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Canada and WWII 1939-1945 Into the Fire Again WWII Begins Canada declared war against Germany on Sept. 10th 1939 after Germany invaded Poland on Sept. 1st, 1939. Unlike WWI, Canada declared war after a vote in Parliament…not because we were part of the British Empire. Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King was determined to not split Canada over conscription as had happened during WWI. “Not necessarily conscription, but conscription if necessary” Having suffered from nearly twenty years of neglect, Canada's armed forces were small, poorly equipped, and for the most part unprepared for war in 1939. Tens of thousands of volunteers signed up immediately. Unlike WWI, everybody knew this war would not end quickly…or, without sacrifice. The War Measures Act was voted in again… Canada saw Nazi Germany as a threat to Canada. Laws are passed by PM & Cabinet…not Parliament. Civil rights are suspended. British Commonwealth Air Training Program One PM King wanted to contribute to the war effort ( and keep Canadian soldiers from dying in battle) was to start a program to train pilots from all over the Commonwealth. The prairies were chosen as an ideal location for pilot training as the skies were clear and population centres were small…in case of acidents! Canada agreed to accept most of the plan's costs but insisted that the British consent to a public pronouncement that air training would take precedence over all other aspects of the Canadian war effort. The Canadian government paid more than $1.6 billion, three-quarters of the total cost. Graduates totalled 131 553 pilots, navigators, bomb aimers, wireless operators, air gunners and flight engineers from the 4 founding partners, other parts of the COMMONWEALTH, the US and countries of occupied Europe. Home Front Women played a vital role in working in factories to replace men serving overseas. Victory bonds were sold to pay for war. Supplies like gas, food were rationed. Metal, wood, fat recycled for war use. The government controlled the economy. Ordered factories to produce war material. Also controlled prices to keep inflation down. The Allied Powers Britain Canada Australia New Zealand Other Commonwealth nations Free French resistance fighters USA (After Dec. 7, 1941) The Axis Powers Germany Italy Japan Hitler’s March Through Europe Hitler’s blitzkrieg style of fighting marched through most of Europe quickly. France falls in weeks… Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, Poland all are invaded. Battle of Britain Hitler wanted to crush Britain…it was the only country in Europe not invaded by Nazis. Hitler called it “Operation Sea Lion” Operation Sea Lion was an air war… Bomb London into submission. British pilots fought back valiantly. Always outnumbered by German bombers. Britain did have one advantage…radar! Spitfire airplanes flew out to meet German bombers and shot them down before they could drop bombs on London. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill had this to say about the brave pilots that pushed back the Nazi bombers: August 20, 1940 - On the Battle of Britain "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." June 4, 1940 "We shall not flag or fail. We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be. We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender." Hitler’s invasion of Britain failed… Now England became a base to begin fighting back against the Germans. This was a huge victory for the allies. Evacuation of Dunkirk On 10 May 1940 Hitler’s armies struck westwards across Europe. Within three weeks Holland and Belgium had surrendered and German Panzer (tank) divisions had split the British and French armies. The British Expeditionary Force (BEF) and a substantial number of French troops were trapped in a diminishing pocket of land centred on the port of Dunkirk. The German army was hoping to trap the 335,000 soldiers along the coast and capture them. Hundreds of boats…fishing boats, ferries, anything that could float sailed across the English Channel to pull the soldiers off the beach, Most of the soldiers were rescued. The “Miracle of at Dunkirk” Battle of the Atlantic After Hitler’s failure to invade Britain, he wanted to starve off the island nation by using his U-boats to torpedo any supply ship heading to Britain. The Allies countered by forming convoys. Hundreds of supply ships would be protected by warships on the outer edge. Safety in numbers! Operation Barbarossa June, 1941 Hitler’s first big mistake was to stab the Soviet Union in the back, break a treaty of nonaggression and try to invade Moscow. Now Hitler had to fight on two fronts…west and now east. Hitler was also unprepared for a Russian winter. The War in the Pacific Canada’s major contribution to WWII was focused in Europe…. Canadian soldiers were engaged in some Pacific battles however. The Attack of Pearl Harbor On Dec. 7, 1941, the Japanese government launched a surprise attack on the US Naval Base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Two attack waves, totalling 350 aircraft, were launched from six IJN aircraft carriers which destroyed two U.S. Navy battleships, one minelayer, two destroyers and 188 aircraft. Personnel losses were 2,333 killed and 1,139 wounded. Damaged warships included three cruisers, a destroyer, and six battleships. The intent of the strike was to protect Imperial Japan's advance into Malaya and the Dutch East Indies – for their natural resources such as oil and rubber – by neutralizing the U.S. Pacific Fleet The attack was one of the most important engagements of World War II. Occurring before a formal declaration of war, it shocked the American public out of isolationism. Roosevelt called December 7, 1941 "… a date which will live in infamy." On Dec.8, 1941, the USA declared war against Japan and any of Japan’s allies. So, now the USA was also at war with Germany and Italy too. Canada and the other allies also declared war against Japan. Hong Kong Falls Japan also timed other attacks as the same time as Pearl Harbor. Hong Kong was an English colony in Asia. Japan attacked Hong Kong on Dec.7 as well. Hong Kong was defended by a small unit of British military. Canada also had soldiers there to help England defend Hong Kong. The Japanese military easily conquered the small army. Thousands were captured and put into the infamous Japanese prison camps. The Battle of Dieppe The Allied Dieppe Raid, codenamed Operation Jubilee, began at dawn on August 19, 1942. The objective was to briefly invade the German-occupied port of Dieppe, France, destroy predetermined targets and return to England as quickly as possible. The Dieppe Raid of August 19, 1942 was one of the worst disasters of the Second World War. Nine-hundred-and-seven Canadian lives were lost on that day and 1,946 other Canadians were captured and forced to spend the remainder of the war as prisoners. Success depended on surprise and darkness, neither of which prevailed. In the main attacks that took take place across the pebble beach in front of Dieppe, the enemy swept the beach with machine gun fire. Mis-communication caused the reserve battalion to be pinned down as well. Bad timing, inadequate equipment and miscommunication caused the entire mission to be plagued by disaster. On almost every front, the enemy was ready for the Canadians and was able to defeat them quickly. Some claim it was a useless slaughter, others maintain that it was necessary to the success of D-Day two years later. Invasion of Italy Canadian troops played a vital role in the 20-month Mediterranean campaign which led to the liberation of Italy during the Second World War. In this campaign, which was fought in Sicily from July 10 to August 6, 1943, and in mainland Italy from September 3, 1943, to February 25, 1945, the fighting was particularly bitter. The Germans, taking full advantage of mountain peaks and swiftly running rivers, made Allied advance very difficult and costly. There were 25,264 Canadian casualties in the fighting, including more than 5,900 who were killed. In the end, the invasion was not enough to pressure the Germans from retreating… another European invasion would be necessary! July, 1943, Italy Surrenders American, British and Canadian forces accepted the surrender of the Italian government… The beginning of the end of the Axis powers. D-Day A European invasion was necessary to face Hitler head-on and begin an invasion of Germany. The target would be in northern France…in Normandy. It would be the largest invasion force ever! Thousands of soldiers, ships, planes gathered at the staging area in England. Everything had to be top secret Americans, British and Canadians would divide the beach landing areas. After a stormy journey across the English Channel, the soldiers would rush to the beach in landing craft. The front ramp would drop and soldiers would run up the beach to the cliffs. On top of the cliffs were German defense sites. Despite huge losses, the Allies held onto the beach and began to push the Nazis back to Germany. Paris is liberated on Aug. 25, 1944. Canadians Liberate the Netherlands Quickly after D-day, the Allies have the Germans on the run…. Canada was given a major role in liberating the Netherlands. Bombing Germany The Allies began to bomb German cities to crush the Nazi economy and punish civilians into submission. US planes bombed by day and British and Canadian bombers flew at night. Dresden/Hamburg Firestorms The Allies created a new bombing technique where incendiary bombs would ignite a city in to a huge firestorm. Fire would burn into a huge tornado killing hundreds of thousands of civilians. Fire-storming these 2 German cities killed as many as the atom bombs in Japan. V-E Day ( Victory in Europe) On May 8th, 1945, Germany had officially surrendered. Hitler had committed suicide in a Berlin bunker. The Allies had defeated the fascist dictators of Europe! Hitler’s Bunker The story of Hitler's death is one of a man who knew the end was near and was determined to not be captured alive. Supposedly while he was in his bunker, on April 30, 1945, realizing the Russians were almost upon him, he put a automatic pistol to his head and pulled the trigger while reclining on a couch. The body was then taken outside, put in a pit and set on fire to destroy the evidence. The War In The Pacific Canada had a limited role in the war in the Pacific. Because of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, this will be a war the USA is focused on. The Nuremburg War Trials The Allies created a new court to hear the trials of captured Nazi officials and death camp operators. The new crimes were: - crimes against humanity - war crimes One important legal concept that came out of the Nuremburg trials: “I was only following orders.” is not a valid excuse for committing war crimes. Of the original twenty-four defendants, twelve (including Martin Bormann, tried in absentia) were sentenced to death by hanging. Many Nazi officials escaped and have never been caught. Some Nazi scientists were given amnesty and came to the USA or Canada to work on the space program. Convicted Nazi prison guard loses appeal to retain Canadian citizenship On Nov. 24, 2000, Seifert was convicted in absentia by an Italian court on charges that he raped, tortured and murdered nine Jews at a German concentration camp in Italy during the Second World War. Death of Mussolini Mussolini was caught in July, 1945 trying to escape in a disguise with his mistress. They were hung upside down on a lamp-post and pelted with stones and mutilated. Japan is Next! With V-E Day over, all energy is now focused to invade Japan. The Japanese culture says it is shameful to surrender. This will be a tough nation to invade. The US and Japan were playing a game of “cat and mouse with their aircraft carriers ( a new weapon). By 1943, Japan was retreating. The US strategy was to “island hop” across the Pacific and cut off the Japanese military. Kamikaze Attacks The closer the US forces got to Japan, the more desperate the Japanese forces fought back. Kamikaze pilots would fly their planes into an American warship in a suicide mission. If they died in battle, their souls went to heaven. The Manhattan Project The US government set up a secret lab in the New Mexico desert. The purpose of this lab was to create a new type of bomb… An atom bomb! A chain reaction that had the power of a ton of dynamite! The secret weapon was detonated sucessfully in 1944. There was enough uranium to make 2 bombs. One was called “Little Boy” and the other, “Fat Man” US President Harry S. Truman had a tough decision to make: 1) invade Japan and risk many US deaths 2) use this new bomb to force a Japanese surrender * Truman chose #2 The Bombing of Hiroshima On the early morning of Aug. 6, 1945, a B-52 Superfortress bomber called the Enola Gay took off from Tinian Island to Japan. On board was the atom bomb “Little Boy”. 100,000 people die from the explosion and the firestorm after. Another 100,000 die from radiation fall-out A new horrible weapon is invented and used in a hostile manner! Nagasaki The Japanese government did not surrender after the bombing of Hiroshima… Some say the government officials in Tokyo did not believe that such a weapon could exist. On Aug. 9, 1945, the US dropped the 2nd and only bomb left on the city of Nagasaki. V-J Day ( Victory in Japan) On Aug. 11, 1945, the Japanese government officially surrendered. WWII was over! The total estimated human loss of life caused by World War II was roughly 72 million people. The civilian toll was around 47 million, including 20 million deaths due to war related famine and disease. The military toll was about 25 million, including the deaths of about 5 million prisoners of war in captivity. The Allies lost about 61 million people, and the Axis lost 11 million. Canadian deaths = 45,300 Germany = 7,503, 000 USSR = 23,600,000 Japan = 2,680,000 USA = 418,000 Was the Atom Bomb Necessary? “I had been conscious of a feeling of depression and so I voiced to him my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives.” Dwight D. Eisenhower US general & future president "The Japanese had, in fact, already sued for peace. The atomic bomb played no decisive part, from a purely military point of view, in the defeat of Japan." Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Commander in Chief of the U.S. Pacific Fleet "The use of [the atomic bombs] at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender." Admiral William D. Leahy, Chief of Staff to President Truman. “Japan would have surrendered even if the atomic bombs had not been dropped, even if Russia had not entered the war, and even if no invasion had been planned or contemplated.” The United States Strategic Bombing Survey, after interviewing hundreds of Japanese civilian and military leaders after Japan surrendered Japanese-Canadian Internment Camps After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, the entire west coast was paranoid that they would be attacked next. Canada’s government used the War Measures Act to label any Japanese-Canadian a potential enemy. The law forced all Japanese-Canadians to leave the coast and move to “internment camps” in the Rocky Mountains or the Prairies. The government sold their houses and fishing boats or farms and kept the money. "We saw all these people behind the fence, looking out, hanging onto the wire, and looking out because they were anxious to know who was coming in. But I will never forget the shocking feeling that human beings were behind this fence like animals [crying]. And we were going to also lose our freedom and walk inside of that gate and find ourselves . . . cooped up there . . . when the gates were shut, we knew that we had lost something that was very precious; that we were no longer free." Mary Tsukamoto “When we got to our tar-paper barracks, we found sand coming in through the walls, around the windows, up through the floor. The camp was surrounded by barbed wire. Guards with machine guns were posted at watchtowers, with orders to shoot anyone who tried to escape. Our own government put a yoke of disloyalty around our shoulders. But throughout our ordeal, we cooperated with the government because we felt that in the long run, we could prove our citizenship.’