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The Main Events of WWII. (1938-1942) By Peter Michalek and Bohumil Riha September 29th 1938 Munich Agreement On 29th September, 1938, Adolf Hitler, Neville Chamberlain, Edouard Daladier and Benito Mussolini signed the Munich Agreement which transferred the Sudetenland to Germany. When Eduard Benes, Czechoslovakia's head of state, protested at this decision, Neville Chamberlain told him that Britain would be unwilling to go to war over the issue of the Sudetenland. The Munich Agreement was popular with most people in Britain because it appeared to have prevented a war with Germany. However, some politicians, including Winston Churchill attacked the agreement. September 27th 1939 Warsaw Surrenders Warsaw surrendered to German troops encircling its borders. Massive air and artillery bombardments left the poles no choice. Eastern Poland was occupied by the Soviet Union, while the rest of Poland was occupied by the Germans. The Germans immediately began their campaign against the Jews of Poland– herding them to live in ghettos in big cities. WW II started... DECEMBER 1939 Battle For The Atlantic The submarine war began on the third day of the war when a German submarine U-30 commanded by Lieutenant Fritz Julius Lemp fired on the British passenger liner Athenia. The Athenia sunk the next day, after most of the passenger were saved. In the first four months of the war 221 ships were sunk. The period between July and October 1940 became know as the “Happy Time” for German submarines. During this period the wolf pact, a group of submarines were operating together . U-boats reached an outstanding 217 ships sunk and losing only six U boats. AUGUST 1940 Battle Of Britain The Germans attempted to subdue Great Britain by utilizing air attacks. Germany attacked all major cities and military installations. British preparedness, combined with the valor of its pilots and a new weapon called "radar," forced the Germans to pay a heavy price for their bombing. By the end of October, when the winter weather made the threat of invasion unlikely, the Germans had lost 2,375 planes, compared to 800 British planes lost. This was the first battle where the Gemens was defeated and the mythus of undefeateble army was broken. DECEMBER 8th 1940 British Attack Italian Forces In Egypt British troops launched a surprise attack on Italian troops, which occupied parts of western Egypt. The British routed the Italians. On January 5th, the Italian garrison at Bardia– with 25,000 troops– surrendered. By the end of January, the British captured Tobruk and, in early February, captured Bengasi and liberated Ethiopia. In April, German reinforcements, under the command of General Rommel, arrived in Africa and stopped the British advance. The British were forced to withdraw. MARCH 28th 1941 Battle Of Matapan The British fleet met the Italian fleet at the battle off of Cape Matapan. The Italian Force was led by Vice Admiral Angelo Iachino, the British force was led by Admiral Cunningham. The British force included the battleships Warspite, Valiant and Barham and carrier Formidable. Cunnigham cruisers engaged part of the Italian force on March 28th. When the British aircraft attacked, the Italians changed course and began to withdraw. Cunnighman then launched successive air attacks against the Italian fleet. The cruiser Polo was seriously damaged and later was boarded and captured. the Italian cruisers Zara and Fiume were sunk. The destroyers Affeieri and Carducci soon followed. It was the greatest British naval victory since Trafalgar. MAY 27th 1941 German Battleship “Bismark” Sunk The German battleship, "Bismark," was sunk by the British Navy . In the first round Bismark sunk the battleship "Hood" and crippled the battleship "Prince of Wales"On May 26th, a plane from the "Ark Royal" attacked the "Bismark." A torpedo hit its rudder and disabled the steering. That night, battleships "Rodney" and "King George" attacked the "Bismark" with their big guns. Together with torpedos from the "Doretshire," they sank the "Bismark". DECEMBER 7th 1941 Pearl Harbor The Japanese were convinced that they could not win a war of attrition with the United States, so they planned a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, hoping that a decisive victory would be achieved which would force the United States to negotiate. Americans at Pearl Harbor were caught unprepared, and the attack was successful. Some people speculate that Churchill knew about the Japanese airstrike of the Perl Harbour before 7th December due to the Ultra Program Enigma, but he did not warned Americans, because he wanted Amerika to enter the war. FEBRUARY 15th 1942 Singapore Surrenders The British fortress at Singapore was forced to surrender to the Japanese. The Japanese advanced down through the Malayan pennisula. They crossed onto the island of Singapore on the night of February 7th and forced the more numerous British troops to surrender. OCTOBER 23rd 1942 British Are Victorious At El Alamein German forces, under the command of Rommel, met the British forces, under the command of General Montgomery at El Alamein. Montgomery had a two-to-one advantage in tanks, and was victorious. The victory in El Alamain eliminated the German threat to the Suez Canal and the Middle East. NOVEMBER 8th 1942 Operation Torch The invasion of North Africa, in what was named "Operation Torch," was designed to encircle German troops stationed there. American troops went ashore in French North Africa with limited opposition. Soon after the landings, French troops defected to the American side. American and British troops advanced towards Tunisia, where they met stiff German opposition. JANUARY 1943 Casablanca Conference A conference was held in Casablanca, in French Morocco. from January 14th to the 24th, between Roosevelt and Churchill and their respective staffs. At the conference, it was announced that the war would be fought until there was an unconditional surrender. Agreement, in principle, was reached on the opening of a second front. May 10, 1943 Bulldog Prime Minester Sir Winston Churchill was elected Prime Minister of Great Britain. The master statesman stood alone against fascism and renewed the world's faith in the superiority of democrac, but his promis nothing more than 'blood, toil tears and sweat' AUGUST 17th 1943 Quebec Conference British and American leaders met in Quebec to coordinate war plans. At the meetings, which were led by Churchill and Roosevelt, leaders discussed the upcoming landing in Italy, as well as summit plans with Stalin. SEPTEMBER 12th 1943 Allies Land In Italy On September 3rd, the Italian government, led by Marshal Badoglio Mussolini– having been dismissed by King Victor Emanuel– surrendered to the Allied forces. At the same time, the British and Americans began an assualt on Italy, now defended by occupying Germans. MAY 1944 Monte Cassino Falls To Allies The town of Monte Cassino fell to the allies on May 18th. With the fall of Monte Cassino, the whole Gustav line crumbled, and the road to Rome was open to US and other Allied troops. JUNE 4th 1944 Rome Liberated by Allied forces. On June 4th, American forces, under the command of General Mark Clark, entered Rome– from which the Nazis were quickly retreating. The capture of Rome marked the first Axis capital captured JUNE 6th 1944 D–Day Operation Overlord On June 6th, 1944, 45 Allied divisions with almost 3 million men, led by General Eisenhower, began landing on Normandy Beach, in France. Within three weeks, Allied troops had captured all of the Normandy peninsula and port of Cherbourg. By the end of August, Paris was liberated, and Allied forces continued toward Germany. It is said that the English had engaged a double-ganger of general Montgomery and send him to Africa to confuse Germen spyes before the invasion. AUGUST 25th 1944 Paris Liberated Allied forces led by the French Second Armored Division, commanded by Major General Lecleric, liberated Paris on August 25th. The next day, US and British forces entered the city and were greeted by quite an emotional welcome. SEPTEMBER 27th 1944 Market Garden Fails After liberating Antwerp and Brussels, Belgium, the Allies planned a very ambitious operation to capture the bridges over the Rhine. The plan entailed the landing of paratroopers at Arnhem Bridge. They were to hold the bridge until advancing ground forces could reinforce them. The ground forces failed, however, to make the link up, and the airborne troops at Arnhem were wiped out. OCTOBER 9th 1944 Dumbarton–Oaks Conference This meeting was attended by representatives of the US, Great Britain, the Soviet Union and China. At the conference, delegates discussed the charter of a new, permanent, post-war international organization. The conference laid the groundwork for the creation of the United Nations. DECEMBER 16th 1944 Battle Of The Bulge The German forces made a surprise attack against US forces in Belgium. The Germans made rapid progress, but were unable to capture the city of Bastogne, where Ameican forces were encircled. The US and the Brtish were able to counterattack, and the Germans were forced to withdraw, but not before US forces lost 35,000 men. FEBRUARY 1945 Yalta Conference President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and Marshall Stalin, met at Yalta in the Southern Soviet Union. The meeting was a continuation of the earlier dialogue between Churchill and Stalin. In that meeting, Churchill and Stalin had discussed spheres of influence in post-war Europe, and Churchill was reported to have written down a list of countries in which he recorded both nations and percentages. Accordingly, he wrote down; Romania-90%, Soviets-10%, Allied Yugoslavia-50% Allies-50%. APRIL 16th 1945 Battle Of Berlin The final battle of the Eastern front began on April 16th, as Soviet troops attempted to capture Berlin. German troops fought to the last man, but the Soviet victory was inevitable. APRIL 1945 San Francisco Conference On April 25th, 1945, the United Nations Founding Conference met in San Francisco. The only purpose of the San Francisco Conference was the establishment of a Charter for the new organization MAY 8th 1945 Germany Surrenders On May 8th, German forces officially surrendered. Signing for the Germans was Chief of Staff General Jodl. The surrender ceremony took place at Eisenhower's headquarters at Reims. JULY 1945 Potsdam Conference The three allies met on July 17th, 1945, in Potsdam, Germany. As the conference opened, American President Truman received word of the successful detonation of the atomic bomb.It was agreed that Germany would initially be governed by the Allied Control Council, made up of military commanders from the four zones of occupation. AUGUST 5th 1945 Atomic Bomb Dropped On Hiroshima On August 6th the US Airforce dropped an Atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The city was destroyed and over 70,000 were killed immediately from the effects of the blast. Three days later a second bomb destroyed Nagasaki. AUGUST 14th 1945 Japan Surrenders On September 2nd, the Japanese formally surrendered aboard the Battleship Missouri in Tokyo Harbor. Two attacks by atomic bombs finally convinced the Japanese government that further resistance was useless.