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VICTORY IN EUROPE Invasion of Normandy (D-Day) 2) General Dwight D. Eisenhower was selected as the Supreme Allied Commander in charge of the operation because of his successful Allied invasions in North Africa and Italy and because the majority of the invading troops were going to be American. “Belgian Gates” D-Day 3) The first phase of the invasion began on the night of June 5th, when the 101st Airborne Division took to the skies and parachuted behind German lines along the coast of Normandy. The Airborne troops were ordered to drop inland and take out the German artillery installations to ensure the success of the ground invasion on the beaches the next morning. D-Day 5) The second phase of the invasion involved a massive aerial campaign to soften up the beaches by bombing German defensive installations. The bomb craters on the beaches would also create natural cover for the invading troops the next morning. D-Day 7) The third phase of the invasion would commence precisely at 6:30 a.m. on June 6th when the American, British, and Canadian ground forces hit the beaches of Normandy. The First Wave 1) The invasion was the largest amphibious assault in history. More than 150,000 men, a fleet of 5,000 ships and landing craft, 50,000 vehicles, and 11,000 planes were involved in the invasion of Normandy. The First Wave 5) American troops had to fight across over 400 yards of open beach to the fortified cliffs under the fire of several German MG-43 machine guns that fired over 1000 rounds per minute. The first waves of American troops on Omaha beach experienced astronomical casualties. The First Wave 7) The 3,200 inhabitants of the small town of Bedford, Virginia lost more men per capita than any other community as a result of DDay. It was as if an entire generation vanished from such a small rural Virginia town. The First Wave 8) The difficult landing cost the combined Allied forces over 10,300 casualties with over 4,900 dead The Holocaust 1) As Allied troops drove back the German advances on the Eastern and Western Fronts in 1944-45, they began to discover a massive system of labor and death camps. The Holocaust 10) The principle goal was to exterminate Europe’s Jewish population, but millions of other victims included the Poles and Slavs of Eastern Europe, nomadic Gypsies, homosexuals, the mentally and physically handicapped, and Hitler’s various political enemies. (Communists, the French Resistance, etc.) The Holocaust 11) It is estimated that over 11 million people were exterminated during the Holocaust. Nearly 6 million of them were Jewish. This represented over 2/3rds of the European Jewish population. The Nuremberg Trials 1) An international court was established by the Allied nations at Nuremberg, Germany to identify and convict the Nazi leaders that were guilty of crimes against humanity. The Nuremberg Trials 2) The Nuremburg trials emphasized individual responsibility for personal actions during the war, regardless of orders that were received from senior officers. The Nuremberg Trials 3) The trials led to increased demands for a Jewish homeland to be established in Palestine (later known as Israel). The Nuremberg Trials 4) The United States government supported the establishment of the Jewish state in the Middle East and was the first to officially recognize the nation of Israel in 1949. VICTORY IN JAPAN Iwo Jima 1) In October 1944, a major naval battle in Leyte Gulf off the coast of the Philippines virtually destroyed the remnants of the Japanese Navy in the Pacific and enabled the invasion of the Philippines. Next up on the Allied agenda was the invasion of a much smaller island named Iwo Aerial shot of U.S. landing on Iwo Jima Iwo Jima 11) After four days of fierce battle, the American flag was raised on the summit of Mount Suribachi. American forces suffered over 26,000 casualties, with nearly 7,000 dead. Less than 5% of the Japanese defenders were taken as prisoner. (Only 1000 remained of the total force of 21,800) Okinawa 1) The next U.S. target in the Pacific Island Hopping Campaign was Okinawa. Similar to Iwo Jima and Saipan, the island’s airfields would enable more bombings of the Japanese mainland. Okinawa 6) Okinawa was declared secure by early July 1945. The battle was the most costly of the entire Pacific Theatre with over 72,000 American casualties and over 18,000 dead. The Atomic Bombs Harry S. Truman 1) President Roosevelt suddenly died in April of 1945 and Vice President Harry S. Truman took the oath of office as Allied troops closed in on Nazi Germany in Europe and assaulted Okinawa in the Pacific. The Atomic Bombs 2) Upon assuming the Presidency, Truman was notified of the top-secret Manhattan Project to develop an atomic bomb. The Atomic Bombs 3) After a successful test of the atomic bomb during the summer of 1945, President Truman decided to use the new weapon against the Japanese to bring the war in the Pacific to a quick end. The Bombs 1) The B-29 Superbomber named “Enola Gay” dropped the first bomb on the city of Hiroshima, Japan on August 6th, 1945. The Bombs 2) Three days passed without a surrender and a second bomb was dropped on the city of Nagasaki on August 9th, 1945. The Bombs 3) The combined explosions instantaneously killed over 150,000 people. However, an additional 150,000 people would die as a result of radiation poisoning and exposure to the atomic explosions. The Bombs 4) On August 10th, Japan officially offered surrendered with the condition that Emperor Hirohito would remain in power and the Allied powers accepted on August 14th. The formal surrender took place aboard the U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay on September 2nd, 1945. The Bombs 5) The Second World War was over and millions celebrated the long awaited V-J Day (Victory in Japan).