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The U.S. in World War II 1941-1945 Declarations of War U.S. declared war on Japan on December 8, 1941 December 11, Germany and Italy declared war on the U.S. • “Germany first” Declaration of the United Nations • January 1, 1942, representatives of 26 nations met in D.C. and signed the Declaration of the United Nations • Pledged themselves to principles of Atlantic Charter • Promised not to make a separate peace with their common enemies Japanese Empire Conquests in Pacific • U.S. islands of Guam, Wake Island, & Gilbert Islands fell by end of December • Philippines taken in March 1942 Resources • Controlled 95% of world's raw rubber; 70% of tin; 70% of rice • Oil from Dutch East Indies • Rice from Indochina Dominated population of 450 million • Played on Asians’ bitterness of European colonial rule • "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere” "Asia for the Asians” The Home Front Military mobilization • Selective Service registration expanded to men 18-65 after Pearl Harbor • 258,000 women enlisted as WAC's (Women's Army Corp), WAVES (Women Appointed for Voluntary Emergency Service), and WAF's (Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron) By war's end, 16 million men and women served • only 72,000 claimed "conscientious objection” • only 5,500 refused to register; were jailed • Nearly a million African Americans served in segregated units Economic mobilization • OWM (Office for War Mobilization) established to supervise various agencies intended to increase war production • War Production Board WPD est. in 1942 by FDR to regulate the use of raw materials "Rosie the Riveter“ • Over 5 million women joined labor force during the war, work in aircraft, munitions, and automobile industries • Propaganda: American heroine- movies, magazines, ads • Women’s increased wages increased family incomes • Despite gains, women return to homemaking Women played an important role in the war effort on the homefront Controlling inflation • More people were working but less consumer goods were available • Too much $ = inflation; cost of living increased • War Labor Board: sought to maintain workers' standard of living; wages kept pace with rise in cost of living • Office of Economic Stabilization -Office of Price Administration (OPA) Froze prices and rents at March 1942 levels Rationing • Coupon Plan -- more widely used Families issued coupon books to buy of meat, coffee, sugar, gas, etc. • Anti-inflation measures successful WWI cost of living up 170% WWII -- less than 29% RATIONING SUGAR LINE GASOLINE LINE TO LEARN HOW TO USE RATIONING STAMPS, THESE SCHOOL CHILDREN SET UP A BOOTH WITH CHARTS AND PRODUCTS TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO BUY NEEDED GOODS DURING THE WAR Taxes were increased to finance the war • Many who had never had to pay taxes were now required to • 1939 -- 4 million filed tax returns; in 1945 --50 million! National Debt • 1941 = $49 billion; 1945 = $259 billion FEDERAL SPENDING INCREASE IN BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, 1940-1945 100 80 BUDGET 60 MILITARY 40 ALL OTHER SPENDING 20 0 1940 1945 Smith-Connolly Antistrike Act (1943) -- expired in 1947 • Authorized gov’t seizure of plant or mine idled by a strike if war effort affected • Response to strikes especially by John L. Lewis 1943, 450,000 United Mine Workers members went on strike who were denied a raise by the National War Labor Board Science goes to war: Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) • Organized before Pearl Harbor, led to advances in technology (radar, insecticides) • Manhattan Project—1942 Established to research all aspects of building Abomb Formed after Albert Einstein and Enrico Fermi warned FDR in a letter in 1939 that Germany was working on building a bomb through nuclear fission • Los Alamos, New Mexico -- group charged with building the bomb itself Headed by Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer • Trinity -- first test July 16, 1945 in desert outside Alamogordo, New Mexico Discrimination during the war African American civil rights issues • During war years, there was massive migration of minorities to industrial centers Competition for scarce resources (e.g. housing) & tension in workplace • Violence plagued 47 cities, the worst example occurring in Detroit Detroit Race Riot in June, 1943; 25 blacks dead; 9 whites • 6,000 federal troops needed to restore order • $2 million in property damage Despite improved economic opportunities African Americans still suffered discrimination in housing and other areas. In Detroit tensions erupted into full scale rioting in the summer of 1943, where 34 people lost their lives. • A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters Blacks were excluded from well-paying jobs in warrelated industries Randolph made three demands of the president • Equal access to defense jobs • Desegregation of the armed forces • End to segregation in federal agencies March on Washington Movement -Randolph proposed a black March on Washington in 1941 if his conditions were not met FDR issued Executive Order 8802 in 1941 establishing Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) to investigate violations in defense industries • FDR did not agree to other two demands • Randolph canceled the march Result: • Gov’t agencies, job training programs, & defense contractors ended segregation • Randolph dubbed "father of the Civil Rights movement” NAACP grew from 50,000 before the war, to 500,000 members by war’s end Mexican Americans • Bracero Program During the war, need for increased farm production led to a U.S. gov't policy for short-term work permits to be issued to Mexican workers • Zoot Suit riots in L.A. (1943) Young Mexican-Americans became object of frequent violent attacks in LA. Sailors roamed streets beating "zooters," tearing their clothes, cutting their hair Radio reports blamed zooters but a city committee under Earl Warren revealed the truth and need for improved housing RACIAL TENSIONS IN LOS ANGELES LED TO THE “ZOOT SUIT” RIOTS, 1943 Internment of Japanese Americans - Japanese relocation • Executive Order 9066 (Feb. 19, 1942) FDR authorized the War Dept. to declare the West Coast a "war theater“ 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry forcibly interned. Pearl Harbor left public paranoid that people of Japanese ancestry living in California might help Japan THESE POSTERS WERE PUT UP IN LOS ANGELES, INSTRUCTING PEOPLE OF JAPANESE DESCENT, CITIZENS AND NON-CITIZENS ALIKE, TO REPORT TO THE CIVIL CONTROL STATION TO BE DEPORTED TO THE CAMPS JAPANESE AMERICAN GIRL WAITS WITH HER FAMILY’S BELONGINGS TO BE EVACUATED TO AN INTERNMENT CAMP • General John DeWitt organized the removal of people of Japanese ancestry to 10 locations in 7 states They were given 48 hours to dispose of their belongings Camps were in desolate areas Conditions harsh, yet many remained loyal to US; after 1943, 17,600 fought in US Army Although gov’t considered relocation of Germans and Italians, the Japanese were the only ethnic group singled out by gov’t for action JAPANESE INTERNMENT CAMPS THE DOTS REPRESENT THE LOCATION OF THE CAMPS CANAL CAMP, AZ CRYSTAL CREEK, TX MANZANAR, CA GILA, AZ • Army considered Japanese potential spies Korematsu v. US – Supreme Court upholds internment • Court could not second-guess military decisions Represented the greatest violation of civil liberties during WWII • $105 million of farmland lost • $500 million in yearly income; unknown personal savings No act of sabotage was ever proven against any Japanese-American Camps closed in March, 1946 1988, President Reagan officially apologized for its actions and approved in principle the payment of reparations to camp survivors totaling $1.25 billion In 1990 Congress appropriated funds to pay $20,000 to each internee The Grand Alliance Coalition of the nations at war with the Axis Powers created with the signing of the "United Nations Declaration", Jan 1, 1942 Objectives • Hitler first: Churchill & FDR wanted to concentrate on defeating Germany before giving Japan higher priority • Many who were outraged from Pearl Harbor complained Military Plans: • • • • Economic blockades on Germany & Italy Air attacks on Germany Peripheral strikes in the Mediterranean Final direct assault on Germany Allied Defeats During first 6 months, it seemed Allied Powers would lose the war • Asia and the Pacific Japanese took Guam, Wake Island, Hong Kong, Singapore, Burma, Dutch East Indies and the Philippines U.S. loss of the Philippines • 20,000 U.S. troops led by General Douglas MacArthur withdrew to Bataan, close to Manila, but eventually surrendered • Bataan death march – 85-mile forced march of U.S. GIs who were tortured and eventually burned alive • MacArthur ordered by Washington to leave for Australia: "I shall return” Assumed command of all Allied Pacific forces BATAAN DEATH MARCH AND THE HORROR OF JAPANESE CAPTIVITY Doolittle Raid: militarily insignificant raid on Japan in April, 1942 in retaliation for Pearl Harbor • Helped American moral since U.S. had not yet struck back after Pearl Harbor Early Defeats in Europe • German U-boats sunk 8 million tons of allied supplies -- 25% of the USSR's • Germans pushed east to Stalingrad by fall 1942, and to El Alamein, Egypt Allied Turning Points in the War Battle of Stalingrad (Sept. 1942) • First major German defeat on land Henceforth, German army in retreat from the east until Berlin occupied by the Russians in the spring of 1945 • Stalin never forgave the Allies for not opening a 2nd front earlier; USSR had to bear the full brunt of German invasion Churchill opted for North Africa instead North Africa – “Operation Torch" - led by Gen. Eisenhower, Nov. 8, 1942 • British had been fighting German Panzer divisions in North Africa since 1941 Germans led by General Irwin Rommel (the "Desert Fox") • Battle of El Alamein (Oct 23-Nov. 3)—signaled end of German presence in North Africa British forces pushed Rommel out of Egypt and all the way back to Tunisia; massive German casualties Considered one of the major turning points of the war • In “Operation Torch” 100,000 Allied troops invaded North Africa in Algeria & Morocco GERMAN GENERAL ROMMEL KNOWN AS THE “DESERT FOX” FOR HIS BRILLIANT LEADERSHIP IN NORTH AFRICA BRITISH GENERAL BERNARD MONTGOMERY, VICTOR IN THE DESERT WAR IN NORTH AFRICA THE END IN NORTH AFRICA: GERMAN TROOPS SURRENDERING TO ALLIED FORCES Europe • Invasion of Italy (commanded by George C. Patton) July 1943, British and U.S. forces land in Sicily; victorious within 1 month Mussolini forced out of power June 4, 1944 -- Allies march into Rome • First capital city freed from Nazi control U.S. military leaders frustrated with focus on Italy; want a second front in Western Europe • Churchill wanted Italy so FDR acquiesced; Stalin extremely frustrated D-Day (June 6, 1944): Invasion of Normandy -- "Operation Overlord” • Perhaps war’s most important battle • Commanded by General Dwight D. Eisenhower • 120,000 troops left England and stormed 5 beachheads at Normandy Coast 800,000 more men within 3 weeks; 3 million total Demonstrated significance of Battle of Britain four years earlier German bunker at Utah Beach THOUSANDS OF ALLIED SOLDIERS ENTERED BATTLE FROM THE AIR A HEAVY PRICE WAS PAID FOR THE SUCCESSFUL INVASION OF FRANCE • Casualties during D-Day: 2,245 Allies killed; 1,670 wounded • Significance of battle: Second front established (to Russia’s joy) • August 25, 1st Allied troops enter Paris • By end of summer, Belgium, France and Luxembourg liberated Had Allies failed, Hitler could have focused on Eastern Front and perhaps negotiated a peace with Stalin leaving most of Europe under Nazi control Liberation of Paris Invasion of Germany • Pre-invasion bombing Hamburg all but wiped out in summer 1943 Berlin and other major cities and targets hit repeatedly especially factories and oil refineries • Allied invasion in Sept. 1944 repelled by Germany Germany held the Rhine by mid-September on the edge of Germany • Battle of the Bulge (December 16, 1944) Germans launched last major offensive on U.S. positions in Belgium and Luxembourg -- U.S. casualties: nearly 80,000 General George Patton and his 101st Airborne Division stopped Hitler’s last counter-offensive By January, the Allies were once more advancing toward Germany • Britain & US attacked Dresden with fire bombs killing 100,000 & destroying factories and rail lines Soldiers in the Ardennes at the Battle of the Bulge April 1945 • U.S. approached Berlin from west while Soviets came from east German resistance in Italy collapsing Mussolini caught by Italian resistance and killer • Hitler went into bunker under Chancellery in April and committed suicide on April 30 • Germany surrendered unconditionally on May 7, 1945 Allies celebrated V-E Day (Victory in Europe Day) THE END APPROACHES FOR NAZI GERMANY AND HITLER AS THE U.S., BRITAIN AND CANADA ATTACK FROM THE WEST WHILE THE RUSSIANS MASSIVELY ATTACK FROM THE EAST U.S. AND SOVIET SOLDIERS GREET EACH OTHER AT TORGAU, GERMANY IN APRIL OF 1945. Japan pushed back to its mainland Battle of the Coral Sea (May 1942)– entire battle fought with aircraft • Japan prevented from successfully invading New Guinea and Australia Battle of Midway (June 4-7, 1942) – turning point in the Pacific • Allies broke the Japanese code • Japan lost 4 aircraft carriers (of 10)--7 of 11 other ships destroyed; 250 planes • Significance: Japan no longer had any hopes of attacking US mainland Island Hopping campaign began in 1943, eventually pushed Japanese forces all the way back to Japan • Sought to neutralize Japanese island strongholds with air and sea power and then move on • Battle of Guadalcanal (Solomon Islands -August 1942-February 1943) First Japanese land defeat after 6 months of bitter jungle fighting OKINAWA ALEUTIAN ISLANDS Iwo Jima (February, 1945) • Fighter planes now close enough to bomb Japan Okinawa (April 1, 1945 -- ends in June) • 50,000 American casualties resulted from fierce fighting which virtually destroyed Japan’s remaining defenses • Bloodshed influenced the eventual use of the atomic bomb to prevent further U.S. casualties from ground assaults Bombing of Japan resulted in destruction of most major cities • March 1945, 100,000 die in a single Tokyo raid; 60% of buildings destroyed IWO JIMA OKINAWA MAP SHOWING INVASIONS OF IWO JIMA AND OKINAWA American casualties on Okinawa would exceed 68,000. Of the nearly 16,000 servicemen killed the burden fell to the naval forces: 8,343 dead sailors, coast guardsmen and marines, the highest toll in naval history. Much of the naval loss was due to the Japanese use of kamikaze suicide plane attacks. KAMIKAZE Kamikazes were the suicide attacks the Japanese began late in the war when they realized they could not defeat conventional US forces. While the attacks were made mainly in aircrafts against US ships there were other types of kamikaze vehicles as well. These included small boats, flying human missiles or ohkas, human torpedoes and even the great battleship Yamato. U.S. SHIPS HIT BY KAMIKAZES The horrendous losses the U.S. suffered at Iwo Jima and Okinawa combined with the devastating kamikaze attacks was only a prelude to the slaughter which happened when the U.S. invaded the Japanese home islands All combined kamikaze operations combined sunk 34 ships, and damaged 288 ships. The most damage done by kamikaze’s was at Okinawa where 1465 suicide planes sank 30 ships and damages 130 more. 70000 60000 50000 40000 KILLED WOUNDED TOTAL 30000 20000 10000 0 IWO JIMA OKINAWA US losses at both battles Election of 1944 and death of FDR FDR, with running-mate Harry S. Truman, defeated Republican Thomas Dewey • FDR elected to an unprecedented fourth term in office April 12, 1945 -- FDR died at Warm Springs, GA Vice President Harry Truman become president PRESIDENT FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT DIED ON APRIL 12, 1945. The Atomic Bomb Potsdam Conference (Mid-July - August) • Three allied leaders (Truman, Stalin, and Clement Atlee) warned Japan without specifics to surrender or suffer "complete and utter destruction” • Japan refused removal of emperor but showed signs in secret dispatches it might be willing to surrender if emperor remains on throne • Military advisors warn of casualties as high as 46,000 if U.S. invades Japan August 6, 1945 -- First atomic bomb ("Little Boy") dropped on Hiroshima • 80,000 killed immediately; 100,000 injured Countless die later of radiation sickness or cancer • Bomb dropped by the Enola Gay • Japanese gov’t still did not surrender August 8, Soviet Union entered the war against Japan as promised AUGUST 6TH, 1945, 70,000 KILLED AND EVEN MORE WOUNDED THE FIRST ATOMIC BOMB WAS DROPPED ON THE CITY OF HIROSHIMA August 9, 2nd bomb ("Fat Man") dropped on Nagasaki; 60,000 dead August 14, Japan surrendered • World War II is over • Sept 2, Japanese formally surrendered aboard U.S.S. Missouri in Tokyo Bay AUGUST 9TH, 40,000 KILLED A second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and the Japanese surrendered FOREIGN MINISTER SHIGEMITSU SIGNS JAPANESE SURRENDER DOCUMENT VJ DAY, AUGUST 14, 1945 WORLD WAR II ENDS The decision to drop the atomic bomb became controversial in later few decades • Most compelling reason for dropping the bomb was that it saved countless U.S. lives who would have had to invade Japan • Scholarship suggests Truman sought to intimidate Soviet Union in the post-war world by using the bomb Allied Diplomacy during the war Casablanca Conference (January 14-25, 1943) • FDR and Churchill declare policy of unconditional surrender for "all enemies" • Agreed that Italy would be invaded first before opening 2nd Front in France Moscow Conference (October 1943) • Secretary of State Cordell Hull obtained Soviet agreement to enter the war against Japan after Germany was defeated and to participate in a world organization (UN) after the war was over Declaration of Cairo (issued December 1, 1943) • FDR met with Chang Kai-shek in November, demanding Japan’s unconditional surrender • All Chinese territories occupied by Japan would be returned to China; Korea would be free and independent Tehran Conference (Nov-Dec, 1943) • First meeting of the "Big Three" -- FDR, Stalin, and Churchill • Allies agree to an invasion of the Western Europe in 1944 • Stalin reaffirmed the Soviet commitment to enter war against Japan and Allies discussed coordination of Soviet offensive with Allied invasion of France • Disputes over post-war world Stalin insisted on Soviet control of Eastern Europe and division of Germany Churchill demanded free governments in Eastern Europe and a strong Germany after the war to preserve a balance of power in Europe Roosevelt acted as a mediator and believed he could work with Stalin to achieve a post-world peace within the construct of the United Nations Yalta Conference (Feb, 1945) • "Big Three" met to discuss post-war Europe • Stalin agreed to enter Pacific war within 3 months after Germany surrendered • Stalin agreed to "Declaration of Liberated Europe" which called for free elections • Called for a world organization to meet in the U.S. beginning on April 25, 1945 and agreed Soviets would have 3 votes in the General Assembly and that the U.S., Great Britain, the Soviet Union, France and China would be permanent members of the Security Council YALTA CONFERENCE, 1945: FDR, CHURCHILL AND STALIN MET TO DISCUSS THE FUTURE OF EUROPE AFTER THE WAR. Germany divided into occupied zones and a coalition government of communists and non-communists was agreed to for Poland • U.S.S.R. allowed to keep its pre-1939 territory Potsdam Conference (July-Aug, 1945) • Truman, Stalin, and Clement Atlee (Britain) met at Potsdam, eastern Germany • Conference disagreed on most issues; war alliance beginning to break down • During conference, Truman ordered dropping of the atomic bomb on Japan • Approvals given to concept of war-crimes trials and the demilitarization and denazification of Germany Aftermath of WWII Massive casualties • 46-55 million dead; 35 million wounded; 3 million missing • About 30 million soldiers died (including about 405,000 Americans) • 25 million civilians 15 million in USSR alone Massive destruction of cities • 4 million homes in Britain • 7 million buildings in Germany • 1,700 towns destroyed in USSR) Holocaust • Six million Jews were liquidated as part of Hitler's "Final Solution” • Six million others also killed including Gypsies, Homosexuals, physically handicapped, Jehova's Witnesses and political opponents • U.S. response to Europe’s Jews before and during the war was biased "Americanism" of 1920s continued into 1940s with strong anti-Semitism 40% of German immigration quota between 1933 & 1945 was unfilled while German Jews tried to get into the U.S. At one point, U.S. forced a ship full of German Jews that had made it to U.S. shores to turn around and go back to Germany HITLER’S NEXT STEP WAS TO ISSUE IDENTIFICATION CARDS TO ALL PEOPLE LIVING IN GERMAN TERRITORIES. JEWISH CARDS HAD A YELLOW STAR TO EASILY IDENTIFY THEM. HITLER THEN MADE JEWS WEAR THE YELLOW STAR ANY TIME THEY LEFT THEIR HOMES JEWS REBEL IN THE WARSAW GHETTO IN POLAND WARSAW GHETTO JEWS ARE ROUNDED UP AND DEPORTED TO EXTERMINATION CAMPS MAP FROM UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM Warning: images on next slides are graphic • You are not required to look at them ZYKLON B POISON GAS STARVATION DEATH CAME IN MANY FORMS GAS CHAMBER EINSATZGRUPPEN Post-war Political issues WWII made allies of ideological enemies • Prior to WWII, Stalin's communist dictatorship was condemned by the West • Soviets conversely denounced "Western Imperialism" • Once the war was over, the rivalry between East & West quickly reemerged: The Cold War The U.S. and USSR emerged as the world’s two superpowers Fate of Eastern Europe • By war's end, the Soviets controlled most of Eastern Europe Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary surrendered to Soviets Soviets drive Nazis from Poland and Czech • Stalin promised free elections; West was wary that Eastern Europe would have communist governments imposed Germany was divided into four zones among the Allies • Soviets wished for a weak Germany • Britain & US wanted a strong economic Germany and a healthy democracy As Europe declined, their colonies demanded their independence • India had been promised greater freedom as a reward for fighting in the war • French Indochina determined to resist European rule; nationalists had fought against Japanese; later fought France and U.S. in Vietnam War Technology • Synthetic materials such as plastics were developed to replace natural ones in short supply • Improvement in airplanes and radar changed war • A-bomb changed course of human history; years after 1945 called "Atomic Age"