Download WWII Topics: Answer Sheet - Findlay City Schools Web Portal

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Allied Control Council wikipedia , lookup

Western betrayal wikipedia , lookup

Aftermath of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Operation Torch wikipedia , lookup

Allied plans for German industry after World War II wikipedia , lookup

World War II by country wikipedia , lookup

Military history of Greece during World War II wikipedia , lookup

British propaganda during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Foreign relations of the Axis powers wikipedia , lookup

Diplomatic history of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Battle of the Mediterranean wikipedia , lookup

Consequences of Nazism wikipedia , lookup

Causes of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Historiography of the Battle of France wikipedia , lookup

Allies of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Mediterranean and Middle East theatre of World War II wikipedia , lookup

Écouché in the Second World War wikipedia , lookup

Allied war crimes during World War II wikipedia , lookup

Technology during World War II wikipedia , lookup

End of World War II in Europe wikipedia , lookup

Operation Bodyguard wikipedia , lookup

The War That Came Early wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
1. Dr. Joseph Mengele- “The Angel of Death” he was a Dr. in the Birkenau concentration camp
infamous for his experiments on the prisoners there. He was fickle in his choice of who lived
and who died. He had a love of physical and genetic abnormalities and as a result targeted
twins, little people and anyone who had a physical or mental impairment. Experiments
conducted by him included trying to change eye color through the use of dyes, creating
conjoined twins, removing and reattaching limbs, live dissections, removal of organs without
pain killers, etc.. He was prosecuted for war crimes at the Nuremburg trials but he had escaped
to South America where he lived out the rest of his life following the war.
2. Rape of Nanking- This event took place in December and January of 1937 and 1938 and lasted
approximately six weeks following the capture of the city of Nanjing, China by the Japanese
Army. During this event the Japanese carried out the systematic rape of over 20,000 Chinese
women(most of the time gang raped and then murdered) and the execution of over 300,000
Chinese people. The executions were done in a variety of ways including beheadings by sword
as they knelt before a mass grave. The person who was to be killed next pushed the body into
the grave before kneeling down themselves. This saved on Ammunition. This is a hotly
contested event today with many Japanese questioning the validity of the claims even though
there were newspapers from the time in Japan chronicling the event.
3. Unit 731- Japanese chemical and biological warfare unit that was active in China. This group
carried out many different types of experiments that not limited to but including, live dissection,
testing of weapons on live targets, studying the effects of freezing and burning on the body,
blood loss, removal and reattachment of limbs, deliberate infection of people with diseases and
they then dissected the bodies to see the results of the experiments on them, giving fleas the
bubonic plague and dropping them in Chinese territory. The results of these tests and activities
are between 200 and 600,000 people dead. Many of these men were never prosecuted for war
crimes and were instead pulled into service of other countries as a result of their valuable
knowledge. Ethical question is it ok to use the information that was gained through these losses
if it saves lives today?
4. Operation Torch- The Invasion of Northern Africa, There was a debate going on between
Churchill, Stalin, and FDR as far as the war in Europe in 1942. Stalin wanted the US to attack in
Europe now and the British were pressuring us to hold off that attack and to instead attack in
North Africa to clear that territory and the Mediterranean of German forces. The belief being
once we accomplished this it would be easier to attack southern Europe in 1943. The problem
with this plan is that it will delay the US attack in Europe by at least one year maybe more. The
US ends up backing the British plan and invades Africa. The US first worked to assess the
interest of the Vichy French forces in changing sides and at the same time prepared to stage
amphibious and airborne assaults to take targets and to prevent the destruction of key targets
such as ports and bridges that they needed. The Allies were able to find out that there was
interest however and they had it set up to stage the landings without any danger of return fire.
Unfortunately it did not work out that way, many of the French commanders were discovered as
traitors by Axis loyalist and they instead met our landings which came under heavy fire. (The
American troops were expecting a soft-landing and their commanders had ordered them to not
fire unless fired upon, to prevent an accidental escalation of the battle). This meant that there
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
had not been any softening of the enemy by artillery prior to the battle. Blowback from the
subsequent French surrender is that Hitler sent reinforcements to hold this territory under
Rommel and the French were finally invaded to the full extent of other captured territories. The
result will still be an Allied victory but mostly due to our supplies of men, ammunition, food, and
fuel. The Germans were low by this point and not able to fight a sustained conflict regardless of
their experience and tactics.
The Sherman Tank- This tank was mass produced for the US military and was effective in its role
as an infantry support vehicle. Benefits to the Sherman- more of them on the battlefield than
any other tank, gasoline engine was easy to work on, it was able to be modified for different
roles including turning it into a platform to carry a flamethrower as well as amphibious landing.
Drawback: In a tank to tank battle one on one it was very difficult for its main gun to penetrate
the armor of the German main battle tanks, the gasoline engine made it liable to explode if hit,
burning the crew alive, many of the DD versions used in amphibious assaults sank in the water
as they were arriving on the beaches.
General George S. Patton-“old blood and guts” Commander of the US 3rd army, famous for his
understanding of tank warfare and unusual tactics and leadership style. Won victories for the
US in North Africa, Italy, and famously the Battle of the Bulge. He was interesting in the fact
that he carried a riding crop and a chrome handled 45. He is famous for his language and
attitude about enemy soldiers. He will lose a lot of prestige over slapping a soldier on the back
of the head and verbally berating him for cowardice, in a hospital for crying. It will later turn out
that the soldier had malaria and Patton will apologize.
General Erwin Rommel- “The Desert Fox”, one of the greatest German generals, he fought the
US in North Africa, Fortress Europe, etc.. He really becomes famous when he is implicated in an
attempt to assassinate Hitler. He is initially expected to stand trial, but Hitler realizes that he is
loved by the people and to make him stand trial will lower German morale which is already low
by that time so he instead gives him the choice to commit suicide peacefully and his family and
staff will be spared and no one will know that he killed himself or go through the trial where the
verdict is already known and his family and staff can be prosecuted for crimes as well. Rommell
chooses suicide by cyanide and no one but his family really knows the truth until the Nuremburg
trials following the war the German people are told he died of injuries in battle.
The Tehran Conference-December 1, 1943 The First meeting of the Big Three. The Partisans of
Yugoslavia should be supported by supplies and equipment and also by commando operations,
It would be most desirable if Turkey should come into war on the side of the Allies before the
end of the year, in which circumstances, the Soviet Union was to support them, Operation
Overlord would be launched during May 1944, in conjunction with an operation against
southern France, The military staff of the Three Powers should from then on keep in close touch
with each other, At the insistence of Stalin, the borders of post-war Poland were determined
along the Oder and Neisse rivers and the Curzon line, A United Nations Organization was
tentatively agreed to, The Soviet Union agreed to wage war against Japan once Germany was
defeated.
Operation Husky- The Invasion of Sicily- This battle lasted just over a month and it was
important in that the Allied victory here secured allied dominance of the Mediterranean Sea and
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
it helped destabilize Mussolini further to the point that he was overthrown in a military coup
shortly after. As in all operations they tried to through the German’s off and they conducted a
bit of deception prior to this using a corpse that was dressed in a British Officers Uniform and
had fake documents saying that the invasion was going to be in Greece bypassing Sicily. This
operation was a success in just over a month the Axis were forced to evacuate the island
although it was not as easy as we had originally hoped.
10. Operation Avalanche- The Invasion of Italy- Called by Winston Churchill the Soft Underbelly of
the Axis. The Invasion of Italy was supposed to give us an easy route from the South into
Europe. We were expecting light resistance from the Italians as Mussolini had just been
deposed after a coup and the new leaders were approaching the allies to make peace. The
assumption was that we could win a quick victory. The reality was very different, because Hitler
knew of the Italian plan to capitulate with the allies he sent reinforcements to Italy to tie the
allies down. What was supposed to be a quick and decisive victory turned into a quagmire of
fighting that distracted from our goals and ended up hurting us more than them. Any territory
that we “liberated” we now had to protect and provide for and that tied up food money and
supplies. The German defense was strong and the US was fighting in Italy up to the fall of
Berlin.
11. D-Day- June 6th 1944 US army website on D-Day with primary resources from it.
http://www.army.mil/d-day/ PBS D-Day website http://www.pbs.org/thewar/detail_5217.htm
If we could get a beachhead and get up the cliffs on the beaches of Normandy then by striking
inland we could catch the Germans in a pincher and they would have to fight on three fronts.
The Allied Army coming north from Italy, the new invasion heading west to Germany from
France, and the Russian Army heading east to Germany from the Soviet Union. This would be
their doom. Components of D-Day: Misdirection(Operation Fortitude), Airborne, Amphibious,
Bombing, Naval, French Resistance, etc.. What went wrong on that day; Tanks sinking-no armor
on the beaches, Paratroopers being dropped in the ocean or miles from their drop points,
Landing ships dropping off the ground troops in ten foot of water instead of a few feet from the
beach, Troops being dropped off at the wrong beach, German emplacements had not really
been softened up by the Allied Artillery barrage, equipment was delivered to the wrong
locations leaving troops terribly exposed and under gunned. We still pulled off the victory in the
face of all of this partially because of these problems; the Germans had so many reports or allied
landings both amphibious and airborne that their response was slow and limited, we had more
men and supplies to throw at the beaches that they did, and the French Resistance did their job
in causing disruptions.
12. Operation Fortitude- Allied plan to misdirect the Germans on the location of the Allied Invasion.
Fake planes, tanks, an entire fake army to convince them that we were staging for another
location and the Germans bought it. The operation involved a massive effort to deceive
Germany about the date and place of the invasion. It saw the "creation" of a nonexistent U.S.
army to mislead the Germans into believing that the Normandy landings were merely a feint
and that the main landing would be under the command of Lieutenant General George S. Patton
in the Pas de Calais. The ruse reinforced the already existing German conviction that the main
landing would indeed take place in that part of France closest to Britain. Another part of the
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
plan was to draw off resources from France by convincing the Germans that the Allies also
intended to invade Norway. Both aspects of fortitude worked to perfection. Hitler was
convinced that the invasion at Normandy was merely a feint and that the main thrust would
come in the Pas de Calais sector. Allied intelligence played a key role in deluding him.
The British "double cross" system worked to perfection. Every German agent in Britain
was either dead, jailed, or working for British intelligence. The British actually controlled the
entire German spy network in the United Kingdom and used it to feed disinformation to the
Germans. Operations FORTITUDE NORTH and FORTITUDE SOUTH also deceived Hitler. Operation
FORTITUDE NORTH caused him to believe that the Allies intended to invade Norway from
Scotland, leading him to maintain and even reinforce substantial German units there;
FORTITUDE SOUTH led Hitler to believe that the main Allied effort in France would come in the
form of a subsequent landing in the Pas de Calais area, the narrowest point of the English
Channel, and that the lodgment in Normandy was only a feint. To this end the Allies created the
"First U.S. Army Group" under Lieutenant General George S. Patton, still without command
following an incident in which he had slapped soldiers suffering from combat fatigue in Sicily.
The Germans expected the aggressive Patton would command any Allied invasion of the
Continent. First U.S. Army Group, a notional formation of 18 divisions and 4 corps headquarters,
contributed nothing to OVERLORD but did confuse the Germans.
Not until late July did Hitler authorize the movement of the Fifteenth Panzer Army from
the Pas de Calais to Normandy. In effect, the deception totally immobilized 19 German divisions
east of the Seine. Although units of the Fifteenth Army were moved west to Normandy before
that date, this was done piecemeal and hence they were much easier for the Allies to defeat.
13. The Battle of the Bulge- December 1944-January 1945 just over a month long. The last major
German offensive. They concentrated all of their forces in a last ditch effort to drive the
Americans from Europe. Many of Hitlers commanders questioned whether this was possible
prior to the battle taking place but Hitler demanded it. Reasons why the Germans were
successful at first: The Weather caused our aircraft to be grounded for the most part, the
Germans had been retreating, They infiltrated our ranks. This was the bloodiest battle of the
War for the US with an estimated 100,000 casualties of which nearly 20,000 were deaths.
14. The Yalta Conference- February 4–11, 1945 This conference was a wartime meeting of the
heads of government of the United States-FDR, the United Kingdom-Churchill, and the Soviet
Union-Stalin for the purpose of discussing Europe's postwar reorganization. Mainly, it was
intended to discuss the re-establishment of the nations of war-torn Europe. It was the second of
three wartime conferences among the Big Three (Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin). Major points
of interest Japan, Poland, Germany. The US and SU had very different views of the way Europe
would be shaped following the war and this will come to a head at the conference. Stalin will
not feel like he needs permission at this conference and will operate from a position of control
with the US and GB trying to coerce concessions, why? National Defense policy as well as Red
Army only 40miles from Berlin at this time.
a. The result of the conference: German unconditional surrender and then 4 zones,
Germany will undergo demilitarization and denazification, The creation of a reparation
council located in the SU, discussed Poland(idea is that existing Communist gov’t set up
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
by Soviets will reorganize on a broader democratic basis, New Polish borders that gave
up territory to Russia and took it away from Germany, Churchill tried to push for free
Polish Elections which never happened, Stalin promised to participate in the UN, Stalin
agreed to help fight Japan within 90 days of the German surrender, Nazi war criminals
will be hunted down and brought to justice, Set up a committee to discuss taking
Germany apart into separate nations
Navajo Code Talkers- Navajo Indians were recruited by the Government to be used in the war
against the Japanese because they were the perfect code machines. No one in the world
outside of the tribe spoke there language so as long as you had a Navajo at each end of a radio
conversation messages of great military importance could be spoken in the clear with no danger
of interception. Even if the Japanese heard the messages they would never be able to
understand without a Navajo(“Windtalker”). Link to a Navy Navajo Code Talker Dictionary
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq61-4.htm There work saved many battles for the US, they
could create send and decipher a message in 20sec versus the 30 min that a machine required.
This meant nearly instantaneous information in the field. There were many other groups were
were used in this way the Basque, the Cherokee, the Choctaw, the Comanche, and the
Meskwaki. This practice went back to the 1st world war when it happened almost by accident in
the 2nd battle of the Somme. Navajo though was perfect as it was spoken fluently by less than
20 non-Navajo people, it was not a written language, and no Japanese spoke it at all or had ever
heard of it. Problem with “Windtalkers”….
Philippines- The Island were originally captured in the first months following the attack on Pearl
Harbor. The US plan to take back the Islands took place from October 1944 to August 1945.
Okinawa- 82 day battle from April to June of 1945 to take the Island. This Island is important
because it will be used to launch bombing runs on the Japanese main islands and it is considered
to be a part of the Japanese home islands by them. This will be the bloodiest battle of the war
with approximately 100,000 Japanese killed, 50,000 allies, and tens of thousands of civilians.
The battle will be marked with suicide attacks by Japanese soldiers and civilians as well as mass
suicides by Japanese civilians. Human Landmines, cliff diving, starvation, etc… They tried to fight
to the last man. One of the reasons why we will use the Atomic Bomb.
Iwo Jima and Chi Chi JimaTokyo Fire-bombings- US attacks against the Civilian population of Japan. In the last 5 months
of the war they changed tactics and bombed 67 Japanese cities to achieve a death toll as high as
500,000 and made up to 5,000,000 more homeless. Tokyo was the worst hit and an estimated
100,000 people died in this attack alone. The city was so hot that the water in the canals
literally boiled. This tactic helped to lead to the Japanese surrender.
USS Indianapolis- US cruiser which had delivered many of the components for the little boy
bomb to Tinian to be used in the attack on Hiroshima. Unfortunately it will be remembered as
one of the worst events of the war as it was sunk 4 days later. The ship had a crew of nearly
1200 and 330 of these died with the ship as it went down in approximately 12 min. The rest
ended up in the water for the next 4 days. While in the water they were faced with a variety of
dangers not limited to suicide, murder, salt poising, dehydration, and shark attacks. When they
were finally rescued by chance only 316 survived. The distress call is reported to have went out
WWII Topics: Answer Sheet
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
but no one responded to it although there were reportedly 3 bases that received the call. If
they would not have been spotted they never would have been saved since no one was aware
that the Indianapolis was missing. They had removed it from the board. The captain of the Ship
was court martialed; they later cleared him of wrong doing and returned him to command until
he retired in 1949. But the shame of it never left him and he killed himself in 1968.
The Manhattan Project- The project to create the Atomic Bomb ahead of the German’s and
Japanese. There were many aspects to the development of this and at its heights it employed
over 130,000 people. The project had to decide what type of bomb to build, where to conduct
the project, how to get the material to create the bomb, and keep track, steal from, and
obstruct the Axis attempts if possible. The Bomb was developed in Los Alamos, New Mexico
and that is where the first explosion took place but the material was collected in Oak Ridge,
Tennessee a site chosen due its remote location and access to abundant water and power. The
first atomic power plant was actually created underneath the football field at the University of
Chicago but they removed it quickly afterward due to fears of a disaster in such a heavily
populated area. The US succeeded in creating the bomb and testing it in July 16 1945. The
explosion had the energy equivalent of 20 kilotons of TNT (20,000 tons) The shock wave was
felt over 100 miles away.
The Potsdam Conference Class discussion tomorrow
Hiroshima- August 6th 1945, 1st City ever attacked by the Atomic Bomb. The US dropped the
bomb on the city to try to force a Japanese surrender because they had not acted favorably to
an ultimatum issued by the allied leaders at the Potsdam Conference. The Bomb was dropped
by Colonel Paul Tibbets from his Plane the Enola Gay a modified B-29 Bomber. The resulting
explosion was an estimated 13kilotons, a much smaller blast than what could have occurred,
only a very small percentage of the nuclear material actually exploded. The blast killed an
estimated 70,000 people instantly with another 70,000 injured. Over the next few months the
death toll rose with estimates today of as high as 160,000. The blast did not result in the
Japanese immediate surrender.
Nagasaki- August 9, 1945, 2nd and last city to date to be attacked by the atomic bomb. Same
goal, finally achieved. The explosion is estimated to have been around 21 kilotons in size. This
time it was a fatman bomb, dropped by Captain Frederick Bock from his B-29 bomber, the
Bockscar. Immediate fatalities 40-75,000 total death toll from the bomb are estimated to be as
high as 80,000. The Japanese agreed to surrender after this.
Nuremburg Trials Class discussion tomorrow
United Nations Class discussion tomorrow