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The Allies Turn the Tide All-out war • To defeat the Axis war machine, the Allies had to commit themselves to total war- nations devoted all of their resources to the war effort. • Government Increases power – to achieve maximum war production the U.S. and Great Britain governments increased their political power by ordering: - factories to stop making cars or refrigerators and make tanks and planes. - programs to ration food and other vital goods consumers could buy. - raised money by holding war bond drives (citizens donate money). - prices and wages were also regulated. - the increase in production ended the unemployment of the depression era. - Limited rights of citizens • Under the pressure of war, even democratic governments limited the rights of citizens, censored the press, and used propaganda to win public support for the war. • In Canada and the U.S., many citizens of Japanese descent lost their jobs, property, and civil rights and were placed in internment camps. • Santa Anita Racetrack in Arcadia was one of several sites for Japanese-Americans to be placed in internment camps. Internment Camps Women Help Win the War • As men joined the military, millions of women around the world replaced them in war industry jobs by building ships, planes and ammunition. • British and American women served in the armed forces in many auxiliary roles – driving ambulances, delivering airplanes and decoding messages. • Some women even fought in battle. • Soviet pilot Lily Litvak shot down 12 German planes before she was killed. • Marie Fourcade, a French women, helped downed Allied piolts escape to safety. Rosie the riveter Outline I. The Allies Forge Ahead winning victories on four fronts – (1)the Pacific, (2)North Africa and Italy, (3)the Soviet Union, and (4)France. A. Japanese Navy Battered 1. 2. B. The Big Three Plot Their Strategy 1. 2. 3. C. Allied Victory in North Africa. 1. 2. 3. D. Allies Advance Through Italy. 1. 2. E. Germans Defeated at Stalingrad. 1. 2. 3. The D-DAY ASSAULT • By 1944, the Western Allies were ready to open a second front in Europe by invading France. • To prepare the way for the invasion, Allied bombers flew constant missions over Germany, targeting factories and destroying aircrafts. • The Allies chose June 6, 1944 – known as D-Day – for the invasion of France. • Just before midnight on June 5, Allied planes dropped paratroopers behind enemy lines. • Then at dawn, thousands of ships ferried 156,000 Allied troops across the English Channel to Normandy Beach in France. Witness History Video - Triumph at Normandy - Allies Continue to Advance • In early August of 1944, a massive armored division under General George S. Patton helped break through German defenses and advance toward Paris. Within a month, all of France was free. • For two years, Allied bombers hammered military bases, factories, railroads, oil depots, and cities crippling Germany’s industries. • After freeing France, Allied forces battled toward Germany. • Germany launched a massive counter attack at the bloody month-long Battle of the Bulge where both sides took terrible losses. Germany was unable to break through. • The Soviet Union moved in on Berlin from the east while the Allies advanced from the west. • Hitler’s support within Germany was declining, and he survived an assassination attempt by German senior officers. Uneasy agreement at YALTA • In February of 1945, “The Big Three” -Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin met again at Yalta, in the southern Soviet Union. • There they planned war strategy in an atmosphere of distrust. • Stalin wanted control of Eastern Europe to protect the Soviet Union form future aggression. • Churchill and Roosevelt wanted self-determination for the people of Eastern Europe, but they needed Stalin’s help to win the war. • The three leaders agreed that the Soviet Union would enter the war against Japan 3 months after Germany’s surrender. • In return Churchill and Roosevelt promised Stalin an occupation zone in Korea, and that Germany would be divided up in four zones, to be governed by American, French, British, and Soviet forces. • Stalin promised free elections in Eastern Europe, which he later ignored.