eventually defended by relatively weak German allied armed forces from Rumania, Hungary and Italy. Map19 Approach to Stalingrad By mid-August 1942, German armored forces were pressing the Soviet armies defending the front before Stalingrad into the city itself. Panzers attached to 6th Army pushed east in conjunction with 4th Panzer Army striking northward. Map20 Battle of Stalingrad As German armed forces pressed forward into the city of Stalingrad during September, they encountered increasingly effective resistance from the defending Soviet troops. Within Stalingrad, various complexes became battlegrounds. Map21 Operation Uranus: November 19, 1942 - February 6, 1943 As the German 6th Army continued its battle of attrition to capture Stalingrad, the Soviet military command prepared to launch a counteroffensive (Operation Uranus) that aimed to encircle the German army fighting in Stalingrad and bring about the collapse of southern wing of the German front. Map22 Operation Winter Storm: December 12-18, 1942 German armed forces of Army Group Don made an unsuccessful attempt break through and relieve the German 6th Army encircled in Stalingrad. Soviet military resistance proved too great to overcome with the German units available and the German 6th Army remained isolated. Map23 Soviet Pursuit After Stalingrad: January 13 - March 26, 1943 By the time the German 6th Army surrendered at Stalingrad, the Red Army aggressively pursued the remnants of Army Group Don, now renamed Army Group South, further west. Soviet units recaptured Kharkov and were approaching the Dniepr River. However, the commander of Army Group South, F.M. von Manstein marshaled forces for a counterattack in March 1943 that stabilized the southern wing of the Eastern Front until the Battle of Kursk in July 1943. Map24 Red Army Advances to Kiev and Isolates the Crimea August 18 - December 23, 1943 The Soviet follow-up offensive after Kursk carried the Red Army inexorably forward. Although it failed to encircle significant German forces, the Soviet armed forces trapped the German Army Group A in the Crimea and recaptured Kiev before the end of December 1943. Map25 Soviet Gains on the Eastern Front: June 1944 - January 1945 The constant military pressure on the southern front led to a serious German intelligence failure in the summer of 1944. The Soviet summer offensive, opened on June 22, 1944, was directed against the Minsk salient. Army Group Center collapsed under the weight of the Red Army assault and the Soviet armed forces advanced on to the Vistula River line. The Balkans were cleared of German forces in the follow-up offensive. Map26 From the Vistula to the Oder: January 11 - February 2, 1945 The Soviet military offensive across Poland positioned the Red Army within the borders of prewar Germany. Map27 Balaton to Vienna: March 6 - April 15, 1945 The German military plan and execution of offensive operations against Soviet forces advancing beyond Budapest failed to produce lasting results. Soviet counterattacks followed and pushed the German defenders back behind Vienna. Map28 The Final Offensive: April 16 - May 8, 1945 Soviet armed forces along the Oder and Neisse built-up continuously from the completion of the conquest of Polish territory in January. The final Red Army offensive ultimately overran eastern Germany and produced a link-up between Soviet and Allied forces. Map29 Battle of Berlin: April 26-28, 1945 Soviet armies complete the encirclement of Berlin and continued to press the attack into the city of Berlin. Most of the city was occupied within a matter of days. Map30 The Battle for the Reichstag: April 29 - May 2, 1945 German military resistance within Berlin continued and a prestige battle developed around the capture of the German parliament building (the Reichstag). Map31 NORMANDY INVASION Allied Planning for D-Day: Map32 Projection of Allied Advances to July 26, 1944 Although the Allied command's expectations of progress in the first fifty days of the Normandy invasion were somewhat optimistic, the results of themilitary campaign in fact showed that the Allies had produced a reasonable forecast of progress to be expected for the first ninety days after the invasion. Map33 Allied Invasion Forces Available for D-Day In addition to the armed forces that were designated for the initial landings, there were further divisions and corps allocated for exploitation after a successful beachhead was established. Map34 Normandy Invasion: June 6-9, 1944 The first objective after establishing the beachheads was to link the five landing sites together. German counterattacks followed the landings as well but only after an important delay. Map35 7th Armoured Division at Villers-Bocage: June 11-15, 1944 The legendary armored engagement in which a lone Tiger tank (commanded by Michael Wittmann) destroyed an entire column of British armor, took place during the 7th Armoured Division's foray into Villers-Bocage Map36 Clearing the Cotentin Peninsula: June 10-30, 1944 American armed forces initially forced a corridor across the Cotentin Peninsula and then cleared it of German military resistance by the end of June. Cherbourg was captured by June 29th and served as an important landing site and base for Allied armies operating in Normandy. Map37 Operation Epsom: June 24 - July 1, 1944 In the continuing effort to capture Caen, British armed forces launched a flanking attack on the right of the front which proved insufficient to break the German defense. Operation Epsom, however, drew considerable German armor away from American armed forces aiming to break out of Normandy. Map38 Allied Capture of Caen: July 7-9, 1944 British and Canadian military units advanced toward Caen against heavy resistance by German armed forces. Royal Air Force heavy bombers contributed to the reduction. Map39 US 1st Army Advance to St. Lô: July 10-18, 1944 American efforts to breakthrough to St. Lo remained slow. German armed forces put up a determined defense. The US armed forces advanced at less than one mile per day. Map40 Allied Drive to the Seine: August 1-16, 1944 The successful breakout from Normandy was reflected in the Allied sweep across northern France during this period. German military resistance collapsed. Landings in southern France (Operation Dragoon) took place on August 15th and the US and French forces swept northward against light opposition. Map41 American Drive into Brittany: August 3-7, 1944 Forces of Patton's Third Army with elements of the US First Army on the left flank pressed into Brittany. The German forces fell back into designated ports to hold out, in one case up to the end of the war. Map42 WESTERN FRONT Map43 Operation Market Garden: Plan to Capture Rhine Crossings General Montgomery's plan to capture bridges across the rivers and canals in Holland that would allow the Allied advance to continue into northern Germany, unimpeded by these natural defensive lines. German forces in Holland and especially in the Arnhem area are much stronger than anticipated. The plan proved too ambitious. Map44 Allied Advance: September 15 - December 15, 1945 The execution of Operation Market Garden proceeded successfully at first, however, the relative strength of the German armed forces in the line of advance slowed progress. Nonetheless, in the period, Allied armed forces reached the German border, releasing all of France and Belgium from Nazi occupation. Map45 Battle of the Bulge: December 15, 1944 - January 18, 1945 German armed forces achieved strategic surprise in launching the offensive. The relatively weak American military forces blocking their advance managed to slow down the German troops sufficiently to all for an American regrouping which then effectively prevented further progress. The advantage of Allied air superiority was initially hampered by poor weather. Map46 Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen: March 7, 1945 The fight for the Ludendorff Bridge across the Rhine was intensive and day-long. The bridge was weakened during the fighting and eventually collapsed. By then, a firm American bridgehead had already been established. Map47 Allied Rhine Crossings, North of the Ruhr: March 22-28, 1945 Rhine crossings were also established north of the Ruhr industrial area of Germany. These served as the northern pincer of the envelopment of the Ruhr and the consequent encirclement of German Army Group B. Map48 Allied Advance to the Elbe: April - May 1945 With the Rhine River obstacle overcome, Allied armed forces began a final drive which encircled Army Group B in the Ruhr valley and pressed eastward toward the Elbe River -- the agreed upon demarcation of Allied and Soviet forces advancing from west and east respectively. American military forces in the south exploited southeast into Austria and Czechoslovakia after achieving this objective. Map49 PACIFIC THEATER Map50 Japanese Approach to Pearl Harbor: December 7, 1941 The Imperial Japanese Navy fleet attacking Pearl Harbor launched a total of 423 aircraft in two waves against American military targets on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu. Map51 Attack on Pearl Harbor: December 7, 1941 Commander Fuchida led the first wave of torpedo bombers against the US Pacific Fleet ships at anchor in Pearl Harbor. Their first objective was to strike at the battleships. Map52 Japan 1941 Map53 Invasion of the Philippines: December 10, 1941 - May 3, 1942 The American controlled Philippine islands represented a serious threat to Japanese expansive intentions in the Pacific and were therefore targeted for invasion. General MacArthur initially commanded the Allied forces. Japanese General Homma's diversionary landings in the north of the main island of Luzon failed to divide the defenders who nonetheless could not cope with the main landings at Lingayen Gulf. By the end of December most of the island was occupied. Map54 Conquest of Bataan: January 7 - April 9, 1942 By mid-January American and Filipino armed forces in the Philippines had retreated into the mountainous Bataan Peninsula of Luzon as well as holding the island of Corregidor immediately to the south, blocking Manila Bay. General Homma wrongly believed the defenders almost defeated and launched assaults that depleted his forces. A protracted period of trench warfare followed. The American command surrendered on April 9th. Map55 Conquest of Corregidor: May 5- 6, 1942 The last American outpost in the Philippines was the island of Corregidor. It was intensively bombarded and ultimately a Japanese force established a beachhead and quickly eliminated the remaining opposition. General Wainright surrendered on May 6th. Japanese expectations of a fifty day campaign in the Philippines turned into be a bloody six month effort. Map56 Battle of Midway: June 4-5, 1942 Japanese Admiral Yamamoto did not anticipate meeting significant American naval forces at Midway. A number of tactical errors ensued. A series of air strikes and counter strikes resulted in the sinking of the Japanese carriers Akagi, Kaga, Soryu and Hiryu and for the loss of the American carrier Yorktown. It was a decisive Japanese naval defeat. Map57 Battle of Iwo Jima: February 19 - March 11, 1945 Iwo Jima was the only Japanese base capable of interfering with American bombing operations against Japan. The entire island was heavily fortified and defended by about 21,700 troops determined to hold it. US Marines faced fanatical resistance once ashore and sustained heavy casualties. Total American losses numbered 17,200 wounded and 6000 dead. Only 200 Japanese troops were captured. Once cleared, the island was used as a fighter base for escorting bombers over Japan and as an emergency landing site for B-29 bombers operating from the Mariannas. Map58 Okinawa Campaign: April 1 - June 14, 1945 Operation Iceberg, the US invasion of Okinawa, involved over 450,000 troops and 1200 transports in what was the largest naval operation mounted in the Pacific. About 130,000 Japanese troops defended the island from entrenched positions and they proved a formidable obstacle. Kamikaze attacks against the American naval forces also took a heavy toll. Almost all the Japanese defenders were killed, as well as about 42,000 of the 450,000 civilians on the island. Only 10,755 were taken prisoner. US casualties amounted to 12,500 killed and 35,500 wounded. Map59 Allied Plans for 1945 US Army and Navy leaders differed on the strategic direction of the war against Japan. Admiral Nimitz preferred to forgo occupation of the Philippines in favor of an invasion of Formosa to be followed-up with landings on mainland China. General MacArthur, supported by General Marshal, wanted to occupy the Philippines, then land on Okinawa and follow up with a landing on Kyushu (the southernmost of the main Japanese home islands). After this, they intended to strike Honshu.