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World War II Should the British Empire last for a thousand years, people would say ‘This was their finest hour.” -Winston Churchill, 1940 After Shocks of World War I ► ► ► Germany resented the territorial losses and reparations payments Italy, one of the victors, found its territorial gains far from enough either to offset the cost of the war or to satisfy its ambitions Japan, also a victor, was unhappy about its failure to gain control of China When the “Doughboys” Came Home United States disillusioned by the Europeans' failure to repay their war debts, retreated into isolationism. 1933 - Germany Hitler had come to power legally in on a platform of anti-communism, anti-Semitism, and expansionism ► Preached to German soldiers and Nazi party that they were a superior race that deserved more than they had ► By 1938 he had amassed the best-equipped, besttrained army in the world. ► In Violation of the Treaty of Versailles ► Hitler built up Germany’s armed forces ► Sent troops into the Rhineland and Austria ► Then seized Czechoslovakia, Poland, Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Belgium, Norway, and France. 1935 - Italy ► Mussolini took Ethiopia Address to League of Nations "I, Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia, am here today to claim that justice which is due to my people, and the assistance promised to it eight months ago, when fifty nations asserted that aggression had been committed in violation of international treaties. Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis ► Hitler tried out his new weapons supporting military rebels in the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) ► Aided by Mussolini who had just seized Ethiopia in a small war 1937 – Japan Invades Manchuria ► Japan defended its aggressive militarism on several grounds, including it was "protecting China from its inner turmoil," Japan's overpopulation "necessitated" colonization of other lands, its economy lacked adequate resources of its own and so needed those of China, long-term effect would be to strengthen all of East Asia, and all of the world's powerful nations had made similar advances in the past. The Rape of Nanking With Beijing under siege, Nanking had been made the capital of China In the autumn of 1937, Japanese war planes began bombing Nanking, concentrating their efforts on the downtown areas, which were most densely populated by civilians. Fearing the consequences of surrender to the Japanese, Chinese military men donned civilian clothing and retreated into the city. It was on this day that the six-week stretch of atrocities against the civilian population of Nanking began. It is for the crimes against the women of Nanking that this tragedy is most notorious ► ► ► Over the six weeks of the massacre, in addition to the murder of about 300,000 civilians, the Japanese troops raped over 20,000 women, most of whom were murdered thereafter. In recognition of these horrifying acts, the massacre is also commonly referred to as 'the rape of Nanking.' Women of all ages (including children as young as seven and elderly women in their seventies) were violated, many of them being gang raped or attacked on multiple occasions. The Thousand Corpse Ditch ► ► ► ► ► Some women were held captive so that the could be repeatedly abused. Rapes were committed in broad daylight, in front of spouses, children, or other family members, and with appalling frequency. The soldiers' usual practice, officially condoned by high-ranking officials so as to "avoid difficulties," was to murder the women when they were finished with them. This was most often done by cutting off their breasts and/or disemboweling them with a bayonet to the abdomen. Senior officers were not only aware of these acts, but participated in them as well. The Munich Pact “Peace in our time” ► ► In 1938 British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, along with France and Italy, signed the Munich Pact with Hitler. Gave in to Hitler’s demands for cession of the Sudetenland, a Germanspeaking region of Czechoslovakian German Armored Division Enters Poland ► ► August 1939: Germany and Russia sign non-aggression pact Germany attacks Poland, making the official beginning of World War II as France and Britain were treaty-bound to come to the aid of Poland September 1, 1939 Germany invades Poland ► ► ► ► ► Hitler introduced a new kind of war called a blitzkrieg, which means “lightning war.” Waves of German bombers targeted railroads which crippled Polish military mobilization. Hundreds of tanks smashed through Polish defenses and rolled deep into the country. The Poles fought hard, but on September 17, the Soviet Union invaded their country from the east. By the end of the month, Poland had fallen. Polish Jews Evicted from Warsaw Ghetto on way to Concentration Camp ► ► In the summer of 1942, about 300,000 Jews were deported from Warsaw to Treblinka. When reports of mass murder in the killing center leaked back to the Warsaw ghetto, a surviving group of mostly young people formed an organization called the Z.O.B. which means Jewish Fighting Organization Did We Know What was Happening in the Camps? ► The Z.O.B., led by 23-year-old Mordecai Anielewicz, issued a proclamation calling for the Jewish people to resist going to the railroad cars. Warsaw Ghetto Uprising ► ► In January 1943, Warsaw ghetto fighters fired upon German troops as they tried to round up another group of ghetto inhabitants for deportation. Fighters used a small supply of weapons that had been smuggled into the ghetto. After a few days, the troops retreated. This small victory inspired the ghetto fighters to prepare for future resistance. France and England initially took no action, until Hitler invaded Denmark and Norway in April 1940. ► ► ► ► ► They allowed the Danish government to continue governing the country, but took control of Denmark's FOREIGN POLICY. Many Danish citizens began a RESISTANCE movement in their country. The Danish people organized a nationwide effort to smuggle the Jews by sea to SWEDEN. Within a two-week period, Danish fisherman helped carry 7,220 Jews to safety across the channel to Sweden. The Jews were safe in Sweden because it was a neutral country. Denmark was the only country to stand up for its Jewish citizens. ► ► About 500 Danish Jews were deported from Denmark and put into the THERESIENSTADT ghetto in CZECHOSLAVAKIA. The Danish government demanded to be able to talk to the Danish Jews in the concentration camp and kept them from being sent to death camps. The Miracle at Dunkirk - 1940 In May, Germany invaded Belgium and advanced into France ► More than 300,000 troops were evacuated from Dunkirk and the surrounding beaches in May and June 1940. ► At the time the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said it was "a miracle of deliverance". ► England Goes to Aid of France and Belgium ► ► Allied forces underestimated the strength of Hitler’s army, which used tanks and bombers to smash the Allies and drive them back into France. Overpowered, the BEF was ordered to beat a hasty retreat towards the port of Dunkirk. Operation Dynamo ► ► Troops found themselves stranded without shelter or supplies. They were also under constant attack from the air. On 26 May, the British Admiralty responded by launching Operation Dynamo - the evacuation of the BEF by sea. This enormous rescue mission was led by Vice Admiral Ramsay, who rounded-up a huge fleet of vessels - from tiny tugs and barges, to lifeboats and navy destroyers - to send to Dunkirk. Of the 850 vessels which took part in Operation Dynamo, 235 were sunk. The Maginot Line ► ► ► ► ► ► ► ► Built between 1929 and 1940 To protect France from her longtime enemy, Germany, and to defend the traditional invasion routes across her eastern frontier. To provide time for the French army to mobilize and to make up for a shortfall of manpower predicted for the late 1930s to provide a place behind which the French army could hide, a so-called "Great Wall" of France French army was caught off guard. Germans had superior numbers of aircraft and an invasion plan The blitzkrieg sent French forces into a confused retreat, and Germans marched into Paris on June 14 The French government collapsed. Was the Maginot Line a Failure? ► ► ► ► Most of its components were underground, where interconnecting tunnels stretched for kilometers, and where, beneath the earth, thousands of men slept, trained, watched, and waited for a war that never came. It was powerful and supposedly impregnable, yet it failed to save France from a humiliating defeat in 1940 The truth is that the Maginot Line served the exact purpose for which it was built. It dissuaded the Germans from attacking across France's eastern frontier it gave the French Army time to fully mobilize and deploy it could have made up for France's anticipated manpower shortage In May 1940 Hitler simply chose to ignore it. Battle of Britain, 1940-1941 ► ► ► ► Britain held firm, largely due to the efforts of the Royal Air Force, or RAF. Hitler underestimated the effectiveness of British radar and their Spitfire fighter planes. The Spitfire could outmaneuver German Luftwaffe fighters. Resulted in an English victory at the Battle of Britain. Britain – Running out of Money ► By 1942, Britain was holding but bogged down, and the Nazis had conquered most of western and central Europe, half of European Russia and much of North Africa. World War II At Home I address you, the members of this new Congress, at a moment unprecedented in the history of the union. I use the word "unprecedented" because at no previous time has American security been as seriously threatened from without as it is today. Arsenal of Democracy ► The most important determinants of its outcome were industrial capacity and personnel. In the last stages of the war, two radically new weapons were introduced: the long-range rocket and the atomic bomb. Air-defense systems in England were greatly aided by the development of radar ► To guide interception, ► Also aided by inability of German fighter planes to escort their bombers because of low fuel capacity. German U-boat from World War II (1939-1945) ► ► ► Cramped but deadly warship. Machinery and weapons took most of the space on board, leaving little room for crewmembers. The snorkel allowed the U-boat to run its diesel engines while submerged, conserving battery life and extending range. By 1904 Christian Hülsmeyer, a German inventor, had used radio waves in a collision avoidance device for ships. ► ► ► ► Hülsmeyer’s system was only effective for a range of about 1.5 km (about 1 mi). The first long-range radar systems were not developed until the 1920s. In 1922 Italian radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi demonstrated a low-frequency (60 MHz) radar system. Scientists at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., became the first to use radar to detect aircraft in 1930. The U.S. Army operated air surveillance radar at the start of World War II. ► ► Mitsubishi Zero The army also used early forms of radar to direct antiaircraft guns. Initially the radar systems were used to aim searchlights so the soldier aiming the gun could see where to fire, but the systems evolved into firecontrol radar that aimed the guns automatically. Lockheed P-38 Lightnings ► Flew as long-range bomber escorts during World War II (19391945), protecting bombers from intercepting enemy fighters. Giant automobile-manufacturing plants shifted to the production of tanks and other military vehicles. ► Civilian automobile production was completely halted so that factories could manufacture military vehicles. After America’s entrance into World War II, military production in the United States increased rapidly. ► Many women took jobs or volunteered in staffing weapons factories, earning the nickname of “Rosie the Riveter.” ► Intense rationing efforts of certain foods and materials, such as rubber and metals, were also enacted to feed America’s war machine. ► “Rosie the Riveter” December 7, 1941 “A date which will live in infamy” ► Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor ► U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt asked Congress for a declaration of war against Japan To Cripple the American Fleet ► Within a few hours they destroyed four battleships and damaged four more, including the USS Arizona, destroyed other naval vessels and a large number of combat aircraft, and killed and wounded many American naval and military personnel. Captured Japanese photograph taken aboard a Japanese carrier before the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, December 7, 1941 "Pearl Harbor, taken by surprise, during the Japanese aerial attack. USS WEST VIRGINIA aflame." December 7, 1941 Mobilizing for War ► The War Productions Board (WPB) offered businesses lucrative contracts for retooling for the war effort Business does its part ► ► ► Large commercial farmers also received incentives for war production Labor unions offered “no strike pledges” for the duration of the war Taxes were raised, bonds were sold and the general tax based was increased Japanese forces compiled impressive list of conquests in remarkable short time! ► ► By May 1942 the Japanese stood with open avenues of attack to both India and Australia. However, three events in 1942 helped turn the tide of the war for the Allies. First - Doolittle’s Raid on Tokyo The Doolittle bombing raid on Tokyo in April unnerved Japanese officials who had believed the home islands were secure. ► After dropping their bombs, mainly on or near their intended targets, Doolittle's sixteen B-25B bombers left Japanese airspace ► One of them, suffering from excessive fuel consumption, had no hope of reaching China and so headed for the closer Soviet Maritime region. ► After landing north of Vladivostok, this plane and its five crew members were interned by the then-neutral Soviet authorities. The crew ultimately returned to the U.S. by way of Iran. ► Overextended Japanese Naval Forces ► When they attempted to capture more islands to the south and east to prevent another such raid, the overextended Japanese naval forces were crushed by the U.S. Navy at the battles of Coral Sea and Midway in May and June of 1942. Island Hopping in which each island that was captured became the base from which to attack the next target. Islands that were Japanese strongholds were skipped; this strategy saved both lives and time ► ► ► ► ► Japan on the Defense Allies regroup Island-hopping strategy used to reconquer the Pacific. With their naval offensive capacity crippled, the Japanese were forced to adopt a more defensive posture, while the Allies had time to regroup and halt further Japanese expansion and to formulate the islandhopping strategy used to reconquer the Pacific. Flying on to China ► ► ► The other fifteen planes, with their seventy-five men, flew on toward China, where darkness forced four to crash-land or ditch offshore. With fuel running out after some fifteen hours of flying, eleven crews took to their parachutes. Three men were killed at this time. Local residents saved most of the others and heroically spirited them through Japaneseheld territory to safety. The Vengeful Enemy Retaliated ► ► ► ► Viicious ground offensive, killing tens of thousands of Chinese over the following months. The Japanese also were able to capture eight men from two planes' crews. Three of these prisoners of war, Second Lieutenants Dean E. Hallmark and William G. Farrow and Sergeant Harold A. Spatz, were executed at Shanghai in October 1942. Another, Lieutenant Robert J. Meder, died in prison more than a year later. Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo The remaining airmen eventually returned to duty with the Army Air Forces, and twelve of these lost their lives later in the war. ► Their leader, Lieutenant Colonel "Jimmy" Doolittle, was quickly promoted to Brigadier General and awarded the Medal of Honor. ► Twenty-three of his men received Distinguished Flying Crosses. One of the latter, the seriously injured 2nd Lt. Ted W. Lawson, wrote a best-selling memoir of the raid and its aftermath. ► In 1944, this book, "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo", served as the basis for a Hollywood motion picture of the same name. ► Overextended Japanese forces Surrender of American troops at Corregidor, Philippine Islands, May 1942. Bataan Peninsula The March of Death. Along the March [on which] these prisoners were photographed, they have their hands tied behind their backs. The March of Death was about May 1942, from Bataan to Cabanatuan, the prison camp." "This picture, captured from the Japanese, shows American prisoners using improvised litters to carry those of their comrades who, from the lack of food or water on the march from Bataan, fell along the road." Philippines, May 1942. June 6, 1942 – Battle of Midway American naval reconnaissance planes observed a Japanese armada of some 185 ships advancing on the Midway Islands. ► On June 4 American fighters and bombers, sent from Midway airfields, and three aircraft carriers attacked the Japanese fleet. ► At the same time Japanese carrierbased planes attacked aircraft installations on Midway in preparation for an invasion; damage, however, was not sufficient to prevent the American planes from refueling and taking off again. ► August 7, 1942 - Guadalcanal •United States Marines attacked a small Japanese garrison in the Solomon Islands. •The Japanese responded with a powerful air and sea defensive. •Six major naval engagements were fought on or near the island, with both sides experiencing heavy losses, before U.S. forces secured it in February of 1943. •Here, United States troops land at Guadalcanal during amphibious training in 1944. "These men have earned the bloody reputation of being skillful jungle fighters. They are U.S. Marine Raiders gathered in front of a Jap dugout on Cape Totkina on Bougainville, Solomon Islands, which they helped to take." January 1944. "First flag on Guam on boat hook mast. Two U.S. officers plant the American flag on Guam eight minutes after U.S. Marines and Army assault troops landed on the Central Pacific island on July 20, 1944." "Marines of the 5th Division inch their way up a slope on Red Beach No. 1 toward Surbachi Yama as the smoke of the battle drifts about them." Iwo Jima, February 19, 1945 "Corsair fighter looses its load of rocket projectiles on a run against a Jap stronghold on Okinawa. In the lower background is the smoke of battle as Marine units move in to follow up with a Sunday punch." June 1945. By the night of June 6, the defeat of the Japanese was accomplished. ► ► The victory at Midway terminated a major Japanese attempt to capture the islands as a possible prelude to an invasion of Hawaii. The success of the operation, only a month after the important but indecisive Battle of the Coral Sea, effectively tipped the balance of sea power in the Pacific Ocean in favor of the United States. Col. Paul W. Tibbets, Jr., pilot of the ENOLA GAY, the plane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, waves from his cockpit before the takeoff, 6 August 1945." "The patient's skin is burned in a pattern corresponding to the dark portions of a kimono worn at the time of the explosion." Atomic bomb survivor. Intolerance At Home Colleges, professional schools, and businesses barred Jews entirely or admitted only a few during this period. ► The loyalty of Americans of Japanese descent became suspect. ► Quotas enforced during the 1920s limited immigration from countries with large numbers of Jewish emigrants. ► ► Through the first half of the 20th century, towns and individual householders barred Jews from buying real estate by including restrictive covenants in property deeds, a practice known as “gentleman’s clauses.” Japanese-Americans were relocated to “internment camps” Internment of Japanese-Americans ► ► Although 102,000 Jewish refugees escaping Nazi Germany were admitted into the United States before World War II (19391945), many more were refused entrance. As a consequence of this policy, some died in German labor and death camps. nd 442 ► ► ► Regimental Combat Team All-volunteer Japanese American unit The 442nd went on to become the most decorated unit of its size in American military history. Although the 442nd never had more than 3000 soldiers at any one time, the unit earned 18,143 medals for valor and 9486 Order of the Purple Heart decorations, awarded to soldiers wounded in the line of duty. Korematsu v. United States In 1944 the Supreme Court ruled that the evacuation and internment were constitutional ► By then, however, the government had started to release the internees. ► In 1988 Congress apologized and voted to pay $20,000 compensation to each of 60,000 surviving internees. ► Who’s Who in World War II? Harry S. Truman ► ► ► ► Truman was the central figure in three controversial issues concerning the military. First, he insisted on transferring control and development of nuclear energy from the military to the civilian Atomic Energy Commission and on placing authority to use the bomb solely with the president. Second, he persuaded Congress to unify the armed forces under a civilian secretary of defense. Third, Truman ordered the armed forces of the United States desegregated after Congress refused to do so. “The buck stops here.” "Gen. Douglas MacArthur wades ashore during initial landings at Leyte, “ October 1944 George Catlett Marshall ► ► ► ► U.S. Army chief of staff during World War II and as secretary of state from 1947 to 1949. He authored the European Recovery Program, also called the Marshall Plan, to rebuild the war-ravaged continent. The plan, which helped check the spread of communism, called for the United States to spend more than $13 billion to aid European countries. The plan earned him the 1953 Nobel Peace Prize. George S. Patton is considered one of the greatest United States generals of World War II ► ► ► His reckless, outspoken manner gained him friends and enemies of equal determination. During the war, Patton led U.S. troops in Morocco, Tunisia, and Sicily, then took command of the Third Army, leading the troops through the German lines at Normandy to traverse France. His toughness on his enemies as well as his own forces earned him the name “Old Blood and Guts.” General Omar Nelson Bradley ► ► Commanded United States ground troops during World War II (1939-1945) After the war Bradley became chief of staff of the U.S. Army in 1948 and served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff from 1949 to 1953. Dwight D. Eisenhower ► Supreme Allied commander in Europe during World War II. He organized the largest sea-toland invasion in history, popularly known as D-Day, during which the Allies crossed the English Channel and invaded the northern coast of occupied France. Chester W. Nimitz ► ► ► ► ► Appointed commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, As commander of the Pacific Ocean Zone, he directed both the Navy and the Marines His bold tactics and strategy were largely responsible for stopping the Japanese advance at the Battle of the Coral Sea (May 1942) and the victorious Battle of Midway (June 1942). Nimitz also helped to develop the strategy of island hopping,. Nimitz was the official U.S. representative who signed the Japanese surrender in 1945. Battle of Stalingrad and Vasili ► ► ► ► ► ► In modern history there has never been a battle so dominated by snipers, as was Stalingrad, the 1942 high-water mark of German conquest in Russia. By October 1942, the Germans had seized nine-tenths of the city, Combatants on both sides tunneled, scurried, and hid in the ruins The premier Soviet sniper at Stalingrad was Vasili/Vassili/ Zaitsev, who had been a shepherd in the Ural Mountains. In his first 10 days of shooting, Zaitsev killed 40 Germans. When his tally neared 100, he became the focus of a Soviet propaganda campaign as the living epitome of Russian resistance. Zaitsev, keen to the tactics of German snipers ► ► ► ► ► ► Dispatched to Stalingrad was the commandant of the Sniper School, Major Koning/Konig to kill Vasili. Vasili was alerted. At one point, a communist political officer excitedly proclaimed that he could see the German and raised himself. A bullet struck him. Though the commissar lay in the open writhing in pain, his wound was not serious. Searched with his binoculars, to see if the German sniper would compromise him self by engaging the medics, purposely wounding rather than killing, To test this, Zaitsev slid a glove over a plank and slowly exposed it. A bullet smacked through it. Hero of the Soviet Union. ► ► ► ► ► The Russian could see that the shot must have come from somewhere in a particular rubble pile. Waiting for the sun to be at his back, so as not to reflect his riflescope, he had his spotter raise a dummy’s head inside a helmet. He saw a glimmer of scope glare from beneath a boilerplate. Bang! The German shattered the dummy’s head. Instantly Zaitsev fired, too, but it was no decoy he hit. The contest was over; the Reichs super sniper, Major Konig, lay dead. Zaitsev eventually was credited with 142-242(varies) kills at Stalingrad. He received the Order of Lenin and by the end of the war; he personally had accounted for 400 Germans and was declared a record. Germany invades USSR ► ► During the fall and early winter of 1941, German armored divisions had advanced toward Moscow capturing hundreds of thousands of Soviet troops But by the first week of December, snow began falling, and temperatures plunged to -40° C (-40° F) Defeated by the Russian Winter ► ► ► The German soldiers, not dressed for winter weather, were freezing and losing their will to fight. Their equipment also froze, becoming useless. The Russian winter finally accomplished what its military had failed to do: It halted the German offensive. “Not one step backward.” -Josef Stalin, orders at Battle of Stalingrad ► The German army had practically turned its invasion of Russia into a rout. But at the end of July 1942, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin issued the order, “Not a step back!” In the ruins of Stalingrad, shown here, Soviet soldiers fought the Germans building-bybuilding in a savage battle for the city that lasted for five months. By 1942, most of Europe was under Germany’s control ► Soviet Union was in danger of collapse. ► The United States lend-lease program helped arm the Soviets, who fought the Germans to a stalemate during the early part of the war. The War in Africa ► ► German leader Erwin Rommel was genius in desert-warfare tactics After his defeat by British Lieutenant General Bernard Montgomery in August 1942, Rommel was transferred by Hitler to defend the beaches of Normandy, against the anticipated Allied invasion. North Africa ► ► ► Free French—French armed forces formed in exile by General Charles de Gaulle Engaged in several successful battles against Axis forces led by German General Erwin Rommel. In 1943, after months of fighting, the Allies were able to force the final surrender of German and Italian troops in North Africa. British General Bernard Montgomery leads invasion of Italy ► After defeating the Axis powers in northern Africa, the Allies invaded Italy and pushed north 1943: Mussolini’s government fell Italy joins the Allies ► ► ► ► ► ► Italy had lost all of it colonies in Africa, and most of its army, and was being invaded. Mussolini was deposed by a revolt within his own Fascist Grand Council Mussolini was arrested, while Italy attempted to change sides. Hitler sent German paratroops to rescue Mussolini from the mountaintop resort where he was imprisoned. When the Germans surrendered in northern Italy, in April, 1945, Mussolini was arrested again. He and his mistress, Clara Petacci, were removed from the jail and lynched, by the local Communist partisans. In Russia, at Kursk Largest armored engagement in history ► ► ► In Russia, at Kursk, the Soviets won the greatest tank battle in history Over 3000 tanks took part in this battle. Also included the most costly single day of aerial warfare in history. The Pacific Theatre Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands ► On August 7, 1942 United States Marines ► The Japanese responded with a powerful air and sea defensive ► Six major naval engagements were fought on or near the island in 6 months of fighting Tehran, Iran - The “Big Three” 1943 ► ► ► ► ► Soviet leader Joseph Stalin United States president Franklin D. Roosevelt British prime minister Winston Churchill, to discuss their military strategy and post-World War II policy for Europe. decided to invade France in 1944, against Churchill’s recommendations. August 1, 1943 United States bombs Hitler’s oil fields ► In Ploieºti, Romania. ► Americans suffered heavy casualties during the attack, and it was not until the following year that the Allies completely destroyed these oil fields. June 6, 1944: D-Day ► Began the Normandy Invasion — the largest military operation in history. ► The Allies landed 130,000 men initially; and 1 million within a month, on the coast of France. The Battle of the Bulge Last German offensive of World War II. ► It was launched at the end of 1944 in an attempt to divide the British and American forces and retake the seaport of Antwerp, in Belgium. Shown here are German troops. V-E Day http://history.acusd.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/qt/v-eday.html ► ► May 7, 1945: The European theater of W.W.II ended with Germany's surrender “BroadWay is 'White Way' Again - When all the lights are turned on again in Times Square, the dazzle and brilliance convinces all Broadwayites that V.E. has been achieved. “ Iwo Jima ► ► ► Mt. Suribachi, the volcano which is covered with Jap guns. Naval ships pour tons of shells into the mountain. The Marines advance uphill as U.S. dive bombers place sticks of bombs immediately ahead of the Leathernecks. Forty Percent Casualty Rate ► ► Jap fortifications with narrow entrances and huge, thick walls are reduced with hand grenades. Marines enact one of the stirring scenes in American history, the Stars and Stripes are planted on Suribachi, 750 miles from Tokyo!" B-29s Rule the Skies over Japan ► ► ► Super Fortresses roar into the sky - destination Tokyo! They shower tons of bombs and incendiaries on the city Hit factories, steel mills and docks Kamikaze “divine wind” ► ► ► Suicide squadrons organized by the Japanese air force in the last months of World War II Pilots flew their aircraft, loaded with explosives, directly into U.S. naval vessels Kamikaze pilots, sacrificing their lives in a last-ditch effort to stop the American advance, sank August, 1945 US drops atomic weapons on Japan ► Japanese industrial cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ► Japan was convinced to surrender by this new weaponry, and surrendered within weeks. August 6, 1945 Hiroshima ► 60,000 to 70,000 people were killed or reported missing, according to U.S. estimates, and thousands more were made homeless. U.S . Sixteen hours after the attack, President Harry S. Truman’s report of the event was broadcast to radio listeners . Japanese Surrender ► September 2, 1945, aboard the United States battleship Missouri.