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Transcript
World War II and the
Collapse of Europe
4/30/2017
1
Mass Executions
4/30/2017
Before the war began in 1939, mental patients in
Germany had been killed on Hitler’s orders by lethal
injections (to save their food for war needs). Deaths
by gas experiments had also been undertaken.
2
Katyn
4/30/2017
The world would not learn until 1942 that Russian secret
police had murdered thousands of Polish officers in their
part of Poland – and buried the bodies in a Polish forest.
World War II would violate the “rules” repeatedly.
3
“Sitzkreig”
Although France briefly attacked
German lines in the Saar, and the British
sent bombers over Germany, the war
after Poland collapsed was quiet.
German submarines attacked British
ships but the German armies did little
but defend the border with France.
Soon, the was called a “sitting war” in
Berlin, while the British made jokes
about a “Bore War.” Hitler made
overtures for peace talks but the Allies
rejected them.
4/30/2017
4
Stalin strikes
In December 1939, Stalin demands territory in Finland and attacks
when Finland refuses to comply. This “winter war” ends in a
Russian victory but at great cost to Stalin’s armies. Hitler concludes
that Russia would be easy to defeat.
4/30/2017
5
Norway and Denmark
In April 1940, the German armies
struck quickly, marching into
Denmark and launching a
paratroop/sea invasion of Norway.
British delays in responding and
errors made in landing a few
thousand men near Narvik led to a
crisis in Parliament – Prime
Minister Chamberlain was forced to
resign.
Winston Churchill was made Prime
Minister.
4/30/2017
6
German U-boats
But German “untersee” boats were sinking one of
every three tons of goods that Britain bought.
4/30/2017
7
Isolationism
•Neutrality Laws in 1935-1936 Restrict American
business with nations at war and prevet American
citizens from being endangered.
•But U.S. journalists begin covering the war and
their stories have an impact on how Americans
regard the situation.
•Refugees from Europe also affect how Americans
think about Europe.
4/30/2017
8
Cash and Carry
FDR persuaded Congress to modify the
Neutrality Laws so Britain could buy weapons for
cash and carry them away on their own ships.
4/30/2017
9
Enigma and Ultra
Mathematicians and engineers fought to
protect and break one another's’ codes
in war that produced the first steps to
modern computers.
4/30/2017
10
Defeat in France
In May-June, 1940, the
German armies defeated
France in 6 weeks and
forced the British to
evacuate their troops
from Belgium. The U.S.
feared Britain would
quickly sign a treaty that
would give Hitler control
of Europe.
4/30/2017
11
France Occupied
4/30/2017
12
US Aid
4/30/2017
As France collapsed,
Roosevelt offered
Britain a chance to
shelter its navy in
American ports. The
defeat of France
shocked Congress into
vastly increasing
spending on defense.
13
Britain Alone
France, having promised to make no separate peace, not
only signed a separate peace but also returned to Germany
400 captured German airmen, who could now be used to
attack Great Britain.
4/30/2017
14
Air Assault on Britain
German air attacks in British air bases in August-September 1940
did heavy damage but failed to open the English Channel for a
German landing.
4/30/2017
15
British Determination
Churchill’s willingness to destroy
French ships at Oran convinced
Roosevelt that Britain meant to
continue the war.
4/30/2017
16
Siege
4/30/2017
Although the threat of invasion was passing by October
1940, Britain’s had to endure nightly bombings and
rationing, and take part in the National Service Act.
17
Shortages
British rationing was among
the strictest in the war – with
cloth, food, gasoline, fuel oil,
shoes, paper, rubber (tires), and
even soap and metals for dental
fillings tightly controlled.
Middle- and working-class
Britons complained that their
wealthier neighbors continued
to find ways to get “more and
better” commodities.
4/30/2017
18
Action at Dakar
4/30/2017
In September 1940, the “Free French” forces of
Charles de Gaulle, with aid from the British
navy, tried to seize the French colony of Dakar in
west Africa. The attempt failed.
19
Destroyer Deal
Despite British failures, Roosevelt in September
1940 ‘traded’ 50 older destroyers to Britain in
return for 99-year leases of bases in the
Caribbean and Canada.
4/30/2017
20
North Africa
Imperial War
Museum
photograph
Italy tried to seize additional lands in North Africa but lost
over 100,000 men to the more mobile British forces
4/30/2017
21
Barbarossa
Hitler’s plan for defeating
Russia In May-June 1941
was based on the
expectation that Stalin’s
armies would collapse in
8-10 weeks. His best
generals were skeptical,
but he insisted the Soviet
Union would fall like a
“rotten house.”
4/30/2017
22
Genocide
The Nazi plan was to occupy
the western part of Russia as
far as the Ural mountains,
allow much of the Russian
population to starve and use
the remainder as slave labor.
“We shoot villagers on the slightest
excuse. Just stick them up against a
wall. We order the whole village out to
watch. It’s a vicious circle. We hate
them and they hate us, and on and on it
goes, everyone getting more inhuman.”
From a German soldier’s diary
4/30/2017
23
Greece
Italy’s failures in North
Africa and Greece forced
the Germans to intervene,
seizing Yugoslavia, Greece
and Crete in another
“lightning” campaign.
This action threatened the
British hold on Egypt and
Suez (its link to India).
But Hitler had to postpone
the attack on Russia until
late June.
4/30/2017
24
The Draft
In 1940, Congress approved the first peace-time draft in
American experience. The draftees (21 or older) were
chosen by lottery and were to serve for one year.
4/30/2017
25
Guardsmen Called Up
In the fall of 1941, the draft was extended, keeping
those from 1940 in the service. National Guard
units were also called up for training with the U.S.
Army. This included Minnesota and North Dakota
guard units. People were expecting war.
4/30/2017
26
Lend-Lease
4/30/2017
27
Russia Invaded
When the Germans invaded
Russia in June 1941, the
surprised Russian soldiers
were mauled, losing over 4
million men in six months.
But they held on until winter
stopped the German forces
west of Moscow
About 8 of every 10 German
soldiers who were killed in the
war died in battle against the
Russians.
4/30/2017
28
Full Mobilization
4/30/2017
Russia employed more women in the military and war industry than any
other European nation, and managed to move many machine tools to
eastern communities beyond German air range – but food shortages were
29
acute and there was starvation in parts of the nation.
City of Death
4/30/2017
Leningrad (formerly St Petersburg) was under siege for 872
days, during which time 1.5 million died and over forty
30
percent of the city was destroyed,
Russian losses
4/30/2017
Russian losses in the war exceeded 25 million,
with young Russians dying at such a high rate that
population in the Soviet Union declined into the
1960s.
31
Einsatzgruppen
Einsatzgruppen (“special
action squads) murdered over
1 million Jews, communist
party members and other
“undesirables” in Russia from
the summer of 1941 until
early 1942.
Britain and the U.S., having
broken German radio codes,
knew about these activities,
which remained unknown in
the press.
4/30/2017
32
Death Camps
In 1942, the Nazis employed
their knowledge of poison gas
to speed up the murder of
some 5 million Jews in
special death camps, like
Auschwitz (entrance to the
Auschwitz camp still exists at
the memorial site in Poland).
U.S. and British code
breakers also knew about the
activities in these camps.
4/30/2017
33
And the War Came for
America
4/30/2017
34
Global War
4/30/2017
Where should the U.S. use its military power?
35
Purpose of the War?
In a mid-ocean meeting, Roosevelt and
Churchill had agreed that Germany
should be the major focus of US and
British military effort (which angered
Americans who wanted revenge for
Pearl Harbor).
Roosevelt also persuaded Churchill to
agree to the Atlantic Charter – a vague
commitment to a better postwar world.
Churchill feared this meant the end of
the British empire, but could only
finish the war with US aid.
4/30/2017
36
Different Agendas for Victory




To Roosevelt the Atlantic Charter meant a
reduction of the British Empire.
To Churchill, victory in the war meant preservation
of the British empire.
Neither Roosevelt nor Churchill completely trusted
Stalin. But Roosevelt thought Stalin could be
persuaded to co-operate. Churchill doubted this.
Could Roosevelt succeed where Woodrow Wilson
had failed?
4/30/2017
37
Different Strategies
Direct invasion (U.S.) vs. peripheral attacks (British)
4/30/2017
38
The Second Front
Russia began demanding a
“second front” from Britain
in 1942. But France was
not invaded until 1944.
Stalin accused Churchill
and Roosevelt of waiting
until Russia and Germany
had “bled one another
white.”
“What news from the second front” – In
British newspaper, July 1942.
4/30/2017
39
“Unconditional Surrender”
After the U.S. Army fought German
troops in North Africa, Roosevelt
surprised everyone when he said that
only the “unconditional surrender” of
Germany, Italy and Japan would end
the war. He may have said this to
reassure Stalin. Britain, receiving
enormous aid from America, had to go
along with the idea of not accepting a
negotiated peace. Churchill suspected
the US could use a long war to seize
British markets.
4/30/2017
40
Battle for
Mediterranean bases
Despite Stalin’s complaints,
Britain won over the U.S. to
again postpone the invasion of
France and fight in Italy in
1943. It was later charged that
Britain was trying to prevent
Russian advances into eastern
Europe (Greece and
Yugoslavia).
The Allies allowed Italy to
surrender with conditions- and
join their side.
4/30/2017
41
Mountain combat
4/30/2017
Italy’s conditions for combat were more like those of the
Great War in 1917. Here only mules could haul supplies
into the mountains – or carry the wounded out.
42
Twilight War
4/30/2017
Anti-German partisans, supported by British
weapons, carried out numerous raids – one, in
Norway, helped derail German nuclear research. But
the Germans struck back brutally.
43
Lidice
4/30/2017
When Czech partisans – trained in Britain, assassinated
Reinhardt Heydrich, SS troops destroyed the Czech village
of Lidice, killing all males over age 10, deporting all the
44
women to concentration camps.
Poison Gas
Both sides in Europe had
maintained large dumps
of poison gas, with
neither side using them
for fear of retaliation.
After the German
surrender in May 1945, a
large part of the Allies
stockpile was dumped in
the North Sea.
4/30/2017
45
Stalingrad
4/30/2017
1943 -- The loss of over 200,000 veteran troops in a failed
attempt to seize Stalingrad crippled the German army.
Germany will attack only rarely after this disaster.
46
British War in the Air
4/30/2017
Unable to sustain losses in daytime bombing, the
British relied on night attacks against German cities.
This resulted in about 800,000 civilian deaths in
Germany
47
Bombing Germany
At Dresden, March 1945,
35,000 died in one raid by
British bombers. American
bombers struck the same city
a day later, in a raid that
author Kurt Vonnegut later
described as “a storm of fire.”
4/30/2017
48
US War in the Air
The American air force
believed Germany could
be forced to surrender by
bombing German
industry.
Of the 78,000 American
“M.I.A.s” of WWII,
85% are air force fliers.
4/30/2017
49
The U-boat menace
4/30/2017
Until German submarine damage could be reduced,
an invasion of Europe was not possible. In 1943,
Britain was in danger of starvation.
50
4/30/2017
Small aircraft carriers and improved tactics against
U-boats turned the Atlantic into an “Allied ocean”
before 1944.
51
D-Day, 1944
4/30/2017
52
Breakout
4/30/2017
After six weeks of hard combat, British and
American forces pierced German defenses and
raced across France.
53
Vengeance
As German forces retreated in
France, Hitler used his progress
in rocket technology to launch
his Vergeltungswaffen
(retaliation weapons) on
London.
From 1940-45, over a million
homes in Britain were damaged
by bombs and rockets. 20,000
London citizens died in the war.
4/30/2017
54
Warsaw in ruins
4/30/2017
In August 1944, as the Red Army approached, Polish “liberation
forces” rose up against the German occupation forces – but Stalin
halted his troops and let the German army destroy Warsaw. In 1945
Stalin installed a communist government in Poland.
55
Stalin moves west
Despite Hitler’s commitment of his heaviest armor
in the east, Russian forces shattered German forces
in the summer of 1944 and closed in on Poland.
4/30/2017
56
Fading moments of ‘friendship”
4/30/2017
57
End in Europe
The war ended in
Europe in May
1945, after the
Russian armies
captured Berlin and
Hitler committed
suicide.
4/30/2017
58
Cities in Europe were in such ruin that it took years to find all
the dead buried under the rubble. An estimated 30-40 million
European civilians died in the war, from battle, extermination,
4/30/2017 disease, and famine.
59
Island Hopping
To win the Pacific
War, the United
States had to build
the largest fleet in
history and move
from island to
island, building air
bases as they
approached Japan.
4/30/2017
60
End of Japanese Navy
Total destruction of Japan’s navy by April 1945
opened the home islands to endless bombing.
4/30/2017
61
End in the Pacific
Atomic bombs dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
August 1945, forced Japan to
surrender (but only on the
condition that the Japanese
emperor remain on the thrown).
4/30/2017
62
4/30/2017
63
Postwar Europe and
American Leadership






4/30/2017
U.S. was the guiding force in creating the United
Nations.
US played major part in occupying Germany from
1945-50.
US “Marshall Plan” provides billions of dollars to
restore European economy (eastern Europe does
not participate).
US creates NATO to counter Soviet military
power.
US leads in the creation of West German
Republic.
US “containment” policy is the key strategy in the
Cold War (1947-92).
64