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VICTORY IN EUROPE AND THE PACIFIC SECTION 3 How did the Allies defeat the Axis Powers? Vocabulary: -D-Day -Battle of the Bulge -Harry S. Truman -island hopping -kamikaze -Albert Einstein -Manhattan Project -J. Robert Oppenheimer ALLIED VICTORY IN EUROPE After “Bulge”, allies closed in on Berlin Allies met at Yalta to discuss terms of German surrender Berlin ended up under Soviet Control Hitler Committed Suicide VE Day – Victory in Europe Discovery of the death camps VE DAY TURNING POINT IN THE PACIFIC Establish control over skies and waters of the Pacific Battle of the Coral Sea 1st major battle in Pacific Battle of Midway June 1942 Turning point in the Pacific Kamikazes BATTLE OF IWO JIMA AND OKINAWA US Island hopped their way through the Pacific Dangers other than battle Monsoons, malaria, heat, earthquakes, jungle conditions Iwo Jima US losses: Okinawa 6800 killed 23,000 wounded Costliest engagement 50,000 casualties Gave U.S. strong positions to launch air strikes CODE-TALKERS, NAVAJO TROOPS IWO JIMA IWO JIMA DEATH OF FDR 4/12/45 HARRY TRUMAN, 33RD PRESIDENT THE END OF THE WAR Bombing of Japan Blockade of Japan Kamikazes Manhattan Project A-Bomb Attacks VJ Day August 14, 1945 Casualties TRANSPARENCY The Manhattan Project MANHATTAN PROJECT Key Players Albert Einstein Enrico Fermi J. Robert Oppenheimer The Decision to drop the Bomb August 6, 1945 Hiroshima August 9, 1945 Nagasaki August 14, 1945 Surrender of Japan THE WAR GOES ATOMIC…. AN AERIAL VIEW OF "GROUND ZERO" AT LOS ALAMOS AFTER THE DETONATION OF THE WORLD'S FIRST ATOMIC BOMB AT 5:29 A.M. ON 16 JULY 1945 HIROSHIMA (LITTLE BOY)/ NAGASAKI (FAT MAN) HIROSHIMA August 6, 1945, Japan 180,000 killed, wounded, or missing after atomic bomb is dropped. Two days later Soviet Union enters war against Japan. PRE-ATTACK HIROSHIMA POST-ATTACK HIROSHIMA TOWARDS THE EPICENTER, HIROSHIMA NAGASAKI August 9, 1945, Japan Second bomb is dropped after Japanese delay surrender. 80,000 killed or missing. NAGASAKI A JAPANESE REPORT ON THE BOMBING CHARACTERIZED NAGASAKI AS "LIKE A GRAVEYARD WITH NOT A TOMBSTONE STANDING." EFFECTS OF THE WAR SECTION 5 What were the major immediate and long-term effects of World War II? Vocabulary: -Yalta Conference -superpower -GATT – General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade -UN – United Nations -Universal Declaration of Human Rights -Geneva Convention -Nuremberg Trials Date Participants Highlights MolotovRibbentrop Treaty August 23, 1939 Germany, Soviet Union Hitler and Stalin sign non-aggression pact which meant the Soviets would not intervene if Poland were invaded. Hitler later invaded Russia (June 22, 1941) Atlantic Conference August 1941 Great Britain, US FDR and Churchill approve the Atlantic Charter which supported selfdetermination, a new permanent system of general security (a new League of Nations), and the right of people to regain governments abolished by dictators. Casablanca Conference January 1943 Great Britain, US FDR and Churchill agree to step up Pacific war, invade Sicily, increase pressure on Italy and insist on an unconditional surrender of Germany. Teheran Conference Novemb er 1943 Great Britain, US, Soviet Union Allies agree to launch attacks from Russia on the east at the same time as US and Great Britain attack from west. Date Participants Highlights Yalta February 1945 Great Britain, US, Soviet Union Stalin agreed that Poland would have free elections after the war and that the Soviets would attack Japan within three months of the collapse of Germany. Soviets receive territory in Manchuria and several islands San Francisco April 22, 1945 50 nations United Nations Charter approved establishing a Security Council with veto power for the Big Five powers (US, Great Britain, France, China, and Soviet Union) and a General Assembly. Potsdam July 1945 U.S, Great Britain, Soviet Union Pres. Truman met with Stalin and Churchill and agreed that Japan must surrender or risk destruction. Atomic bomb successfully tested on July 16 and then dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. EUROPE AFTER WORLD WAR II