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Children who have been made homeless by the bombs of the Nazis, waiting outside the wreckage of what was their home Winning World War II The surprise Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 galvanized the American people. Though reluctant to directly enter WWII prior to the attack, many Americans quickly changed their minds when faced with the 2,300 deaths and massive destruction caused by it. Americans faced the task of defeating the Axis powers without the lofty idealism that characterized the outset of WWI. Instead, there was widespread recognition that defeating wellarmed enemies across two oceans would require enormous sacrifice and courage. Ultimately, more than 15 million men and women served in the US armed forces. On the home front, millions of Americans of all ages spent four years working in munitions plants, buying war bonds, collecting scrap metal, and living on rationed goods to support the war effort and freedom at home and abroad. The Japanese different PacificStates Islands. What militarycontrolled strategymany might the United What obstacles do you thinkdoes this created for the United What What territory territory is controlled is under Japanese by the Allied control? Nations? What part of the world this map show? have developed to defeat the Japanese? States in the war against Japan? BritishUS Prime Soviet Prime President Minister Winston Minister Josef Franklin D. Churchill Roosevelt Stalin The Big Three Meet at Yalta Why might an alliance between the US, the Who are these three Soviet Union, men, and what and Great Britain countries do they have caused represent? tension during World War II? The United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union • Tensions between the countries – Soviets were communist; GB and US were democracies • Decided to defeat Hitler, then take on Japan • The war took a terrible toll on the Soviet population (approximately 26,600,000 civilian and military dead) How do youDwight think D. they are feeling astroops he This is General Eisenhower giving What Who What might do do this you you man think see be here? he saying? is? orders before the invasion at Normandy. spoke? The Allied Invasion of Northwestern Europe • Allies attack Normandy – France • Operation Fortitude – decoy mission D-Day Deception • Operation Overlord (D-Day) Invasion at Normandy • Two million soldiers involved • June 6, 1944 • Allies experienced high casualties • Fall 1944 –Paris and Belgium freed D-Day Here we see US soldiers trying to identify the body of soldiers who were machine-gunned after being taken as a prisoner by the German Nazis in January 1945. The Battle of the Bulge • December 1944 – Hitler squeezed between Soviets in East and Americans in West • Hitler marched into a weak point in the Allied lines, creating a “bulge” • March 1945 – Hitler pushed back; Allies entered Germany Here we see Trafalgar Square in London filled with people celebrating the German surrender and the end of WWII in Europe. The Allied Victory in Europe • Allies closed in on Berlin from E and W • April 25, 1945 – Allies from E and W met and celebrated • May 7, 1945 – Hitler committed suicide; Germany surrendered • May 8, 1945 – V-E Day US Strategy in the Pacific War • The US military adopted an “island hopping” strategy to defeat the Japanese • April 1942 – US Air Force bombed Japanese cities in the Doolittle Raid Here we see Americans abandoning the carrier Lexington during the Battle of the Coral Sea. The Turning Point of the Pacific War • The key to winning the Pacific War was controlling the sky and water of the Pacific Ocean • Battle of the Coral Sea – no clear winner, but set stage for Midway • Battle of Midway – June 1942 – turning point in the war – gave the Allies the upper hand Here we see U.S. Marines raising the American flag atop Mount Surabachi on the island of Iwo Jima. The Battle of Iwo Jima • Soldiers battled monsoons, malaria, heat, and earthquakes • February to March 1945 – fought for Iwo Jima • Heavy casualties on both sides • Allies won there and at Okinawa – gave them strong position to launch attacks on Japan The End of WWII • US blockade cut off Japan’s supply lines • Kamikaze missions used • Atomic bombs dropped on Japan • August 14, 1945 – Japan surrendered • Approx. 50 million lives lost in WWII The End of WWII Scene from the surrender ceremony, held on September 2, 1945 aboard the U.S. battleship Missouri. Officials from the Japanese government signed the Japanese Instrument of Surrender, ending World War II. Important Military Leaders of WWII General Omar Bradley • Known by his troops in World War II as "The Soldier's General" because of his care of and compassion for those soldiers under his command. • Served in North Africa and Italy General Dwight D. Eisenhower • Supreme Commander of Allied forces in Europe for the D-Day invasion • Later served as president of the United States General Douglas MacArthur • Commander of the US Army in the Pacific • Most famous phrase: “I shall return.” General George Marshall • Coordinated the war effort from Washington, DC • U.S. Army Chief of Staff during WWII, the highest ranking U.S. Army officer General George Patton • Tank commander who spearheaded the final attack into Germany • Known for carrying ivory-handled pistols and his fiery temper